Sunday, July 1, 2018

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July 1, 2018

Human failings
 
The EOS disaster offers a strong reminder of how entrenched human mistrust can be difficult to overcome, suggesting it's too soon for on-chain governance to work, Michael J. Casey writes.

Read more in THE TAKEAWAY below.
 
 
TOP TRENDS ON COINDESK

Eye on zcash

Zcash successfully completed its first hard fork: the Overwinter upgrade was activated at 00:42 UTC on June 26 on block No. 347,500. The changes themselves were minimal, intended to prepare the network for the Sapling upgrade scheduled for October.

But the days before the hard fork were somewhat worrisome, as one of the developers, D. Jane Mercer, used the moment to threaten to launch a new coin if he didn't get additional funding to maintain WinZEC, a Windows-based zcash wallet.

However, community members reached out to fund the developer, and zcash is rolling toward Sapling with a new two-year roadmap. High on the agenda is researching steps toward removing transparent transactions from the protocol, so users will use the platform's shielded "z-addresses" by default and balances and actions will be invisible to observers.

Now the community needs to decide on other important questions, such as how to deal with freshly introduced ASIC mining chips for zcash and other issues, some of which are going to be highly contentious, as the cryptocurrency's creator, Zooko Wilkox, acknowledged during Zcon0, the first Zcash Foundation conference in Montreal.

Regulatory blotter

It was a busy week for regulators and law enforcement in the crypto space, as governments around the world took a variety of steps to tighten their supervision and oversight.

The South Korean Financial Services Commission told banks that have cryptocurrency exchanges as customers that they must monitor all accounts of such businesses. Previously, the banks only monitored the accounts used to hold traders' funds, but not the operating accounts for the exchanges' own money. This can open the door to money laundering, as some exchanges were noticed moving investors' funds to their operating accounts, the regulator fears.

Similarly, the Bank of England warned the U.K.'s financial institutions to proceed with utmost caution when taking on exposure to crypto-assets, given the risks of market manipulation, money laundering, terrorist financing and reputational damage.
 
Huobi Pro, the world's third largest exchange by 24-hour trading volume, decided to cease service for customers in Japan, likely because it's not registered with the country's Financial Services Agency (FSA). Earlier this year, Huobi Pro announced a partnership with SBI Virtual Currency – a licensed exchange – to launch a regulated platform in Japan, but the alliance dissolved in March.  

U.S. law enforcement seized another big batch of bitcoins: 4,000 of them (worth about $24 million), which are believed to be the proceeds of illegal drug sales on the dark web. The funds were confiscated from Ryan Farace and Robert Swain, who were indicted in Maryland for manufacturing and selling drugs.

France weighed in on the case of Alexander Vinnik, who is accused of money laundering through the cryptocurrency exchange BTC-e. While Russia and the U.S. are trying to get Vinnik extradited from Greece and he has maintained his innocence, France announced it was going to put Vinnik on trial for "cybercrime, money laundering, and membership in a criminal organization and extortion," and is seeking his extradition, too.

And finally, some encouraging regulatory news for the industry: The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) published a working paper suggesting that domestic regulators introduce licenses for crypto-related activities. Last year Chinese regulators banned ICOs and fiat-to-crypto trading.

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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

"I've heard that Corda stands for Consortiums Only Rarely Deliver Anything." 

Pete Randall, CEO of SETL, taking a dig at enterprise blockchain consortium R3. (To be fair, others are now building on R3's open-source Corda platform.)


THE TAKEAWAY

Michael J. Casey is the chairman of CoinDesk's advisory board and a senior advisor for blockchain research at MIT's Digital Currency Initiative.

Blockchain governance is hard.

That's the only reliable conclusion to draw from the chaotic, contentious rollout of EOS, the $4 billion project whose consensus model was touted as a way to enable smoother governance and scalability in a blockchain industry beset with conflicts and decision-making gridlock.

