Neowiz to bring Golf Impact and Brave Nine to the blockchain – Pocket Gamer.Biz

Neowiz has revealed that two of its most popular titles, Golf Impact and Brave Nine, are being expanded to include blockchain-based content.

Golf Impact is even being renamed to Crypto Golf Impact to reflect this change, with plans to launch in March 2022 and is set to be the first play-to-earn golf game on the global market.

Although tactical RPG Brave Nine will not be getting a name change, Neowiz is developing new blockchain-based play-to-earn content and systems for the title that are due to be mented in Q2 2022.

Braving the blockchain

The blockchain currency to be used in these titles is Neopin, which is launching later this month. Powered by Neoply (a leader in the Korean crypto market), the vision for Neopin is that it will see users having a single account that connects with multiple blockchain services.

Going forward, Neowiz has plans to gradually introduce further play-to-earn features amongst its portfolio, alongside NFT, service-to-earn, and decentralised finance features.

Last week, Com2uS Holdings revealed that it will implement a blockchain ecosystem into its upcoming title, World of Zenonia, which is scheduled to launch in the second half of 2022.

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Neowiz to bring Golf Impact and Brave Nine to the blockchain - Pocket Gamer.Biz

The United States will become the global crypto and blockchain leader – Cointelegraph

We have some great news coming out of the United States on the cryptocurrency industry this month with potentially more good news coming later this fall. On Oct. 6,Gary Gensler, head of the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), confirmed during a House Committee on Financial Services hearing that the regulator will not ban cryptocurrency, potentially blazing the path for the worlds largest economy to become the global leader in the development of decentralized finance (DeFi) and blockchain technologies.

Gensler, who taught a class on cryptocurrency at MIT, also said that prohibiting cryptocurrency doesnt fall under the SECs mandate and the only way to legally ban digital assets would be through Congress. Its a matter of how we get this field within the investor consumer protection that we have and also working with bank regulators and others how do we ensure that the Treasury Department has it within Anti-Money Laundering, tax compliance, Gensler said. He also added:

The SECs announcement comes after U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Sept. 30 that the regulator has no plans to ban Bitcoin (BTC) and other cryptocurrencies during testimony in Congress. When asked by Rep. Ted Budd, a longtime advocate for the cryptocurrency sector and a member of the Congressional Blockchain Caucus, whether he intended to ban or limit the use of cryptocurrencies, Powell responded with a resounding No. [I have] no intention to ban them.

Most of the media reports I have been reading are headlined with The U.S. will not ban cryptocurrencies. This is true, but this also means something much more significant: The U.S. will allow cryptocurrency to grow and will embrace the community to be involved in the process of discussing better ways for regulating the industry.

When the largest economy in the world announces that it will allow cryptocurrency to exist with its current financial industry of course, with proper regulation all other nations should take notice and begin considering opening their doors and regulating the industry in a fair way that spurs innovation and helps to create new jobs.

As we have been seeing, U.S. regulators are incorporating the cryptocurrency industry into its financial system allowing the traditional banking system to work alongside the new and fast-growing decentralized financial system. This could enable the U.S. to become a frontrunner in fintech development, blockchain technologies and even into more unconventional parts of decentralized finance such as insurance, trade finance and fundraising.

Related: Crypto in the crosshairs: US regulators eye the cryptocurrency sector

From a regulatory standpoint, there is plenty of work that still needs to be done by the cryptocurrency community and the U.S. government to pinpoint where their interest aligns and how they can work tougher, therefore making a smart decision together on how to regulate the industry, including the regulation of stable coins, decentralized exchanges, cryptocurrency derivatives and yield farming, just to name a few.

It is also very possible that the SEC could approve as many as four Bitcoin futures this fall, based on Bloomberg Intelligences count. On Oct. 3, the analyst put the chances the SEC would approve a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) at 75%, with ProShares and Valkyrie already leading the race, getting their approvals coming on Oct. 19 and Oct. 22, respectively.

Related: Bitcoin futures ETFs: Good, but not quite there

It's also nice to note that even American lawmakers are buying Bitcoin. U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummisdisclosed that she scooped up the worlds largest cryptocurrency on Aug. 16, worth between $50,001 to $100,000.

Since the U.S. government wont ban cryptocurrencies and American politicians are investing in them, it would be a good idea for all of us to reevaluate our investment portfolios and take a long look at Bitcoin, Ether (ETH) and other new blockchain technologies.

The U.S. is clearly signaling that it will embrace and regulate Bitcoin, blockchain technology and other cryptocurrencies, which from a geopolitical perspective, couldnt have been more smart positioning itself to receive massive foreign investment and attract the best talent on the planet. I expect to see the U.S. become the leader in decentralized finance over the coming years as regulators continue to work with the cryptocurrency community to build a sustainable and secure industry.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Raymond Hsu is the co-founder and CEO at Cabital, a cryptocurrency wealth management platform. Prior to co-founding Cabital in 2020, Raymond worked for fintech and traditional banking institutions, including Citibank, Standard Chartered Bank, eBay and Airwallex.

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The United States will become the global crypto and blockchain leader - Cointelegraph

Jeff Vinik to receive Innovation Catalyst Award at Bitcoin and Blockchain Summit – St Pete Catalyst

Local innovation leader Jeff Vinik will be presented with the inaugural Innovation Catalyst Award at this weeks Bitcoin & Blockchain Summit at Tampas Amalie Arena.

On behalf of the Florida Bitcoin & Blockchain Summit and the Florida Blockchain Business Association (FBBA), St. Pete Catalyst publisher Joe Hamilton will present the metal award, which features Vinik on an artists rendering of the Metacity Fluent coin.

Additionally, Hamilton will give Vinik a thumb drive with the award loaded onto it as a non-fungible token (NFT).

Vinik will receive the award Friday (Nov. 5), following ARK Investments Cathie Woods keynote speech on the second day of the summit. Tampa Mayor Jane Castor and the St. Petersburg Mayor-elect are expected to attend the presentation.

Vinik also owns Amelia Arena, which is hosting the two-day event, and the Tampa Bay Lightning, current Stanley Cup champions.

Jeff Vinik is building the physical infrastructure that is allowing us to connect internally to build the virtual infrastructure of the future, said Chris Krimitsos, founder of the Florida Bitcoin & Blockchain Summit.

Vinik is widely known for investing in emerging technologies and innovative companies throughout Tampa Bay. Notably, he committed $10 million to establish Embarc Collective in March 2019.

Embarc Collective is an education nonprofit focused on technology, innovation and entrepreneurship. Now home to over 100 companies with a total of 234 team members, the collective is the fastest-growing startup hub in Florida. In just over 2.5 years, Embarc companies have raised over $107 million in venture capital.

In March, the Vinik Sports Group company launched Backing the Bay, a program that provides free, custom marketing services to locally-owned small businesses in the Tampa Bay area.

The reason why hes the Innovation Catalyst is because hes designed the physical infrastructure to allow the intentional collisions between people and ideas that spawn innovation

Part of that virtual infrastructure of the future are platforms such as the Metacity. Metacity is a virtual operating system for a physical city and will be debuting its latest innovations at the summit.

Hamilton, who is also Head of Network for Metacity and the St. Petersburg Community Leader for the FBBA, believes Viniks very presence in the community has inspired the entire Tampa Bay region to innovate.

Jeff has driven many specific initiatives to make our community better, but I believe his presence delivers the biggest impact, said Hamilton. That he chose to bring his level of vision and activation to us has elevated our entire region to not only believe but to expect that Tampa Bay is a top place in the world to call home.

For more information on the Florida Bitcoin and Blockchain Summit, visit its website here.

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Jeff Vinik to receive Innovation Catalyst Award at Bitcoin and Blockchain Summit - St Pete Catalyst

How to predict where blockchain regulation may be heading: an expert explains – World Economic Forum

Blockchain technologies offer great trust and transparency, without the need for a trusted third party. However, Blockchain's platform nature, how its pricing works, and its impact into supply chains pose considerable risks for anticompetitive behaviour by users, the blockchain itself, or directed towards it.

Both policymakers and the blockchain community now look towards competition policy and antitrust experts to find a middle ground, avoiding scenarios where those in control of the Blockchain partake in anticompetitive behaviour whether it be by controlling its price or reaching a collusive agreement to raise prices unfairly. This would diminish trust in blockchain technologies and set them up for failure.

We discussed this emerging issue with Dr. Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at VU Amsterdam and Faculty Affiliate at Stanford Universitys CodeX Center, who has been focusing most of his research on blockchain antitrust. He states, Western legal systems have historically helped establish trust between parties and reduce transactional uncertainty by providing recourse to legal procedures. Nonetheless, establishing trust still imposes significant transactional costs and blockchain may reduce them to a smaller level. In the meantime, the very nature of the technology raises fundamental questions about antitrust law and how individuals conduct transactions.

Proactively engaging relevant blockchain community stakeholders at an early stage when the technology is still being developed, making them aware about the concerns of antitrust laws and how authorities deal with them could be a way forward.

I decided to focus on antitrust at the end of the very first hour of class back when I was a student (kudos to Prof. Mainguy). That was it for me. Later, I went to the United States to complete my studies and started a comparative Ph.D. discussing predatory innovation in digital markets. At that time, I had written a paragraph on blockchain, and ended up on an OECD panel to discuss the intersection between blockchain and antitrust.

From that moment on, I could never stop researching the interplay between the two, which I find fascinating because everything remains open. This led me to write several articles on the subject (all available here) and, eventually, a book entitled Blockchain + Antitrust: The Decentralization Formula (it just came out, and its accessible in open access!).

I started my research in the field by addressing the antitrust issues created by blockchain, which is very typical of lawyers. It took me quite some time to realize that blockchain and antitrust were going in the same direction and, even more so, that they were great complements. The book is all about ensuring cooperation while addressing mutual aggressions.

Hard to say which one is the most critical but let me name a few. Should you be an antitrust expert, learning about the technology is a significant challenge, but one must overcome it. Let me be clear here: antitrust lawyers and enforcers will not be required to learn about code blockchains or AI systems from scratch but to reach a sufficient level of computer science to understand the legal implications, options, and drawbacks of their actions. The same can be said for smartphones: no antitrust expert knows how to design an entire smartphone (in fact, nobody could do it on their own in the entire world), but some antitrusters understand the smartphone impact on competition, how to regulate their use, etc. Only then will it be relevant to discuss how to ensure procedural fairness, cooperation between agencies, and consideration of non-computable elements while fostering computational antitrust.

