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  • Blockchain: Massively Simplified | Richie Etwaru

    Blockchain: Massively Simplified | Richie Etwaru

    Published on May 15, 2017

    Richie Etwaru, discusses the opportunity and implications of blockchain as a paradigm to slow/chose the expanding trust gap in commerce. He unpacks blockchain to a level of simplicity to be consumed by those that are just starting to understand and explore the paradigm. He lays out a current state of commerce, suggesting that every company is currently at risk of being disrupted or incurring severe strain from a blockchain version of itself. Professionally, Richie Etwaru is a c-level at a Fortune 500 Company, an author, the owner of international patents, the founder of multiple ventures, an experienced keynote speaker, an angel investor, a member of advisory boards, and a recognized thought leader in the area of digital, technology, and design. Specific to this TEDx talk, Richie is an adjunct professor of blockchain management at Syracuse University in New York, he has delivered over 100 blockchain keynotes across the world, he has written well read blockchain blogs, he has been interviewed on blockchain in online TV shows, and has advised governments and venture funds on blockchain opportunities. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

    Now I know how to explain Blockchain technology in layman terms 🙂 .. Excellent presentation Richie.

    12:00 “just trust me” uh huh… 😉

    why the hell is he shouting

    76

    He nailed it! Anyone else multitasking like me…on the toilet?

    Trust, but verify is a translation of a Russian proverb, which became well known when used by President Ronald Reagan in the context of nuclear disarmament.

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    Excellent speaker. If he hasn’t had training as an actor I’d be amazed. Really knows how to use his voice.

    25

    This guy yell talks like he is about to replace Joe Rogan or Bruce Buffer on the next big card…

    17

    guys got a terrible sense of humor

    15

    How could blockchain be used to verify news reporting?

    55

    I am in the toilet.

    Watched several videos and read articles to get a grip on the concept. FINALLY this guy gets it to me in an understandable way!

    6

    What did Bill Gates do for the internet? Last time I checked, nothing.

    94

    Fantastic speech. Blockchain is explained in simple terms with visuals that helped me understand. Confident speaker. Humour broke up what is a complex subject and helped give the audience a mental break from intense concentration on this new and mind blowing digital concept.

    7

  • How The Blockchain Will Radically Transform The Economy

    How The Blockchain Will Radically Transform The Economy

    Published on Dec 8, 2016
    Say hello to the decentralized economy — the blockchain is about to change everything. In this lucid explainer of the complex (and confusing) technology, Bettina Warburg describes how the blockchain will eliminate the need for centralized institutions like banks or governments to facilitate trade, evolving age-old models of commerce and finance into something far more interesting: a distributed, transparent, autonomous system for exchanging value. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world’s leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design — plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more. Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at http://www.ted.com/translate Follow TED news on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tednews Like TED on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TED Subscribe to our channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/TEDtalksD…

     

     

    Very informative video! Thanks Bettina!

     

     

     

    is she related to Paul Warburg?

     

    Oooohh boy this is a tricky one…. In some ways I see where they are coming from… I just always get cautious when you have something like this… How does the management work… What if someone interferes with my profile, how do you decide whats gets revealed and what doesn’t… What if someone wants to live off grid, if this was a system everyone would be tied together… I think that a benefit with money is that it ISNT recorded.. In some ways yeah it will add more safety, and it tries to add a level playing field between both parties… hmmmmmmmm idk, its tricky cause I do agree that certainly in the U.S a lot of institutions are just outdated and slow… How would this work with government, would institutions use this when say working with legal contracts like with property??? Or would this be purely just an OPTIONAL database that the seller and buyer could use to get information on the property? I definitely know that our own government makes doing these transactions tricky, because there is one center for the information so both parties must be willing to hunt around and sleuth for info, a system like this would definitely alleviate stress, and hassle… The main fear I think I have is what must we give in return… Obviously this database will need people to gather all this information, and how will they obtain this current information? Some records will have to be purchased from government institutions, it seems complex… complex systems usually have more areas for flaw… Idk… People smarter than I an will have to weight the pros and cons, and further discuss the implications of something like this…. but my fearful monkey brain makes me cautious of things like this..

     

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    A video worth watching thank god.

