The 15 most beautiful Scottish islands to visit – goodhousekeeping.com

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Here at Good Housekeeping, we love relaxing on gorgeous beaches, soaking up the beauty of the worlds best natural landscapes and learning about different cultures.

But you dont always have to travel long distances for exciting experiences as weve got a wealth of stunning beaches, amazing landscapes and interesting traditions right here in the UK.

Cornwall, the Isle of Wight, the Jurassic Coast and the Isles of Scilly are home to some of our favourite British beaches, but for really remote landscapes, bracing dog walks along the shore, unique food and drink tastings and fascinating heritage, there is nowhere quite like the Scottish islands.

There are over 900 offshore isles to explore, grouped into four main clusters: the northernmost Shetland Islands, the Neolithic Orkneys and the Inner and Outer Hebrides - famous for their white-sand beaches and brilliant outdoor activities.

Visitors will also find islands in Scotland's inlets and firths and on its iconic freshwater lochs (just watch out for mythical monsters!). Yet somehow, Scotland's beautiful islands are still one of Britains best-kept secrets.

To make things easier, weve narrowed down our 15 favourite Scottish islands and all of their best bits, with how you can visit, whether you love a spot of island hopping, travelling in luxury or you're after an eco-friendly escape.

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1Mull

Located in western Scotlands Inner Hebrides, the Isle of Mull is the fourth-largest Scottish island, known for its white-tailed sea eagles, a favourite on the BBCs Coast and Springwatch, the 700-year-old Duart Castle and the colourful houses that line the waterfront of Tobermory.

This town, which is the largest on Mull and the inspiration for CBeebies Balamory, is sprinkled with pubs, eateries, specialist shops and nature trails.

You can visit on a luxury private yacht with fellow Good Housekeeping readers.

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2Islay

Islay - also known as the Queen of the Hebrides - is Scotland's whisky isle, where you can sip single malts in one of nine working distilleries.

Its also the perfect spot for bird watchers, who will be keen to see the beautiful hen harriers up on Loch Gruinart Nature Reserve and the large flocks of wild geese who visit the isle every winter on their long journey to Canada.

Top tip: its pronounced 'eye-lah'.

You can visit Islay with Good Housekeeping this summer.

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3Eigg

Although tiny Eigg is only home to 90 people, its community is also made up of marine animals and birdlife, including gorgeous Atlantic seals, minke whales, dolphins, porpoises and a variety of seabirds.

On Eigg you can climb Britains largest pitchstone ridge, watch eagles fly over dreamy white sand beaches and learn about the worlds first renewably powered electricity grid, plus its just a short sail to the town of Inverie in Loch Nevis, where you can have a drink at the most remote pub in the British Isles.

Visit Eigg on a luxury cruise with Good Housekeeping.

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4Arran

One of Scotlands most popular islands, Arran packs in the culture. Time your visit to check out one of the many cultural festivals held on the island and make sure to taste the local cheese, beer and oatcakes.

You can also while away the hours admiring artworks inspired by the island scenery at Arran Art Gallery, or taking in the magnificent period furniture, waterfall and woodlands of Brodick Castle.

Other fun activities on Arran include seeing the early Christian carvings in Kings Caves, or a walk from Arran Brewery to Glen Rosa, where you can enjoy spectacular views of the Goatfell ranges scraggy peaks.

5Lewis and Harris

Lewis and Harris are two real Scottish heritage islands. Youll still hear Gaelic spoken on the streets of Stornoway, the islands main town, and you can browse hand-woven Harris tweed clothing in the shops - perhaps what the area is most famous for.

Archaeology buffs will love the mysterious Neolithic landing stones at Callanish, which are even older than Stonehenge, and at the ancient blackhouse villages you can experience the unique Gaelic farming system of crofting.

You can visit Lewis during a cruise along the west coast of Scotland.

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6Jura

Jura gets its name from the ancient Norse word for 'deer', so its no surprise this narrow Southern Hebridean island is one of the wildest places in Scotland, where the 200-odd inhabitants are outnumbered by the local deer.

Jura is a walkers paradise and the west of the island is especially unspoilt - featuring wealth of wildlife, stunning views and a sense of total peace. Its probably why George Orwell chose Jura as the place to finish writing his bestselling novel 1984.

7Fair Isle

One of the craftiest of the Shetland Islands, Fair Isles past is interwoven with a rich history of wool, textiles and the inimitable Fair Isle technique. Fair Isle knits, with their classic geometric patterns, were made famous by the royal family back in the 20s and are still popular today.

You can learn all about the process of knitting with our sister magazine Prima. From seeing Uradale sheep on a local farm, to watching the dying process and even trying your hand at knitting in a workshop alongside experts Hazel Tindall and Kathleen Anderson, this is the perfect short break for everyone from beginners to knitting pros.

Visit the Shetlands with Prima.

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8Orkney

Weve all heard of Orkney crab. Well, theres nowhere you can have it fresher than here, in a restaurant on the craggy cliffs of Orkneys wild Atlantic Coast. But theres plenty more to do on Orkey.

Visit the UNESCO World Heritage Site to see the Standing Stones of Stenness, the Ring of Brodgar and the 5000-year-old village of Skara Brae - where remarkable dwellings appeared from beneath the sand dunes in a storm just 150 years ago. Interestingly, Gaelic was never spoken in Orkney, and locals - who speak a distinctive dialect of the Scots language - are called Orcadians.

9Skye

The Isle of Skye is on everyones bucket list, and with less foreign travel on the cards this year, we think nows the perfect time to make the trip. Skye offers spectacular sunsets over the mountains and into the sea, delicious seafood with a French twist in the Michelin-starred Loch Bay and magical hikes around the otherworldly Fairy Glen.

Portree, the isles capital, has a lovely harbour fringed by dramatic cliffs which is great to stroll around - a walk up to the Apothecarys Tower offers a view thats simply not to be missed.

Visit Skye and Scotlands West Coast gems with Good Housekeeping in July or on an East to West sailing from Edinburgh to Glasgow, both on the square-rigged sailing ship, Golden Horizon. For something more intimate, visit in autumn on a luxury yacht.

10Eriska

To arrive at this private tidal island on Scotlands West Coast you have to cross a rattling wooden-decked bridge at low tide. But its worth it. The views across Loch Linnhe and its maze of small islands are spectacular, and the blue-green hills of Appin to the North and Morvern to the South stand proud in the distance.

There are also 300 acres of private gardens on Eriska, a gorgeous coastline, wildlife including deer, otters and badgers, and a Victorian mansion which was renovated into a luxury hotel and spa. Stay for pampering, sports and leisure, and walks through the secluded grounds.

Read Good Housekeeping's review and book a stay.

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11Gigha

Tiny Gigha (pronounced 'Gee'a') is the 'Good Isle' of the Hebrides, and is owned by the islanders themselves. The community here has been growing since the island was bought by its inhabitants back in 2002.

With a warm microclimate, Gigha is perfect for holidays taking in the sandy beaches and clear turquoise seas. Achamore House, set in over 50 acres of woodland gardens, has a renowned Rhododendron and Camellia Collection and exotic plants that are beautiful year-round.

Experience island hopping in the Hebrides with Good Housekeeping.

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12Inchmurrin

Inchmurrin in Loch Lomond is the largest freshwater island in the British Isles. Now covered in woodland, it used to be a deer park owned by the Dukes of Montrose and features the atmospheric ruins of a castle.

Stay in self-catering accommodation on Inchmurrin to enjoy swims from one of its many pretty beaches and visits to the highly rated Inchmurrin bar and restaurant.

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13Hirta

Although Hirta is a UNESCO double World Heritage Site and the 'jewel in the crown' of the National Trust for Scotland, a visit to the remote St Kilda archipelago is totally dependent on the weather - which is what makes it feel all the more dramatic.

The islands are the stunning remains of a volcanic crater, where thousands of seabirds like to nest. Its also a spot known for sightings of minke whales. But its difficult to live on this exposed island. Although Hirta was inhabited for over 5,000 years, the remote island community all self-evacuated in 1930. Want to know more? Head to the tiny St Kilda museum.

Visit Hirta during Good Housekeeping's island hopping cruise in the Hebrides.

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14Inchconnachan

Another of Loch Lomonds islands, Inchconnachan is in the Trossachs National Park and has an especially unusual feature: its home to a population of wallabies - yes, those cute marsupials native to Australia and Papua New Guinea!

It turns out the eccentric Lady Arran was fond of exotic animals and introduced them to Loch Lomond, where she grew up. You can visit the island on a ferry from Luss and stay at the old coaching inn, The Winnock, which has been welcoming weary travellers passing through Loch Lomond and the Trossachs for centuries.

If youre feeling inspired to explore Scotland, browse the full list of Good Housekeeping Holidays Scottish breaks.

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The 15 most beautiful Scottish islands to visit - goodhousekeeping.com

This Entire B.C. Island Could Be Yours For Less Than $640000 – 604 Now

Its no secret that the cost of living in Vancouver is incredibly high. So high in fact, that you can buy your own island for around the same price as a typical condo in the city.

Burts Island is currently up for sale and it will set you back approximately $637,317 Canadian dollars.

You can find this hidden gem in the Bamfield Inlet within Barkley Sound on Vancouver Islands rugged west coast. The area is known as being one of the top fishing destinations in B.C.

RELATED: No Mans Land: Forbidden Places In B.C. Nobody Is Allowed To Visit

According to Private Islands Inc., the non-developed 5.3 acre island is one of the most affordable private islands on the B.C. coast.

The website states: Unlike the Georgia Strait and Inner Coast, very few private islands become available for sale on the west coast of the island.

That makes this steal of a deal even more rare.

Photo: Google Earth

Other highlights of the island include how easily accessible it is and that it features multiple choices for building sites.

With such a low cost, the potential owners would also have more of a budget to spend on building a dock and home surrounded by all the lush trees.

Where: In the Bamfield Inlet within Barkley Sound on Vancouver Island

Cost: Approximately $637,317 Canadian (listing online)

For more cool things to do and see in beautiful B.C., check out our Travel & Outdoors section.

Plan your next night out, enter contests, and stay connected.

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This Entire B.C. Island Could Be Yours For Less Than $640000 - 604 Now

St Barts to re-open its borders to vacationers on June 9 – GlobeNewswire

St Barthelemy, June 08, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Nils Dufau, the President of the St Barths Tourism Committee announced a plan today to re-open the islands borders to residents of the US and most other countries, effective June 9, 2021.

US Residents will be allowed to enter St Barts if they meet these two conditions:

For Residents of the UK & European Union

UK & European Unions residents only require a PCR test with 72 hour prior to arrival or Rapid Anti-gen test 48 hours prior to arrival

Villa rental agencies and hotels are tasked by the local government with collecting this proof of vaccination from their clients prior to arrival to verify that they meet the requirements for entry. Once a traveler arrives on St Barts they can move about freely, with no restrictions. Villa rental specialist WIMCO has summarized the requirements for entry in its St Barts travel bog.

CDC Lowers St Barts Travel Risk advisory from Level 4 to Level 1, June 7, 2021

In related news, As the COVID-19 situation evolves, the CDC is monitoring COVID-19 risk in destinations around the world and making travel recommendations. On June 7 the CDC issued new guidance on St Barts on June 7, reclassifying it as a level one the lowest level of risk.

Where to Stay in St Barts

Those visiting St Barts this summer would do well to consider renting a private villa. With spacious open-air living areas, fully equipped kitchens and private pools, travelers vacationing for the first time since the pandemic started might find staying private villa the most comfortable option. WIMCO Villas, which has operated in St. Barths for over thirty-five years, confirms that all 360 private villas it represents on the island are open and available to rent.

