Tag:Blockchain

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Project Bletchley
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Blockchain catches a righteous break and avoids becoming unchained
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What’s next in UK FinTech?
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The French take on the blockchain
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ASX looking to replace CHESS with blockchain
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Blockchain not Bitcoin Becomes Industry Focus

Project Bletchley

By Tyler Kirk

On June 15, 2016, Microsoft released a white paper introducing Project Bletchley, Microsoft’s next iteration on its blockchain as a service (“BaaS”) product. In late 2015, Microsoft announced that it would be leveraging its cloud platform, Azure, to provide a low-risk sandbox for customers to gain experience with how blockchain may be applied in various business scenarios, such as supply chain management. Bletchley is positioned as incorporating the latest innovations on the blockchain protocol in the Azure cloud service.

Generally, blockchain is a decentralized digital ledger. Blockchain differs from traditional centralized ledgers because the blockchain protocol uses encryption combined with distributed copies of the ledger to replace the need for a third-party to serve as the ledger’s trusted guardian. Further, blockchain is more efficient because all transactions are mathematically provable and do not require a multi-day verification process. The protocol is append only, and distributed, thus every participant receives an update to their copy of the ledger with the latest transactions. Yet, this revolutionary framework, blockchain 1.0, was just the beginning.

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Blockchain catches a righteous break and avoids becoming unchained

By Tyler Kirk (ed. Cameron Abbott and Giles Whittaker)

Blockchain is alive and well – one of the greatest threats to blockchain’s success appears to have been seen off with the end of efforts to legislate “exceptional access” to all encryption in the United States. Tyler Kirk explains this in more detail in his article, “Blockchain Catches a Righteous Break and Avoids Becoming Unchained.”

You can read his full article on K&L Gates Hub here.

What’s next in UK FinTech?

By Aritha Wickramasinghe

The emergence of blockchain technology and the size of the FinTech industry were the major points of discussion at a recently concluded CBI Insights and KPMG webinar on the future of FinTech.

Blockchain is a data structure that creates a digital ledger of transactions. Using cryptography, blockchain allows participants to securely manipulate the ledger without any central authority. Once the information is entered, it is almost impossible to erase – creating an accurate record of the transaction’s history.

The technology is still in its infancy and currently undergoing significant experimentation. For established financial institutions such as banks, blockchain is seen as a possible solution to the problem of an increasingly complex regulatory landscape. The technology is also seen as an effective tool in combatting money laundering as it tracks a transaction’s entire digital history.

Venture capital investment in blockchain, which had seen a rapid rise over the last several years, is showing signs of plateauing as the technology matures. However, the boom in FinTech investment is expected to continue unabated as companies emerge from their infancy and the adoption of their technology becomes more widespread. In 2015, investments into FinTech were US$14 billion, with major banks such as J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs as primary investors. In the UK, Funding Circle, Atom Bank and World Remit each received in excess of US$100 million in funding in 2015. There are now 19 FinTech companies with a market capitalisation in excess of US$1 billion.

The French take on the blockchain

By Claude-Etienne Armingaud

On March 24, the French National Assembly hosted a day-long conference on “Blockchain: Disruption and Opportunities.”

This event aimed at raising awareness of the French elected representatives and corporate executives on blockchain issues and potential uses for the digital transformation of society as a whole.

The closing statement provided by Emmanuel Macron, the French Minister of Economy, Industry and Digital Economy, was subsequently echoed by his announcement on March 29 of the upcoming adaptation of the French finance regulatory framework in order to progressively allow the introduction of the technology.

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ASX looking to replace CHESS with blockchain

By Jim Bulling and Michelle Chasser

The Australian stock exchange ASX has announced that it has partnered with a US-based firm to develop distributed ledger technology, more commonly referred to as blockchain. The ASX is planning to develop the ledger technology for post-trade services such as clearing and settlement of the cash equities market. Unlike the bitcoin blockchain which operates as a public ledger, the ASX will use a private network which will only allow parties with permission from the ASX to participate.

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Blockchain not Bitcoin Becomes Industry Focus

By Jim Bulling and Michelle Chasser

Blockchain, the public decentralised ledger technology behind Bitcoin, is gaining attention from a much wider audience within the financial services industry in terms of the potential application to securities clearing and settlements, payment processing and loan transactions.

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