     

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    >2013 >BITCOIN WILL BREAK GLOBAL CONTROL >2016 >BITCOIN IS NWO SATANIST PLOT I love you guys, for real

     

    49

    I normally avoid TED talks, but I love blockchain technology so I gave this video a go. I wasn’t disappointed. Like the points about how our societies got more complex and world trade grew. Right now we are at a stage where the world is a very small place. Movement is easier for people and ideas. Institutions can try (or just sabre rattle) to regulate and stop blockchain developments. I fear they are scared and not sure of what blockchain can achieve. If there is more regulation, sure privacy coins will become more widely adopted and demanded. DeepOnion in particular believes in decentralisation and total anonymity for transactions. Additionally Lightening technology will be a game changer in this industry.

     

    As much as I believe in blockchain, this video looks like something you’d find as an initial clue in the post apocalypse as to why it happened.

     

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    My gosh she is so pretty.

     

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    Yes… If blockchain is like WIKIPEDIA, I will be able to edit my credit score to 850, and add a few ZEROs to my bank account. The best part is, everyone will see it right away!!

     

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    Sure, make the new deep web in Blockchain I’m in.

     

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    Bettina Warburg.. Warburg?? WAR-BURG?!!!

     

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    This whole thing is a scam, Rockefellers, Rothchilds, Banks are cryptocurrency. They want to get rid of paper cash, which is harder to control. With technology numbers, they’ll be able to control all of your money. They’ll be able to take from you whenever they want, deduct and even stop your account if you protest against them. Total control. They are just baiting you with “governments can’t control your money” bullshit, its a LIE.

     

     

    Finally an improvement to poe.trade

     

    12

    This is exactly why Governments including their three letter agencies as well as banks have been attacking blockchain especially Bitcoin. They cannot allow us to cut the cord and be independent of their control. Another thing is blockchain could be used to secure elections preventing fraud by 99.999%. So if the government was honest, you would think they would love and embrace it. No way will we see the US government ever want to allow blockchain backed elections.

     

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  • Blockchain: Real World Use Cases

    Blockchain: Real World Use Cases

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHe_ow9v094

    Published on Oct 3, 2016

     

    At Global Architecture Week 2015, we covered ‘Digital Currencies and Cash’ and their relevance to Tax and Welfare Authorities, concluding with the message: “It’s not about Bitcoin, it’s about the Blockchain”. Blockchain technology has the potential to enable a new mutually trusted, transparent way of sharing and transacting. In the UK Public Sector, Sir Mark Walport’s report Distributed Ledger Technology: Beyond Blockchain encouraged Government to assess its early use and potential. Meanwhile in the private sector, Blockchain FinTech excitement among start-ups and venture capitalists remained strong for a technology promised to be “like a whole new internet for value exchange”. But where are the real world use cases today? What is it that makes a use case more likely to succeed? In this talk, Nick Meyne, Enterprise Architect, Capgemini shares and discusses a number of Capgemini examples. Filmed at Capgemini Week of Innovation Networks 2016 in Telford, UK.

    This frenzy of bitcoin and blockchain is exaggerated and turned into a global casino for the participants. For now that is all . There is not even one practical application of blockchain at work solving or enhancing enterprise applications. And the reason for this is the fact that blockchain is encumber some , slow, utilizing extensive amount of computation and energy to validate block of transactions. Although the concept of getting rid of centralized trusted parties is the key attribute of blockchain technology, the implementation and speed of process is not yet up to par with the needs and demands that are currently solved by centralized trusted parties. Bitcoin thus is only serving as a token of participating in the Ponzi game of global casino it has created. Every newcomer joins in hoping to sell bitcoin to the next guy for a higher price fueling the demand till it implodes and all the late comers hold the bags. Very unhealthy for masses . And it will not serve or solve any of the promises that have been hyped as a blockchain. There are already others that are at work trying to improve or offer alternative to blockchain in the hope of a practical enterprise application that can immediately be put to work to achieve decentralized transactions through consensus theory. One such model is Hashgraph. Problem with Hashgraph though being licensed to one company as a closed source. Hopefully soon it will be an open source or others will come up with similar improved technology making blockchain obsolete. Hashgraph is capable of 250000 transactions per sec, vs. blockchain of 7 transactions per second. Further it is cheaper and will not consume the massive energy blockchain requires.

     

     

    3

    A lot of miss leading concepts.

     

     

    Hi Matt, First of all great videos, in my opinion best one on Blockchain and Bitcoin on the internet. I have a doubt. > What happens if a miner add a fake transaction himself into the list of transaction , after that he do all the steps of block creation and found the random number.Then he will send this block (which actually contains a fake transaction added by him) to all other nodes. How will the other nodes which are receiving this block can validate it, because no node is guaranteed to know about every transaction in the network, so they can’t check whether all the transactions included in the block they just got are valid or not.Then how can a node verify that all the transactions included in the block just received are Valid?