Most of the top restaurants on the island are open for business this summer including popular beach spots like Nikki Beach, Shellona, Lil Rock and Pearl Beach. For dinner, travelers have a wealth of options including Mayas, Tamarin, Black Ginger, Isola, Ociela and many more. Those seeking after dinner excitement will love Bagatelle, Baz Baz, Modjo and The Sky Bar.

Life on the island has returned to normal, added WIMCO president Stiles Bennet. the Islands highly regarded restaurants are open without restriction, and boutiques in Gustavia and St Jean are operating as usual.

In tandem with renting private villas, from its office on St Barts WIMCO also offers 24/7 concierge service to its clients. Families can feel secure knowing that WIMCO will outfit a villa in advance to make the arrival day less stressful. Their local WIMCO concierge team will provision a villa, deliver take-out, as well as arrange private chefs, whether for seated meals, or to prep for easy self-assembly.

About WIMCO Villas

Recently voted one of the Top Three villa rental companies in the world by the readers of Cond Nast

Traveler magazine, and featured in the New York Times, and on the Today Show, WIMCO offers a selective and personally visited collection of private villas in the Caribbean and Europe. Well-traveled Villa Specialists match clients with the right villa for their preferences and needs, and then arrange every aspect of their trip, including: booking international flights, pre-stocking groceries, and meeting guests at the airport. In addition, they can arrange rental cars, restaurant reservations, and local activities, all supported by itineraries.

WIMCOs portfolio of private villas with concierge service includes properties on eleven Caribbean islands (including St. Barths, Turks & Caicos, and Anguilla), a dozen private island resorts, and Southern Europe (including the Amalfi Coast, St. Tropez, and Mykonos). Browse villas at wimco.com or speak directly with a Villa Specialist at +1 (401) 849-8012.

WIMCO also operates a real estate sales office on St. Barths, with listings ranging from undeveloped land to spacious villa compounds. Inquiries for villa rentals or real estate sales may be sent to info@wimco.com

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St Barts to re-open its borders to vacationers on June 9 - GlobeNewswire

Celebrate World Oceans Day 2021 All Year Round At These Sustainable Luxury Resorts – Forbes

Since 2008, when the UN General Assembly passed a resolution designating June 8 as World Oceans Day, the date has reminded those around the globe of the vital significance of the ocean: covering some 70% of the planet, it produces at least 50% of the earths oxygen, is home to most of its biodiversity, and is the main source of protein for more than a billion people worldwide.

With 90% of big fish populations now depleted and 50% of coral reefs destroyed, were taking more from the ocean than can be replenishedstark realities that inform this years theme, The Ocean: Life and Livelihoods, and the UNs reassertion of the commitment necessary to achieve its Sustainable Development Goal 14Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resourcesby 2030.

For the following inimitable resorts, conserving and sustainably using the oceans resources has long been a defining mission. By booking them, youll help directly support the crucial rehabilitation of our imperiled seas.

Baros, Maldives

Baros Maldives has been a pioneer of Indian Ocean coral reef conservation and education since its ... [+] debut in 1973.

Since its opening in 1973, BarosMaldivessituated in the North Mal Atoll, just 25 minutes by speedboat from Mal International Airporthas been a pioneer of Indian Oceancoralreefconservationand education, a passion that manifests today in initiatives to improve the condition and biodiversity of its surrounding reefs. This year, Baros introduced coral cubes to encourage coral regeneration. Living coral fragments are attached with reef-safe glue to the plastic-free, reusable cubes and then placed directly on the reef, with the goal of afforesting areas damaged by crashing waves and weather events.

Guests of Baros Maldives can help preserve the region's fragile biodiversity by installing coral ... [+] cubes on damaged segments of surrounding coral reefs.

Guests of Baros can plant their own coral cubes and learn about the surrounding ecosystem. Baros resident marine biologists carefully monitor the cubes as part of the resorts conservation strategy.

If You Go: Rates at Baros Maldives start from $675 per night in a Deluxe Villa on a B&B basis, excluding taxes. For more information, visitbaros.com.

Miavana by Time + Tide, Madagascar

Nestled on a protected island with a full-time environmental team trained in wildlife monitoring and ... [+] reforestation, Miavana's approach to conservation is truly hands-on.

Surrounded by a pristine reef offering superb snorkeling and diving opportunities as well as turtle, whale, and dolphin watching, fly-fishing, and deep-sea fishing beyond the reef, Miavana by Time + Tideis a private-island hotel located on Nosy Ankao, off the northeast coast of Madagascar. With a conservation heritage dating back to 1950, the sustainability-mindedTime + Tide contributes more than $300,000 annually to community, health, education, andwildlife conservation through its Time + Tide Foundation.

Uniquely positioned on a protected island with a full-time environmental team trained in wildlife monitoring and reforestation, Miavana cultivates a truly hands-on approach to conservation. To date, its efforts include monitoring nesting sea turtles on Nosy Ankao, conducting marine and terrestrial biodiversity surveys, seabird ringing and monitoring, and championing a conservation program for crowned lemurs, an endangered species endemic to Madagascar.

If You Go:MavrosSafaris offers journeys to Madagascar from $11,384 per person based on two guests sharing, which includes three nights atMiavana, roundtriphelicopter transfers from Nosy Be, all meals,butler, selected premium wines, top-shelf spirits and bar drinks, laundry, conservation fees,selectshared activities, and roundtrip international flights to Nosy Be.

Islas Secas, Panama

Separated from mainland Panama by 20 miles of pristine ocean, Islas Secas offers guests an idyllic, ... [+] conservation-driven adventure.

Located in the Gulf of Chiriqu,theprivatelyownedIslasSecasseparated from mainland Panama by 20 miles of pristine seais an unrivaled destination for a marine-focused adventure with conservation at the fore. One of Central Americas best-kept secrets, the virtually untouched regionis home to sprawling coral reefs off PanamasruggedPacific coast, pristine beaches, and two vast, protected marine parks teeming with a plethora of underwater fauna and flora.

Designed to exist in seamless harmony with its surroundings, Islas Secas is designated an environmentally preserved protected area under Panamanian law. The privately funded Islas Secas Foundation also partners with conservation organizations to support efforts ranging from mangrove restoration to marine area protection, as well as environmental education in Chiriqu.

If You Go:RatesatIslasSecasstart from $1,500 per Casita, per night on an all-inclusive basis, including all F&B, select activities on and off-island, and road and boat transfers between the city of David Airport andIslasSecas.For more information, visitislassecas.com.

BawahReserve, Indonesia

Indonesia's Bawah Reserve is located in one of the world's most biodiverse marine environments.

An under-the-radar group of six tropical islands in Indonesia's Anambas Archipelago, BawahReserve's protected lagoons and powder-white sandsoffer guests the opportunity to explore this remote paradise while contributing to protecting its future.A pioneer ineco-friendly practices and all-encompassing marine and forest conservation, the plastic-free resort is certified by WWF Signing Blue program (an Indonesia-based WWF conservation initiative) as a five-star destination for responsible marine tourismthe first resort in Indonesia to receive this distinction.

To help protect Bawahs surrounding seas, thereservelaunched theAnambasFoundationin 2018, an independent charity whose goal is to improve the overallecosystem. The foundation works alongside local communities to educate residents about ways to combat the negative impacts of fishing and waste management.In 2020,thefoundation launched new initiatives for mangrove conservation and integrated waste management (IWM) on the surroundingAnambasIslands. Guests can also spend time with Bawahs expert marine biologists who educate during snorkeling trips and kayaking adventures.

If You Go:Rates at Bawah Reserve start from $1,980 per night for two people on a full board basis including daily spa treatments, laundry, in-room minibar, a host of land and water-based activities. For more information visitbawahreserve.com.

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Celebrate World Oceans Day 2021 All Year Round At These Sustainable Luxury Resorts - Forbes

Why agents need to have villas and private homes in their sights – TTG

Margot Estate in Corfu features with Luxury Villa Living

With villas, residences at hotels and private high-end home rentals already having been in growth mode before the pandemic, there are now so many great places to be found, whether in typical hot spots that might (eventually) make the green list this summer or more exotic options for future planning, especially for those looking for family reunion and special occasion locations.

With a growing portfolio, including the most recent addition of almost 100 properties around Cannes, onefinestay is more than happy to work with agents, opening up a top-notch little black book in the Cote dAzur for whenever France clears its amber status, and further afield too.

Our villa bookings have held up over the last year, and this year are stronger than ever; we are also seeing our average booking value rise, says Amanda Dyjecinski, chief brand and marketing officer for onefinestay. Services such as a helicopter ride to a private island for lunch and in-villa services such as celebration dinners have also become increasingly popular, as guests still want indulgent experiences, while limiting contact with others.

Seeing the way the market was moving, Relais & Chateaux has just launched a villa portfolio of its own too, presenting 500 villas across 30 countries, from grand palazzos on Mediterranean islands to a cliff-top cabin in Sri Lanka. The range is fully searchable online by destination or holiday interest, such as beachside, private pools, call of the wild or wine lovers. And agents can access the range via a dedicated section of the website, or 24/7 via a call to the global reservations team.

Now, more than ever, our guests value personal space, and our collection of incredible villas can give them confidence and peace of mind without compromising on hospitality, says Philippe Gombert, president of Relais & Chateaux. Our villa guests can expect the same level of refined service as if they were staying in one of our hotels how much they want and when is entirely up to them. This is an essential component of our ability to evolve and thrive as we begin to think beyond the pandemic.

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Why agents need to have villas and private homes in their sights - TTG

Privacy Is the New Luxury: 5 Caribbean Destinations Offering Ultra-Luxe Experiences – Yahoo Finance

The last year has brought challenges and changes to the travel landscape, particularly luxury, but the concerted efforts and solution-oriented approach that the Caribbean region executed has been incredibly impactful and dynamic as we look ahead, together.

While each island nation has developed unique protocols and strategies to help maintain a healthy and safe lifestyle, the collective region has had a consistency in messaging that can and should be directly linked back to the recent growth in inquiries, web visits and bookings. At The Hartling Group, we already have seen a number of sold out weeks in 2021 and a promising forecast for the summer and fall ahead, a welcome change from 2020 and a positive outlook in travel trends moving forward.

What the Caribbean offers is a diverse collection of exceptionally private escapes that are easily accessible from the U.S., which in the current travel climate, has been highly sought after and in line with what the high net worth traveler is looking for. Travel Age West reported that an American Express survey found 44 percentwere willing to pay more for a hotel where they could easily socially distance and 80 percent of respondents indicated that they were more likely to book a vacation to an uncrowded area or one offering private accommodations. Searches and bookings for private islands and private flights follow this same pattern.

Here are the Caribbean luxury gems that are offering the ultimate in privacy, service and experiences:

The Shore Club Turks & Caicos is the only resort on Long Bay Beach, Providenciales most pristine stretch of oceanfront real estatea less crowded and more discreet location to spend vacation or extended time away. Alongside the 106 guest rooms and suites, four pools, four dining venues, a wellness center and Dune Spa, the six private estate villas are the standout accommodations for exclusive escapes. With private plunge pools, personal beach access, stocked kitchens and even underground tunnel access, the stand-alone villas embody the best of indoor-outdoor living. They are the most sought after in the Caribbean and have hosted celebrities like actress Chrissy Metz and comedian Tracy Morgan. The resort itself offers direct access to the beach and a variety of activities like paddleboarding, kayaking and boat excursions.

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Jade Mountain in St. Lucia is known for its three-walled, open-air sanctuaries that are accessible by private bridges that extend from the main resort. The oversized suites feature private infinity pools, sweeping views of the twin Piton mountains and Caribbean Sea and 24/7 butler service. The resort offers private experiences geared towards relaxation, adventure and cultural exploration, from en suite spa treatments and learning to make signature sweets at the onsite Chocolate Lab to organic farm tours, world-class snorkeling and scuba diving to hiking the Gros Piton with a personal hiking butler who comes equipped with gourmet canaps and cold towels.