First, it took longer than expected for the EOS community to elect the network's 21 block producers, which are paid $10,000 a day to validate transactions. Then, the EOS Core Arbitration Forum, a body set up to resolve disputes, sent out a memo ordering those block producers to freeze 27 supposedly sketchy-looking accounts.

Concerns immediately arose that the ECAF was arbitrarily censoring participants, inevitably raising accusations of centralized control and putting chain immutability into question right at the outset. As an ECAF representative threatened lawsuits against one block producer, and as a separate fake document purporting to be from the arbitration body appeared, one New York block producer threw up its hands and refused to participate.

Now, after Dan Larimer, CTO of founding company Block.one, called the ECAF's order a mistake and argued that its handling of the problem did more harm to confidence in EOS than any lost funds that the suspect accounts might have stolen, his company wants to rewrite the entire EOS Constitution.

Just three weeks into the launch, the spat has provided a popcorn-worthy spectacle for commentators on Crypto Twitter. But, in reality, as a way to assess on-chain governance mechanisms such as EOS's delegated proof-of-stake (DPOS) consensus mechanism, there's a lot more at stake (excuse the pun) than entertainment.

Along with saga at Tezos, another very well-funded on-chain governance project, which was rocked by disputes between the founders and the first director of the foundation overseeing its $243 million war chest, the EOS disaster offers a strong reminder of how entrenched human mistrust can be difficult to overcome.

To offset the mistrust there must be a sufficient store of shared community trust in whatever mechanism or institution is in place to resolve those problems. That's the case whether the overall system is described as "decentralized" or "centralized."

The problem is that when large amounts of money are involved, forging that common store of trust in the dispute resolution mechanism is especially difficult.

The best laid plans...

I'm actually sympathetic to the creative efforts of the Tezos and EOS founders – as well as those of a host others, including Decred, NEO and Cardano. In exploring protocol-level solutions such as voting and staking to enable some level of internal, functional democracy, they are trying to help blockchain communities make orderly decisions on important changes and upgrades and to avoid the contentious disputes and chain splits that have rocked bitcoin, ethereum and others.

I'm not willing to say that on-chain governance won't ever work – or that our only choice is to either live with disorder, acrimony and gridlock or turn to external legal solutions that expose user identities and require a dependence on external government bodies. But I think we are getting a very clear demonstration that it's very difficult to design the right algorithm to overcome the toxic mix that money and mistrust create.

We should note that the ECAF, which was formed in the midst of forum discussions among EOS community members before the launch, was conceived as a solution to these problems. Its existence reflects a recognition that disputes would arise and that an off-chain mechanism was needed. But it was very poorly put together, with unclear rules and processes for arbitration.

The question is: Would it have been better designed, more capable of earning the trust of all participants, if the community wasn't founded on a kind of utopian-like blind faith in the DPOS mechanism?

In other words, the root of the problem may be the unreasonable claims being made by on-chain governance proponents.

As it is, the reliability of the DPOS mechanism was tested by the size of the EOS money pot. The giant fundraise fueled expectations of high valuations, which in turn stoked greed and mistrust. It fed the perception, right or wrong, that those who obtain power and influence inside the EOS network might be able to game the system.

Larimer, others from Block.one and many EOS fans swear by the various checks and balances intended to protect users from overly powerful block producers: that it requires agreement among 15 of the 21 block producers to reverse transactions; that ongoing voting holds them to account; and that there's always the option (or threat) of a fork.

And yet, despite all that, the system has clearly generated mistrust and, ultimately, dysfunction.

And that's not for nothing. While he may have been biased against EOS, there was sound logic to ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin's warnings in a blog post three months ago of the risk of bribes and collusion among block producers operating across different jurisdictions. Money and power breed corruption. Always.

Buterin's main point, one that he made in support of his Ethereum developer colleague Vlad Zamfir's critique of Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsham's impassioned plea for protocol-based solutions to bitcoin's and ethereum's problems, was that on-chain governance won't work.

In terms of where the technology currently stands, I think that's true. The wellspring of trust in these mechanisms isn't yet strong enough to overcome the problem of cross-user mistrust.