     

     

    i smell a whole lot of rotting fish being sold.

     

     

  • Understand the Blockchain in Two Minutes

    Understand the Blockchain in Two Minutes

    Published on Apr 18, 2016

     

    Over the past decade, an alternative digital paradigm has slowly been taking shape at the edges of the internet. This new paradigm is the blockchain. After incubating through millions of Bitcoin transactions and a host of developer projects, it is now on the tips of tongues of CEOs and CTOs, startup entrepreneurs, and even governance activists. Though these stakeholders are beginning to understand the disruptive potential of blockchain technology and are experimenting with its most promising applications, few have asked a more fundamental question: What will a world driven by blockchains look like a decade from now? Learn more: http://www.iftf.org/blockchainfutureslab Contact us: http://www.iftf.org/blockchainfutures…

     

     

     

     

    The Geeks have obliterated the International Banking System. Revenge for the Global Financial Crisis, long in coming but sweet. Bless them. Wow.

     

     

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    I still have no clue as to what this blockchain is. I guess that’s how my grandmother felt about internet.

     

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    Blockchain will eventually be exploited by governments looking to collect tax.

     

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    i see this becoming skynet

     

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    Exciting blockchain future

     

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    Cool video. Left out any mention of proof of work though. You can’t separate bitcoin from the blockchain, so any future killer apps will be built on the whole system (bitcoin + blockchain = Bitcoin).

     

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    One of the better explanations on YT, thanks

     

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    What if Blockchain was put together from the same evil bankers your trying to hide your money from?

     

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    is it just me or is it scary the potential effect blockchain can have on the global economy

     

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    Using bitcoins to highlight the supposed security of this system is laughable considering that last year hackers made off with something like a billion dollars worth of the digital “currency”. Of course, this is all speculation because no one knows what bitcoins are worth, and it’s really just fool’s gold at the moment.

     

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    Here we go. A consortium of giant corporate interests have found a way to eliminate government and simply have our tax dollars go directly to our corporate masters. This is good, this is wonderful, this will totally change the way we live! Only the last statement is true. Now our corporate masters will begin having their news services tell us how the banks and business conglomerates are being changed and revolutionized but some how they will still exist and still have successes privately distributed to share holders and failures paid for by tax payers.

     

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    Intangible and useless when things go dark. A sharp stick will be of more use.

     

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    Too confusing, got my dick stuck in a toaster.

     

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    The form of technology does not matter, the rich will benefit first and most. I remain pessimistic to the extreme.

     

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    But where does the responsibility and accountability lies in case of blockchain? in case of Money banks can be held responsible and they fix the problem but in case of bitcoin if things go wrong there is not one org which can be held responsible and fix things?

     

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    this is going to replace paper money you mark my words

     

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    Can we kill the idea that Blockchain will enable E-Voting? If there is a verifiable record of how someone votes, history shows that leads to voter intimidation. If you don’t trust that your vote was counted, software isn’t going to save you.

     

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    I have just started researching this blockchain business, and I have much more to learn; however, there is one huge, glaring question: All this depends on the internet, but what happens in the event of an EMP attack or violent solar storm in which all electronics, and computers in particular, are fried?

     

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  • Blockchain USE CASES – Programmer explains

    Blockchain USE CASES – Programmer explains

    Published on Sep 27, 2017

    Blockchain use cases – a very important topic that I think we need to talk more about! What can blockchain be used for? Today we discuss how the blockchain technology can be applied in cybersecurity, charity and fundraising! Bitcoin, Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies all have their different nisches and I think it’s important to realize how these technoogies can benefit the society. Write your own use cases in the comment section below, let’s discuss! What is your favorite Ethereum’s use case? Bitcoin? Monero? etc. Thanks for watching guys ? Elsas channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMDt… ? Join the crypto discussion forum – https://thecrypto.pub ? The best crypto content in one place – https://cryptochannel.tv ? Get my free e-book on Bitcoin and Blockchain – http://eepurl.com/c0hyc9 you will receive the book in your inbox once you sign up ???Social: Steemit: https://steemit.com/@ivanli Facebook: http://facebook.com/ivanontech/ Slack: http://slack-invite-ivan-on-tech.hero… Exclusive email list: http://eepurl.com/c0hyc9 ? Buy cryptocurrencies: https://www.coinbase.com/join/529bab0… ? Secure your Crypto with Hardware Wallets: Ledger: https://www.ledgerwallet.com/r/4607 Trezor: https://trezor.io/?a=rvj3rqtje3ph