Necker Island, located in the British Virgin Islands, has reopened following a two-year closure after its destruction by Hurricane Irma. Stays on Necker Island generally require a full buy-out, which means guests have the entire place to themselves. Guests visiting in 2021 will be among the first to experience the new island following its restoration, including the brand new Bali Hi complex featuring an extended pool and outdoor lounges, as well as private pools in the individual Bali villas. Travelers to Necker get to interact with local wildlife, like lemurs, and can enjoy an abundance of water sports, like snorkeling off the shore.

Eden Roc Cap Cana in the Dominican Republic is a Relais & Chteaux property, located in the high-end gated community of Cap Cana for next level privacy. Perched on a private beach, the property offers travelers an ultra-luxe boutique Caribbean experience. The 30,000-acre luxury resort is home to luxury accommodations (from multi-bed villas with private pools to beachfront suites), several dining destinations that celebrate regional produce, a brand-new spa and wellness experience and family-friendly programming.

The Ocean Club, a Four Seasons Resort, located on Paradise Island, Bahamas, is the ultimate destination for those seeking an ultra-luxe and private retreat. Some of the most sought after accommodations include the three- and four-bedroom beachfront villa residences that offer the glamour and luxury for which the resort is known. For an extended stay option, the new Home by The Ocean Club is a home-away-from-home concept designed to embody all the aspects of a luxury home with personalized pre-arrival designs (including family picture frames and decor).

Karen S. Whitt is the VP of Marketing for The Hartling Group (which owns and operates three Turks & Caicos luxury properties). She is also a longtime board member for the Caribbean Travel + Hotel Association and an award-winning former GM.

The post Privacy Is the New Luxury: 5 Caribbean Destinations Offering Ultra-Luxe Experiences appeared first on Worth.

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Privacy Is the New Luxury: 5 Caribbean Destinations Offering Ultra-Luxe Experiences - Yahoo Finance

Be the ruler of your own island on BC’s Sunshine Coast for just over $1 million – BC News – Castanet.net

Bob Kronbauer/Vancouver is Awesome - Jun 7, 2021 / 10:09 am | Story: 336203

Photo: LandQuest

As the B.C. real estate market continues to heat up and people start to look farther afield for property to invest in, one Lower Mainland real estate company is offering a rural escape that could see you be the owner of your own island.

From tiny parcels of land for $40,000 to semi-remote 10,000-acre cattle ranches, LandQuest Realty bills itself as "The Source' for Oceanfront, Lakefront, Islands, Ranches, Resorts & Land in British Columbia."

Among its listings is a two-and-a-half acre private island a few minutes from Saltery Bay on the Sunshine Coast, just 30 minutes from the town of Powell River.

Listed at $1,089,000, Dragonfly Island has what LandQuest is calling a small "starter cabin" and a dock, and more than enough room for a nicer, more permanent structure.

It has "panoramic seascapes" looking out onto Texada and other islands, as well as lots of trees, including one "beautiful gnarled mature Arbutus tree... found outcropping on the ledge of the south eastern tip bordering this site."

"Presenting various resourceful attributes, the Island's surroundings gift abundant oyster beds, clams, salmon, cod and prawn fishing," the listing adds.

In the heady atmosphere of Vancouver real estate, $1 million puts buyers in teardown territory, making this island an attractive option.

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Be the ruler of your own island on BC's Sunshine Coast for just over $1 million - BC News - Castanet.net

This Riviera-inspired island resort will be the ultimate party hotspot – What’s On

The incredible island is just a 20-minute boat ride from Dubai

Ever fancied visiting the ultra-chic French Riviera, home to Monaco, Nice, Cannes and St. Tropez, but dont fancy the seven hour-plus flight from the UAE? What if we told you that you could get a slice of all that Mediterranean action on an island just a 20-minute boat ride from Dubai?

Say hello to the Cote dAzur Resort which can be found on the excitingThe Heart of Europe development on The World Islands. This incredible new resort, decked out in no less than 60 hues of the rainbow, is set to be the ultimate new party hotspot when it opens, slated to be later on in 2021.

The resort is set to reflect the vibrant French Riviera port cities, with each 220-room hotel being named after each: Monaco, Nice, Cannes and St Tropez. The hotels will be connected by four lagoon swimming pools which join together to form one gigantic waterway eight times larger than an olympic swimming pool.

overseer

Youll reach the resort by boat, where youll walk up a wooden pier to be greeted with arrival drinks, reminiscent of the signature arrival to the Maldives. An expansive golden beach stretches out ahead of you, dotted with blue and green deck chairs, with the brightly coloured hotels beyond.

The five-star resort will boast six stunning restaurants (including a luxury champagne and piano bar), a pool and beach club, with fiveswimming pools on the sea front, including private pools, luxury beach cabanas, entertainment area and games room, fitness facilities and a squash court.

The World Islands is a one-of-a-kind project, and one developed in line with HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Ruler of Dubais vision for the future of Dubais tourism sector. A large part of this development is The Heart of Europe a Dhs18.3 billion fully sustainable project comprising of seven distinct islands.

Keep this one on your radar its going to be big

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This Riviera-inspired island resort will be the ultimate party hotspot - What's On

The Impact of an All NOVA Democratic Ticket This Fall – WVTF

Democrats are heading into the fall campaign cycle with a ticket full of northern Virginia candidates.

Michael Pope reports that might shape the election dynamics.

Now that Democrats have their candidates for the fall election, Republicans are boasting that they have the most diverse statewide ticket in Virginia history. The GOP ticket includes candidates from Hampton Roads and northern Virginia, as well as a Black woman and a son of Cuban immigrants.

But David Ramadan at George Mason University's Schar School says Republicans have lost the ability to invoke identity politics.

"That would sell if the Republicans were not selling white supremacy and were not selling white nationalism," Ramadan says. "Minorities are not going to vote for Republicans period because of what they saw in the last 10 years."

Democratic strategist Ben Tribbett says Democrats will be facing a problem for the rest of the election cycle. Terry McAuliffe, Hala Ayala and Mark Herring are all from northern Virginia.

"Typically statewide elections tend to be determined in Hampton Roads, and Republicans have one candidate from Hampton Roads but all three have ties to Hampton Roads," Tribbett explains. "And so, they have more geographic balance. I think that's more important than the other diversity that the Republicans are trying to highlight."

Some Democrats say they're worried that Republicans can go across the state and brand them as the party of northern Virginia; potentially costing them votes in key parts of the state.On the other hand, northern Virginias huge population is increasingly influential in elections.

This report, provided byVirginia Public Radio, was made possible with support from theVirginia Education Association.

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The Impact of an All NOVA Democratic Ticket This Fall - WVTF

Rev. William Barber Calls For Restructuring U.S. Policies To Root Out Racism, Poverty – Here And Now

There are two times in U.S. history when the government saw the mistreatment of Black Americans as something we could no longer tolerate: The First Reconstruction followed the Civil War and the Second Reconstruction was the Civil Rights movement.

For years, Rev. William Barber has been calling for a Third Reconstruction a sweeping effort from the federal government to dismantle racist policies and structures to reimagine American society for the betterment of us all. This idea has gained traction over the last year.

Barber is co-chair of the Poor Peoples Campaign, president of Repairers of the Breach, and author of the book "The Third Reconstruction: How a Moral Movement is Overcoming the Politics of Division and Fear."

In his work, Barber once posed the question, what is the cost of inequality? In the U.S., 140 million people live in poverty 43% of the nations population, according to the Poor Peoples Campaign.

Barber believes there's not a scarcity of resources, but a scarcity of political consciousness. The U.S. has the capacity to give Americans health insurance, for example, which would give the country a boost, he says.

We know every time corporations want money, they get the tax cut, he says. But poor and low wealth people get the short end of the stick and it's hurting this nation.

This transformation requires more than a single bill, agenda or political power, though some elements of what Barber pushes for are included in the Biden administrations most recent measures taking on systemic ills.

The Poor People Campaign brought 35 people poor and low wealth folks, public health experts, environmentalists, economists, lawyers to meet with Bidens policy team before the inauguration, Barber says. The group laid out a 14 point plan on establishing justice in order to heal the nation.

Number one, we need living wages, he says. We need health care for all. We need infrastructure that's targeted toward poor and low wealth communities and infrastructure that addresses climate change. We said we needed restoration of the Voting Rights Act.

Barber is glad to see some of these asks moving forward but questions remain about pushing these policies all the way through. And the campaign doesnt think the dollar amount in Bidens infrastructure bill is enough.

Barber is working with Democratic Reps. Pramila Jayapal and Barbara Lee to pass a resolution that would realize at least one goal of the Third Reconstruction ending poverty in the U.S.

The bill explains how to end poverty and why making these investments will benefit the nation in the long run even if it means some deficit spending now, he says. The plan to fully address poverty includes a living wage, universal health care, permanent earned income and child tax credits.

Barber pushed Walmart to embrace an Employee Safety and Wages Initiative. But the company voted against the plan, saying it already has proper health protocols and offers workers two weeks paid leave for COVID-19 related reasons.

Walmarts decision shows why the country needs reconstruction and policy shifts, he says. He believes corporations should pay workers living wages and provide health care because its the right thing to do, both economically and morally, but federal laws are needed to ensure compliance.

He recalls the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: It may be true that the law cannot make a man love me, but it can keep him from lynching me, and I think thats pretty important also.

One major part of all of this is the need for bipartisan support in a divided nation. The division stems from, as King said, the ruling classs fear of poor people of all races joining together and using their voting power to change the economic architecture of this nation, Barber says.

A study with Columbia University showed that new low-income voters could flip election results in 15 states.

In his recent op-ed in The New York Times, Barber reminds us that the generation of kids who watched the case of the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in 2012 are now adults who are mobilizing this week, which marks the anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

The U.S. cant wait 20 years for this next reconstruction, he says, because our democracy will implode without it.

The solution starts at the state level and requires building multiracial coalitions, he says.

You can't have coalitions of Black folks over here fight for voting rights, white people over here fighting against environmental injustice. They all intersect, he says. And we must deal with interlocking injustices with an intersectional moral fusion coalition.

And Barber believes the coalition is forming. The Poor Peoples Campaign had to make its planned march on Washington virtual last June because of COVID-19 and 2.7 million people tuned in to join the fight, he says.

But it can't be too long because if we don't get a handle on the issues of systemic racism, systemic poverty, ecological devastation, denial of health care and this false moral narrative of white supremacy and religious nationalism, it will undermine this democracy in ways that may not be able to be fixed, he says. The reconstruction must be now.

Ciku Theuri produced and edited this interview for broadcast withJill Ryan.Allison Haganadapted it for the web.

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Rev. William Barber Calls For Restructuring U.S. Policies To Root Out Racism, Poverty - Here And Now

Two Books on the Bizarreness of Texas – The New York Times

Forget the Alamo divides neatly in half. The first half recounts the events leading up to and through the fiasco at the Alamo, and often reads like a boys story of action and adventure, although there is an absence of heroes in the factual version of the tale. For example, Jim Bowie, the knife-wielding pioneer of legend, is revealed to be a slave trader, a swindler and a murderer; William Barret Buck Travis is a racist syphilitic who writes in his diary that he has bedded 56 women; the coonskin-capped Davy Crockett emerges as a former U.S. congressman and self-promoter in thrall to his own large ego. Their defense of the fort is not just foolhardy, its weirdly suicidal. They can no longer be the holy trinity of Texas, nor can the Alamo be the Shrine of Texas Liberty, the authors proclaim with complete justification, drawing their own Travis-like line in the sand.

