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domingo, 7 de abril de 2019

A blockchain Brexit

Coindesk Weekly
for the week ending April 7, 2019
CoinDesk Weekly is sponsored by
Coindesk Weekly

Time For a Blockchain Brexit?

The U.K. is on the brink of a previously unthinkable 'hard Brexit' from the European Union. A solution could be found in the capabilities of blockchain tech, argues Pindar Wong.

Read more in THE TAKEAWAY below.

THIS WEEK'S TOP STORIES

A new DLT framework

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) published the “plain English” token guidance first promised by Director of Corporation Finance William Hinman in late 2018, outlining how exactly the securities regulator would apply the decades-old Howey test – the current standard examination criteria for securities sales – to initial coin offerings. The guidance was published in conjunction with the agency’s first-ever “no action letter,” which granted TurnKey Jets LLC. permission to sell tokens it is developing under strict criteria.

However, legal experts and advocates alike say that the guidance leaves many questions unanswered. “Active participants,” a new term included in the framework by the SEC, appears to be very broadly defined, and as a result, its possible that promotors or activists or shareholders – rather than those who developed the tokens – could still result in a token sale actually being a securities offering. Moreover, TurnKey Jets’ token sale, which took the better part of a year to get approved, is subject to severe restrictions, and may not actually be broadly applicable. 

XRP transfers

Coinbase quietly launched a “fast and free” payments service for its users using XRP and the USDC stablecoin (which was first launched last fall by Circle affiliate CENTRE). Coinbase customers will have access to the no-fee service when sending to other users of the exchange. “It’s primarily designed as an educational resource for customers to learn about the benefits of using crypto for cross-border payments,” a company representative said. The XRP transfer service has been available since Coinbase first added XRP to its exchange in late February.

ICO crackdown

Canadian police have frozen assets owned by the founders of blockchain services company Vanbex as part of a fraud investigation into a 2017 initial coin offering (ICO) that raised $22 million. Vanbex told investors that its FUEL token would be usable in a forthcoming smart contract system called Etherparty, and that "the value of the FUEL token would increase dramatically," says a civil forfeiture action filed in British Columbia. However, Vanbex "developed no usable products" and its founders – who deny the allegations – "did not intend to develop the products" but rather misappropriated the funds "for their own personal benefit," according to another filing. 

Dogecoin CEO

A month and a half after calling bitcoin “brilliant,” Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk has lauded one of the crypto market’s longest-running, and famously whimsical, alternatives. “Dogecoin might be my fav cryptocurrency. It’s pretty cool,” Musk tweeted Tuesday. His praise came in response to an April Fool’s Day poll posted the day before by the official Dogecoin account asking who should be the cryptocurrency’s next CEO. Musk won with 54 percent of the vote. His Twitter profile briefly read: “CEO of Dogecoin.”

Exchange-traded XRP

An exchange-traded product (ETP) tracking the price of the XRP cryptocurrency has gone live on Switzerland’s primary stock exchange SIX. Amun AG, the provider of the product, announced the news on Tuesday, saying that the XRP ETP had started trading on the exchange under the ticker symbol AXRP. With today’s launch, Amun AG now has a total of four cryptocurrency ETP products listed on the SIX exchange. The firm said it plans to add more crypto ETPs and indices later this year.
 
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QUOTE OF THE WEEK

"I think the broad trend we’re seeing is … there’s obviously demand for regulated futures contracts for crypto that is denominated and paid out in crypto.”
– Sui Chung, head of indices and pricing products at Crypto Facilities, on a massive boost in volume his company has seen in litecoin and bitcoin cash futures trading.
 

The Takeaway

Pindar Wong is the chairman of VeriFi (Hong Kong) Ltd and a member of CoinDesk’s advisory board.

There is a crisis in governance. I’m not talking about bitcoin, but Brexit.

Britain’s exit from the European Union (EU) is not so much a technical crisis between a ‘hard fork’ and a ‘soft fork’ but a legitimacy crisis. Yet the solution to its core dilemma -- politically deciding between a ‘Hard Brexit’ and a ‘Soft Brexit’ -- may actually lay in harnessing blockchain technology’s great potential as an economic governance system for the digital age.

One thing’s clear: the current system is failing. The impasse in Britain requires a radical rethink. Unless even more time is requested by the UK, and unanimously granted by all 27 member states of the EU, the default option is for the UK to chaotically crash out from the European trade bloc, by leaving without a legal agreement, on Friday April 12th. As laws have borders, this lack of ‘legal certainty’ is particularly troubling as it risks disrupting cross-border supply chain networks which would be bad news for everyone.

Nations vs networks

Where blockchain can help is that its 'cryptographic certainty' avoids the need for bordered thinking in the borderless world created by the Internet, a world where laws are difficult to enforce and collaboration difficult to incentivise.  Could thinking harder about what we mean by a 'border' be the key to unlocking the current political deadlock?

Let’s consider the 500km border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland and the failure to find a suitable ‘Irish Backstop’. No one -- not in EU-exiting Britain nor in EU-remaining Ireland -- wants to return to the troubled times of physical checkpoints that might place lives at risk. All agree this insurance policy should be honoured regardless of the outcome of future EU-UK trade negotiations. Even though it is never supposed to be called upon, the ‘backstop’ - a last resort to maintain the island’s open border - risks creating a regulatory border in the Irish Sea, which is unacceptable because Northern Ireland would be treated differently from the rest of UK.