Should you be a computer scientist, the challenge is slightly different. Computer scientists are required to work with antitrust experts to develop the right tools and efficient ways to feed these tools with data, but even before that, they face an issue of incentives. Antitrust agencies pay their employees a tiny fraction of what big tech pay them because they cannot compensate more. This means we need to talk about monetary incentives which harbor and foster this community of practice if we want to overcome this challenge.

Antitrust agencies, policymakers, and market participants all can benefit from the new domain of computational antitrust, which seeks to develop computational methods for the automation of antitrust procedures and the improvement of antitrust analysis. The Stanford Computational Antitrust project was created in January of 2021 to raise awareness and provide concrete research and solutions in the space. It gathers over 55 competition agencies and an academic board of 35 scholars. All our publications are available in open access, so feel free to have a look.

I am not sure how to identify the most exciting new development, but the one that excites me the most relates to the combination of technology and law, whether to augment procedures and analyses or reach substantial objectives. In Blockchain + Antitrust I explain that both blockchain and antitrust seek a common objective of freeing economic transactions from coercion, for example through decentralization.

I wish we could move beyond the anti vs. pro enforcement debate. My work does not fit anywhere on this scale because it seeks to contribute to a different enforcement, hopefully more dynamic, more in line with complexity theory and innovation. For one, I see the use of computational tools computer-based problem-solving methods, such as natural language processing, unsupervised machine learning or agent-based modeling as a way to get antitrust enforcement closer to market realities. In addition, blockchain antitrust begs for a different type of enforcement activities, called pro-blockchain, which implies protecting the technologies from artificial forms of centralization without challenging blockchain core characteristics.

Legal systems are designed and run by human beings, so education is key. I believe that getting acquitted with computer science requires learning by doing. I have listed open-access resources for the purpose, accessible to all. Antitrust agencies and governments need to prioritize learning about the latest advancements in blockchain along with the risks and opportunities in order for public systems to catch up.

Now, more specifically to the legal systems, there is a challenge of developing the right computational tools and feeding them appropriately. In some cases, the necessary data is already in the hand of agencies; for example, they could label their past case-law and train machine learning systems on that basis to detect new patterns. In some other cases, the data is out there, meaning, on the market. Here, it could be difficult to access the desired information. Web scraping could help, the use of public documentation in the hand of other governmental bodies could also help, but eventually, we will need to give agencies greater investigative powers. The CMA was able to access Google and Bing search queries for one week, which would be impossible for the European Commission. This is an important topic that we should discuss along with procedural fairness to ensure computational antitrust improves the common good and not personal agendas.

I dedicate Title 3 of Blockchain + Antitrust to this question, but here is what I would like to say in a nutshell: cooperation is only possible if we (1) we agree on the necessity to cooperate, (2) address the sticking points (when antitrust infringes blockchain, and when antitrust infringes blockchain functioning and goal), and (3) implement a concrete program. One thing is sure: without a proper understanding of the other (i.e., blockchain or antitrust, depending on your background and training), no cooperation will ever be achieved. Unfortunately, a confrontation between the two would end up playing against blockchain communities interests, antitrust communities interests, and, more broadly, our democratic market-based societies interests. This is simple game theory; you may want to try out this little game to convince yourself of the fact. In the meantime, thank you very much for your questions!

For further insights and analysis from the World Economic Forum, explore the transformation map on Blockchain curated by the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

Written by

Abhinav Chugh, Specialist, Content Partnerships and Community Curation, Strategic Intelligence, World Economic Forum

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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How to predict where blockchain regulation may be heading: an expert explains - World Economic Forum

Tech 24 – How to reduce the environmental impact of the blockchain? – FRANCE 24

Issued on: 01/11/2021 - 15:31

In this edition we explore how toreduce the carbon footprint of the blockchain, an underlying technology in which many cryptocurrencies are encrypted. The blockchain requires significant computing power and hence consumes a lot of energy, prompting a push to find ways to make it greener.

NFT art combines a digital work of art with a unique, tamper-proof certificate encrypted in the blockchain. This is a revolution because it makes it possible for the first time in the digital world to distinguish an original version from its copies and to give it an ownershiptitle.

The owner receives an NFTor non-fungible token,which certifies that he or sheis indeed the official owner of the artwork.The problem is that the underlying technology, the blockchain,has a high carbon footprint.

We ask John Karp,co-author of "NFT Revolution", how to make NFTs and the blockchain more environmentally friendly.

Plus, we tell you how the US's top military commander has confirmed a test by China of hypersonic weapons. Those weapons could be used in the creation of a system orbiting in space, capable of shooting down an incoming attack. It's the first time the US has acknowledged the Chinese test.

And in Test 24, Peter O'Brien showcases a model of a nanosatellite launcher by French startup Venture Orbital Systems.The real version is set to be 10 times bigger and should be operational by 2024.

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Tech 24 - How to reduce the environmental impact of the blockchain? - FRANCE 24

Blockchain for climate action must be on the COP26 Agenda – Ledger Insights

This is a guest opinion post fromAnna Roberts of iov42.

The need for climate action is unquestionably one of urgency. From the UN Code Redclimate reportto ever increasing catastrophic weather events, its clear that the world must take this seriously and fast. This weeks COP26 summit hopes to ignite some united action, but governments risk falling short of their own targets unless new beneficial technologies are embraced. If environmental ambitions for the next decade are to become a reality, now is the time for governments to abandon the misconception that blockchain remains too abstract to harness and instead equip themselves with the tools and technology to trigger an era of healing.

While there are some positive signs of innovation within this space from the international community, such as the development of theEuropean Blockchain Services Infrastructure, some are still concerned that blockchain itself is energy consuming, especially when it comes to cryptocurrency. However, enterprise blockchains can actually reduce energy usage as they scale rather than creating as much of a problem as theyre trying to solve. The environmental benefits of utilizing blockchain for industry and enterprise are substantial, and as it stands, they remain somewhat untapped. But ifESGtargets are to be met internationally, its time for leaders to take note.

Decentralized ledger technology can provide new levels of traceability and transparency for environmentally-impactful supply chains, such astimberandagriculture supply chains that have far-reaching societal and economic impacts too. This means that irresponsible sourcing can be eradicated and accountable decision-making promoted through a visible, secure audit trail of actions. Curtailing deforestation, which is one of the pre-established goals of the COP26 summit, can be achieved using tools such asTimber Chain, which digitalizes human processes and holds identities to account. This is game-changing for industries susceptible to vulnerability, and especially those most impactful to our environment.

This is why blockchain-powered solutions are needed. They enable governments and organisations to ensure regulatory compliance and track and report on reducing carbon footprints, in turn allowing leaders to become better informed. Until recently, the development ofgreen smart contractswas hindered by the inability of blockchains to interact meaningfully with data about the state of the environment. However, they are finally becoming production-ready, meaning that developers globally are able to build applications aroundcarbon offsets, crop yields and air quality.

Its clear that these tools must have a place on the agenda for the November meeting of the worlds most powerful nations. Blockchain when integrated with other technologies can help us practically deliver the necessary action to slow down the climate crisis, but only if its potential is properly recognized, and soon.

Thankfully, its clear that public and private investors are starting to take notice of this type of technology. The global value of blockchain innovations for agriculture isexpected to growto nearly 420 million by 2023. However, its fair to say that despite an increase in interest, blockchain technology overall is still in its infancy and requires further research and piloting efforts to achieve large-scale adoption. The COP26 summit is an opportunity to speed up this process.

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Blockchain for climate action must be on the COP26 Agenda - Ledger Insights

Crypto payments platform introduces a solution to scalability concerns with the help from co-inventor of blockchain – Cointelegraph

Since the release of the Bitcoin white paper exactly 13 years ago, blockchain technology has revolutionized several industries with multiple use cases, including facilitating money transfers, automated legal contracts, and providing traceability to the supply chain. And a blockchain project advised by the co-inventor of blockchain technology, Dr. Scott Stornetta, has decided to launch their mainnet on this very day. Jax.Network positions itself as an extension of the Bitcoin (BTC) network, fixing the scalability problem of the latter.

Through many years of research, the Jax.Network teambelieves they have found a solution to the Blockchain Scalability Trilemma. Jax.Network brings this to life as the first full-state sharded proof-of-work (PoW) network, introducing an approach for solving the scalability problem in blockchain networks like Bitcoin. The team believes they are well-positioned to achieve this goal due to the onboarding of Dr. Stornetta, one of the co-inventors of blockchain technology, as an advisor.

The project is an open-source protocol anchored to the Bitcoin network to build a universal standard for quantifying economic value. It also has a native digital currency known as JAX, the backbone of the Jax.Networks blockchain value proposition.

Dr. Stornetta is most well-known for his three citations in the original Bitcoin white paperwritten by Satoshi Nakamoto. Each mention considers his work with Dr. Stuart Haber. This work outlines the original prospect of using digital time stamping to record transactions on the blockchain. This work later went on to win the Discover Award for Computer Software in 1992 and, three years later, was featured in the New York Times.

Dr. Stornetta has joined Jax.Network as an advisor to share his knowledge, perspective, and experience. He believes the company has the potential to build off what he initially proposed and create a decentralized payment solution for everyday payments a.k.a. Electronic Cash, just as Bitcoin intended.

When asked about the project, Dr. Stornetta shared, I met the Jax.Network team at a blockchain conference in Dubai, UAE, and got interested in their idea of a stablecoin pegged to hash rate. I believe Jax.Network could become a critical infrastructure for the ecosystem, as it extends the Bitcoin protocol by bringing proof-of-work sharding and a decentralized stablecoin backed by Bitcoin hash rate to solve the pain points of scalability and volatility thats hindering the mass adoption of cryptocurrency payments.

Looking at the project in more detail, Jax.Network includes pure state sharding, which ensures that transactions, validators, while accounts are distributed between shards. The result is that future transactions dont require any knowledge of the one preceding them. Another important feature is merged mining, a technique used to simultaneously mine two or more chains in order to secure shards with a mining reward system that is flexible and balanced. Additional features worth noting are their decentralized transfer system and universal reward function.