The books second half is a more discursive examination of the ways various groups have exploited the myth of the Alamo, weaponizing it as propaganda, as Sam Houston did when he cried out to his troops to remember the Alamo, or invoking the myth in defense of white supremacy, as was the case with Texas History Movies, which was in fact a popular racist comic strip that ran in The Dallas Morning News in the late 1920s; it was later published in book form and for decades distributed free to all Texas seventh graders. Shockingly little serious academic study of this touchy subject occurred until the 1980s.

Predictably, Hollywood played a villainous role in spreading the false narrative of the old fort, notably through John Wayne, who used the subject to indulge in his own hypermasculine version of nationalism. In 1960 Wayne produced, directed and starred in a nearly three-hour $12 million epic called, fittingly, The Alamo, in which he played Davy Crockett. The result was, in Texas parlance, horse pucky and a bomb at the box office. The book ends with an amusing account of the states farcical effort to build a $450 million museum to house a collection of Alamo antiquities compiled by the British pop star Phil Collins that includes an ammo pouch once used by Crockett to load Old Betsy and a Bowie knife, allegedly bought for $1.5 million. The authors make a convincing case that the most important items are of dubious, if not fraudulent, provenance.

In A Single Star and Bloody Knuckles, Bill Minutaglio, a Texas journalist with a saddlebag of books to his name, takes a decade-by-decade look at Texas politics, placing particular emphasis on events at the Statehouse and its succession of unlikely governors, but digressing to include other key players in the story like Sam Rayburn and Barbara Jordan. He begins with General Order No. 3, announcing Emancipation in Galveston at the end of the Civil War, and moves through to the present. Smoothly tackling this near-herculean research task, he keeps the sweat stains from showing and writes in prose as cool as a trout stream.

Texas, from its earliest days, championed a form of swashbuckling free enterprise that minimized the regulatory touch of government. Even today, the Legislature convenes for only a maximum of 140 days every other year. Business oversight and federal interference have been anathema from the outset. In the immediate post-Civil War years, plantation owners pivoted toward sharecropping and a patrn system that turned freed slaves into impoverished indentured servants with no ability to vote. Further crimes against humanity appeared later in the form of the cruel convict-leasing system that was used to build the roads and railroads across the states vast interior. And then big oil gurgles up into the story: A maze of miles of pipes, a metallic Oz of roaring tanks, flares, hoses, storage tanks and train tracks, was growing on the shallow bays and marshes that a few decades earlier had been mostly devoid of human presence, except for the crab collectors and oyster men pushing their flat-bottomed boats past the great blue herons.

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Two Books on the Bizarreness of Texas - The New York Times

Opinion: Why we don’t need to meet in the middle but we can’t allow political polarization to fester unchecked – Times Record News

Author's Opinion:Our country is stricken with a plague ofpolarizationthatsso dangerous its deadly. Here's how to build bridges.

What we need is a revolution.

Youve heard it before from the right, from the left and everything in between. And who am I to say theyre wrong?

In fact, theyre right. Our country is stricken with a plague ofpolarizationthatsso dangerous its deadly.

Now is not the time to go soft, failing to address what truly ails us just for the sake of afalse semblance of civility.

No, that wont get us anywhere. But what I found inwriting a new book aboutAmericans who are spanning gaps between people of differenceis that these bridge builders are pursuing their own unique form of revolution something that looks a lot different than what we're used to.

Nathan Bomey's book, "Bridge Builders: Bringing People Together in a Polarized Age," available in May 21, 2021.(Photo: Polity)

Their revolution is predicated on forming relationships between people who aren't like each other under the premise that we won't overcome our deepest divides until we can see the world through each other's eyes.

Bridge builderssee solutions where the rest of us see problems.And they see nuance where the rest of us see caricature.

Bridge builders are a rare species.And we have a lot to learn from them. But in writing this book, I spent nearly as much time deconstructing myths about the metaphorical process of bridge building than I did on elucidating the lessons bridge builders can teach us.

Here are five misconceptions about the act of bridge building and the role it can play in tearing down the walls that divide us.

The reality is quite the opposite. Bridge building is countercultural. Our cultural instinct is to cling to people who are like us. Its human nature to gravitate toward tribalism.

But its revolutionary to form relationships with people who arent like you. Its revolutionary to engage in deep, meaningful conversation with people who think differently, pray differently or look differently and, on that last point, Im speaking primarily about white people, like me, who often dont get to know people of color.

Valarie Kaur, author of the dynamic book See No Stranger and founder of theRevolutionary Love Project, put it this way: You are a part of me I do not yet know.

Its revolutionary to consider the possibility that your destiny is intertwined with mine or, as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther KingJr.famously put it, We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality,tied in a single garment of destiny.

Like it or not, we need each other to achieve progress.

The pursuit of unity is admirable, but achieving it is not necessary to begin bridging our divides.

We will always have conflict, and thats OK. In fact, its necessary.

What we need isto reestablish a degree of social trust in the midst of conflict.That involves demonstrating basic respect for each other as humans.It often means listening first and speaking second.

David Blankenhorn co-founder of the nonprofitBraver Angels, which is teaching Americans of difference how to communicate told me that the goal of his group isnt to get people to agree on policy.

Were not trying to do away with conflict, Blankenhorn said. Most progress would not have occurred without conflict. The only way you get rid of conflict is to get rid of freedom. Free people disagree, often passionately, and thats normal and healthy. The question is, how do you deal with it?

Think of it like this: Friction generates fire. Fire can create, or it can destroy. The goalof bridge buildingis to make sure its a refiners fire, gradually burning away the imperfections of hate, distrust, callousness and distance.

I like the way author Amanda Ripley put it in her new book, High Conflict: We need some heat to survive.

Perhaps youve heard the catchy pop song The Middle.

Oh baby, why don't you just meet me in the middle?! it goes.

Well, with apologies to Zedd, Maren Morris & Grey, I can report that bridge builders dont always meet in the middle.

As it turns out, even real-life bridge builders often dont build their structures from both sides of the divide to meet at a halfway point. In fact, they often use a process called incremental launching, wherein the bridge deck is preassembled offsite and then effectively pushed from one side to the other.

What does that mean for metaphorical bridge building? It means that sometimes one side is right, and the other side is wrong.

Sometimes perhaps most of the time there is no moral equivalence on the issues that divide us. Yet that doesnt mean we should stop trying to build bridges.

Clearly there are exceptions. There is no excuse for hate, and we cannot and must not tolerate it.

But many of our deepest divides fall in the gray middle ground of perspective.Which leads me to my next point.

Former Rep. Bob Inglis talks about climate change with James Eskridge, the Republican mayor of Tangier Island, Virginia, in August 2017.(Photo: Price Atkinson)

There is room for selfishness in the process of bridge building. That is, the ultimate goal is to achieve some form of policy change in many cases. Perhaps you want to achieve progress on climate change, for example.

OK. Well, building bridges with people on the other side of that issue doesnt require you to compromise your identity or your principles.

What it requires, however, is for you to consider the perspective of people on the other side of the fence and to help them see how your proposed solution fits within their values. Sure, maybe in the long run, they might change their personal identity and come over to your side. But the better bet is that they wont change who they are for the sole purpose of yielding to your point of view.

Bob Inglis, a former South Carolina Republican congressman who is now pursuing action on climate change through his nonprofitrepublicEn, is reaching his fellow conservative Christians by speaking their language of accountability and casting biblical principles in a new light. Hes showing how conservatives dont have to change the fiber of their being to embrace the need to do something meaningful about greenhouse gas emissions.

What we need to do is tell people under the tents in my tribe (that)its completely consistent with your values, he said.

Sometimes, the gaps between us seem impossibly wide. It seems like nothing will ever change.

And Americans are worried about it.In a Public Agenda/USA TODAY poll published in April as part of our Hidden Common Ground series, 44% of Americans said the countrys ability to deal with major disagreements over the next decade will get even worse than it already is.

Yet despite our disagreements, as deep as they are, there is plenty of reason to believe that people can and will change. History proves it.

In 2004, only 31% of Americans supported same-sex marriage,according to the Pew Research Center. By 2019, it was 61%.

Let that sink in. Over the course of a decade and a half, the nation's attitude on a contentious social issue changed drastically.

But I thought we were impossibly divided?

Here's the bottom line: People arent static. Even in a culture racked by toxic polarization, Americans are capable of considering the possibility that they could be wrong. They are capable of change.

For my book, I had the privilege of interviewing the Rev. Alvin Edwards, pastor ofMt. Zion First African Baptist Churchin Charlottesville, Virginia. Edwards founded theCharlottesville Clergy Collective, an interfaith group of ministerspursuing racial and religious reconciliation in that community in the wake of thedeadly clash there fueled bywhite nationalism and white supremacy in August 2017.

In spite of everything his community has endured and in spite of all the hate that Black Americans like Edwards have faced he still retains his conviction that others are capable of a turnaround.

No matter what theyve done, what their history, what their past is, I believe they can change, he told me. I have to believe that because, see, the belief that people cannot change means I cannot change.

Nathan Bomeyis a reporter for USA TODAY and the author of anew book, Bridge Builders: Bringing People Together in a Polarized Age, published byPolityand available in hardcover and e-book. You can follow him on Twitter: @NathanBomey

Read or Share this story: https://www.timesrecordnews.com/story/opinion/2021/06/06/opinion-build-bridges-overcome-polarization/7551275002/

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Opinion: Why we don't need to meet in the middle but we can't allow political polarization to fester unchecked - Times Record News

Blockchain – Wikipedia

Distributed data store for digital transactions

A blockchain is a growing list of records, called blocks, that are linked together using cryptography.[1][2][3][4] Each block contains a cryptographic hash of the previous block, a timestamp, and transaction data (generally represented as a Merkle tree). The timestamp proves that the transaction data existed when the block was published in order to get into its hash. As blocks each contain information about the block previous to it, they form a chain, with each additional block reinforcing the ones before it. Therefore, blockchains are resistant to modification of their data because once recorded, the data in any given block cannot be altered retroactively without altering all subsequent blocks.

Blockchains are typically managed by a peer-to-peer network for use as a publicly distributed ledger, where nodes collectively adhere to a protocol to communicate and validate new blocks. Although blockchain records are not unalterable as forks are possible, blockchains may be considered secure by design and exemplify a distributed computing system with high Byzantine fault tolerance.[5]

The blockchain was invented by a person (or group of people) using the name Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008 to serve as the public transaction ledger of the cryptocurrency bitcoin.[3] The identity of Satoshi Nakamoto remains unknown to date. The invention of the blockchain for bitcoin made it the first digital currency to solve the double-spending problem without the need of a trusted authority or central server. The bitcoin design has inspired other applications[3][2] and blockchains that are readable by the public and are widely used by cryptocurrencies. The blockchain is considered a type of payment rail.[6] Private blockchains have been proposed for business use but Computerworld called the marketing of such privatized blockchains without a proper security model "snake oil".[7] However, others have argued that permissioned blockchains, if carefully designed, may be more decentralized and therefore more secure in practice than permissionless ones.[4][8]

Cryptographer David Chaum first proposed a blockchain-like protocol in his 1982 dissertation "Computer Systems Established, Maintained, and Trusted by Mutually Suspicious Groups."[9] Further work on a cryptographically secured chain of blocks was described in 1991 by Stuart Haber and W. Scott Stornetta.[4][10] They wanted to implement a system wherein document timestamps could not be tampered with. In 1992, Haber, Stornetta, and Dave Bayer incorporated Merkle trees to the design, which improved its efficiency by allowing several document certificates to be collected into one block.[4][11]

The first blockchain was conceptualized by a person (or group of people) known as Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. Nakamoto improved the design in an important way using a Hashcash-like method to timestamp blocks without requiring them to be signed by a trusted party and introducing a difficulty parameter to stabilize rate with which blocks are added to the chain.[4] The design was implemented the following year by Nakamoto as a core component of the cryptocurrency bitcoin, where it serves as the public ledger for all transactions on the network.[3]

In August 2014, the bitcoin blockchain file size, containing records of all transactions that have occurred on the network, reached 20GB (gigabytes).[12] In January 2015, the size had grown to almost 30GB, and from January 2016 to January 2017, the bitcoin blockchain grew from 50GB to 100GB in size. The ledger size had exceeded 200 GiB by early 2020.[13]

The words block and chain were used separately in Satoshi Nakamoto's original paper, but were eventually popularized as a single word, blockchain, by 2016.