    Category

    Thanks for watching guys, and PLEASE BE DECENT/RESPECTABLE IN THE COMMENTS ? ? Join the crypto discussion forum – https://thecrypto.pub ? The best crypto content in one place – https://cryptochannel.tv ? Get my free e-book on Bitcoin and Blockchain – http://eepurl.com/c0hyc9 you will receive the book in your inbox once you sign up Elsas channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMDtaLZuY8UTjELhsYn1teA ???Social: Steemit: https://steemit.com/@ivanli Facebook: http://facebook.com/ivanontech/ Slack: http://slack-invite-ivan-on-tech.herokuapp.com Exclusive email list: http://eepurl.com/c0hyc9 ? Buy cryptocurrencies: https://www.coinbase.com/join/529bab0ab08ded7080000019 ? Secure your Crypto with Hardware Wallets: Ledger: https://www.ledgerwallet.com/r/4607 Trezor: https://trezor.io/?a=rvj3rqtje3ph

    Hour Glass

    I thought you were rockin the ponytail for a second

    Scott Govoni

    I love the idea of an transparent charity where one can track their donation. It should be called CharityChain

    Ermanos22

    i could listen to her talking to me about blockchain all day

     

    Shout out for Elsa’s return.

    elpretentio

    great vid but i feel like you kinda interrupted her a bit there in the middle.. understandably to take control of the flow of the video. but let her talk some more.. haha

     

    heywhatuoguyswlcomebacktmychannel

    curiousgeorge555 3 months ago

    For some reason I find it hard to concentrate on what is being said. I have no idea why.

    BlooDh3xx

    loving the vids! keep it up

    3

    Chaka421

    I’ve not really thought it out fully but I think blockchains could be applied to political parties to hold them to account somehow. Like placing their mandate on a blockchain and releasing campaign funds in the following election cycle if they have attempted to fulfill the mandate. Or even putting the entire nation’s budget on a blockchain so everyone can see where their tax money is being spent.

     

     

     

  • Uses of the Blockchain

    Uses of the Blockchain

    This video is part of a larger online course, “From Barter to Bitcoin: Society, Technology and the Future of Money” run by Prof. Bill Maurer and Prof. Donald J. Patterson In addition to the video on YouTube there is a variety of other content available to students enrolled in the class. “In 2008, a person calling himself or herself or themselves Satoshi Nakamoto released a paper suggesting a system for an anonymous, peer-to-peer alternative money. Bitcoin was born. Although not the first digital currency ever proposed, nor the first challenger to fiat money, bitcoin is the first to have captured the broad imagination of speculators, coders, regulators, criminals and the mass media. This course puts Bitcoin in context: how do we understand money as a social, political and technological phenomenon? From discussions of ancient transactions to the rise of state-issued currencies, we will explore the social and technical aspects of bitcoin, its predecessors and potential successors, and how its features echo aspects of many different historical transaction systems. No prior knowledge of economics or computing is required. There is little academic writing on bitcoin. And this may be the first truly academic class on the topic. We want to put bitcoin in a wider perspective, to reflect on what it means for society, politics and economics, as well as how it helps us think about money both a social and a technical phenomenon. This class is not an advanced seminar on bitcoin–we will not be delving deeply into the inner workings of the system, but instead providing a bird’s-eye overview with enough technical detail for you to be able to put media stories, hype and hope around bitcoin in perspective. Similarly, this is not a class in monetary economics–we won’t go too deeply into monetary theory or policy, the money supply, or inflation. Instead the class invites you to think more deeply about one of the oldest systems of technology on the planet, and most ubiquitous: money, whether coin, cash, credit card or cryptocurrency, we humans have been making money for most of the past 10,000 years. How we do so in the future is a question bitcoin just maybe helps us answer.”

     

    I think “decentralized” is a better description than “distributed”.

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    I understand what BLOCKCHAIN as used for banking, finance as well as investments. But can it be applied to store and manage information or data for any entity whether its personal, business even for a government? And if it does, how safe is it from any tempering or unwanted access by hackers, online criminals, intelligence agencies?

    1

    Great video, enjoyed that. On a second note, did you ever star in the big bang theory?

    2

    great video! very helpful

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    Very good talk. Thanks! However I don’t really see any reason to do any of these on a distributed database rather than a centralized database other than those political, idealogical, etc reasons the speaker refers to early on in the talk. I think using the file folder is misleading; it’s not a binary choice of blockchain or paper records. We already have centralized databases that the DMV, banks or whoever can use. In fact, central databases work faster and can do more in terms of calculations or self-executing code or smart contracts or whatever you call it. So it really just comes down to an issue of trust. In other words, why can’t you build a centralized database system for all of these use cases that is public, time-stamped and persistent. All you need is to open read access, time-stamp which is extremely simple and back it up! What am I missing here?

