Thursday, December 6, 2018

ConsenSys layoffs

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December 6, 2018

13 PERCENT: Ethereum development studio ConsenSys is laying off 13 percent of its employees, the company announced Thursday, just days after founder Joseph Lubin told all staff members that the firm was shifting gears to become more sustainable.

Lubin hinted at the layoffs in an interview with CoinDesk earlier this week, telling CoinDesk that some projects might see their staff cut as part of the ConsenSys 2.0 pivot.

The company said in its statement Thursday that "excited as we are about ConsenSys 2.0, our first step in this direction has been a difficult one: we are streamlining several parts of the business including ConsenSys Solutions, spokes, and hub services." Full Story

IDENTITY CONTROL: One of the crypto industry’s biggest players is experimenting with ways to give its users more control of their personal information.

Crypto exchange Coinbase wants to “help people own more of who they are online,” according to B Byrne, product manager of the firm’s identity team.To that end, Coinbase now has 17 staff currently exploring decentralized identity solutions.

Byrne said the team is looking to bridge products – such as its mobile wallet – using a built-in decentralized app explorer, and is is starting by looking at which dapps are most used by Coinbase’s customers. They hope to establish how users might be able to leverage their own personal data, instead of Coinbase collecting and storing know-your-customer information across its products.

Coinbase intends to scale up these efforts over the next 12 months, possibly allowing customers who currently have difficulty accessing some products to more easily gain access in future. “We think it’s an important part of our future and we’re thinking about the tools we need to ship for that,” Byrne explained. Full Story

BITGO'S BANKER: Crypto security startup BitGo has hired retired banking veteran Richard Corcoran to lead its just-launched institutional custody division, the BitGo Trust Company. 

Corcoran comes with 25 years of experience leading the trust department at First National Bank in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, from which he retired in 2016. As such, he is already familiar with the state’s regulatory framework – useful expertise, given that South Dakota gave BitGo its trust company license earlier this year.

The addition to BitGo’s team coincides with the firm’s onboarding of its first major clients, and plans to oversee billions of dollars in value. The new CEO told CoinDesk that “from a banking standards view, I think we would be considered well capitalized.” Full Story

FRIENDS AGAIN: Distributed ledger technology provider R3 has launched what it's calling the Corda Settler – an application aimed to facilitate global cryptocurrency payments within enterprise blockchains. And it's added XRP as its first token.

R3 said XRP is the first globally recognized cryptocurrency to be supported by the Settler, bringing the Corda and XRP ecosystems into closer alignment – something of a rapprochement considering Ripple and R3 were previously locked in a legal dispute.

The news “is an important step in showing how the powerful ecosystems cultivated by two of the of the world’s most influential crypto and blockchain communities can work together,” said Richard Gendal Brown, CTO at R3.

The Corda Settler is an open source CorDapp that allows payment obligations arising on the Corda network to be settled via any parallel rail supporting cryptocurrencies and any traditional rail capable of providing cryptographic proof of settlement.

The app will verify that the beneficiary’s account was credited with the expected payment, automatically updating the Corda ledger. In the next phase of development, the Settler will support domestic deferred net settlement and real-time gross settlement payments. Full Story​



The cryptocurrency bear market is disappointing but some fundamentals show optimism. The selling pressure might be pushing prices down (and a few up) but holistic understanding is necessary to truly identify the growth and decline of the market. Here's a highlight:

Active vs total subscribers to each subreddit allow us to see social engagement levels. The underperformers were BTC (44-52), XRP (10-11) and ETH (19-22), while the overperformers were BCH (21-12) and EOS (6-3).
 
Learn more about the crypto market in Q3 across price, network, exchange, developer, and social fundamental metrics in our recently released State of Blockchains report here.

RESISTANCE AHEAD? Bitcoin remains on the defensive, having charted a key bearish pattern yesterday. The immediate outlook, however, would turn bullish if prices cross $3,900 confirming a falling wedge breakout on the hourly chart. That might see bitcoin probe resistance lined at $4,265. Full Story​

BEST OF THE BEST

MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW:
 Researchers studying crypto pump-and-dump schemes – in which individuals buy into an obscure cryptocurrency, arrange for it to be hyped via social media groups, then sell their holdings when the price rockets as a result – have published an analysis of how they work and even developed an algorithm that can predict when they are about to occur.

According to MIT TEchnology Review, Jiahua Xu and Benjamin Livshits from Imperial College London studied over 230 pump-and-dump events that occured from late July to mid-November. Their data revealed odd patterns in the buying activity around a selected crypto.

When they trained a machine-learning algorithm to look for the tell-tale indicators and fed it live market data, it managed to flag six suspicious events, five of which turned out to be real crypto pump-and-dump schemes

THE REST

FORBES: While Facebook has made moves to stop crypto scams from fleecing victims on its platform – including banning some ads for crypto services – some fraudsters are managing to sneak past the firm’s filtering algorithms by changing their wording, says a piece from Forbes.

The author of the article wrote that he had seen ads that misappropriated the names of well-known TV presenters and financial experts – one of whom launched a lawsuit against Facebook earlier this year over the issue.

Facebook has previously said it plans to use facial recognition to help spot fraudulent ads, but conceded it’s "challenging to do technically at scale," says Forbes.

WIRED: MetaCert – a firm trying to tackle the problem of phishing emails by building an extensive database of domain names associated with phishers – is now eyeing blockchain technology to help its cause, Wired reports.

The company – which has an app that marks emails with coloured icons to indicate phishing risk  – has already classified over 10 billion URLs, according to the piece. To assist with the huge task, it's now hoping to encourage the public to submit and categorize links by putting its database on a blockchain.

By effectively handing over control of the database, the firm's CEO hopes that will create more trust among potential contributors. It would also sidestep potential abuse from staff who might red-flag sites merely because they don't like them. 

MetaCert has already built a blockchain protocol for the cataloguing effort, and plans to offer a token-based rewards system going forward.

WHO WON #CRYPTOTWITTER

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