Bringing these features together, Jax.Network will also provide benefits to the original Bitcoin network. Since Jax.Network is anchored to Bitcoin; the project can also help to bring stability and scalability to this blockchain ecosystem.

Disclaimer. Cointelegraph does not endorse any content or product on this page. While we aim at providing you with all important information that we could obtain, readers should do their own research before taking any actions related to the company and carry full responsibility for their decisions, nor can this article be considered as investment advice.

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Crypto payments platform introduces a solution to scalability concerns with the help from co-inventor of blockchain - Cointelegraph

Inside the blockchain developers mind: What is a testnet? – Cointelegraph

Cointelegraph is following the development of an entirely new blockchain from inception to mainnet and beyond through its series, Inside the Blockchain Developers Mind. In previous parts, Andrew Levine of Koinos Group discussed some of the challenges the team has faced since identifying the key issues they intend to solve and outlined three of the crises that are holding back blockchain adoption: upgradeability, scalability, and governance.

Blockchain testnets are an interesting subject because they come in all shapes and sizes. So, in this post, my goal is to leverage my inside experience as the CEO of Koinos Group (developers of Koinos) to demystify testnets and perhaps give some insight into why they seem to have such an impact on price.

The most obvious place to start is with the name: testnet. The purpose of a testnet is to test a network. At a very high level, there are two flavors of testnet. The first is a testnet that is released prior to a mainnet (main network), and the second is a testnet that is released after a mainnet is already in operation. The functions these serve are similar, but the context in which they are released dramatically impacts the perception, and impact, of the release.

Ill start with the second kind of testnet because, in a way, this is the more straightforward context. When youre talking about existing networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum, testnets serve two primary functions. The first is that they are a live environment in which developers can test their decentralized applications. Every good developer knows that theres no such thing as perfect code, so testnets give developers an environment that is very similar to the main chain (e.g. Ethereum) in which they can test their code with effectively zero risk. Things running on a testnet are expected to break, and the tokens used are expected to be worthless.

Related: London fork enters testnet on Ethereum as difficulty bomb sees delay

So, testnets are an environment that enables decentralized application (DApp) developers to increase the value of their applications (i.e., make their apps better) precisely because there is no expectation of full functionality or wealth creation. In a sense, the value of a testnet stems from its worthlessness.

But testnets have a two-sided nature, which brings us to the second function that testnets serve, and that function is to the benefit of, not the DApp developer, but the platform developer (in our case, the blockchain developer). One thing I have been surprised to see from my unique perspective is how commonly DApp developers are conflated with blockchain developers. Typically, people who write smart contracts are not blockchain developers, and blockchain developers generally spend very little time writing smart contracts.

Ironically, Koinos is throwing a huge wrench in this distinction because its entire system is implemented as smart contracts! Since Koinos smart contracts are upgradeable, this means that any feature can be added to the blockchain without a hard fork, but it also means that the people developing the blockchain (like members of the Koinos Group) are using and developing the very same toolchain and toolkit that developers will use to build their DApps. But this is a feature that is totally unique to Koinos, so we can put that aside for the sake of this discussion.

In every other blockchain, the blockchain developers have to develop updates in whatever programming language the blockchain is written in (C++, Rust, Haskell, etc.), and they are working on a very large and complicated system called a monolithic architecture. Within monolithic architectures, changing any part of the system can impact any other part of the system, so the risk of making changes is that much higher.

Blockchain developers also need a live environment with low stakes that they can use to test out their changes and see what breaks. Like application developers, they want this environment to be as close to the real network as possible, which means that they want their code to interact with code that application developers will be running as well.

This reveals the two-sided aspect of testnets. They enable both the developers of applications and the developers of platforms to interact with one another and safely test their code in as close to a live environment as possible, but with very low stakes. This enables both groups to improve their products and make them more valuable to their users.

Now we can start to see why testnets seem to have such an impact on token price. If we assume that price is a function of value, and that testnets help developers increase the value of their products, then price impact should be expected. The problem is that this correlation has led to several undesirable outcomes. Projects will often release a testnet that has no utility to developers for the sole purpose of boosting their token price. Unfortunately, many people will see the testnet announcement and just assume that something valuable has been released, and so the act will have the desired effect on the price.

Up until now, Ive been focusing on the utility of testnets in the context of existing blockchains, which is that they create a safe space for application developers to test their applications and for blockchain developers to test upgrades to the underlying platform. This will help you understand the other important context in which testnets are released, which is prior to the release of the mainnet.

Once again, testing is the primary objective, but the focus is far more on the system itself, as it has never before been operational. Of course, since it is new, there wont be any applications running on it anyway. Now the situation is more one-sided. The majority of the people working with the codebase will be blockchain developers, and the goal is to get the platform to a place where developers want to actually build on it.

The first requirement developers will have is that the platform is proven to be sufficiently safe, and that should be the prime directive behind the specific tests that are run. Assuming developers are convinced that the platform is sufficiently safe, then theyll need to be educated on how to use the platform. In other words, the testnet must be thought of as an educational tool that enables developers to gain a deeper understanding of how they will be able to use the platform while they are also helping to test the security of the network.

Finally, as they are testing the network and learning how to use it, they will inevitably find places where the platform could be improved important libraries might be needed, or important documentation might be needed to help them understand the system. This information is invaluable feedback that the platform developers absolutely have to use to make the platform better before mainnet implementations are finalized.

Computer networks have become a major part of our lives whether we realize it or not, and they are only increasing in importance. Testnets are a critical step in the process of releasing new and innovative computer networks that can add ever-increasing value to our lives. Hopefully, by gaining a deeper understanding of the nuances of testnets and the important contexts in which they are released, you are now better equipped to evaluate specific testnet releases and whether they are being designed and launched for the right reasons.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Andrew Levine is the CEO of Koinos Group, where he and the former development team behind the Steem blockchain build blockchain-based solutions that empower people to take ownership and control over their digital selves. Their foundational product is Koinos, a high-performance blockchain built on an entirely new framework architected to give developers the features they need in order to deliver the user experiences necessary to spread blockchain adoption to the masses.

Koinos Group is to release version 2 of their testnet, which features stability improvements, their mana fee-less transactions system and a contract development toolkit that will allow developers to build and run smart contracts on Koinos.

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Inside the blockchain developers mind: What is a testnet? - Cointelegraph

How CURE Is Combining Innovation, Technology and the Blockchain To Decentralize Healthcare – Yahoo Finance

CURE is on a mission to heal the world and it is already well on its way.

Chicago, Illinois--(Newsfile Corp. - November 1, 2021) - The charity-backed DeFi project blasted out of the gate on September 16th and has since gone on to enormous success, raising its market cap to an ATH of $51 Million, as well as achieving the fabled hallmark of $1 Million daily volume traded. However, it is the core principles of the project, and founder Jacob Beckley's vision for the future that is really turning heads.

Cure Token

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Unlike most projects that launch and then attach themselves to a charity component as an afterthought, CURE is charity first. Backed by the immensely successful non-profit, The Beckley Foundation, CURE has so-far raised over $200,000 for pediatric cancer, and is continuing to raise a further $10,000 every single day. Already these donations have had an immeasurable impact on the lives of so many families and children suffering from childhood cancer - including paying for 4-year-old Lukas' dream holiday to Disney World, and providing care for terminally ill Alex. This ceaseless wave of positive work has now caught the eye of big names, including platinum-selling musician Majestic Drama, who has joined the project as ambassador.

Jacob himself is not one to stand on the side-lines. Even though he is already the Senior Vice President of Innovation, Technology and Product at highly successful Innovation company, Fusion92, he spends countless hours working tirelessly alongside his vast team of some 85 individuals. As the face of the project, Jacob is constantly taking part in featured AMA's (sometimes up to four a day), hosting Crypto 101 sessions (where he educates newcomers about DeFi and how to stay safe), planning marketing and organizing charitable donations.

He does all this without earning a single cent.

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A true testament to his philanthropic nature and the aims of his project Jacob does not own a single token, and any he buys with his own money, he immediately burns to decrease circulating supply and increase value. For Jacob, this is about a life of service and helping as many people as he can as quickly as possible. And it's working.

The future is already bright for CURE, but with its upcoming real-world use cases, it is about to burn white-hot. Pay attention, because this is where things get really exciting:

CURE Chain will be up first, which will allow agnostic patient healthcare to be stored as dynamic NFT's, growing organically throughout the life of the individual, whilst remaining completely anonymous. Global researchers would then be able to tap into, collate and share that information between each other across the world, side-stepping the large data gap caused by bureaucracy and national policies. This in turn would mean that for the first time in history, researchers would be working together rather than in small, separate pockets, which would allow them to discover cures and treatments unimaginably faster, whilst the patient earns perpetual royalties from the supplied data.

The second future utility is no less than a total revolution in global healthcare. There is a vast discrepancy in the quality and accessibility of healthcare, particularly for those with less affordability. CURE is set to become the currency for that access. It could be traded or even donated to people in need, allowing them to get access to quality and equal healthcare, regardless of geographical location. Once implemented, it will become the greatest equalizer the medical field has ever seen, one that will allow everyone on the planet to get the help they need, as well as sounding the death knell for expensive, prohibitive barriers.

CURE was one man's vision that has now become an entire movement centered around access, decentralization and equality. It is growing at an exponential rate, of which much of its popularity can be attributed to its transparency and authenticity, as well as the fact that in a sea of scams and memes, it is a project with a true purpose, and a passion at its core; the desire to change lives and improve the world.

Now that's a cause worth investing in.

If you want to find out more about CURE and its mission, head over to their website at https://www.curetoken.net/ or join the telegram at https://t.me/curetokenv2.

Media Contact

Jacob BeckleyEmail - admin@curetoken.net

PR - cryptoshib.comEmail - info@cryptoshib.com

To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/101545

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How CURE Is Combining Innovation, Technology and the Blockchain To Decentralize Healthcare - Yahoo Finance

AWS for blockchain Alchemy boosts valuation to $3.5B with $250M raise – TechCrunch

Exactly six months after raising $80 million at a $505 million valuation, blockchain and Web3 development SaaS startup Alchemy has raised $250 million in a Series C funding round that values the company at $3.5 billion.

Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) led the financing, which was extremely competitive with a number of large venture firms clamoring to not only back the company, but lead the investment, according to sources familiar with the transaction.

Besides the fact that Alchemy increased its valuation by a staggering 7x over a six-month period (thats a gain of more than $500 million in value per month), the round is notable for a few other reasons. For one, it represents one of a16zs largest Web3/blockchain investments to date. In June, the firm revealed its $2.2 billion crypto fund, illustrating its serious commitment to the space. (For the unacquainted, Web3 refers to a set of protocols led by blockchain, that intends to reinvent how the Internet is wired in the backend).

Whats also interesting is that Alchemy has managed to achieve something that remains elusive for most startups: profitability.

According to CEO and co-founder Nikil Viswanathan, the company is in fact very profitable. It turned that corner over the past few months, he said, as demand for its offering has exploded and revenue grew 15x since its last raise in April. The startup has been doing so well that it hasnt even touched the $80 million it raised in its Series B, according to Alchemy CTO and co-founder Joe Lau.

All that money is still in the bank, he said. We didnt need the money but we saw the value in bringing on great partners, such as Andreessen, which has an incredible team with deep technical expertise in the blockchain space.

Put simply, Alchemy wants to do for blockchain and Web3 what AWS (Amazon Web Services) did for the internet. The startups goal is to be the starting place for developers considering building a product on top of a blockchain or mainstream blockchain applications. Its developer tool aims to remove the complexity and costs of building infrastructure while improving applications through necessary developer tools. It launched its offering in August of 2020.

Today, Alchemy powers a range of transactions across nearly every blockchain vertical, including financial institutions, exchanges, billion-dollar decentralized finance projects and multinational organizations such as UNICEF. It has also quickly become the technology behind every major NFT platform, including MakersPlace, OpenSea, Nifty Gateway, SuperRare and CryptoPunks. Other customers include Dapper Labs, Axie Infinity, Fortune 500s building on blockchain such as the recently signed Adobe, PricewaterhouseCoopers. It also serves the majority of DeFi.

Alchemy powers over $45 billion in transaction volume for companies around the globe. Thats up from $30 billion at the time of its April raise. Since then, the company has also expanded the number of blockchains that it powers.

Our platform was more or less on Ethereum, but weve seen a lot of demand and have since expanded to include Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism and Flow, Lau said.

Image Credits: Alchemy

Alchemy has also seen a lot of new developers, noted Viswanathan

Weve had many more teams and companies join Alchemy, and more developers per team or per company are using our platform, he added. So were seeing growth across all axes.

Despite its explosive growth, Alchemy remains a lean team. It currently has 37 employees. It is based in San Francisco, with an office in New York and remote employees globally.

The company plans to use its new capital mostly to invest in building a community around blockchain. Alchemy started at the right time, in the execs view in 2017 when the market was tiny and many still doubted the opportunity in the space.

Our ultimate goal is to bring the promise of blockchain to life, Lau said. We want to fulfill its potential by creating more resources for developers to come into the space and more effectively and more quickly build blockchain products.

Viswanathan believes Alchemy is playing a crucial role in the recent surge and popularity of blockchain.

As blockchain has been growing, not only has Alchemy grown, but we have helped the blockchain ecosystem grow because, he told TechCrunch. Its this kind of virtuous cycle the more we provide better tooling, the easier it is for developers to build products, and then more users come, so then more developers come and we make the tooling better, and so on and so forth. So we like to think of ourselves as helping spin that flywheel.

Image Credits: Alchemy

Ali Yahya, general partner at Andreessen Horowitz (16z), described Alchemy as a key driver of the growth of blockchain and Web3, and said the startup is already the de facto developer platform for Web3.

Just as Microsoft and AWS built platforms that powered the computer and internet industries, Alchemys platform enables developers to build blockchain products used by millions globally, he wrote via email, adding thatAlchemys growth across all relevant metrics has been staggering.

Google chairman and former Stanford University President John L. Hennessy who invested in the companys last round echoed Yahyas sentiments. But he also made another, noteworthy comparison:

Alchemy is powering the growth of the blockchain industry the same way Amazon Web Services did for the cloud, he wrote via e-mail. The excitement about their technology reminds me of the early days of Google.

The Series C financing also included participation from new investors Lightspeed Venture Partners and Redpoint. Existing backers Coatue, Lee Fixels Addition, DFJ and Pantera Capital doubled down on their investments in Alchemy, which has now raised about $345 million in total since its 2017 inception.

Other previous investors in the company include the Chainsmokers Mantis, actor Jared Leto and the Glazer family (owners of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Manchester United), Yahoo co-founder and former CEO Jerry Yang, Coinbase, SignalFire, Samsung, Stanford University, Charles Schwab, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman and others.

Continued here:

AWS for blockchain Alchemy boosts valuation to $3.5B with $250M raise - TechCrunch

Why Hollywood loves cryptocurrency, NFTs, and the blockchain – Fast Company

Delayed three times since spring of 2020, No Time to Diethe 25thJames Bond moviefinally premiered in London earlier this month, taking in $119 million in its international debut. It marked not only the return of the movie theater experience to much of the world, but also a glimpse at the future role of technology in facilitating global entertainment distribution.

From merchandise to receiving financing through crypto- and blockchain-based production, studios can better cater to filmmakers, retailers, and moviegoers by modernizing their approach to production and distribution. No Time to Die signals the first time a major Hollywood production has received such backing, but further crypto-based financing for other Hollywood projects in general has the potential to upend the entertainment industry.

In particular, MGM represents a vanguard in the entertainment industry. The companywhich Amazon agreed to acquire for $8.45 billion last Mayhas already been collaborating with technology leaders to reach a wider audience and better monetize its properties. Early in 2021, it announced a partnership with Eluvio and its Content Fabric platform to support MGMs distribution of screeners, prerelease screenings on local devices, and marketing and licensing support. Eluvios recent breakthroughs in blockchain security for content streaming are enabling media companies to expand monetization efforts beyond traditional barriers, with greater levels of personalization and rights control. MGM is also one of several recent media companies to explore the viability of NFT distribution to support their IPs, partnering with VeVe to distribute digital collectibles for No Time for Die.

Blockchain technology is positioned to potentially transform several processes within the media and entertainment industry for content security, license & rights management, digital advertising, and royalty distribution, according to a recent report from Industry Research on the blockchains impact on the media business. With crypto and blockchain, the movie and entertainment industry is poised to reinvent its business functions, facilitating secure, transparent, and traceable transactions across the market.

The worlds largest media companies have endured a string of significant issues in recent years, among them surges in piracy, the challenge of fully monetizing streaming platforms, and the cratering of the box office because of COVID-19. According to Industry Researchs report, With the help of blockchain technology, media, and advertising enterprises are able to eliminate fraud, reduce costs, and increase transparency within critical and time-consuming business processes. Further, blockchain technology helps the media and entertainment companies to effectively protect Intellectual Property (IP) rights.

Piracy and access remain the greatest risks to the entertainment industry. Blockchain technology that enables secure delivery of content, and crypto-based investments that support independent filmmakers at scale are set to transform how media is both created and distributed. As a result, the global crypto and blockchain market size in the media and entertainment industry is expected to reach $1596.3 million by 2027, up from $466 million in 2020.

As managing partner of Parkpine Capital, an early-stage post-revenue venture capital fund, Im already seeing the effects of the growing interest in crypto-based entertainment investments. Our own fundraising for $175 million to be allocated to seed and Series A startups is about to close, and well be launching a private investment syndicate with an investment capacity of over $3 billion to back the tech-based entertainment industry.

Were seeing that studio executives and their tech-fund managers are keen to explore acquisitions of blockchain/crypto-backed entertainment startups that will speed up international distribution of films and products. In the independent film market, funding is scarce and investors are generally skittish due to the high risk of such endeavors. The implementation of NFTs and the democratization of development through crowdfunding is an opportunity for all artists, but especially for the independent film landscape. For both major studios and independent filmmakers, crypto/blockchain investments are enabling greater flexibility, reduced labor costs, and streamlined production processes. By reducing risk, crypto is enabling more opportunities throughout the industry.

At the consumer level, AMC recently announced it will start accepting Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Bitcoin Cash payments from customers. And as many companies dip into crypto, some like DraftKings, Funko, and Liquid Media are experimenting with pop-culture and sports-oriented NFTs. The increased adoption of crypto-transactions by supporting industries will likely lead to evolving relationships between studios, investors, and creators.

This appetite for crypto-based backing will grow, even as Chinathe worlds largest market for film entertainment has started to crack down on cryptocurrencies and the entertainment industry. China recently banned crypto as part of a series of sweeping bans on everything from superhero movies to video games and representations within media. While these restrictions on content and currency in China may look like a potential roadblock to widespread crypto implementation, and the country will continue to flex its financial muscles, its not quite so simple. Chinas anti-crypto efforts are part of much broader measures the country is imposing on its financial systems in general, in an attempt to reduce risk in the system and stabilize growth that has been exponential in recent years. There are limits to what those restrictions will be able to do (were already seeing some flexibility), with the country permitting the blockchain-backed No Time to Die to premiere on October 29.

With blockchain technology already making inroads throughout the industry, were on the precipice of seeing a shift in how technology impacts and influences Hollywood and entertainment in general. Down the road, California venture capital firm a16z could be winning Academy Awards instead of Columbia Pictures or Warner Bros. Were optimistic about this potential and expect fundraising for multicultural collaborative-entertainment projects to accelerate by at least tenfold in the next several years.

Despite recent turbulence in the markets, likely impacted at least partially by Chinas regulator crackdown, crypto and the revolutionary blockchain technology behind it are here to stay. What were seeing right now may delay what comes next, but change is coming nonetheless. Just as audio technologies ushered in the Golden Age of Hollywood, crypto and blockchain are positioned to inspire awe and passion among filmmakers and viewers alike.

Ahmed Shabana is a venture capitalist, startup advisor, and investor. As managing partner for Parkpine Capital, founder of Global Ventures Summit, and creator of The Hungry Company, he helps founders to scale startups beyond borders.