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    The recording, registering, and tracking of assets (digital or otherwise) is already available and working in the Digital Rights Exchange (DRE) provided by Xeden Cloud Concepts. The DRE allows you to control access grants to the data lodged in your library, registered entries can be public or private, plus it’s supported by other relational applications. It’s currently used for registering, storing, and tracking digital art, music, software, medical records, financial and legal documents. You can check it out at www.Xeden.us

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    ….More Comments On Youtube

  • 19 Industries The Blockchain Will Disrupt

    19 Industries The Blockchain Will Disrupt

    Published on Jun 15, 2017

    The blockchain is a distributed ledger technology that underlies cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. It provides a way to record and transfer data that is transparent, safe, auditable, and resistant to outages. The blockchain has the ability to make the organizations that use it transparent, democratic, decentralized, efficient, and secure. It’s a technology that holds a lot of promise for the future, and it is already disrupting many industries. Original post: http://futurethinkers.org/industries-… More podcasts & videos about the blockchain: http://futurethinkers.org/blockchain Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/futurethinkers Check out our merch store: https://www.redbubble.com/people/futu… Blockchain startups and projects featured in this video: Bitcoin – https://bitcoin.org/ Abra – https://www.goabra.com/ Provenance – https://www.provenance.org/ Fluent (Rebranded to Hijro) – https://hijro.com/ SKUChain – https://skuchain.com/ Blockverify – http://www.blockverify.io/ Augur – https://augur.net/ Networking and IoT Adept – http://www.coindesk.com/ibm-reveals-p… Aeternity – https://www.aeternity.com/ Arcade City – https://arcade.city/ La’Zooz – http://www.shareable.net/blog/lazooz-… Innogy – https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/… UBS – https://www.ubs.com/microsites/blockc… ZF – http://www.econotimes.com/UBS-bank-in… Online Data Storage Storj – https://storj.io/ IPFS – https://ipfs.io/ BitGive Foundation – https://bitgivefoundation.org/ Democracy Earth – http://democracy.earth/ Follow My Vote – https://followmyvote.com/ GovCoin – http://www.businesswire.com/news/home… Dubai Blockchain Strategy – http://www.smartdubai.ae/dubai_blockc… Circles – aboutcircles.com Gem – https://gem.co/ Tierion – https://tierion.com/ TransactiveGrid – http://transactivegrid.net/ Mycelia – http://myceliaformusic.org/ Ujo Music – https://ujomusic.com/ OpenBazaar – https://www.openbazaar.org/ OB1 – https://ob1.io/ Ubitquity – https://www.ubitquity.io/ Consensys – https://consensys.net/about/ Ethereum – https://www.ethereum.org/ Future Thinkers is a podcast about evolving technology, society and consiousness. If you want to learn more about the blockchain technology, you can listen to some of our episodes going in depth. http://futurethinkers.org/blockchain/ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/futurethinkers Donate through Paypal or cryptocurrency: http://futurethinkers.org/support Check out our merch store: https://www.redbubble.com/people/futu..

    Comments
    the common man has no idea what’s coming

    234

    To be clear, Blockchain does not “manage” trust, it eliminates the need for trust.

    150

    #TetraSales

    But will the blockchan remove government at all?137
    The block chain can also be used for managing hiring employees in a company. Colony.io is using ethereum I believe to allow company’s to post jobs and have freelancers submit their proposals. Then individuals that make voting decisions for the company and can vote for proposals. Once the job is completed reputation and payment is given to the freelancer. I believe this will be the norm for the future as it’s seems we need to have more diverse skills in the workplace.99
    it will disrupt the graphic card industry because everyone is buying out GPU to mine bitcoin.
    Great Info, thanks. Still mining and still investing. The future is bright. A hope for a world is a bit of a mess.
    Blockchain+AI=True new world Order  31
    A little flaw in the video: UBS, Innogy an ZF are no startups at all, they are huge companies with billions of revenue.19