Yet Brexit is supposed to be what the acronym implies: an exit from the EU rules and self-determining the free flow of goods and services across international borders. How can policymakers come up with a solution that honors that change, reimposing tariffs and controls, while still protecting human lives?

The solution lies in rethinking the very idea of a border.

A border in time

In the Internet age, the governance borders that matter most are not bound along geographical or political lines. They are based on time, an invisible metric that is fairer and arguably the hardest of hard borders. You can't go back in time. And, if you get down to it, this concept of  "border in time" is what a blockchain represents.

That is why today I'm calling for the UK and EU governments to participate in a bottom-up process to establish a 'Brexit Blockchain': where customs authorities use a blockchain architecture to take the friction out of tariff enforcement by agreeing on the provenance of economic activity on a temporal, not  geographic, basis.

The key would be to use a government recognized stablecoin to lock/unlock product delivery, to incentivise deployment and to complement existing solutions for digitizing international trade from firms like the UK’s Provenance, Denmark’s Maersk and France’s Carrefour .  

Individual per-product tariffs could be implemented, with automated payments made as  products move back and forth across national borders. The tariffs could be dynamically adjusted as political demands dictate; with as many borders in time, and currency-pair stablecoins, as needed. Initially only a Euro/Pound stablecoin would be used with nominal or zero tariffs enforced. This would result in a 'Customs network', not a 'Customs Union', though initially it would behave like one.

Don’t trust, verify

When the Withdrawal Agreement doesn’t mention the Internet (a big zero), where does one even start a multi-stakeholder process? I would start the coordination game by listening to industry at next month’s Consensus conference (May 13-15) and learn from existing international governance organizations. Then I’d take any output to the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)/ TC307 Blockchain meeting that will be held in Dublin, Ireland on May 27-31. Then I’d cross my fingers!

To be sure, for Britain and the EU to view governance in this manner is a pipe dream, but it’s my hope that the seemingly inevitable train wreck that lies ahead for Britain will lead to some more enlightened thinking about the real problem at hand: scaling governance.

I might not get my Brexit Blockchain next month, but in the spirit of "failing fast," perhaps the powers-that-be will learn from this crisis and realize that they need to rewrite the rulebook -- quite literally. The top of this rulebook should read: 'No one is above the Law, No Nation below Mathematics'.
-- Pindar Wong


 

BEYOND COINDESK...

THE NEW YORK TIMES: While many in the crypto industry thought not so long ago that major Wall Street firms were about to leap into the space, they were mistaken , says a piece from The New York Times. The news source spoke to ex-Goldman Sachs employee Paul Chou, who left the bank to found a crypto exchange, LedgerX, that would cater to the expected institutional influx. “It was definitely part of the original plan that institutions would be a big part of this market,” he said. “We were wrong.” Another crypto firm founder who faced difficulties with jittery investors said, “The smart money knows that crypto is not ready,” adding it won’t be for several more years at least.

WIRED: Missoula County in the U.S. state of Montana is taking on crypto mining and environmental concerns about the energy usage by forcing miners to offset all energy used by funding or building renewable energy projects, according to Wired. The measure, while not explicitly part of a broader mandate to have Missoula run on 100 percent clean energy within a decade, nevertheless would help the county achieve that goal, said county commissioner Josh Slotnick. He explained that at present, roughly one-third of the state’s energy production goes to crypto mining (from just a single company).

THE NEXT WEB: You can actually walk on the ethereum blockchain now, sort of, thanks to a virtual world startup called Cryptovoxels. The virtual world itself interacts with other projects build on top of ethereum, such as OpenSea, and features a bitcoin museum (where you can see the bitcoin white paper abstract on a mural, for example), Pascal Boyart's puzzle mural with $1,000 in bitcoin hidden inside and Elon Musk smoking weed. The Next Web's Matthew Beedham, who walked through the world, concluded that while "there's not a real need," it's still "a mildly interesting way to spend half an hour." 

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO

Catch our latest videos when you subscribe to our YouTube channel.

The newest episode in our ongoing "Road to Consensus" podcast series features Crypto Dad himself, CFTC Chairman Christopher Giancarlo. He sat down with CoinDesk's research director Nolan Bauerle to talk markets, regulation, and blockchain. Also be sure to check out our last episode , in which Nolan spoke to Flexa co-founder Tyler Spaulding about the unsung benefits of blockchain payments.

Interested in keeping up with crypto market infrastructure development? Our Institutional Crypto newsletter focuses on the progress in cryptoassets from an investor’s point of view: security tokens, portfolio theses, market regulation, exchanges and trading desks, valuation techniques and much more. Delivered weekly on Tuesdays, it’s free, and you can sign up here.

CoinDesk's Construct event is back and it's being held alongside Consensus on May 13-15 in New York City. Developers looking to learn about the biggest public and private blockchain technologies can register for Construct for only $299. 

Send feedback on CoinDesk Weekly to marc@coindesk.com or troll him on Twitter. We'll see you here next Sunday. Thanks for reading!
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