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Why Hollywood loves cryptocurrency, NFTs, and the blockchain - Fast Company

A play-to-earn blockchain envisions a revolutionary token economy through the perfect combination of DeFi and NFTs – Cointelegraph

The new era of blockchain-based games involves more than advanced graphics and sophisticated gameplay. Through the advent of technologies that enable decentralized finance (DeFi) and nonfungible tokens (NFTs), in-game incentives can turn into real-life financial rewards.

Dragon Mainland is a play-to-earn game that combines PvP (player vs player) and PvE (player versus environment) warfare, breeding dragons, free commerce and collecting NFTs. By absorbing other dragon skulls, players can level up their own dragons and earn cryptocurrency in the game. The platform takes the experience one step further by offering players the opportunity to earn more by trading NFTs collected in-game and engaging in DeFi activities.

By contributing to the ecosystem or developing in-game skills, players can earn DMS tokens or Dragon mainland shards digital assets to realize ecological co-construction.

According to the platform, once the game is deployed, the games developer will have no control over it. Instead, the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) community will be solely responsible for validating all transactions without the involvement of a third-party platform.

Inspired by the movie How to Train Your Dragon, Dragon Mainlands gameplay is based on dragon breeding and battles. Dragons can be of five types: fire, water, wind, stone and thunder with each exhibiting a different set of skills and attributes.

In order to improve their dragons existing attributes, players will need to absorb the skulls of dragons of the same type. Dragon skulls can be obtained by burning DMS tokens to open the Dragon treasure box, purchasing them on the marketplace or from certain special events.

The game promises an immersive 3D experience with roguelike gameplay and AR visuals. Unlike most other blockchain games, Dragon Mainlands in-game battles will provide more than just another way for players to level up. These in-game battles will ultimately determine the computing power of the blockchain network, which will, in turn, improve the efficiency of liquidity mining.

To obtain a dragon, players will have to participate in the Genesis Dragon Egg sale. There are a total of 10,000 Genesis Dragon Eggs, but so far, the platform has sold 1000 Fire Dragon Eggs in a sensational three-second sale.

A players earnings are split into two categories: in-game earnings and liquidity mining earnings from staking dragons. The quantity of in-game revenue is determined by a dungeon's difficulty, and tokens are earned once the monster level has been conquered successfully.

DMS tokens can be used to buy items on the marketplace, governance, staking, liquidity mining, dragon breeding and marketplace dividends. DMS holders that stake their tokens and provide liquidity will be eligible to earn rewards, says Dragon Mainland. These tokens have a maximum supply of 1,000,000,000 and will never be issued.

Meanwhile, the Dragon Miracle Potion (DMP) is a functional token issued by the platform with an unlimited total supply. DMP tokens can only be obtained through game dungeons and daily quests completed. These tokens will be consumed during dragon breeding, dragon skull absorption and swallowing other dragons.

Aside from the platforms revenue aggregator, players can earn through a multitude of innovations introduced by Dragon Mainland, such as DeFi mortgage mining, rare dynamic attributes of games, DAO management of the game mechanism and NFT trading.

All NFT data will be stored on the Filecoin network to maintain the decentralized integrity of the tokenized collectible.

Dragon Mainland describes its token economy system as one that perfectly combines DeFi and NFT into an encrypted world and uses financial mechanisms and game systems to empower its users, creating a truly unique and lasting game financial ecosystem.

The platform anticipates that when all of these elements come to fruition, Dragon Mainland will be much more than a blockchain-based role-playing game. By combining the best aspects of existing DeFi infrastructure, NFT trading and in-game experiences, players will be a part of a novel GameFi ecosystem. And as is the case with most things in the metaverse, early adopters are likely to reap the largest rewards.

Disclaimer. Cointelegraph does not endorse any content or product on this page. While we aim at providing you with all important information that we could obtain, readers should do their own research before taking any actions related to the company and carry full responsibility for their decisions, nor can this article be considered as investment advice.

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A play-to-earn blockchain envisions a revolutionary token economy through the perfect combination of DeFi and NFTs - Cointelegraph

Email over blockchain: The best bad idea I’ve heard this year – Techradar

It has become an established joke that blockchain is a technology in search of a problem to solve. Although this quip is deliberately provocative, designed to needle a thin-skinned community of enthusiasts, there is a measure of truth to it too.

Since the emergence of cryptocurrency, the first blockchain use case, entrepreneurs have come up with tens of alternative applications for the technology, which can be thought of as a time-stamped database of transactions distributed among the members of a network.

With varying degrees of success, blockchain has been applied to fields ranging from supply chain management and enterprise data protection to identity verification and more. The emergence of (DeFi), meanwhile, has seen blockchain used to facilitate peer-to-peer lending, borrowing and the like.

Now, a company called Pingala Software believes it has come up with the latest killer use case. Earlier this year, the firm launched LedgerMail, a product billed as the worlds first decentralized email solution. The service promises to liberate users from invasions of privacy, insecure message transfer protocols, and abuses of centralized power.

However, LedgerMail also relieves users of a number of aspects of traditional email they might rather like to keep. In fact, so fundamental are the differences, it might be considered misleading to characterize LedgerMail as an email service at all.

Speaking to TechRadar Pro over Zoom, Suraj Malla, VP Marketing and Sales at Pingala, methodically set out the case in favor of blockchain-based email.

To understand the benefits, though, its first important to understand the attributes that define a public blockchain network:

According to Malla, this combination of qualities means blockchain is uniquely equipped to neutralize one-by-one the significant problems with the traditional email systems we rely on today.

For example, the harvesting of email data en masse by the likes of Google and Microsoft is made possible by the centralization of power and control. But with LedgerMail, there is no centralized authority managing and controlling your data, Malla explained. And this also means there is no central point of failure.

Likewise, a large proportion of email-based cyberattacks are made possible by the continued use of archaic transfer protocols (like IMAP and SMTP). But LedgerMail replaces email transfer protocols with blockchain, which Malla described as one of the most secure technologies in the modern world.

Although LedgerMail users can still feasibly send malicious content to one another, identity spoofing and phishing attacks (a major problem with traditional email) are made much more difficult by a whitelist-style mechanism, in conjunction with the natural transparency of a blockchain-based system.

And, finally, LedgerMail encrypts all message content and attachments, which means only the sender and recipient can possibly gain access to the material.

To its credit, Pingala has enjoyed a measure of early success with LedgerMail, attracting 400,000 users in the first two months, including a number of enterprise customers. And there is clearly a large market for products that champion data privacy in this way; just look at the growth of the VPN industry.

However, the company is all too happy to gloss over the issues with its proposition, which are as varied and significant as the problems it is attempting to remedy.

When we spoke, Malla was proud to tell us that 24,000 emails had been exchanged using LedgerMail in the past 24 hours; the implication was that the platform is fast gaining traction. Inadvertently, though, this boast drew attention to the first of the major problems with the LedgerMail system: scalability.

LedgerMail sits atop a little-known blockchain called XinFin, a proof-of-stake network that draws from the traditions of both private and public blockchain. Courtesy of a number of clever design features, XinFin boasts a far greater throughput than either Bitcoin or Ethereum, achieving upwards of 2,000 transactions per second.

However, despite these innovations, the network still caps out at roughly 173 million transactions per day, circa 0.06% of the 319.6 billion emails that currently pass back and forth in the same time period. And remember, LedgerMail has to share XinFin with other blockchain-based services too.

The issue of scalability is tied closely to a second problem: cost. Although its free to sign up for a LedgerMail account, it is not free to send an email. Like all public blockchain networks, each exchange of value or information incurs a transaction fee. This fee incentivizes participation in the network, which in turn ensures a high level of security and redundancy is maintained.

In the case of the XinFin network, transaction fees are remarkably low; Pingala says it costs roughly 1/800th of a dollar to send a LedgerMail email. However, the value of transaction fees is tied directly with the amount of traffic on a network. So, in a hypothetical scenario wherein LedgerMail becomes immensely popular and users flood the XinFin network, emails will become significantly more expensive (even if the ceiling is one million times lower than on the Ethereum network). Given only a tiny fraction of people currently pay for the privilege of sending emails, its difficult to imagine the concept going down all that well.

The single largest problem with LedgerMail, however, is that its a closed-loop system. That is to say, users can only deliver messages to other people that own a LedgerMail account - and even then, only if they feature on the recipients approved list of contacts.

Email has lasted more than 50 years in large part thanks to its universality; anyone with an internet connection can have an email account, and anyone with an email account can communicate with anyone else.

While Pingala has made dispensations to allow users to sign up for LedgerMail using an existing email account, a simple sign-up process does not offset the fact that the platform does not allow for free and open communication. In this regard, can LedgerMail even be considered an email service at all?

After more than a little back-and-forth over the shortcomings of the model, Pingala founder Vinay Krishna (who was also on the call) eventually conceded that LedgerMail is not a service that will replace traditional email after all. Rather, its a product people might use on occasion, when exchanging information that is particularly sensitive.

For all regular emails that dont contain sensitive information, people could still use regular email, he proposed. But when people want to make sure information remains confidential, thats when theyll use LedgerMail.

In this sense, LedgerMail shares more DNA with encrypted messaging services like Signal or Telegram (neither of which require a blockchain, by the way) than it does with Gmail or Yahoo!.

Ultimately, the problems Pingala is aiming to solve are genuine ones. All internet users deserve to be shielded from the intrusions of Big Tech, and they also deserve to be protected from the army of cybercriminals in their inboxes.

However, the scale at which the company is proposing to solve these problems is microscopic; with the various caveats and limitations, LedgerMail wont even make a dent. Its the best bad idea Ive heard this year.

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Email over blockchain: The best bad idea I've heard this year - Techradar

Nimbus Founder Alex Lemberg On The Power Of Blockchain To Create A Society In Which Everyone Is Empowered – Entrepreneur

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Middle East, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Alex Lemberg is the CEO of Nimbus, a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) regulated ecosystem that offers a variety of revenue streams to users on a single platform, and the first piece of advice that he offers to people in the UAE who are keen on making use of blockchain technology is to understand the revolutionary potential it brings to the market. By this, I mean the distributed ledger aspect of it, the smart contract aspect, the trust-less environment, and to treat it regardless of a specific region or any other region, he says. According to him, the significance of blockchain technology is that it breeds trust, in an environment that does not offer it, at least not in a format to which people are accustomed.