According to Accenture, an application of the diffusion of innovations theory suggests that blockchains attained a 13.5% adoption rate within financial services in 2016, therefore reaching the early adopters phase.[14] Industry trade groups joined to create the Global Blockchain Forum in 2016, an initiative of the Chamber of Digital Commerce.

In May 2018, Gartner found that only 1% of CIOs indicated any kind of blockchain adoption within their organisations, and only 8% of CIOs were in the short-term "planning or [looking at] active experimentation with blockchain".[15] For the year 2019 Gartner reported 5% of CIOs believed blockchain technology was a 'game-changer' for their business.[16]

A blockchain is a decentralized, distributed, and oftentimes public, digital ledger consisting of records called blocks that is used to record transactions across many computers so that any involved block cannot be altered retroactively, without the alteration of all subsequent blocks.[3][17] This allows the participants to verify and audit transactions independently and relatively inexpensively.[18] A blockchain database is managed autonomously using a peer-to-peer network and a distributed timestamping server. They are authenticated by mass collaboration powered by collective self-interests.[19] Such a design facilitates robust workflow where participants' uncertainty regarding data security is marginal. The use of a blockchain removes the characteristic of infinite reproducibility from a digital asset. It confirms that each unit of value was transferred only once, solving the long-standing problem of double spending. A blockchain has been described as a value-exchange protocol.[20] A blockchain can maintain title rights because, when properly set up to detail the exchange agreement, it provides a record that compels offer and acceptance.

Logically, a blockchain can be seen as consisting of several layers:[21]

Blocks hold batches of valid transactions that are hashed and encoded into a Merkle tree.[3] Each block includes the cryptographic hash of the prior block in the blockchain, linking the two. The linked blocks form a chain.[3] This iterative process confirms the integrity of the previous block, all the way back to the initial block, which is known as the genesis block.[22]

Sometimes separate blocks can be produced concurrently, creating a temporary fork. In addition to a secure hash-based history, any blockchain has a specified algorithm for scoring different versions of the history so that one with a higher score can be selected over others. Blocks not selected for inclusion in the chain are called orphan blocks.[22] Peers supporting the database have different versions of the history from time to time. They keep only the highest-scoring version of the database known to them. Whenever a peer receives a higher-scoring version (usually the old version with a single new block added) they extend or overwrite their own database and retransmit the improvement to their peers. There is never an absolute guarantee that any particular entry will remain in the best version of the history forever. Blockchains are typically built to add the score of new blocks onto old blocks and are given incentives to extend with new blocks rather than overwrite old blocks. Therefore, the probability of an entry becoming superseded decreases exponentially[23] as more blocks are built on top of it, eventually becoming very low.[3][24]:ch. 08[25] For example, bitcoin uses a proof-of-work system, where the chain with the most cumulative proof-of-work is considered the valid one by the network. There are a number of methods that can be used to demonstrate a sufficient level of computation. Within a blockchain the computation is carried out redundantly rather than in the traditional segregated and parallel manner.[26]

The block time is the average time it takes for the network to generate one extra block in the blockchain. Some blockchains create a new block as frequently as every five seconds.[27] By the time of block completion, the included data becomes verifiable. In cryptocurrency, this is practically when the transaction takes place, so a shorter block time means faster transactions. The block time for Ethereum is set to between 14 and 15 seconds, while for bitcoin it is on average 10 minutes.[28]

A hard fork is a rule change such that the software validating according to the old rules will see the blocks produced according to the new rules as invalid. In case of a hard fork, all nodes meant to work in accordance with the new rules need to upgrade their software. If one group of nodes continues to use the old software while the other nodes use the new software, a permanent split can occur.

For example, Ethereum has hard-forked to "make whole" the investors in The DAO, which had been hacked by exploiting a vulnerability in its code. In this case, the fork resulted in a split creating Ethereum and Ethereum Classic chains. In 2014 the Nxt community was asked to consider a hard fork that would have led to a rollback of the blockchain records to mitigate the effects of a theft of 50 million NXT from a major cryptocurrency exchange. The hard fork proposal was rejected, and some of the funds were recovered after negotiations and ransom payment. Alternatively, to prevent a permanent split, a majority of nodes using the new software may return to the old rules, as was the case of bitcoin split on 12 March 2013.[29]

By storing data across its peer-to-peer network, the blockchain eliminates a number of risks that come with data being held centrally.[3] The decentralized blockchain may use ad hoc message passing and distributed networking. One risk of a lack of a decentralization is a so-called "51% attack" where a central entity can gain control of more than half of a network and can manipulate that specific blockchain record at-will, allowing double-spending.[32]

Peer-to-peer blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability that computer crackers can exploit; likewise, it has no central point of failure. Blockchain security methods include the use of public-key cryptography.[33]:5 A public key (a long, random-looking string of numbers) is an address on the blockchain. Value tokens sent across the network are recorded as belonging to that address. A private key is like a password that gives its owner access to their digital assets or the means to otherwise interact with the various capabilities that blockchains now support. Data stored on the blockchain is generally considered incorruptible.[3]

Every node in a decentralized system has a copy of the blockchain. Data quality is maintained by massive database replication[34] and computational trust. No centralized "official" copy exists and no user is "trusted" more than any other.[33] Transactions are broadcast to the network using software. Messages are delivered on a best-effort basis. Mining nodes validate transactions,[22] add them to the block they are building, and then broadcast the completed block to other nodes.[24]:ch. 08 Blockchains use various time-stamping schemes, such as proof-of-work, to serialize changes.[35] Alternative consensus methods include proof-of-stake.[22] Growth of a decentralized blockchain is accompanied by the risk of centralization because the computer resources required to process larger amounts of data become more expensive.[36]

Open blockchains are more user-friendly than some traditional ownership records, which, while open to the public, still require physical access to view. Because all early blockchains were permissionless, controversy has arisen over the blockchain definition. An issue in this ongoing debate is whether a private system with verifiers tasked and authorized (permissioned) by a central authority should be considered a blockchain.[37][38][39][40][41] Proponents of permissioned or private chains argue that the term "blockchain" may be applied to any data structure that batches data into time-stamped blocks. These blockchains serve as a distributed version of multiversion concurrency control (MVCC) in databases.[42] Just as MVCC prevents two transactions from concurrently modifying a single object in a database, blockchains prevent two transactions from spending the same single output in a blockchain.[43]:3031 Opponents say that permissioned systems resemble traditional corporate databases, not supporting decentralized data verification, and that such systems are not hardened against operator tampering and revision.[37][39] Nikolai Hampton of Computerworld said that "many in-house blockchain solutions will be nothing more than cumbersome databases," and "without a clear security model, proprietary blockchains should be eyed with suspicion."[7][44]

An advantage to an open, permissionless, or public, blockchain network is that guarding against bad actors is not required and no access control is needed.[23] This means that applications can be added to the network without the approval or trust of others, using the blockchain as a transport layer.[23]

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies currently secure their blockchain by requiring new entries to include a proof of work. To prolong the blockchain, bitcoin uses Hashcash puzzles. While Hashcash was designed in 1997 by Adam Back, the original idea was first proposed by Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor and Eli Ponyatovski in their 1992 paper "Pricing via Processing or Combatting Junk Mail".

In 2016, venture capital investment for blockchain-related projects was weakening in the USA but increasing in China.[45] Bitcoin and many other cryptocurrencies use open (public) blockchains. As of April2018[update], bitcoin has the highest market capitalization.

Permissioned blockchains use an access control layer to govern who has access to the network.[46] In contrast to public blockchain networks, validators on private blockchain networks are vetted by the network owner. They do not rely on anonymous nodes to validate transactions nor do they benefit from the network effect.[citation needed] Permissioned blockchains can also go by the name of 'consortium' blockchains.[citation needed] It has been argued that permissioned blockchains can guarantee a certain level of decentralization, if carefully designed, as opposed to permissionless blockchains, which are often centralized in practice.[8]

Nikolai Hampton pointed out in Computerworld that "There is also no need for a '51 percent' attack on a private blockchain, as the private blockchain (most likely) already controls 100 percent of all block creation resources. If you could attack or damage the blockchain creation tools on a private corporate server, you could effectively control 100 percent of their network and alter transactions however you wished."[7] This has a set of particularly profound adverse implications during a financial crisis or debt crisis like the financial crisis of 200708, where politically powerful actors may make decisions that favor some groups at the expense of others,[47][48] and "the bitcoin blockchain is protected by the massive group mining effort. It's unlikely that any private blockchain will try to protect records using gigawatts of computing power it's time consuming and expensive."[7] He also said, "Within a private blockchain there is also no 'race'; there's no incentive to use more power or discover blocks faster than competitors. This means that many in-house blockchain solutions will be nothing more than cumbersome databases."[7]

The analysis of public blockchains has become increasingly important with the popularity of bitcoin, Ethereum, litecoin and other cryptocurrencies.[49] A blockchain, if it is public, provides anyone who wants access to observe and analyse the chain data, given one has the know-how. The process of understanding and accessing the flow of crypto has been an issue for many cryptocurrencies, crypto-exchanges and banks.[50][51] The reason for this is accusations of blockchain enabled cryptocurrencies enabling illicit dark market trade of drugs, weapons, money laundering etc.[52] A common belief has been that cryptocurrency is private and untraceable, thus leading many actors to use it for illegal purposes. This is changing and now specialised tech-companies provide blockchain tracking services, making crypto exchanges, law-enforcement and banks more aware of what is happening with crypto funds and fiat crypto exchanges. The development, some argue, has led criminals to prioritise use of new cryptos such as Monero.[53][54][55] The question is about public accessibility of blockchain data and the personal privacy of the very same data. It is a key debate in cryptocurrency and ultimately in blockchain.[56]

Blockchain technology can be integrated into multiple areas. The primary use of blockchains today is as a distributed ledger for cryptocurrencies, most notably bitcoin. Starting from mid-2016, Blockchains have found close operational relevance to the field of Logistics and e-votings.

There are a few operational products maturing from proof of concept by late 2016.[45] Businesses have been thus far reluctant to place blockchain at the core of the business structure.[57] Although businesses have been reluctant to fully implement blockchain, many have begun testing the technology and are conducting low-level implementation to gauge its effects on organizational efficiency.

