CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Dutchman Martijn Wismeijer is very cautious when it comes to storing Bitcoin – so much so that in 2014, he had two NFC (near field communication) chips surgically implanted into each hand to store his encrypted Bitcoin keys. Wismeijer stated a number of reasons for the drastic method of storing crypto, saying he had lost The post Bitcoin Under The Skin – Why People Are Using Subdermal Microchip Wallets appeared first on CCN |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST The bitcoin price crossed the $8,000 mark earlier this week, supported by a massive spike in buy volumes across all major cryptocurrency exchanges. Analysts explained that a sudden surge in demand from institutional investors and inflow of new capital may have triggered the surge in the bitcoin price. $250,000 by 2022 On April 13, CCN The post Experts Predict Bitcoin Price to Reach $25,000 by 2018, $250,000 by 2022 appeared first on CCN |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Since the beginning of 2018, the price of Bitcoin has been one of the most popularly discussed topics within the cryptocurrency ecosystem. The reason for this is not far-fetched as there has been a huge slump in price and a downward pressure that defeats the expectations of many. An Influx of Speculators Besides the underlying … Continued The post Opinion: We are at the End of another Cryptocurrency Downward Trend appeared first on CCN |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST This is a submitted sponsored story. CCN urges readers to conduct their own research with due diligence into the company, product or service mentioned in the content below. The cryptocurrency era comes packed with bountiful promises of financial freedoms, transparency, and security. Bitcoin has the potential to replace traditional methods of finance especially in countries and The post Skycoin Announces Obelisk Protocol to Fix Present Flaws in Bitcoin and Ethereum appeared first on CCN |
Bitcoin Magazine, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Golem has lumbered in from the wilderness now with its first beta release, the Brass Golem, bringing the notion of Airbnb for computers to life on Ethereum. Also in Ethereum news, Ether Capital seeks to be a steadying and calming force in the Ethereum technology and ICO space. Samsung has now confirmed that it is manufacturing ASIC chips for Halong Mining, while the ASIC-resistant hashing algorithm that is part of Ravencoin has peeked its head above the clouds with a new white paper and detailed roadmap. In regulatory news, the EU has formally launched blockchain initiatives with 22 member countries joined in cooperation to develop education and regulation for the industry. Featured stories by Amy Castor, Colin Harper, Nick Marinoff and Justin O’Connell Stay on top of the best stories in the bitcoin, blockchain and cryptocurrency industry. Subscribe to our newsletter here. Golem, the “Airbnb for Computers,” Launches on Ethereum Mainnet in BetaOn November 11, 2016, Golem raised 820,000 ether — worth $8 million at the time — in 29 minutes. Golem was one of Ethereum’s earliest ICOs, and this week their beta, known as Brass Golem, went live on the Ethereum mainnet. Initially advertised as an “Airbnb for computers,” the Golem idea is to create a global market for your idle computing power. You can rent out your unused computing power and be paid for it in cryptocurrency. Ultimately, the goal for Golem is to make just about anything that requires heavy computer lifting, such as CGI rendering, scientific calculation, machine learning and more — both affordable and accessible. Samsung Is Building ASIC Chips for Halong MiningIt’s now confirmed that Samsung has been producing high-capacity memory chips for GPUs for years. The company has now confirmed that it is providing ASIC chips to mine bitcoin, ether and assorted cryptocurrencies for hardware manufacturer Halong Mining. Its partnership with Halong is expected to bring heavy competition to the ASIC industry, primarily to China’s Bitmain, which, up to this point, has largely dominated the chip-development arena. Cryptocurrency Project Ravencoin Gets Back to P2P Asset Transfer BasicsOfficially launched at the beginning of 2018, Ravencoin (RVN) has a stated aim “to implement a use-case-specific blockchain, designed to efficiently handle one specific function: the transfer of assets from one party to another.” According to founder Tron Black, RVN bears several resemblances to Bitcoin, with many of its advantages being extended to assets. In the future, he says Ravencoin will also bear features similar to Ethereum’s ERC20 and ERC721 contracts. The company’s road map shows that they are on Phase 2 of 6, but no dates are associated with deliverables. Taking Ether Public: An Interview with Ether Capital CEO Michael ConnEther Capital is positioning itself to be the first Ethereum-focused publicly traded company. Having already raised $45 million through a private placement, the Toronto-based firm is now close to finalizing the reverse takeover (RTO) of a Vancouver shell company by mid-April. “We want to create accretive value by building a true business, rather than acting as a venture capital firm that makes 10–15 investments and is pleased if two or three appreciate in value,” said CEO Michael Conn in an interview with Bitcoin Magazine. “We are really looking to be a meaningful alternative to both ICOs and venture capital. We are not precluding ourselves from collaborating with VCs or private investors in any of our investments, but ultimately [we] need to see how a business fits in to our broader vision of interoperability.” 22 European Nations Come Together with Blockchain PartnershipThe European Union has been active this year in exploring blockchain technology and assessing potential regulation and growth. On April 10, 2018, 22 European countries joined forces to cooperate on blockchain regulation and education. The European Blockchain Partnership “will be a vehicle for cooperation amongst Member States to exchange experience and expertise in technical and regulatory fields and prepare for the launch of EU-wide blockchain applications across the Digital Single Market for the benefit of the public and private sectors,” states the European Commission press release. This article originally appeared on Bitcoin Magazine. |