Nimbus

Alex Lemberg, CEO, Nimbus

"We, as an entrepreneur-based economy, or China, as a state-based economy, have rightfully relied on institutions, Lemberg explains. "If you compare the very first transaction that's ever been done, to any transaction that we do today, the one moving factor is that we don't necessarily know the people that we transact with. There's a certain level of insecurity, and a certain level of not having an established trusted relationship. So, we started to create institutions to bridge that one gap for any transaction that we do, whether it's law firms, accounting companies, or banking companies- these institutions played a tremendous role."

However, with the advent of blockchain and smart contracts which cannot be manipulated or hacked, Lemberg believes that society is, for the first time ever, starting to move away from the absolute need for institutions of any kind to be a part of any transaction. Yet, Lemberg opines that blockchain will not eliminate institutions, but to the contrary, make them play a much larger role in it than the retail investor or the retail participant. "That's just how it is, because they simply have way too much experience and way too much liquidity, he says. This is a whole new technology for both the institution and the retail investor, and now, the only difference is that the retail investor does not have to wait for the institution to catch up.

Lemberg goes on to note that the retail investor can now choose to operate outside of an institution, and hence start participating in deals much earlier, whether it's initial public offering-based, staking-based, investment-based or lending-based. "So, we can either go through an institution and pay a smaller fee, or we can actually do this on our own, he says. "Now, why is that so important? It's important, because institutions over the years really have stopped innovating. Now, it doesn't mean that we have stopped spending on technology or process innovation (banks do innovate), but because of the regulatory environment, the amount of innovation that they can actually produce is very limited.

While a regulated institution will innovate only within a well-defined context, Lemberg points out that blockchain is able to enable a lot more of it, because we, as individuals, can now start creating smart contracts and projects, he says. So, the innovation that's going to come from that world is going to get adopted, because it doesn't have to rely on an institution to make its way to the marketplace, but on that guy or girl working in the basement to create it. They now can actually put it onto the chain, instead of having to convince an institution to do it for them.

According to Lemberg, the significance of blockchain as a technology lies in the level of innovation and market access that it offers, which has never been seen before. "It certainly will never be able to be regulated to the extent that the regulators would want, he adds. "But at the same time, what's going to happen, I believe, is that institutions will pick up on those innovations. They can't do it on their own. They'll have that innovation put into a framework that will be mature and backed by the mature institution. And the ones that do deserve to sustain the marketplace will stay in the marketplace."

Lembergs Malta-registeredenterprise Nimbus, a decentralized finance platform that offers peer-to-peer lending/staking and off-exchange (the ability to exchange cryptocurrency off the exchange) is designed to grasp the power of this new potential. Nimbus two main advantages, Lemberg explains, are in eliminating fees and being protected from hackers, as it does not hold the currency in any physical state. The future trajectory of his business will remain in decentralized finance, he explains, but the Nimbus team will focus more on working with regulators in order to create more stringent governance processes within the companys compliance processes in certain regions, starting with knowing your client (KYC) rules, anti-money laundering (AML) rules, and starting to register.

Source: Nimbus

When explaining that the companys plan also includes conducting use case studies for leveraging blockchain technology as well as non-fungible token (NFT) based technology within the sectors that people actually understand, Lemberg admits that the biggest obstacle he currently faces is in their actual adoption. Its because we care about the adoption of the actual technology overall, not necessarily a specific product, he says. "What matters is that people begin to use and track this technology on a daily basis. One of the difficulties of doing it by only providing financial securitized products and complex financial products and models is that when you're looking for a technology to get adoption, you have to teach people what is blockchain, what is cryptocurrency, what are smart contracts, NFTs, and so on. Then, you have to teach them what a complex financial product is.

To prove his point, Lemberg explains that peer-to-peer lending has enjoyed wide acceptance, mainly because it is an easy to understand concept for people. Inspired by that, Nimbus aims to thus use its case studies about the technologies that it offers to enter the regulated environment, and help banking institutions to participate in this new world. As a company that wants to drive adoption, well do this by actually solving fundamental issues in several different categories, several different industries, and especially industries that people use every day, he says. "It's easier to create adoption participation from the end user, when they know the end product. And now, all they have to really learn is how to open up a wallet and how to fund an account. Thats our goal in the company- to get as many people onto this technology, and to help the industries that everyone uses and loves to adopt these technologies, despite their certain fundamental issues. In parallel, we look to make a very strong foothold in the financial space, as well as the decentralized finished space.

Another area that Lemberg is interested in promoting is decentralized finance (DeFi) for SMEs in the fashion sector, who are known to often struggle to get funding from classical financial institutions, as they dont satisfy the large number of factors that are checked as a risk assessment process. "DeFi might not substitute the bank as an intermediary needed to process transactions, but it might substitute it as a source of permissionless financing, Lemberg notes. "However, if a company chooses DeFi in order to get a loan, it means that this company already uses cryptocurrency, and thus, it can transfer funds across the world in a fast, secure, cheap, and transparent way, while keeping a close track of its financial operations.

One more benefit of DeFi is that it enables highly profitable companies to increase that profit through a lending mechanism, such as his Nimbus platform. "Fashion companies performing profitably might use the excessive profit to provide direct loans to other DeFi market participants, and at the same time, differentiating their sources of income and receiving even more profit, thus increasing volume in their primary operations, Lemberg says. Platforms like Nimbus, he adds, open up cross-border action, because cryptocurrency and the ability to directly swap from one token to another bring more liquidity to a company, along with the ability to use different products and services at the same time and without any visit to centralized entities.

DeFi is also a good avenue to consider also when a fashion company decides to move its production or expand it to another country, Lemberg says, where it usually does not have any credit rating. "Nimbus might help here, since there is no definition of borders for DeFi protocols, you can use the platform as a source of finance to cover the costs of expansion abroad, he says. "Nimbus can also be used as a royalty and tax payment automated system. For example, fashion brands can use Nimbus as an automatic royalty payment system for designers, meaning that designers who created a design for shoes/suit/clothes might create an NFT token locked up under their name, and receive automatic royalties paid to them for their design being used by a fashion brand.

Source: Nimbus

And the list of other possible uses of Nimbus expands grows more. Another case might be near-field communication (NFC) chips, which are devices integrated into the design of a cloth/shoe, in order for blockchain to gather, track, and organize different types of information, Lemberg adds. "This information might be how the logistics of products are organized, how much time does it take for a piece of clothes/shoes to reach a shop or a warehouse. Also, it can be used to track other personal metrics, such as, for example, related to shoes, steps, time or location of usage and gather relevant big data."

Lembergs expertise and understanding of both the business process and the use of technologies to maintain a streamlined, user-friendly environment comes from his time working as a business analyst on Wall Street since 1992, which included stints at Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Barclays Capital, CIBC, Bank of America Securities, and Credit Suisse. Over all these years, he has become known as an expert in data visualization, big data, and artificial intelligence for big companies, and in that sense, his most significant piece of advice for entrepreneurs is to make it a point to make use of the aforementioned technologies to their benefit, starting now. More importantly, don't entirely rely on external consultancy companies that come in, but start initiating programs in your organization for data literacy," he adds. "That means that everyone in the team and the organization should not look at information anymore in a very static way. Every time they touch a piece of information or generate some form of data, they have to look at the generation or the act of generation of that data with the end goal, which should be creating some form of business intelligence tool or data visualization tool that the company can leverage internally in that specific department, and more so by associating all those data points across the organization."

Following this approach, Lemberg concludes, will allow business leaders to see more positive interactions and benefits for their different processes and departments. "You're going to be able to make much faster decisions, and those decisions are going to be a lot more accurate. So, that stamps for that one," he says.

Related:How Blockchain Is Set To Transform The Healthcare Sector

TREP TALK: Nimbus CEO Alex Lembergs Tips For Entrepreneurs In The Blockchain Space

1. Make your blockchain business meaningful Whenever you start up your first business, select use cases and solutions that are specific and meaningful, so do not do just a project that's going to be wrapped up in a lot of marketing in order to just drive awareness. That's where most of the failure has taken place in the blockchain space today.

2. Hire the right legal consultants You need to make sure that the use case of what you are going after, or that the solution you're looking to provide, can be done in the jurisdictions in which you plan to work. Certainly, you'll find some jurisdictions in which you cannot do anything, but in the end, that should not necessarily be a major factor in providing the solution that you want to give to the world. So, legal compliance and regulatory compliance- get that very early.

3. Prioritize business intelligence Make business intelligence, data, visualization, machine learning, predictive analytics, and in general, reporting, the foundational core of what you're doing, and make sure that you support data literacy across your organization. Leverage business intelligence from day one all the way through to the end of your project, both for internal purposes and for client-facing or any other external purpose, so that you can present some level of transparency to whoever you're dealing with.

4. Have pride in doing things by yourself This space isn't just decentralizing innovation, but its also decentralizing the need to do things on your own, in any capacity. I would highly recommend that you get partners quickly early. Everyone wants to network, but network with a purpose, and actually help each other. If you want to succeed and grow very quickly, you'll be able to do that only by leveraging other people who are already in the space in a particular region.

5. Stay focused One of the difficulties with blockchain is that it gives you the ability to really do almost anything, and so, it's going to give you a lot of options in terms of use cases to go after and how, and so on. Youre going to find yourself in a position where everything sounds amazing, and whether you're slapping in an NFT on a game, on financial products, on commodity products, and you're going to end up with a lot of ideas, especially when you start going to these events. But, if you're just starting out, pick one use case, and don't let yourself get distracted from it, but make sure that you stay focused, that your team is focused and get back to other use cases only once the ones that you have started with are actually running successfully.

Related:Startup Spotlight: Blockchain-Powered Platform AKcess Launches In Kuwait

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Nimbus Founder Alex Lemberg On The Power Of Blockchain To Create A Society In Which Everyone Is Empowered - Entrepreneur

What Happens When You Take Social Media On The Blockchain? – ValueWalk

TikTok became an instant hit in India following its launch in 2016, as it became the countrys most downloaded app for Android. Everything changed in 2020 when it was banned along with 58 other Chinese apps over national security issues.