In 2019, it was estimated that around $2.9 billion were invested in blockchain technology, which represents an 89% increase from the year prior. Additionally, the International Data Corp has estimated that corporate investment into blockchain technology will reach $12.4 billion by 2022.[58] Furthermore, According to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), the second-largest professional services network in the world, blockchain technology has the potential to generate an annual business value of more than $3 trillion by 2030. PwC's estimate is further augmented by a 2018 study that they have conducted, in which PwC surveyed 600 business executives and determined that 84% have at least some exposure to utilizing blockchain technology, which indicts a significant demand and interest in blockchain technology.[59]

Individual use of blockchain technology has also greatly increased since 2016. According to statistics in 2020, there were more than 40 million blockchain wallets in 2020 in comparison to around 10 million blockchain wallets in 2016.[60]

Most cryptocurrencies use blockchain technology to record transactions. For example, the bitcoin network and Ethereum network are both based on blockchain. On 8 May 2018 Facebook confirmed that it would open a new blockchain group[61] which would be headed by David Marcus, who previously was in charge of Messenger. Facebook's planned cryptocurrency platform, Libra (now known as Diem), was formally announced on June 18, 2019.[62][63]

The criminal enterprise Silk Road, which operated on Tor, utilized cryptocurrency for payments, some of which the US federal government has seized through research on the blockchain and forfeiture.[64]

Governments have mixed policies on the legality of their citizens or banksowning cryptocurrencies. China implements blockchain technology in several industries including a national digital currency which launched in 2020.[65][66] In order to strengthen their respective currencies, Western governments including the European Union and the United States have initiated similar projects.[67]

Blockchain-based smart contracts are proposed contracts that can be partially or fully executed or enforced without human interaction.[68] One of the main objectives of a smart contract is automated escrow. A key feature of smart contracts is that they do not need a trusted third party (such as a trustee) to act as an intermediary between contracting entities -the blockchain network executes the contract on its own. This may reduce friction between entities when transferring value and could subsequently open the door to a higher level of transaction automation.[69] An IMF staff discussion reported that smart contracts based on blockchain technology might reduce moral hazards and optimize the use of contracts in general. But "no viable smart contract systems have yet emerged." Due to the lack of widespread use their legal status is unclear.[70][71]

According to Reason, many banks have expressed interest in implementing distributed ledgers for use in banking and are cooperating with companies creating private blockchains,[72][73][74] and according to a September 2016 IBM study, this is occurring faster than expected.[75]

Banks are interested in this technology because it has potential to speed up back office settlement systems.[76]

Banks such as UBS are opening new research labs dedicated to blockchain technology in order to explore how blockchain can be used in financial services to increase efficiency and reduce costs.[77][78]

Berenberg, a German bank, believes that blockchain is an "overhyped technology" that has had a large number of "proofs of concept", but still has major challenges, and very few success stories.[79]

In December 2018, Bitwala launched Europe's first regulated blockchain banking solution that enables users to manage both their bitcoin and euro deposits in one place with the safety and convenience of a German bank account. The bank account is hosted by the Berlin-based solarisBank.[80]

Mojaloop is designed to deliver financial support to people living in areas underserved by banks. It of use to migrants sending remittances[81]

Tokenization of stocks is also occurring[82] and some cryptocurrency exchanges are already offering so-called "stock tokens".[83]

The blockchain has also given rise to Initial coin offerings (ICOs) as well as a new category of digital asset called Security Token Offerings (STOs), also sometimes referred to as Digital Security Offerings (DSOs).[84] STO/DSOs may be conducted privately or on a public, regulated stock exchange and are used to tokenize traditional assets such as company shares as well as more innovative ones like intellectual property, real estate, art, or individual products. A number of companies are active in this space providing services for compliant tokenization, private STOs, and public STOs.

A blockchain game CryptoKitties, launched in November 2017.[85] The game made headlines in December 2017 when a cryptokitty character - an in-game virtual pet - was sold for more than US$100,000.[86] CryptoKitties illustrated scalability problems for games on Ethereum when it created significant congestion on the Ethereum network with about 30% of all Ethereum transactions being for the game.[87]

CryptoKitties also demonstrated how blockchains can be used to catalog game assets (digital assets).[88]

Blockchain is also being used in peer-to-peer energy trading.[89][90][91]

There have been several different efforts to employ blockchains in supply chain management.

Blockchain could be used in detecting counterfeits by associating unique identifiers to products, documents and shipments, and storing records associated to transactions that cannot be forged or altered.[98][99] It is however argued that blockchain technology needs to be supplemented with technologies that provide a strong binding between physical objects and blockchain systems.[100] The EUIPO established an Anti-Counterfeiting Blockathon Forum, with the objective of "defining, piloting and implementing" an anti-counterfeiting infrastructure at the European level.[101][102] The Dutch Standardisation organisation NEN uses blockchain together with QR Codes to authenticate certificates.[103]

In response to the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, The Wall Street Journal reported that Ernst & Young was working on a blockchain to help employers, governments, airlines and others keep track of people who have had antibody tests and could be immune to the virus. Hospitals and vendors also utilized a blockchain for needed medical equipment. Additionally, blockchain technology was being used in China to speed up the time it takes for health insurance payments to be paid to health-care providers and patients.[104]

There are several different efforts to offer domain name services via blockchain. These domain names can be controlled by the use of a private key, which purport to allow for uncensorable websites. This would also bypass a registrar's ability to suppress domains used for fraud, abuse, or illegal content.[105]

Namecoin is a cryptocurrency that supports the ".bit" top-level domain (TLD). Namecoin was forked from bitcoin in 2011. The .bit TLD is not sanctioned by ICANN, instead requiring an alternative DNS root.[105] As of 2015, it was used by 28 websites, out of 120,000 registered names.[106] Namecoin was dropped by OpenNIC in 2019, due to malware and potential other legal issues.[107] Other blockchain alternatives to ICANN include The Handshake Network,[106] EmerDNS, and Unstoppable Domains.[105]

Specific TLDs include ".eth", ".luxe", and ".kred", which are associated with the Ethereum blockchain through the Ethereum Name Service (ENS). The .kred TLD also acts an alternative to conventional cryptocurrency wallet addresses, as a convenience for transferring cryptocurrency.[108]

Blockchain technology can be used to create a permanent, public, transparent ledger system for compiling data on sales, tracking digital use and payments to content creators, such as wireless users[109] or musicians.[110] The Gartner 2019 CIO Survey reported 2% of higher education respondents had launched blockchain projects and another 18% were planning academic projects in the next 24 months.[111] In 2017, IBM partnered with ASCAP and PRS for Music to adopt blockchain technology in music distribution.[112] Imogen Heap's Mycelia service has also been proposed as blockchain-based alternative "that gives artists more control over how their songs and associated data circulate among fans and other musicians."[113][114]

New distribution methods are available for the insurance industry such as peer-to-peer insurance, parametric insurance and microinsurance following the adoption of blockchain.[115][116] The sharing economy and IoT are also set to benefit from blockchains because they involve many collaborating peers.[117] Online voting is another application of the blockchain.[118][119] The use of blockchain in libraries is being studied with a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services.[120]

Other designs include:

Currently, there are at least four types of blockchain networks public blockchains, private blockchains, consortium blockchains and hybrid blockchains.

A public blockchain has absolutely no access restrictions. Anyone with an Internet connection can send transactions to it as well as become a validator (i.e., participate in the execution of a consensus protocol).[124][self-published source?] Usually, such networks offer economic incentives for those who secure them and utilize some type of a Proof of Stake or Proof of Work algorithm.

Some of the largest, most known public blockchains are the bitcoin blockchain and the Ethereum blockchain.

A private blockchain is permissioned.[46] One cannot join it unless invited by the network administrators. Participant and validator access is restricted. To distinguish between open blockchains and other peer-to-peer decentralized database applications that are not open ad-hoc compute clusters, the terminology Distributed Ledger (DLT) is normally used for private blockchains.

A hybrid blockchain has a combination of centralized and decentralized features.[125] The exact workings of the chain can vary based on which portions of centralization decentralization are used.

A sidechain is a designation for a blockchain ledger that runs in parallel to a primary blockchain.[126][127] Entries from the primary blockchain (where said entries typically represent digital assets) can be linked to and from the sidechain; this allows the sidechain to otherwise operate independently of the primary blockchain (e.g., by using an alternate means of record keeping, alternate consensus algorithm, etc.).[128]

With the increasing number of blockchain systems appearing, even only those that support cryptocurrencies, blockchain interoperability is becoming a topic of major importance. The objective is to support transferring assets from one blockchain system to another blockchain system. Wegner[129] stated that "interoperability is the ability of two or more software components to cooperate despite differences in language, interface, and execution platform". The objective of blockchain interoperability is therefore to support such cooperation among blockchain systems, despite those kinds of differences.

There are already several blockchain interoperability solutions available.[130] They can be classified in three categories: cryptocurrency interoperability approaches, blockchain engines, and blockchain connectors.

The IETF has a recent Blockchain-interop working group that already produced the draft of a blockchain interoperability architecture.[131]

Blockchain mining the peer-to-peer computer computations by which transactions are validated and verified requires a significant amount of energy. The Bank for International Settlements criticized the public proof-of-work blockchains for high energy consumption.[132][133][134] In a 2021 study conducted at Cambridge University, researchers determined that Bitcoin (at 121.36 terawatt-hours per year) uses more electricity annually than Argentina (at 121 TWh) and the Netherlands (at 108.8 TWh).[135] According to Digiconomist, one bitcoin transaction requires about 707.6 kilowatt-hours of electrical energy, the amount of energy the average U.S. household consumes in 24 days.[136]

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen called Bitcoin "an extremely inefficient way to conduct transactions", saying "the amount of energy consumed in processing those transactions is staggering."[137] "Bitcoin uses more electricity per transaction than any other method known to mankind", Bill Gates said. "It's not a great climate thing."[138]

Nicholas Weaver, of the International Computer Science Institute at the University of California, Berkeley, examined blockchain's online security, and the energy efficiency of proof-of-work public blockchains, and in both cases found it grossly inadequate.[139][140] The 3145 TWh of electricity used for bitcoin in 2018 produced 1722.9 MtCO2.[141][142]

Inside the cryptocurrency industry, concern about high energy consumption has led some companies to consider moving from the proof of work blockchain model to the less energy-intensive proof of stake model.[143]

In October 2014, the MIT Bitcoin Club, with funding from MIT alumni, provided undergraduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology access to $100 of bitcoin. The adoption rates, as studied by Catalini and Tucker (2016), revealed that when people who typically adopt technologies early are given delayed access, they tend to reject the technology.[144]

Motivations for adopting blockchain technology have been investigated by researchers. Janssen et al. provided a framework for analysis.[145] Koens & Poll pointed out that adoption could be heavily driven by non-technical factors.[146] Based on behavioral models, Li[147] discussed the differences between adoption at individual level and at organization level.

Scholars in business and management have started studying the role of blockchains to support collaboration.[148][149] It has been argued that blockchains can foster both cooperation (i.e., prevention of opportunistic behavior) and coordination (i.e., communication and information sharing). Thanks to reliability, transparency, traceability of records, and information immutability, blockchains facilitate collaboration in a way that differs both from the traditional use of contracts and from relational norms.[150] Contrary to contracts, blockchains do not directly rely on the legal system to enforce agreements.[151] In addition, contrary to the use of relational norms, blockchains do not require trust or direct connections between collaborators.

The need for internal audit to provide effective oversight of organizational efficiency will require a change in the way that information is accessed in new formats.[153] Blockchain adoption requires a framework to identify the risk of exposure associated with transactions using blockchain. The Institute of Internal Auditors has identified the need for internal auditors to address this transformational technology. New methods are required to develop audit plans that identify threats and risks. The Internal Audit Foundation study, Blockchain and Internal Audit, assesses these factors.[154] The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants has outlined new roles for auditors as a result of blockchain.[155]

In September 2015, the first peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to cryptocurrency and blockchain technology research, Ledger, was announced. The inaugural issue was published in December 2016.[156] The journal covers aspects of mathematics, computer science, engineering, law, economics and philosophy that relate to cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin.[157][158]

The journal encourages authors to digitally sign a file hash of submitted papers, which are then timestamped into the bitcoin blockchain. Authors are also asked to include a personal bitcoin address in the first page of their papers for non-repudiation purposes.[159]

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Blockchain - Wikipedia

Blockchain | NIST

Blockchain represents a new paradigm for digital interactions and serves as the underlying technology for most cryptocurrencies.