The solution, for now

So, what to do? Bitcoin's drawn-out block-size debate and the contentious hard fork that resulted from it presented an image of dysfunction that undermined mainstream confidence in the technology.

And in ethereum, where there has a long been a clearer sense of identifiable leadership, Buterin is himself often accused of having too much CEO-like power. (The slide in ether's price when he was rumored to have died in a car crash illustrated the problems of perceived centralization that have persisted around ethereum ever since Buterin and others supported the hard fork to rescue funds lost in The DAO attack of 2016.)

Well, for now – and this will be anathema to crypto-anarchists and some blockchain libertarians – the solution likely lies in recognizing the limits of the algorithms and  relying instead on human-led, legally defined institutions for dispute resolution and off-chain governance.

While I have been a constant critic of permissioned blockchains, especially of the risk that the consortia that run them can act as colluding gatekeepers to curtail innovation and hold users hostage, they are popular among companies precisely because they operate within a recognized legal structure that they're comfortable with.  Legal certainty is valuable.

The failure of The DAO taught us that code is not law. By defining it as a system in which the software superseded all other legal recourse, that project's founders created a model that allowed the thief who destroyed it to argue, quite reasonably, that he or she was not acting illegally. Yet those who lost money wanted recourse, which is how ethereum ended up with its hard fork.

The solution, for now, lies in forming well-designed, trusted mechanisms that reside within a predictable legal framework and which can resolve disputes through fluid, lightweight arbitration rather than being bogged down in courts. They carry the weight of law, but try to avoid the process of it.

Key here are the words  "well-designed, trusted." Lightweight, off-chain arbitration might have been the intent of those who created the ECAF, but it was not well-designed and clearly hasn't earned the trust of all actors. It's not at clear how social consensus was formed in support of it.

Here, the internet's governance offers a model, as father-and-son team Don and Alex Tapscott laid out in a useful assessment of the outlook for blockchain governance for The World Economic Forum.

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the Internet Engineering Taskforce (IETF) and the Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C) have worked fairly well as trusted avenues for governance and dispute resolution. Understandably, the United States' historical influence over ICANN has been a bone of contention. Yet, even so, the multi-stakeholder structure of these organizations has mostly assuaged concerns that any one party, government or otherwise, has excessive power of the rules by which internet real estate is managed.

Blockhains, with anti-corporatist, decentralized principles at their heart, can't and shouldn't try to emulate the process by which these internet bodies were formed, which relied upon the bargaining positions of different governments in international forums like the United Nations. But there's still much that can be done by standards bodies and NGOs to forge consensus among a variety of stakeholders in this industry. (The W3C and other standards bodies are already seeking to establish authority here.)

Does this mean immutability and censorship-resistance are impossible? Yes, perhaps, if you think in absolute terms. But these were also aspirational objectives, not absolutes.

What matters is a system that works in the service of the widest possible array of users. And, as of now, on-chain governance models like that of EOS clearly don't. – Michael J. Casey

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Beyond CoinDesk...
 
OTHERS ARE TALKING ABOUT

New York Times: The paper offers a wide-ranging package of blockchain explainers and overviews for the introductory reader trying to get a bead on this complex and multifaceted topic. There's a slang glossary, surveys of how industries and governments are exploring blockchain, an analysis of the main impediments to adoption, a most influential people list (wonder where they got that idea?) and much more.  

Computerworld: There will be 50 billion connected internet-of-things sensors and devices in the world by 2022. Blockchain technology may be the best solution to operate these vast networks, provide secure access to devices and support supply chains, this article argues.

Knowledge at Wharton: Blockchain is a disruptive technology, but is it a real revolution? Kevin Werbach, a Wharton professor of legal studies and business ethics, is wondering if people are going to use it for something really world-changing, "other than to get rich, to make a point, or to avoid law enforcement." 