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Miami-based Statar Capital struggled in September as natural gas prices soared. The fund, which specializes in trading natural gas, ended September with a loss of 0.59%, according to a copy of its latest investor update, which ValueWalk has been able to review. Run by Ron Ozer, a former trader at Citadel and DE Shaw, the Read More

The Indian government claimed that the platforms were using the data illicitly by secretly storing data from users phones after the installation of these apps.

The ban left a gaping hole in a huge market following 20 million app downloads for TikTok, and left many creators desperate people who had built their brand, as well as the foundations of a strong following and an income. Step in Chingari.

Chingari is a short-video blockchain-based platform, which became an instant success in India soon after it was launched in September 2016. It is the worlds fastest growing social token app and the first social network in India to have issued crypto tokens.

It is also the first ever Indian short-video platform that is poised to revolutionize the creator economy in the country and gradually across the globe. With 30 million active users on a monthly basis, it enables young and aspiring talents to explore their creative potential.

When compared to TikTok, Chingari users can do a lot more on the app: from uploading clips, to watching movies on the Chingari Multiplex and shopping for trendy garments and accessories. Still, Chingaris biggest proposition is that it rewards viewers with Gari Tokens for simply being on the app and watching videos.

Chingari recently raised $19 million to make a strategic move into crypto and launched its native token, the $GARI, with leading influencer Salman Khan as brand ambassador. Salman has over 40 million followers on social media and a major presence in India.

We spoke to Chingari CEO, Sumit Ghosh, about Chingaris rise and other trends within the short video creation market.

According to some studies, the short-video business in the country is projected to reach 650 million users by 2025 after growing 24% between 2018 and last year. This is almost two times faster than Indonesia and China.

Not only the number of users is expected to grow but also the time they spend on these platforms. At present, people spend 45 minutes a day and we are bound to reach 55 to 60 minutes in the course of four years.

These numbers must also be seen in the light of smartphone usage in India, as people normally spend 4.8 hours a day on these devices, one of them watching videos entirely. This means we are in a very competitive environment, which is bound to grow at a significant pace.

Chingari has always held its unique identity, beyond just short-video creation. Tik Toks ban came in at a time when the market was beginning to adopt the trend and opportunities created by the social video creation category. Chingaris innovative offerings, backed by robust tech skills, gave it an edge over other market players.

Chingaris blockchain platform will allow users to obtain tokens for creating or watching content. The idea is to monetise creators talent with a decent amount of money and help them uplift themselves by participating in a social platform. Chingari wants to make this vision possible through its token $GARI.

Technology has always been my forte. I have spent over a decade working with many high-tech companies, establishing a track record of helping organizations to expand faster. With a background in management consulting and a founder of a successful start-up, my expertise runs in structuring and building a culture for a distributed agile team.

Being a noted speaker and a leading webinar expert, you may find me advising people on internal strategies, processes and methodologies. With Chingari, I envision to build a work environment that lets people explore their best form, both personally and professionally.

It is the vision of Chingari that each user creator and viewer alike should have their own tokens and direct blockchain interactions, making the platform more resilient and providing the users a gateway into the blockchain world without crippling its natural strong characteristics.

For our blockchain integration, we needed a platform that is affordable, has high throughput and is future-proof for the growth of the user base. The platform also has to be very stable, with a proven track record, and sufficiently decentralized.

Solana is the natural fit for these requirements. It is very fast, showing in practice the ability to sustain a higher peak throughput, even without sharing. It is also continuously working on growing these numbers.

$GARI will empower short-form video creators to monetize their content on the blockchain through the GARI Token. The tokens can be used to reward your favourite creators with Gari Tokens, to Watch videos on the platform and earn Gari tokens, and also to create and earn.

Creators are everywhere. The global market has been positively receptive to entertainment of a different kind. Changing trends and engaging incorporations are at their peak. At Chingari, we have devised strategic plans, backed by industry leaders, to pave our way into global territories soon.

Platforms do this to secure traffic. We tie up with influencers based on their creative talent, engagement, and social media reach, regardless of the platform they belong to. We offer them a spectrum of opportunities, which can boost their potential to create more unique content.

This attracts a wider base of existing and new creators towards Chingari.

Short videos are giving companies the chance to cut through saturation in their marketing efforts. It is a fact that people share videos at twice the rate than any other format, and more than 80% buy products or services based on a brands video.

Also, digital saturation is affecting peoples attention span by making it increasingly shorter. In this sense, companies need to adapt to this new rule of engagement so short videos are becoming the norm. Short videos are usually funny, so their usage will depend on the voice companies would want to give their brands.

Several social media networks have adapted their platforms in such a way that short videos are part of their offering. Pinterest is adding a new short video feature to its platform, which shows how strongly this function is growing.

The new feature is called Watch, and it allows users to view short videos and photo series.

Also, in one of its most recent updates, Instagram has renamed its vertical video app from IGTV to Instagram Video. Videos posted to the main Instagram feed can now be up to 60 minutes long previously exclusive to IGTV videos and it is no longer necessary to leave the main application to view them.

In early July, TikTok extended its short videos from 60 seconds to 3 minutes, while YouTube started introducing 60-second long videos last year. This only goes to show how both YouTube and Instagram are serving and adapting to this trend, with short, engaging videos and an effective algorithm.

It also shows how platforms tended to differentiate from one another by offering unique features, but the success of new formats and consumer preferences has disrupted the social media ecosystem to offer a wider variety of features.

Updated on Nov 1, 2021, 11:38 am

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What Happens When You Take Social Media On The Blockchain? - ValueWalk

I’ve Spent $10 So Far on This Blockchain Game. My Assets in It Have Spiked to $17,000 – Motley Fool

A couple of years ago, I started researching cryptocurrencies. I didn't understand the ins and outs, so I haven't invested any money in tokens. During the course of my research, however, I discovered a game on the internet called Splinterlands.

It's a card-based strategy game involving hundreds of monsters, including vampires, maggots, dragons, a giant eyeball, pirates, robots, sharks, ghosts, ice soldiers, and so forth. I started playing for free.

image source: Splinterlands

After a while, I paid $10 to gain access to the entire library of monsters. It also meant I could win cards for keeps.

The cards are non-fungible tokens (NFTs) that reside on the Hive blockchain. What's really cool is that you can't lose your cards. And you don't have to spend any cash in the game if you don't want to. So Splinterlands is a risk-free and entertaining way to learn about crypto and the blockchain while earning NFT assets.

My cost basis is still $10. And my monster cards have dramatically appreciated in value.

I've been playing for almost two years, and in the past several months, I've started paying attention to how much my crypto assets in the game are worth. Here's the rundown:

July -- $2,000

August -- $5,000

September -- $12,000

October -- $17,000

(Actually, my cards are now worth about $16,000. My overall in-game assets are worth $17,000 because I've added roughly another $1,000 in crypto winnings.)

Splinterlands recently introduced its own cryptocurrency -- Splintershards (CRYPTO:SPS). One SPS token is now trading for about $0.57. I've been awarded over 2,000 coins, based on my assets in the game. The company has 3 billion coins, and will release many of them to players every day during the next five years.

So now I'm a crypto owner despite myself. I would actually own more SPS, except I keep exchanging the tokens for the in-game currency, Dark Energy Crystals, so I can buy more cards. I think that's where the true value of Splinterlands resides.

The game itself is attracting more players, which in turn increases demand for the assets in it. So these NFT cards have utility. You don't just look at them or think about them. You usethem to battle other players. And by doing so, you can win more assets. And the more assets you own, the more assets you can win. It's a virtuous cycle.

Of course, you can lose, too. So far I've had over 24,000 battles, and I've lost at least 10,000 times. But the cool thing is that you only lose your pride. The cards are yours to keep.

image source: Splinterlands

I suspect that part of the reason my cache of cards has gained in value so quickly is that it's early in this game's lifecycle. Splinterlands was started in 2018. The vast majority of people have never heard of it, and its marketing is almost all via word-of-mouth.

In the past week, I've mentioned Splinterlands on Facebook, told family and friends about it, told my bartender about the game, and mentioned it to a waitress. I've yet to bring it up to a person who had heard about it.

Demand for the cards is escalating as more and more people start playing the game. Periodically the website is brought down briefly for maintenance because so many people are joining and playing. Splinterlands already has players from around the world, although right now, most of them are crypto and blockchain enthusiasts.

Further, the mechanics of the game causes the supply of cards to shrink. When Splinterlands introduces a card, it only gets a single digital "print run." (This is all electronic, so there's no real ink involved.) When you win a card, it's a level 1 monster. Players combine multiple cards to level them up, making their creatures more powerful. This has the effect of removing cards from circulation and making those that are left more valuable.

You see that ugly, tentacled brute pictured above -- the giant one that's about to eat a shark? That's "The Gorlodon," an epic death monster. To upgrade it to level 2, I had to acquire three additional cards, and then unite them. So the total number of Gorlodon cards available will shrink over time. Right now, there are only 6,861 Gorlodon cards in circulation. On third-party sites, a single Gorlodon card now sells for $17.

image source: Splinterlands

According to PeakMonsters, Splinterlands now averages 3 million transactions every day, and almost 10 million battles, with 400,000 players from around the world. And 13,000 new players are joining every day.

To meet the rising demand created by this dramatic increase in players, Splinterlands periodically introduces new monsters. A new deck, Chaos Legion, will be introduced next month. This will add 80 more monsters to the arena, and increase the total number of cards by 75 million. These cards will be quite cheap at first, allowing newbies the opportunity to acquire many monsters and level them up. Over time, as these cards become scarce, they should increase in value.

Right now there are about 400 different monsters in the game. How big can this universe get? At a certain point too many monsters might make gameplay unwieldy. So far, that hasn't been a problem.

Splinterlands is hugely entertaining and hard to put down. Last Christmas, I got a new Sony PlayStation. I haven't taken it out of the box yet, in part because this cheap internet game is taking up most of the time I have for video games. Aside from the fun of it, the potential money-making aspect is what makes Splinterlands really dynamic.