A blockchain is a collaborative, tamper-resistant ledger that maintains transactional records. The transactional records (data) are grouped into blocks. A block is connectedto the previous one by including a unique identifier that is based on the previous blocks data. As a result, if the data is changed in one block, its unique identifier changes, which can be seen in every subsequent block (providing tamper evidence). This domino effect allows all users within the blockchain to know if a previous blocks data has been tampered with. Since a blockchain network is difficult to alter or destroy, it provides a resilient method of collaborative record keeping.

NIST researchers have been investigating blockchain technologies at multiple levels: from use cases, applications and existing services, to protocols, security guarantees, and cryptographic mechanisms. Research outcomes include scientific papers and the production of software for experimentation as well as providing direction for other NIST endeavors in this space. Blockchain has the potential to be implemented in many different systems, to include manufacturing supply chains, data registries, digital identification, and records management.

Credit: NIST

NISTIR 8202 Blockchain Technology Overview Point of Contact: Dylan YagaSummary: A high-level technical document explaining the technology involved in blockchain systems, as well as how the systems work.

Blockchain for Industrial Applications Community of InterestPoint of Contact:blockchainCOI@nist.govSummary:The BIA COI with members from government, industry, and academia is providingguidelines to create a (better) synergy between end users, research community, and solution providersto reduce complexity, cost, and delay of adoption of blockchain technologies.

Enhanced Distributed Ledger TechnologyPoint of Contact: D. Richard KuhnSummary: The Enhanced Distributed Ledger Technology project examines the traditional blockchain data structure and seeks to create a new data structure (the block matrix) to provide high reliability, and security while also enabling deletion or updating capabilities not currently found in most blockchain systems.

NIST Cybersecurity White Paper - A Taxonomic Approach to Understanding Emerging Blockchain Identity Management SystemsPoints of Contacts:blockchain-idms-paper@nist.govSummary: A high-level technical document breaking down the key components, emerging standards, and system architectures that support blockchain-based identity management systems.

NISTIR 8301 Blockchain Networks: Token Design and Management OverviewPoints of Contacts:blockchain-token-paper@nist.govSummary: An overview of token data models and important building blocks for account, transaction, and infrastructure management in an effort to lower the barriers to study, prototype, and integrate token-related standards and protocols

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Blockchain | NIST

Hook to plate: how blockchain tech could turn the tide for sustainable fishing – The Guardian

In recent weeks, a new $50m (35m) hybrid vessel set sail from Mauritius and headed out into the Southern Ocean where the crew will spend three months longline fishing for the Patagonian toothfish. By the time the fish are brought back, processed and sent to customers, consumers will know where and when that specific fish was caught, which boat landed it, who processed it and which certifications have been met. The technology enabling this is blockchain.

From the day its landed to when it ends up on someones plate, blockchain gives toothfish traceability right from the start, says Steve Paku, captain of the Cape Arkona. People can just scan the barcode and the whole story is right there in front of them.

Blockchain is just one way that fisheries are trying to ensure better traceability from hook to plate but it is garnering a lot of interest. Blockchain cannot be tampered with and the data can be accessed by everyone along the supply chain, from certification schemes to the final consumer. Because it is digital, decentralised and updated in real time, a blockchain tag contains valuable information that a physical label never could. In combination with DNA testing to prove the specific species of fish, blockchain could play a role in reducing fraud in the seafood industry.

This also matters from a conservation perspective. More than a third of fish populations are overfished, according to the UNs Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Guaranteeing where and how a fish has been caught can help ensure that the catch has been made in an area with sustainable fish populations. It can also help tackle the problem of bycatch. In degrading marine ecosystems, bycatch is detrimental to biodiversity and puts additional, unnecessary strain on marine wildlife. Young fish get caught up in nets with too small a mesh, turtles and dolphins can get entangled in gillnets, and seabirds, including endangered albatross, get injured by hooks unless deterrents are put in place.

Paku has fished for 35 years, first for crayfish off the New Zealand coast and, since 1997, for toothfish, sometimes amid 15-metre swells and 50-knot winds (90km/h). Two years ago, the company he works for, Austral Fisheries, introduced blockchain technology, which Paku says has just become part of the process. When we catch the fish, we take the head, tail and fins off, then a digital tag gets attached to the trunk of each fish before it gets frozen onboard. Blockchain backs up the traceability of the fish more substantially I think this will become the norm in the future.

Since the Netflix documentary Seaspiracy, there has been growing concern about whether seafood can ever be certified as truly sustainable. But blockchain advocates argue that it has already been used to highlight fishy findings in a few high-value seafood supply chains. In 2016, UK-based traceability platform Provenance piloted blockchain in yellowfin tuna loins and skipjack tuna supply chains, tracing products back to individual fishers in Indonesia. WWF-New Zealand used blockchain in a tuna longline fishery in Fiji in 2018, while the Sustainable Shrimp Partnership in Ecuador links data from farmed shrimp to a blockchain platform run by the IBM Food Trust.

According to David Carter, chief executive of Perths Austral Fisheries, blockchain is an added layer of accountability that enables continuous monitoring rather than spot-check audits. We want to achieve transparency as cheaply and cost-effectively as possible. MSC certification could be much simpler in the future, says Carter. We could just get to a point where we publish our scoring criteria.

Carter works with OpenSC, a software company based in Sydney, to verify, trace and share data that provides assurance to consumers, and regulators, about where each toothfish has been caught. Where a ship is fishing is arguably the most important claim to verify for line-caught seafood. A rogue captain cant change the fishing locations that have been recorded using blockchain. Nobody can, says Markus Mutz, chief executive of OpenSC, which is co-founded by WWF and startup BCG Digital Ventures.

Were not trying to replace a certification scheme, he adds. We believe we can be a great additive to it. OpenSCs mission isnt to pass judgment about whether a product is sustainable or not they provide the database proof of something happening and then it is up to others to judge. Certification can be quite binary but in reality sustainability isnt clearcut. Everything is on a scale.

Blockchain is a digital ledger that provides a secure way of making and recording transactions, agreements and contracts. However, uniquely, rather than being kept in one place like the more traditional ledger book, the database is shared across a network of computers.

This network can encompass just a handful of users, or hundreds and thousands of people. The ledger becomes a long list of transactions that have taken place since the beginning of the network, getting bigger over time.

A blockchain database consists of blocks and transactions. Blocks contain batches of transactions that are hashed and encoded. Each block contains the hash of the block before it, which links the two and forms the chain. This process validates each block, all the way back to the original, and is integral to the databases security.

Blockchain technology has been around for a number of years its most well-known use so far isBitcoin, the virtual currency. The uses of blockchain are not limited to financial transactions, though, and enthusiasts are looking into other applications for the technology, especially for the types of transactions where there are often disputes or trust issues.

Katherine Purvis

Thank you for your feedback.

MSC [Marine Stewardship Council] certification, the leading label for sustainable fish that involves looking at 28 performance indicators, came under fire last year in a report by French NGO Bloom. It found 83% of MSC-certified catches between 2009 and 2017 involved damaging fishing methods such as deep-sea bottom trawling and dredging. MSC argues that the sustainability of a fishery is not determined by its size or fishing gear alone, and that even big commercial fisheries need to be able to apply for certification in order to improve the management of fish populations on a global scale.

Blockchain has proved to be an exciting way to track digital data in some pilot case studies, such as with the important work of Austral and OpenSC on toothfish, says Natalie Hunter, MSC head of supply chain development. However, certification standards like the MSC are not just about data, but about practices and processes that ensure sustainable harvesting and effective labelling to remove fraud. Technology will support and improve certification, but it will never be able to replace robust, independently audited certification schemes like the MSC.

FAO traceability expert Petter Olsen believes that while the complexities of the seafood supply chain make it suitable for blockchain, it is not scalable or commercially viable across the sector.

Blockchain works for high-value products where the consumer can pay a bit more for that assurance, and I think well see QR codes or barcodes on more special-interest products, Olsen says. But he believes the potential of blockchain has been exaggerated. Its immutable, so any changes will always be tracked but its just a database.

A recent Guardian investigation found that seafood fraud is prevalent on a vast global scale, with 36% of seafood sampled in supermarkets, fishmongers and restaurants mislabelled. But Olsen argues that sometimes, rather than direct fraud, it can be a naming problem. Common fish names such as sardine or anchovy mean different things in different countries, says Olsen. Seafood has the longest supply chain of any food product, with on average seven stages from catch or farming to the consumer, so its convoluted but also geographically complex with people speaking different languages.

Consistent data is the gold, says Libby Woodhatch, executive chair of the Marin Trust, the international programme for marine ingredient certification. There are lots of different blockchain systems being used in the fishing and seafood processing industry but they all need to be interoperable to ensure the same level of information can be provided from start to finish.

WWF has set out to tackle that, launching the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability in 2017 dedicated to drafting the first-ever global standards for seafood traceability.

While it will not single-handedly eliminate llegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUU) or prevent overfishing, blockchain will deeply modify how fish are traced, according to an FAO report. The authors suggest that the technology could be best used by fisheries that voluntarily want to show their legal compliance to meet consumer demand and improve trade, and that this may develop even in places where legislation is lacking.

Carter, as an early adopter, is hopeful. Fishing is a long-term game. The real value is directly measured by the wellbeing of the resource that we rely upon and how clever we are at harvesting and selling it. Anything we do that damages that is just dumb.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

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Hook to plate: how blockchain tech could turn the tide for sustainable fishing - The Guardian

How Multifamily Investment Will Eventually Migrate to the Blockchain – Multi-Housing News

Mark Ventre

Up until recently, I only had a vague concept of what blockchain technology was, and admittedly conflated it with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Now that Ive spent some time digging into this nascent technology, however, Ive become increasingly convinced it is not only here to stay but that blockchainalong with the assets that transact on itwill transform nearly every aspect of commerce as we know it today.

For newbies like me, blockchain is a digital log on which transactions are made, particularly in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. These transactions are recorded on blocks of data that are validated and added onto the previous block, hence the name.

Due to its decentralized record-keeping technology known as a distributed ledger, transactions made on the blockchain are secure, encrypted, and very difficult to manipulate or hack into.

Commercial real estate has been slow to adopt disrupting technologies and new methods of transacting. This leads to the question: Will migrating to the blockchain ever become a reality for an industry averse to change?

The answer is yes eventually.

The blockchain platform will not only be used to transact multifamily and other types of real estate but also to house many other aspects of real estate. Some of the utilities the blockchain will encompass will include, smart contracts, due diligence, transaction history, title documents, permits, property management, leasing and more. It will serve as an immutable digital paper trail.

This will inevitably improve transparency, make transaction processes more efficient, and limit the use of intermediaries, thereby saving time and resources. Sorry, everyone, youll still need brokers, but even we will have to adapt.

This platform will also allow for the tokenization of real estate so that an asset, or a fraction thereof, is converted to a digital token that exists on the blockchain. This could create new opportunities to invest and make an illiquid asset more liquid and reduce the cost of entry.

While this emerging technology may be exciting, it has thus far been largely theoretical for the real estate industry, as there have been very few real-world applications to date. Trusting an unproven system with assets worth millions of dollars is a tough pill to swallowat least for now.

The Federal Reserve and about 80 percent of the worlds central banks are contemplating their own versions of digital currencies. After all, its not like banks are just going to admit defeat and fade into obscurity. On the contrary, once the industry is regulated, the digital dollar will become a reality, and it will also transact on the blockchain along with Bitcoin and other cryptos.