    Biff Bifford

    Haha. The democrats are going to fight this to their last breath. The last thing on earth they want is fair elections. Just look what Hillary did to Bernie.12
    #14: just because you sell energy P2P does not mean you will eliminate the grid – you will still need to pay for the service of the grid to transmit the energy to the buyer unless you can make it travel through the air (which in that case they would need to be right next to you similar to wireless charging for phones). In most cases, there are already many power producers competing with each other for customers on the grid. I wouldn’t expect the energy industry to be disrupted too significantly just because blockchain would allow normal people can generate power and sell it P2P. Normal people won’t have the resources to compete in prices…just not worth it.
    “The data is verified and encrypted”. HUH? No it isn’t.15
    Corruption. Not Curruption.14
    Bruno M

    facebook! STEEMIT pays you for your activity 12

    You could just put EVERYTHING without listing certain industries. But don’t get overexcited, it will happen if we manage to solve main challenges of Blockchain: – Lack of privacy – The security model – Limited scalability – High costs – Hidden centrality – Lack of flexibility – Critical size

    Fernando RR900

    Until the big guys get quantum computers and use them to hack all of this…
    WTF is this voice?
    Just a reminder that the 2016 Democratic primary was rife with questionable results and purposefully lacking / refused audits, and even in some cases (such as Chicago, IL,) outright changed vote tallies. And that Bernie Sanders polled 10 points better against Trump than Hillary Clinton did. The world might look very different today if the US used blockchain technology instead of proprietary, closed-source e-voting machines and tabulators.
    missing Encrypgen in this video. A way to store your genomic data on the blockchain and give partial or timed access to scientists or doctors.
    Very nice video and a very good presentation on block chain. If this technology is so secure, then how come bitcoins were stolen in many instances? Most notably, Mt.Gox (Japanese bitcoin exchange) and Bitfinex (Hong Kong bitcoin exchange) crashed following theft of many millions of dollars of bitcoins that were lost forever by genuine owners and the thieves never traced !?!?
    Hey Don’t it have any Disadvantages because all I am seeing is the positive side rather than also discussing abut its bad impact.
    mind blowing … loved it
    Davin Chase
    Wow there little honey. Block-chain doesn’t guarantee a democracy. Nor will it guarantee decentralization at least as far as who controls it. I fine example is ripple. Centralized, non-democratic.And how can anyone talk about the fact that every single cyber-penny you make will be tracked and audited as a good thing? This is starting to sound like cyber slavery.
    I’m interested in blockchain technology to apply as control departure of each “Owndated Webquantum” creation in Economy 4G3W.
    After autocracy mankind arrived to democracy and now to block chain
    How about “Arts and Craft” industry? Do you see scope for this sector as well?
    Bc and e-coins enthusiasts are completing blind they ‘re don’t getting that BC technology is a new way of intermediaries party, called block (middle man) and just upgrades the process, instead of direct asses or STP (straight through processing) is now per to per but there’s something standing in between the Ps and that thing or things is the block or blocks so is the company that creates the blockchain. What would a bank start creating and investing in this technology ? Because they will make money of it… the hype around BC is that banks and other financials institution will end their middle man (the companies that provides prime brokerage services, clearing and custody firm will be out busines) and there is the go for many other companies…. Blocchain will distrup for sure, but is no 100% true that middle man will end. The Bitcoin and others cryptos are just hot air, they will burst any time soon enough, the disruption relies that BC will turn up many many process into a very cheap one.
    I keep hearing how decentralized blockchain is. It’s not! The developer has all the power.
    Can..we put “Fake News” on a block chain?
    Cant wait for LISK blockchain aplication platform to come out in the late 2017!
    Brilliant and short! congrats.
    Check out voteflux.org for blockchain based governance And xo1.io for blockchain based voting