Wall Street Journal: City agencies in Austin, Texas, are testing a blockchain-based service called MyPass to store the documents of homeless people receiving help from the municipality. Losing IDs is a disaster for homeless people, who in many such cases are denied assistance. In a new system, documents can be accessed via cell phone, computer or text message. 

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO

We're going to be relaunching the CoinDesk Daily as Blockchain Bites. This will move from a 9AM EST send to 12:30PM and will provide more in-depth curation. Click the "Update Your Preferences" link at the bottom of this email to subscribe. 

We're also launching a brand new Markets Daily newsletter, which will go out at 9AM EST Monday thru Friday. We'll be diving deeper into the markets and giving traders a head start on what's moving prices. Stay tuned for more information.

And Consensus: Singapore is starting to gain speed. We're confirming speakers and we'll begin making announcements in the coming days. Be sure to register and join us as we take Consensus on the road. 

Send feedback on this newsletter to marc@coindesk.com. Follow @CoinDeskMarkets for price updates and market analysis. And everyone interested in keeping up with this rapidly evolving field of technology should follow our main Twitter handle, @CoinDesk.   

Thanks, as always, for reading! Until next week...

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Crypto Rallies Through the Weekend

July 1, 2018 Read in Browser
Blockchain Brew
quote-left-filled.pngQUOTE OF THE DAY quote-right-filled.png
"Investment performance is determined more by investor action than investment returns."
- Nick Murray

Happy Sunday! It is now the second-half of 2018, let's hope it is better than the first-half! If the past couple days are any indication it should be!

Cheers,
Blockchain Brew Team

MARKETS
COIN PRICE 24H

BTC $6,375.97 -0.68%

ETH $452.524 -0.58%

XRP $0.45761 -2.36%

BCH $734.744 -2.26%

EOS $8.04308 -0.72%

*Information as of 9:30 AM EST


MARKET

Crypto Rallies Through the Weekend

LOOKING DIRE

  • After such a profitable year in 2017, cryptocurrency investors were looking forward to 2018, thinking more adoption and awareness would continue to push prices skyward
  • Turns out everyone was way too optimistic, 2018 has been the year of the bear with prices of most currencies dropping around 70% halfway through the year
  • Regulations, hacks, and criticism among other factors have pushed the prices down and crushed the expectations of investors
  • This past week has been especially painful for those still checking Blockfolio and CoinMarketCap, Bitcoin once again broke what people thought was support and dragged the entire market down with it
  • Then on Friday night, for reasons unkown, Bitcoin and the market surged nearly 10%, adding $20 billion to the total market cap in 9 hours

LOOKING FORWARD

  • Entering the second half of 2018, investors are hoping that things can turn around and they get the year that they wished for
  • It seems like Bitcoin has bottomed and responded a few times, a breakout could be on the horizon and the fundamentals are only getting stronger, fees are remaining low on the network and everyday the Lightning Network is progressing

The CEO of BitMex has high expectations for Bitcoin and gave his price prediction:

“[Bitcoin] is one positive regulatory decision away, maybe an ETF approved by the SEC, to climbing through $20,000 or even $50,000 by the end of the year.”

  • In addition to Bitcoin, altcoins are becoming fundamentally stronger also
  • Coins like VeChain, Ontology, and Tezos are making progress on their own networks
  • Hopefully, the rest of 2018 brings greater access to cryptocurrencies for everyone and more fiat pairings so that altcoins can decouple from Bitcoin and reach their true valuations

FOLLOW UP

Bithumb Recovers a Portion of Stolen Funds

HACK

  • On June 20th, Bithumb, a South Korean crypto exchange that is the 6th largest exchange in the world by volume, was hacked and lost over $31 million worth of crypto
  • Prior to the hack, Bithumb noticed a need for upgraded security since the "number of unauthorized access attempts has increased"
  • After the hack occurred Bithumb announced that it will cover all stolen assets, so that its customers do not lose any funds from its mistake

UPDATE FROM BITHUMB

  • Bithumb recently posted an update on the hacking situation, sharing that it has recovered 45% of the stolen funds
  • $17 million of the $31 million remains unrecovered

Bithumb also provided a list of all of the coins taken and their amounts (in wons):

ecxtgvX.png
  • Deposits and withdrawals remain frozen, but some users are still attempting deposits, Bithumb asks that they stop:

    “We have noticed that despite [sic] that we have officially announced to our customers asking not to make any deposit for the time being, yet deposit orders are still made. We would like to strongly ask our customers not to deposit any fund until the whole process of deposit service reformation is complete and until [a] further announcement is given.”