Business Insider, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST
"I said, 'Let's do 50/50 because I'm the one that has to build it,'" Michael told Business Insider. George was clearly unhappy with his father's division of equity and as his father recalls, he got emotional. "My wife was mad at me," Michael said. "She said, 'This is supposed to be fun.'" But George considered his father's counter offer, and in the morning, he was ready to compromise: 50/50, as long as he was granted the final say in company business. "We decided that when it comes down to it, we'll do it the way George wants," Michael said. In the world of entrepreneurs, there are few co-founders with so striking an age difference as that between George and his father. George, who turned 12 in February, is a video game enthusiast who has long taken issue with one irksome aspect of video games that he is hoping to solve with cryptocurrencies. George says the idea for Pocketful of Quarters occurred in September, during a conversation with his dad about cryptocurrencies on the car ride home from school. "At the time, I was frustrated because whenever I quit playing a video game, I lost all of the coins I'd earned in the game," George told Business Insider. "That meant that I was losing all of the work and effort I'd been putting into the games. So when my dad told me about cryptocurrencies, creating a cryptocurrency for games made sense to me." George's solution is a cross-platform cryptocurrency token that, if it takes off among developers, will be used in the future as an in-game currency. The token, called Quarters, is built on the cryptocurrency ethereum and will soon be available for purchase on the site Pocketful of Quarters, which he says will function similarly to a cryptocurrency exchange like Coinbase. According to the Weiksners' vision for the token, Quarters could theoretically be used to purchase anything in games — from upgrades to extra lives. While this is the first time Michael Weiksner has gone into business with his son, it isn't his first venture into the field of cryptocurrencies. A Stanford graduate and entrepreneur who now runs the venture capital firm Rostrum Capital, Michael worked on the bitcoin-based Colored Coins back in 2013. Michael has long been a believer in the potential of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology, and when his son came up with the idea for a cross-platform cryptocurrency for video games, Michael thought that it could make for a viable business. Michael says it made sense to go into business with his son, even though George was only 11 years old at the time. In many ways, Michael said he sees George's comparative youth as an asset rather than a disadvantage. "A 12-year-old mind can see the world unpolluted by all of the silly compromises we've made, and that's exactly what happened when I explained cryptocurrencies to George," Michael said. "It was as much for me to get his perspective on something I thought was interesting as it was for him to teach me about something that I think is the future." While Michael sees his son's age as an advantage, some potential investors they approached haven't felt the same way. When the pair tried to enter Pocketful of Quarters into the New York-based incubator Techstars, Michael said that George's age was a barrier. At first, he said the Techstars team seemed interested in the project, but eventually, "they put their foot down." And while the Weiksners offered to change George's title from CEO, Michael said the Techstars team was firm when it came to George's age. "They said they couldn't have a 12 year old in the program." In an email to Business Insider, Techstars managing director Alex Iskold said that Techstars passed because Pocketful of Quarters was pre-launch and had applied after the new group of companies had already been selected for the incubator's upcoming term. However, he did say that the team had found George's age to be problematic. "I think there are certainly challenges and potential liabilities with having an 11-year-old CEO and we had questions around that," said Iskold. "Why can't a 12 year old be CEO?" Michael asked during a phone call with Business Insider. "We have 12-year-old actors and 12-year-old athletes. Why can't we have 12-year-0ld entrepreneurs?" When George and Michael visited Business Insider's New York headquarters, he stopped short as he passed a framed photograph of Elon Musk hanging in the corridor. "Oh my god!" he exclaimed. "Is that Elon Musk?" I confirmed that it was a photo of Musk taken during an interview with Business Insider. "Wow!" He said. "My little brother is going to be so jealous." During the course of the interview, George sat upright on the sofa as he chewed ice from a plastic cup and explained his deep enthusiasm for cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology. Over the past few months, George has regularly attended several cryptocurrency meet-ups in New York with his dad, and, contrary to what one might expect from your average 12 year old, George said he never found the meet-ups to be boring or beyond his comprehension. "I think it's really interesting," he said. "The funny thing about crypto is that there's so many different people involved. There's nobody that's like, 'I went to college and studied crypto.' Everyone is from a different background." At these cryptocurrency meet-ups, George said that he is always the youngest person there. When George meets other conference attendees, he said they often play what he called "the cute game" at first — dumbing down the conversation a bit as they realize they're talking to someone far younger. But George said he's treated more seriously once he describes his idea for Pocketful of Quarters. It's clear that George knew a lot about blockchain-based technology, the notoriously puzzling digital ledger that has warranted explainer columns in news publications from Business Insider to The New York Times. George said he doesn't think that age should be an impediment when it comes to understanding the blockchain. "I think that if anyone puts the time and effort into learning something, they can do it," he said. "If you educate yourself on the blockchain, you'll understand it. Anyone can do that if they have the time." The conversation with George made it apparent that cryptocurrencies, which were once a topic relegated to a close-knit group of