I should note that I haven't sold any of my cards for dollars yet, so I don't know how liquid this market actually is. Demand is definitely spiking, but whether some of these ultra-rare cards will actually change hands at the lofty asking prices on third-party sites is a question. Nonetheless, my cost basis on this "investment" is still just $10. It's a fun way to waste your time, and you might not be wasting your time at all.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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I've Spent $10 So Far on This Blockchain Game. My Assets in It Have Spiked to $17,000 - Motley Fool

Ubisoft will seek to invest in and create blockchain games – Cointelegraph

Ubisoft, one of the worlds largest video game companies responsible for creating popular franchise games such as Assassins Creed, Far Cry and For Honor hosted its Q2 earnings call this week, where blockchain was a key topic of discussion.

Alongside reporting a 15% increase in unique active players in the first half of the year compared with 2020, and the fact that Assassins Creed Valhalla has become the second most profitable game in the companys history, the French firms CEO, Yves Guillemot, also expressed intentions for investment in and adoption of blockchain-centric gaming companies on the platform.

Despite making notable advancements in the space such as the funding of Animoca Brands, owner of Ethereum-based metaverse game The Sandbox Guillemot stated that the platform is in early-stage research and development.

Ubisoft became a validator node on the Tezos network in April, a channel node operator on the Aleph.im network in July and a founding member of Blockchain Game Alliance, a coalition to encourage the adoption of the two sectors.

Frdrick Duguet, chief financial officer of Ubisoft, spoke highly of the potential impacts blockchain technology could have on the gaming industry:

Related:Gaming giant Ubisoft joins Aleph.im as core channel node operator

Fellow gaming corporation Valve recently became embroiled in mainstream headlines in the aftermath of its unpopular announcementbanning all crypto, blockchain and nonfungible token (NFT) games and content from its Steam marketplace, stating its belief that the assets have no intrinsic value.

In response to this prohibition, digital advocacy group Fight for the Future supported by the Blockchain Game Alliance, Enjin and 26 additional blockchain game projects published an open letter calling for the corporation to pivot on its decision, stating that decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) and NFTs can foster the advancement of decentralized, democratic, interactive, player focused systems.

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Ubisoft will seek to invest in and create blockchain games - Cointelegraph

No more waiting days for global transactions to clear, thanks to blockchain – The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Cross-border payments, which typically take three to five days to clear, can now be processed within a few minutes using a new service being tried in a pilot programme.

Partior, a blockchain technology provider for payments clearing and settlement, was formed by Temasek and DBS and JP Morgan banks to test the initiative.

It managed to achieve end-to-end settlements in Singdollar and US dollar in under two minutes, all thanks to blockchain technology, which allows a network to move and validate information simultaneously.

Partior was conceived during Project Ubin, a collaborative project between the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the financial industry to explore the use of blockchain and distributed ledger technology for clearing and settlement services.

Partior chief executive Jason Thompson told The Straits Times that the instantaneous exchange of information is akin to "a data handshake", which is very different from what is happening elsewhere.

Moving currencies between bank accounts in different countries can take anywhere from three to five business days as the transfer is typically processed by an intermediary and the fees can be costly.

With global cross-border transactions expected to reach US$156 trillion (S$210 trillion) next year, Mr Thompson said Partior is "aggressively seeking to disrupt the global payments industry" and to address the pain points that plague it like slow settlement speeds and costly transaction fees.

"Our next milestone will be to engage with a broader group of settlement banks and their participating bank ecosystem to increase our currency coverage. We are aiming to cover the top 15 currencies in the world and will be onboarding banks and currencies in a measured fashion," he added.

Mr Lim Soon Chong, group head of global transaction services at DBS, said at Partior's launch last week: "In the present, we have over US$100 trillion of global payments characterised by inefficient clearing and inefficient settlements."

That has generated demand for instantaneous payments, saidMr Lim.

The high efficiency and transparency of blockchain technology has triggered a wave of innovation across the banking sector.

Mr Praveen Raina, OCBC Bank's head of group operations and technology, said: "Blockchain and decentralised ledger technology have the potential to revolutionise elements of banking. We have implemented many blockchain solutions in the cross-border payments and trade finance space.

"But blockchain's use has extended even further in the last few years, with environmental, social, and governanceapplications becoming apparent."

Partior is also an official partner of the MAS' Global CBDC (central nank digital currency) Challenge.

MAS chief fintech officer Sopnendu Mohanty said: "Globally, there is strong interest among central banks in the use of CBDCs to streamline transaction processing and make financial systems more efficient, transparent and cost-effective.

"The Global CBDC challenge is an important milestone to explore... retail CBDC solutions in partnership with the international community."

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No more waiting days for global transactions to clear, thanks to blockchain - The Straits Times

LinkedIn reports crypto and blockchain job listings have surged 615% since August 2020 – Cointelegraph

Online employment-oriented platform LinkedIn has reported demand for employees with experience in crypto or blockchain is on the rise across many companies.

According to a Wednesday report from LinkedIn editor Devin Banerjee, data from the platforms Economic Graph team shows job postings in the United States that included terms like blockchain or crypto grew 615% compared to those in August 2020. The data shows that while many jobs with companies already focused on crypto and blockchain contributed to this rise, traditional financial institution J.P. Morgan was among the top employers for roles in the digital asset space.

The LinkedIn team added that financial services firms were expected to hire more than three times as many staff with experience in digital assets than in 2015. J.P. Morgans job postings as of July included positions focusing on its global blockchain development efforts blockchain-focused software developers, engineers, marketers and auditors. The company posted more than 30 openings for its operations in the U.S. in a single week.

The opportunities in digital assets are plentiful, said Roman Regelman of the Bank of New York Mellon. We can now attract talent in a very different way.

Related: Major job postings from the crypto space in 2021

Other major companies not directly involved in crypto or finance have also posted jobs related to crypto space. In February, major online retailer Amazon said it was seeking a software development manager in Mexico to help launch a new payment product. In May, Apple said it preferred someone with experience in alternative payment providers including cryptocurrency for a business development manager position.

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LinkedIn reports crypto and blockchain job listings have surged 615% since August 2020 - Cointelegraph

The Hemp Blockchain, Inc. Chooses Algorand as Its Blockchain Platform – Business Wire

SALT LAKE CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Hemp Blockchain, Inc., the company building advanced cloud-based solutions to accelerate the growth of the industrial hemp industry, today announced the selection of Algorand as its blockchain platform to support a range of supply chain management and marketplace solutions purpose-built for the industrial hemp industry. The Hemp Blockchain seeks to leapfrog existing solutions in an agriculture sector with significant growth prospects that is strategically important for multiple reasons, including agricultural sustainability, carbon sequestration and the rapidly increasing need for carbon offset credits.

Algorand Inc. built the worlds first open source, permissionless, pure proof-of-stake blockchain protocol for the next generation of financial products. This blockchain, the Algorand protocol, is the brainchild of Turing Award-winning cryptographer Silvio Micali. Algorand is a leader in proof-of-stake consensus mechanisms used to validate transactions on blockchain networks. Among the advantages of proof-of-stake over proof-of-work, the other major blockchain consensus mechanism, are its scalability and energy efficiency, as it does not utilize competing high resource consuming miners to validate transactions. As a result, Algorand is a natural choice for companies such as The Hemp Blockchain dedicated to helping to achieve a net-zero carbon future.

Industrial hemp is a rapidly growing industry driven by a separate crop from its biological relatives that produce THC-based cannabis products as it contains less than 0.3% THC by dry weight. Industrial hemp can be processed into over 50,000 uses, including fuels, plastics, graphene, solvents, building materials, foods, and medicines, and is also a powerful tool in the global effort to combat climate change because an acre of hemp can potentially sequester as much or more carbon as an acre of rainforest.

Currently, the industrial hemp supply chain is in a state of disarray. It is characterized by opacity, fragmentation, lack of reliable payment systems, the inability to verify real buyers and sellers, and the inability to reliably and consistently verify seed genetics for product provenance and quality according to federal and state regulatory requirements. Owing to its relative immaturity, the industrial hemp industry is underserved by a supply-chain solution targeting its needs, creating favorable conditions for market entry and long-term success of a modern, industry-focused solution that is blockchain-native. Furthermore, by introducing a streamlined carbon offset credit marketplace that includes a reliable token to mediate commerce, The Hemp Blockchain will offer value well beyond that of traditional approaches.

We are partnering with world-class technology firms and domain experts to help build and support our platform while giving us the ability to scale and operate globally, said Dan Higbee, President and CEO of The Hemp Blockchain, Inc. Technology serves its highest purpose when it materially improves the lives of people. The Hemp Blockchain will provide a trusted digital infrastructure that benefits not only those that grow and process hemp, but also consumers of its vast array of end products, and perhaps most importantly, the planet as a whole by accelerating carbon sequestration. Industrial Hemp farmers can literally grow Carbon credits from the earth, for the earth with The Hemp Blockchain and The Carbon Protocol.

We are excited about the continued expansion of the community building on Algorand and welcome The Hemp Blockchain to the Algorand ecosystem. We have been focused since the beginning on creating the most advanced technology that will allow organizations at the forefront of technology adoption, like The Hemp Blockchain, to build and deploy new blockchain-based applications that will remove friction from legacy business models, said David Markley, Director Business Solutions at Algorand.

About AlgorandAlgorand is building the technology to power the Future of Finance (FutureFi), the convergence of traditional and decentralized models into a unified system that is inclusive, frictionless, and secure. Founded by Turing Award-winning cryptographer Silvio Micali, Algorand developed a blockchain infrastructure that offers the interoperability and capacity to handle the volume of transactions needed for defi, financial institutions and governments to smoothly transition into FutureFi. The technology of choice for more than 500 global organizations, Algorand is enabling the simple creation of next generation financial products, protocols and exchange of value. For more information, visit http://www.algorand.com.

About The Hemp Blockchain, Inc.Hemp Blockchain, Inc. is building advanced cloud-based solutions to accelerate the growth of the industrial hemp industry. With planned availability in late 2021, The Hemp Blockchain platform and applications will leapfrog existing solutions in an agriculture sector with significant growth prospects that is strategically important for multiple reasons, including agricultural sustainability and carbon sequestration and the rapidly increasing need for carbon offsets/credits. For more information, please visit http://www.thehempblockchain.com.

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The Hemp Blockchain, Inc. Chooses Algorand as Its Blockchain Platform - Business Wire