    Mathew Heggem

    Excited to see how this technology impacts both the accounting profession and the arts world!
    The days of Rothchild are coming to end
    Nur Khansa
    i just wondering if this blockchain economy someday rules the world, then what would happened with people who barely have access to the computer, let alone proper internet connection to access all these things? Digital divide is still a huge problem to many developed countries…the gap within society probably will increasing despite blockchain’s capability to decentralized power
    I don’t see ride-sharing service like Uber based on the blockchain as good idea, the great thing of Uber is that the drivers are filtered by a company that issues independent contracts to the person that is looking to log in the platform and becomes a taxi driver. Blockchain can help the driver to avoid those crazy fees those companies cut them self as margin profit, but what makes secure the user experience? that the driver can be blocked from the platform for bad behavior, Ok.. but what about the driver don’t give a fuck because he uses another blockchain and getting banned from one won’t make any difference as he can be using a private platform (Uber, Lyft) or another BC network? the things of ride sharing on blockchain is an HOTair, it will fail because you cannot policy and interview all the contracts operating in the blockchain by a network of 5-star givers (users) that it’s just childish and wishful thinking, it will be a mess. And what about hacking? blockchain relying on the user device to store data (and runs the block) so what if someone just put virus (like WannaCry) that spread on many phones on the network and shut down the platform for few minutes? the blockchain in this scenario will be realizing the trolls (the crazy pervert to do the fuck they want with the riders) is too much complication, and is not secure… I don’t know I still no trust blockchain in that way… it needs some form of 3dr party with some responsible limited liability Blockchain sound awesome for another thing like finance but few other is not necessary because the trust… you trust the Uber driver because he/she is no just cab driver, they are people with that gets contract for private corporation that makes sure he qualifies and can be persecuted if something goes pretty wrong with this independent contractor no just banning the independent contractor for having less than 4 stars.
    That blockchain tech could replace lots of areas in our society which is smart city might necessary. A Hongkonger.
    – Smart Home’s currency and local smart contracts between familly members – Payment for home’s appliances usage – servitization – Drone as a Butler – data scanning, decision making – 3D printed flying vacuum cleaners for fast room’s cleaning
    Hey does anyone know a good/ reliable website to do research on this topic? -blockchain -different currencies?
    Disturbing the mass corruption of incarceration the un hide able industry of enslavment and mass incarseration, U.K. now the tuna round up that has swept the streets and family’s homes world wide.

    jp photon

    circles seems to have no logo yet, the logo you showed is for a different company called circle

    Ah shitty work of the future where the employer is in even better position. You will have to have at least 2 master degrees and speak 3 languages. Wonder who will pay all that education… P. S. English is my third language before insults start….
    What about food production and supply chains ?
    I recognize these voices from the interviews with Vinay Gupta.
    This is all amazing, but a random cme or emp will disrupt everything dealing with anything and everything digital, so no matter what make sure to have something that’s physical and can be used in a person to person transactions no matter what the rest of the world is doing, if you can’t literaly hold it in your hand it equals to nothing after any kind of disaster happens, but that’s just my thoughts on this subject. Like any kind of investment, try to diversify and get the best of all possibilities and outcomes.
    Serious question… Was it a woman or a young boy who voiced this video?
    screenshotted this at 184k views, waiting for it to turn into millions in a few years time
    why are the banks investing in it? so what? we don’t need them to, its here now and many other technologies such x11 dash coin. it will work fine without the banks this is after all the whole point of this technology is to take the power away they once had to enslave people through debt obligations.

    READING ALL the Comments on Youtube Can Really give you the complete insight !

  • Stratis Platform the Most Advanced Blockchain?

    Courstsey: Steemit

    Ethereum really brought cryptographic money into the mainstream when Ether (the name for Ethereum’s token) surged from under $12 a token to over $200 a token in under 6 months, with tops over $400.

    Be that as it may, Ethereum is by all account not the only blockchain on the square. Stratis could be the most sensible blockchain stage of decision for organizations hoping to expand on as of now. The thought behind Stratis is that they are a BaaS (Blockchain as a Service) supplier. Basically, empowering individuals and organizations to get their very own private blockchain as opposed to building one sans preparation, utilizing Stratis’ innovation.

    Stratis’ innovation uses C# and .net from Microsoft. The Microsoft cooperation was a brilliant move to give Stratis something solid to separate themselves to Ethereum. Stratis is not an immediate contender to Ethereum, truth be told, you could consider them complimentary blockchain organizations as they do diverse things. Much the same as Google and Amazon, both halfway offer a similar space however have distinctive plans of action and are both effective

    Stratis additionally happens to have been the greatest development of a digital money since ICO (intial coin advertising.)

    An underlying coin offering resembles a Kickstarter yet done in cryptographic money tokens, rather than money or government isused cash. As of late, organizations like Bancor, Status, TenX and others have raised 100s of a large number of dollars in a matter of days through their ICOs.

    The Stratis token which is called STRAT, had an underlying coin offering cost of $.007 USD and as of the season of composing it is $6.00 USD. That is approximately a 85,000% expansion in 1 year for early examiners.

    Why this huge 80,000% expansion in a year? A great many people trust that Stratis is the most innovatively progressed blockchain around, clear by their BaaS show where they need all choices accessible for potential clients. Stratis’ idea is to enable a client to have the capacity to come in and get any accessible blockchain innovation in one spot, without utilizing various innovation accomplices. It’s an exceptionally smart thought.

     

  • What Next For Blockchain?

     Courstsey: McKinsey

    The conversation around blockchain is changing. We’re only now starting to understand this technology’s full potential, says one executive.