Redditors and cypherpunk forums, have seeped into the mainstream consciousness even among middle-schoolers. At school, George said that the concept has come up multiple times in conversations with his classmates, and that the majority of his classmates have a rudimentary understanding of digital currencies. His father has been an active figure in George's education on the blockchain, and Michael said that he emphasizes the importance of learning about coding and cryptocurrencies for all four of his children. "I teach my kids to code," Michael said. "I think it's very important to understand what the future might look like, and I'm very interested in their feedback." George and his father believe that Pocketful of Quarters's emphasis on creating a solution for video game players sets their project apart from other in-game cryptocurrency offerings. "Our focus is on the players," said Michael. "That's what makes us different from what's out there. All of these other gaming industry people who one way or another feel the pain of developers and publishers don't feel the pain of the players in the same way." And to anyone who might believe that making a 12-year-old the face of a company is clearly a clever marketing strategy, George and Michael flatly deny this motivation. When I ask if George's involvement in Pocketful of Quarters is largely as a figurehead, he emphatically disagrees. "I came up with the idea," he said. "Yeah," his dad affirmed. "It was his idea." "I came up with it, and I have a clearer vision than my dad does," said George. "Whenever we go to crypto meet-ups, my dad babbles about it for ages and ages and he won't really get to the main point." What's the main point? I asked. "That it's frustrating whenever you quit a game because you lose all of your coins," George said. "My dad just likes getting into the software." While Pocketful of Quarters may have met some pushback from investors — the pair is currently trying to fundraise — Michael said that most of the people he meets are intrigued by the fact that he's starting a business with his young son. "Mostly, people think it's cool," Michael said. "My friends know George and they believe in George. It all comes down to the fact that when you launch a cryptocurrency, if it's successful, it's unstoppable." He references Vitalik Buterin, who learned about bitcoin from his own father and began working on the creation of what is now one of the world's most influential cryptocurrencies, ethereum, when he was only 19. "Vitalik said that even a 14-year-old could launch a new currency," said Michael. "George is 12, so: close enough." Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: Google, Apple, and Amazon are in a war that no one will win |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST As the regulatory debate continues mainly between government agencies and cryptocurrency protagonists, the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), through its Governor, Patrick Njoroge joins in the campaign towards slowing down the propagation of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies. A Recurrent Warning Njoroge told legislators on Thursday that he had sent a circular to all banks warning them … Continued The post Kenya’s Central Bank Warns Against Cryptocurrency appeared first on CCN |
Business Insider, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST
Nicole Eagan, the CEO of Darktrace, told attendees at the Wall Street Journal's CEO Council event: "We have seen 1,000 crypto-mining cases in the last six months in the US alone with employees taking over company infrastructure for crypto mining. This is becoming a big problem." Crypto mining is the process by which new bitcoins are created and involves solving complex cryptographic problems. The computing power required to crack these problems has grown exponentially since the creation of bitcoin in 2009 and it now takes huge banks of servers to crack codes. Online mining "pools" have sprung up that allow people to plug their computer capacity into digital networks and earn a share of the collective rewards. Eagan said her company had come across one instance where a junior banker at an unnamed Italian bank had actually stolen servers that he had signed for on behalf of his company. "He had taken 12 of these and hidden them under the floorboards in the data centre of the bank and then set up his own crypto mining range," Eagan said. "This went undetected for some period of time. Luckily we actually detected it because there were these unusual connections going outside the bank to these crypto mining places." Darktrace is a cybersecurity company that works with the likes of BT, the Scottish government, the City of Las Vegas, and European power plant giant Drax. Robert Hannigan, the director of Britain's government cybersecurity agency GCHQ from 2014 to 2017, appeared alongside Eagan on the panel in London on Thursday. He said: "People are doing what they've always done in the criminal world, which is to harness unsecured processing power from around the world. We see it all the time in botnets — using your network or your personal computer to do work for them at night if it's not secured." Last year security intelligence group RedLock found at least two companies had their AWS cloud services compromised by hackers who wanted nothing more than to use the computer power to mine the cryptocurrency bitcoin. SEE ALSO: Look inside the surreal world of an Icelandic bitcoin mine, where they literally make digital money DON'T MISS: How to make money mining bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies without knowing anything about it NEXT UP: The electricity used to mine bitcoin this year is bigger than the annual usage of 159 countries Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: Wall Street is divided over whether stocks can storm back from their latest meltdown |
CryptoCoins News, 1/1/0001 12:00 AM PST Robert Shiller, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, called bitcoin a “sort of bubble,” which is not to say it will burst. Shiller, the 2013 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics for his work in “Trendspotting In Asset Markets,” made his comments on an interview for CNBC. Shiller made his remarks shortly after bitcoin recorded a The post Nobel Laureate Economist Robert Shiller Calls Bitcoin ‘Sort Of A Bubble’ appeared first on CCN |