The commercial real estate industry is years away from any pragmatic usage of blockchain technology. Rest assured, though, it will be coming to a town near you.

Mark Ventre is a senior vice president at Stepp Commercial.

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How Multifamily Investment Will Eventually Migrate to the Blockchain - Multi-Housing News

Chinese Officials Embrace Blockchain During Conflux-Hosted Blockchain Summit at Pujiang Innovation Forum – PRNewswire

SHANGHAI, June 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Conflux, the only regulatory-compliant public, permissionless blockchain project in China, hosted a summit on blockchain at the Pujiang Innovation Forum on June 2-3, 2021. The summit, featuring 15+ speakers and guests from several research institutions and government departments, focused on the use of real-world blockchain applications in various sectors, including the construction industry, engineering, and transportation.

Founded in 2008, the Pujiang Innovation Forum is an annual event that features speakers and thought leaders from international organizations, universities, research institutions, and global think tanks. Sponsored by the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China and the Shanghai Municipal People's Government, the conference centers on innovation and aims to be an influential source of information, thought leadership, and discussion for next-generation technological development.

As part of the 2021 event, Conflux hosted a summit titled "Future Connect - Pujiang Innovation Forum: The Blockchain Development Summit." The summit centered on the role of blockchain in the 14th Five-Year Plan, an outline of China's economic and social development over the next several years. The purpose of Future Connect was to lay a solid consensus foundation for the development of China's blockchain technology, focus on leveraging the country's blockchain ecological resources, and help propel China's role as a leader in the blockchain spacewhich requires improvement of the underlying technology powering blockchains.

Fan Long, the founder of Conflux, delivered the keynote speech on how blockchain is more than the digital assets market and what it will take for the technology to see mainstream adoption.

"The true value of blockchain is trust. Once it is used in the mainstream, it will rebuild production relations and make way for increased productivity," explained Fan during the keynote. "It will take time for blockchain technology to be accepted, and for the public to truly understand blockchain's capabilities. Only when we as a society form a consensus on blockchain technology can we effectively promote the mainstream adoption and application of this emerging technology."

Other speeches, interviews, and roundtable discussions featured professors and representatives from several prominent institutions, including General Secretary Xi Jinping, whose quotes have been translated into English.

"The integrated application of blockchain technology plays an important role in new technological innovation and industrial transformation," said Xi. "We must understand the blockchain as its corean important breakthrough in technological independent innovationclarify the main direction, increase investment, focus on mastering a number of key core technologies, and accelerate the development of blockchain technology and industrial innovation."

Yao Qizhi, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and chief scientist at the Tree-Graph Blockchain Research Institute, joined the event via video to share his thoughts on the value of blockchain technology.

"I believe that blockchain is not just a technology, and the trust value it creates can penetrate into all aspects of society to benefit the future life of mankind," Yao shared. "I hope that more scientists will join the research and development field of blockchain technology so that China can lead the blockchain industry. I also hope that people from all walks of life will have the courage to try and introduce blockchain technology into various application scenarios so that basic research and practical applications will begin to increase and we can jointly create a prosperous blockchain application ecology."

The forum also focused on blockchain performance breakthroughs, including Conflux's Tree-Graph consensus mechanism, a high-performance algorithm used to facilitate the processing of 3000 to 6000 transactions per second (TPS) without sacrificing decentralization or security. Conflux has passed rigorous tests to confirm the performance of the Tree-Graph consensus algorithm, which is opening the door for further development using blockchain technology and a thriving ecosystem of applications.

Conflux's involvement in the Pujiang Innovation Forum comes on the heels of several new developments, including the mainnet release of ShuttleFlow, one of Conflux's unique technological features that sets it apart from other chains and decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms. ShuttleFlow is the first cross-chain bridge to support the blockchain networks of Binance, Huobi, and OKexthe most widely used digital asset exchanges in Asiain addition to Ethereum.

About Conflux

Conflux is a permissionless Layer 1 public blockchain connecting decentralized economies across borders and protocols. Fast, scalable, and solidity compatible, with zero congestion and low fees, Conflux is transforming how the world transacts and leading the transformation to a sustainable, borderless economy.

As the only regulatory compliant, public, and permissionless blockchain in China, Conflux provides a unique advantage for projects building and expanding into Asia. Conflux aims to connect decentralized economies to strengthen the overall DeFi ecosystem globally.

To learn more about Conflux, visit confluxnetwork.org/.

SOURCE Conflux

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Chinese Officials Embrace Blockchain During Conflux-Hosted Blockchain Summit at Pujiang Innovation Forum - PRNewswire

Brady Dale: Blockchain Games That Gamers Want to Win – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

Blockchain games arent going to capture the public imagination until theres a genuinely great game full stop.

It looks like the industry thinks gamers will one day say, Oh cool, I can own my digital items? Lets play this blockchain game!

Thats not how its going to work. This premise wont fly until gamers say, This blockchain game is so cool! Oh, hey, neat, I guess I really own my digital items?

This article is excerpted fromThe Node, CoinDesk's daily roundup of the most pivotal stories in blockchain and crypto news. You can subscribe to get the fullnewsletter here.

Gamers want to play great games. If they can get additional benefits out of playing, great, but it needs to be a great game first and foremost. Play-to-Earn will always feel more like work-to-earn as long as the game is boring compared to distractions available on platforms such as the PlayStation or Nintendo Switch.

And the existing game companies are not going to blockchainify their famous games. Fortnite is not going to lead here by making skins provably scarce with Ethereum or Solana or Doge. Sorry, no. Centralized control of these commodities works for their business model.

A great game will need to be built from the ground up for blockchain by crypto believers.

As I was working on this post, I went and watched a few videos for the upcoming game Chainmonsters, from Dapper Labs, the company Crunchbase credits with $357 million in investment. The game is still in alpha, it should be noted, and its updating all the time, including recently slicking up its graphics.But the game is basically one where you wander around a world gathering up little monsters, playing them in fights to increase their experience and make more badass monsters. What does that sound like? It sounds like Pokmon.

Apparently this is so true that, at least according to YouTuber nondairi, folks who compare the game to Pokmon actually get kicked out of the games Discord. Which is weird because its not even the first Pokmon knock-off to show up on the blockchains. We covered Etheremon, for example, three years ago.

And look, I get it: A game doesnt have to be amazingly advanced to capture popular imaginations. The bizarrely profitable mobile game, Flappy Bird, came out in a year when Assassins Creed was on its fourth iteration. It is possible for a simple game to take off, but the popularity of Flappy Bird was a wild outlier. The popularity of any entry in the Assassins Creed mythos is not.

And, on that note: right next to one of the videos I watched about Chainmonsters was a video about a forthcoming game for the PlayStation, Horizon: Forbidden West, from Guerrilla Games. This was an absolutely insane gameplay preview where some guy rides a cyborg elephant the size of a building and then later the players character takes an enemy out with this insane spin-kick stab combo followed by an exploding lightning bolt bow-and-arrow finisher.

Its hard to describe, in a good way.

So crypto will need to make something comparably impressive and drop immutable in-game items somewhere in its guts before gamers really get excited about this industry. It takes a lot of money and a lot of talent to put together a game that really captures gamers attention, but a few people in this industry have made a little money, or so Im told.

So far, the blockchain gaming offerings have largely been slightly lower fidelity derivatives of past video game blockbusters, as if entrepreneurs in this space lack conviction that a truly original, crypto native game can be really good.

You can find lots of videos out there about blockchain games where people brag about making money. Its a whole weird thing. What you cant find are videos of people saying: I cant stop playing this thing and heres how you win.

Earning is nice but its not a game-for-gamers until they want to win.

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Brady Dale: Blockchain Games That Gamers Want to Win - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Are Developers Buying into All the Blockchain Hype? – Dice Insights

Do developers believe thatblockchainhas a future? Or is the technology yet another case of overhype, the current obsession over cryptocurrencies aside?

Stack Overflow recentlyposed that question to nearly 700 software developers. Some 38.56 percent said that blockchain was all hype, while 61.44 percent said that it was a game changer. Moreover, only 23.53 percent of developers said theyd worked with blockchain in the past, versus the 76.47 percent who hadnt touched the technology in a professional context.

Among those who havent developed with blockchain, some 61.85 percent of them want to, while 38.15 percent said they had no interest. Another interesting thing to note: Whenever the price of Bitcoin hits a milestone, the number of blockchain-related questions developers ask on Stack Overflow also rises:

That echoes another long-term trend: Interest in blockchain-related jobsroughly fluctuating with the price of Bitcoin. As far back as three years ago, spikes in Bitcoin prices led to a jump in blockchain-related jobs on Dice. According to Burning Glass, the percentage of technology jobs that ask for blockchain skills remains pretty lowbut could increase substantially over the next decade.

Blockchain isnt just cryptocurrency, of course (although the two are tightly linked in the publics mind). Companies large and small are examining the technologys uses in everything fromsmart contractingtocybersecurity. If youre interested in learning more,experts adviseexploring online courses such as Udacity and Coursera, as well as specific sites such asBitcoin.org.

According to Burning Glass, jobs that involve blockchain have a median salary of $97,000, with six-figure compensation easily unlockable with just a few years of experience. In addition, virtually all the jobs that currently ask for blockchain skills request a bachelors degree, which means you dont have to earn ultra-advanced degrees in order to land that job interviewyou just need to demonstrate that you actually have the skills.

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Are Developers Buying into All the Blockchain Hype? - Dice Insights

Blockchain for business: CoinGeek’s Zurich Conference is live & free with over 100 speakers – PRNewswire

LONDON, June 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- CoinGeek's 7th Conference (June 8-10) will feature real use cases in BSV blockchain technology ranging from healthcare to eSports, iGaming to NFTs, and will focus on the environmental impact of digital assets and the future of money itself.

In the panel discussion about the future of money you will be able to hear the views of Urs Birchler, Professor of Banking, University of Zurich, Dr Jurg R Conzett, Founding President from Switzerland's Museum of Money, Swiss National Bank Board Member, Thomas Moser, and Dr Craig Wright, the inventor of Bitcoin.

Never afraid of a robust debate, CoinGeek have also invited Bitcoin sceptics Nouriel Roubini and Nassim Nicholas Taleb to discuss Where The Value of Bitcoin Should Come From on Day 3, Thursday June 10.

As blockchain technology becomes increasingly mainstream CoinGeek Zurich has recruited the European Commission's Head of Unit for Digital Innovation, Lichtenstein's Financial Centre Director and Switzerland's State Secretariat for International Finance to talk about blockchain law and regulation.

CoinGeek New York (October 2020) saw over 30,000 online viewers tune in and CoinGeek London (February 2020) managed to accommodate over 1,500 actual human beings at the venue.

CoinGeek Zurich will run for three days (June 8-10) and will be live streamed, free of charge, on the Virtual Platform and will be live on YouTube and all social media streaming.

If that was not enough Haute Horlogerie brand, Franck Muller, is putting out a new limited edition timepiece collection.A tribute to Bitcoin's creator, the watch is named the Nakamoto. At the end of CoinGeek Zurich,one registered virtual attendee will be announced the winner of theseexclusive timepieces.

Ignite the Power of Data and blockchain data technology with CoinGeek Zurich.

For further information, media accreditation or access to speakers for interview please contact: [emailprotected]

CoinGeek Zurich is kindly sponsored by: Bitcoin Association, Boquan, Cozen O'Connor, EHR Data, Fabriik, nChain, Ontier, TAAL and Vaionex.

SOURCE CoinGeek

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Blockchain for business: CoinGeek's Zurich Conference is live & free with over 100 speakers - PRNewswire