    Bithumb made sure to thank the community for all of their help:

    “The main reason for the reduction of the damage is due to the ongoing participation, support, and cooperation of cryptocurrency exchanges and cryptocurrency foundations across the world. Also, our quick response to the cyber attack by removing cryptocurrencies from hot wallet to cold wallet effectively contributed to reducing the overall damage. At this moment, we will continue our recovery process as well as implementing preventative measures until this incident is fully resolved.”


PREDICTION

Venture Capital Firm Says that Cryptocurrencies Can Be Worth Trillions

UNION SQUARE VENTURES

  • Union Square Ventures is a venture capital firm headquartered in New York City and oversees over a billion dollars in assets
  • The firm is owned and operated by Fred Wilson, who has a stellar investing track record, investing in companies like Twitter, Tumblr, Zynga, Etsy, and Coinbase
  • Union Square Ventures has established itself as the leading Venture Capital firm for blockchain startups

PARTNER SPEAKS OUT

  • Albert Wenger, a managing partner at Union Square Ventures, recently was interview by CNBC to talk about the firms investments in cryptocurrencies
  • Wenger shared that Union Square Ventures has a significant investment in cryptocurrencies and plans to continue investing into the future

Union Square Ventures will be incredibly successful if Wenger's prediction comes to fruition, he said:

“Investors are rationally pouring a lot of money into this sector, because I think people are seeing the winning blockchain here might be worth a trillion, or a couple of trillion dollars. It’s not at all crazy to think that. Certainly, for any one particular project there’s an extremely high chance it won’t work. As a result, if it works, the rewards will be very high.”

  • He also gave advice to investors saying that they should not only hold Bitcoin and be careful investing as it is a very risky market

MORE BREWING
  • After Many Months of Delay Tezos Launches Betanet
  • $700 Million Crypto Ontology Goes Live
  • Payments Company Qiwi Creates Crypto Investment Bank

TODAY IN CRYPTO
1321.png
Ethereum Classic (ETC)
PoC of new StateDB layer & Emerald Mobile Wallet
2099.png
ICON (ICX)
ICX/ETH Decentralized exchange
1904.png
VeChain (VEN)
VeChain launching their mainnet. VeChain holders will also generate THOR as part of staking rewards every day after this release.
1808.png
OmiseGO (OMG)
"Honte (OmiseGO network preparation for Plasma) is currently on course to be delivered in Q1 to Q2 of 2018"
1214.png
Lisk (LSK)
Lisk is going to launch Custom tokens & dApp registration.
693.png
Verge (XVG)
Verge social network will be launched in Q2 2018 .
1343.png
Stratis (STRAT)
Full Node GUI Mainnet Beta release built on feedback from Alpha release on December.
109.png
DigiByte (DGB)
Artis Turba exchange releases in June, partnered with and listing DGB.
1343.png
Stratis (STRAT)
The Breeze Wallet with Privacy Protocol has progressed through various internal test phases that focused on further testing of the protocol.
1343.png
Stratis (STRAT)
"Courses continue to be developed for the Stratis Academy and will be released during this [Q1 & Q2] period."

Today in Crypto is powered by coinmarketcal.com


COIN OF THE DAY
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RED (RED)
The Red community is building the world's first fullstack and blockchain language. RED tokens will drive the development of those technologies, and a blockchain-powered future. RED is a utility token, which can be used within the Red community.
WEBSITE | TWITTER | REDDIT

MEME
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SUBSCRIBE | FEEDBACK | ADVERTISE
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The above is not intended to be investment advice.
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Copyright © 2018 Blockchain Brew, All rights reserved.