    Bitcoin isn’t mainstream yet, and some skepticism of the digital currency remains. But the buzz surrounding the technology underlying it—blockchains—has started to take a different tone. Blockchain, headquartered in Luxembourg, is a company that provides a software platform for digital assets. Its product offerings are on the forefront of advancing blockchain technology. In this interview with McKinsey’s Rik Kirkland, Liana Douillet Guzmán, senior vice president for growth, discusses what areas are ripe for development and how the story is changing. An edited version of her remarks follows.

    Interview transcript

    I think it was Time magazine in maybe 1994 had a cover on the Internet, and it was all about how it was for the dark net. That was very much the Bitcoin story a year ago. I’m finding we’ve matured out of that story. People are realizing that anything can be used for illicit means. But actually, this is not the ideal thing to use for illicit means, because though it is private, it is fully traceable.

    Blockchain beyond Bitcoin

    Blockchain technology is a distributed ledger. It allows for the permanent and immutable transparent recording of data, essentially, and transactions specifically. That can be used to exchange any number of things that have value, whether that’s an actual item [or something else]. It could be tea leaves making their way to the final tea maker. Or it could be me sending you a payment person to person without the need for intermediaries.

    I think of Bitcoin as being the entry point to a digital future where everything of value can and likely will be exchanged in digital format. Central banks will look to the Bitcoin experience to build central-bank-backed digital assets.

    From an enterprise perspective, you might move away from Bitcoin specifically and take what you learn from that to apply it to other use cases. You can look at things like supply chains, where you can use blockchain technology to [trace the provenance of products], right? You can essentially assign a tag to items across the supply chain and record each movement down the chain on a blockchain.

    I think we will have private blockchains that fit into the public blockchains, similar to the way we think about the Internet and intranets. If you look back at when the Internet came out, a lot of companies took a similar path, where: “Oh, the Internet sounds interesting. We’re actually interested in intranets. We want to have this internal connectivity.” Intranets didn’t radically change our world, but they are a useful part of the ecosystem. Right? They allow our businesses to interact with one another internally and then plug into a more public domain. Ultimately, what we’re going to see is these partnerships, this collaborative process, where we have companies use private blockchains that sit atop public blockchains.

    Bitcoin for the people

    On the consumer side, if I’m being really honest, there isn’t a tremendously compelling use case for somebody like me—somebody who lives in New York, higher socioeconomic status, who’s fairly well served by the current financial system. What’s interesting is that it doesn’t mean that the system that serves me fairly well is a good system. Right? When you actually dig into the financial system as we know it today, it’s fairly antiquated. It’s primarily built on technology that was created in the 1970s.

    The thing that I find really exciting about this technology is [what it can do] not just for users like me but users across the world. Two and a half billion people across the globe are not served by the current financial system at all. That’s 1 in 12 American families. And 1 in 5 families are underserved by the current financial system. They have access to financial services, but at a tremendous cost.

    Those people have a radical use case for this technology and for Bitcoin specifically. I think about somebody who’s sending money home to the Philippines. The typical send is about $200, and the typical fee for that is $12. That’s a half day’s wage for the average person sending a cross-border payment. You can send it via Bitcoin for a couple of pennies. That’s a really meaningful use case.

    A decades-long journey

    When I first joined [Blockchain], the conversation was relegated to financial services. How are the big banks going to use this? Even that conversation was about how the big banks will use this to make their systems more efficient.

    That conversation has transitioned to “We’re creating an entirely new model here.” Even the big banks are on board with that. People really want to be a part of this conversation. And that’s the first step to this technology. The next step is “OK, we want to be a part of the conversation. What can it really do for you?” There will be cases where the answer is nothing. But there will be far more conversations where the answer is really compelling.

    One of the issues that we have as an industry is that people are talking in three- to five-year increments. I think this is a decades-long experiment. And I don’t know that I can say where I think we will be. What I can say is that I do not believe there is a single industry that will not be touched by this technology.

    When you created the Internet, there was no way to really predict Facebook. But the basis of the Internet was to connect people directly. That’s what Facebook does. Right? It’s a delivery of that promise. I think the same is true for this technology. This technology is about allowing people to own and transact their own value.

    I think that will impact identity. You think about refugees and the inability to register their identities. Well, you can do that with this. Take land titles. Haiti, when the earthquake happened—most, if not all, of the land titles in the nation were held in one building that was destroyed. You have a nation now that doesn’t have land titling. And this technology can meaningfully change that.