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Over 1,000 Cryptocurrencies are “Dead Projects”

June 30, 2018 Read in Browser
Blockchain Brew
quote-left-filled.pngQUOTE OF THE DAY quote-right-filled.png
"Diversification is most needed when its least wanted."
- Robert Arnott

Happy Saturday! Well, we are halfway 2018. Cheers to continued progress and making the second half of 2018 special. Have a great weekend Brew Crew!

Cheers,
Blockchain Brew Team

MARKETS
COIN PRICE 24H

BTC $6,410.60 +8.79%

ETH $456.646 +11.05%

XRP $0.470349 +9.12%

BCH $753.106 +14.26%

EOS $8.13898 +11.9%

*Information as of 9:30 AM EST


RESEARCH

Over 1,000 Cryptocurrencies are “Dead Projects”

CRYPTO GRAVEYARD

  • According to research done by Coinopsy and Dead Coins, it is estimated that there are 1,000 cryptocurrency projects that have been abandoned
  • These 1,000 projects total to billions of dollars raised of BTC and ETH
  • This proves how investors were caught in the Blockchain craze, investing in coins that have no real use case or development effort backing them
  • These type of projects are the reason a lot of critics call cryptocurrencies a bubble and why federal agencies have stepped in to protect delusional investors from investing in projects that are destined to die

Aaron Brown, a writer for Bloomberg commented:

“There has obviously been significant fraud and hype in the ICO market. I have seen 80 percent of ICOs were frauds, and 10 percent lacked substance and failed shortly after raising money. Most of the remaining 10 percent will probably fail as well.”

IS THIS BAD?

  • Yes, investors have lost millions investing in projects that end up worth nothing, but projects going to zero may not necessarily be a bad sign for the entire space
  • While people complain about coins with no real use case or trying to solve all problems with blockchains, this behavior is common among new disruptive technologies
  • It is impossible to tell with certainty all of the use cases where Blockchain can be implemented without trying, therefore it is at least worth the effort to develop Blockchain for all use cases and see where it actually works
  • That being said, there are still projects out there with the sole purpose to scam investors, it is important that investors do due diligence on projects that they are investing in

NEWS

Chief Economist Says Bitcoin is a Buy at $5,000

$5K TARGET

  • As Bitcoin swung below $6,000 on Friday, Chief Economic Advisor at financial services company Allianz, Mohamed El-Erian, appeared on CNBC sharing that he will consider buying Bitcoin if it price gets down to $5,000
  • El-Erian believes that Bitcoin will be one day used as a store of value, seeing the cryptocurrency as more of a commodity than a currency

He also went on to call the December price surge as “pure speculation” and said he doesn’t expect it to get back to that level anytime soon:

"I don't think you get all the way back to $20,000, but I do think that you need to establish a base whereby the people who really believe in the future of Bitcoin consolidate and then that provides you a lift."

El-Erian gave his opinion that if cryptocurrencies are to last, they will need to make some changes saying:

"I suspect that if you look 10 to 15 years down the road, we will have digital currencies, but the public sector will have involvement in that. It will not be pure Bitcoin. But the blockchain technology, take that seriously."

  • He also warned that there is too much hype surrounding the space and that adoption will happen much slower than people are currently expecting

PARTNERSHIP

Huobi Signs Cooperation Agreement with JD Cloud to Develop Blockchain and Cloud Computing

PARTNERSHIP

  • According to a press release, Huobi, the world's fourth largest crypto exchange by volume, has signed a cooperation agreement with JD Cloud
  • JD Cloud is a subsidiary of China's massive online retailer JD Group and focuses on cloud computing applications
  • Through this partnership, JD Cloud wishes to explore blockchain's benefits within the cloud computing industry

BLOCKCHAIN CONSULTING

  • As companies make the move to blockchain, they are spending large amounts of funds to research and implement correctly
  • This leaves blockchain-focused companies like Huobi in a valuable position as their knowledge and experience in blockchain is impressive
  • Huobi has recently taken advantage of this blockchain consulting role with numerous partnerships just this year
  • Most recently, Huobi partnered with Korea University to bring blockchain education to the academic world

RESEARCH

PwC Report Confirms ICO Volume Reached Record Highs in First Half of 2018

ICO RECORD HIGHS

  • In a new joint report released by PwC and Crypto Valley, it was confirmed that in the first half of 2018 ICOs reached record highs despite the market decline
  • The ability to raise capital for entrepreneurs has never been easier and it is apparent that many are taking advantage of this opportunity

According to the report, in half of 2018 so far we have already doubled ICO volume from 2017:

"In total, 537 ICOs with a total volume of more than $13.7 billion have been registered since the beginning of the year. In comparison, in 2017 there were a total of 552 ICOs with a volume of just over $7.0 billion. Also, the average size of an ICO has almost doubled from $12.8 million to over $25.5 million since last year."

REGULATION PROGRESS

  • In addition to the record-breaking ICO numbers, the report also cited the U.S., Singapore, and Switzerland as the most important ICO hubs worldwide
  • These countries were chosen due to progress in regulation and availability of resources

The report also highlighted the interesting differences in ICO regulation in different countries:

"The US uses a centralized system in which all tokens offered by ICO are traded as securities. In Europe, on the other hand, a differentiated regulation prevails. FINMA, for example, classifies tokens into three sub-types: asset, payment and utility tokens, which do not constitute an actual investment but allow the buyer direct access to the product or service of the ICO. Finally, in Asia, regulation is very heterogeneous, ranging from strict prohibition to active promotion of ICO projects."


MORE BREWING
  • $300 Million Dollars Sent in Bitcoin for Just $0.04 USD
  • SharesPost Research: 15X Potential Growth in Valuation of Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain Startups Over Next 10 Years
  • Japanese Economist Explains Why Another Bitcoin Price Surge Is Unlikely

TODAY IN CRYPTO
Ethereum Classic (ETC)
PoC of new StateDB layer & Emerald Mobile Wallet
ICON (ICX)
ICX/ETH Decentralized exchange
VeChain (VEN)
VeChain launching their mainnet. VeChain holders will also generate THOR as part of staking rewards every day after this release.
OmiseGO (OMG)
"Honte (OmiseGO network preparation for Plasma) is currently on course to be delivered in Q1 to Q2 of 2018"
Lisk (LSK)
Lisk is going to launch Custom tokens & dApp registration.
Verge (XVG)
Verge social network will be launched in Q2 2018 .
Stratis (STRAT)
Full Node GUI Mainnet Beta release built on feedback from Alpha release on December.
DigiByte (DGB)
Artis Turba exchange releases in June, partnered with and listing DGB.
Stratis (STRAT)
The Breeze Wallet with Privacy Protocol has progressed through various internal test phases that focused on further testing of the protocol.
Stratis (STRAT)
"Courses continue to be developed for the Stratis Academy and will be released during this [Q1 & Q2] period."

Today in Crypto is powered by coinmarketcal.com


COIN OF THE DAY
1839.png
Nebulas (NAS)
Nebulas is a next generation public blockchain, aiming for a continuously improving ecosystem. Based on its blockchain valuation mechanism, Nebulas proposes future-oriented incentive and consensus systems, and the ability to self-evolve without forking.
WEBSITE | TWITTER | REDDIT

MEME
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SUBSCRIBE | FEEDBACK | ADVERTISE
c7a28dd9-9ec5-4913-814b-8b83b0e2f5f0.pnge1c33f1a-0d4d-4829-bc78-1fd392608c05.png e1c33f1a-0d4d-4829-bc78-1fd392608c05.png
The above is not intended to be investment advice.
1317 8th Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414.
If you don't absolutely love us, drop us, click here.
Copyright © 2018 Blockchain Brew, All rights reserved.