Microsoft Partners With Bank of America On Blockchain Trade Finance (securityweek.com) 43
wiredmikey quotes a report from SecurityWeek: Microsoft and Bank of America Merrill Lynch said they are working together to make financial transactions more efficient with blockchain technology -- the foundation of bitcoin digital currency. Blockchains are considered tamper-proof registers in which entries are time-stamped and linked to previous "blocks" in a data chain. As expected, the technology that drives the shadowy bitcoin cryptocurrency is drawing interest from the established banking industry, which sees a potential to revolutionize the sector. The companies said they will build and test frameworks for blockchain-powered exchanges between businesses and their customers and banks. Microsoft plans to use its Azure cloud service platform to enable blockchain transactions between a major corporate treasury and a financial institution. "Blockchains serve as public ledgers considered easy to audit and verify. They are also automated, speeding up transactions and limiting potential for error or revision," the report adds. The companies said that by using blockchain technology, they can digitalize and automate trade finance processes, which are traditionally highly manual, time-consuming and costly.
Ah yes... (Score:3)
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But with this we'd be able to tell pretty quickly who started the market falling. All of the trades would be public readable. In theory.
The question is when the law will catch up and allow legal liability to be assessed and assigned based on the record?
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So, the only financial transactions that any business engages in are securities trades? I guess I need to dig deeper to understand exactly how stock trades get involved in my employer making bi-weekly direct deposits into our (mine and my coworker's) accounts. I'll also ask my brother-in-law what stocks he is using to make payments to the corporation he is a franchisee of and to pay his food suppliers and such.
Or maybe CaptSlaq and H3lldr0p should find some other deceased equines to pummel.
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So, the only financial transactions that any business engages in are securities trades? I guess I need to dig deeper to understand exactly how stock trades get involved in my employer making bi-weekly direct deposits into our (mine and my coworker's) accounts. I'll also ask my brother-in-law what stocks he is using to make payments to the corporation he is a franchisee of and to pay his food suppliers and such.
Or maybe CaptSlaq and H3lldr0p should find some other deceased equines to pummel.
When you have an error as massive as the last one caused in part by automation, it might possibly be understandable that such announcements of further automation are suspect until evidence of actual improvement has happened. How much evidence it takes to regain trust in a system is up for debate.
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Of course, it's also editable.
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Bitcoin transactions are 'instant' but take 10 minutes to confirm, and 1 hour to be final. Spendable usually with a single confirmation.
Credit card transaction are 'instant' but take 3 BUSINESS DAYS to confirm, and 30-180 days to be final.
Fyi this is NOT crypto-currency (Score:2)
This post isn't really a reply to CaptSlaq. Sorry to reply to you randomly, but I wanted to out this above the idiot Koran spammer.
A common misconception is that this use of a blockchain is a new crypto-currency. Readers should note this is a DIFFERENT use of a blockchain, it is not a new currency, nor is it Bitcoin. It's simply a ledger.
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Flash crash, baby! And who else to start one? [fortune.com]
ATM on your phone? (Score:2)
We seem to be approaching a time when it would at least be possible to have an app on your phone that would allow you to transfer money (in the form of bitcoins or other blockchain-based currency) directly to your phone. There it would serve as a wallet, allowing you to make direct purchases. I wonder if such a plan is being considered?
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And here's another working implementation, which doesn't involve waiting several minutes for blockchain resolution. This is run by the same Square that provides those little point-of-sale readers that attach to an iPad at the local coffee bar.
https://cash.me/ [cash.me]
I heard... (Score:2)
MIT License (Score:2)
Banks: Thanks *yoink*
Microsoft: Ha ha! (Score:3)
Microsoft: I'm in ur bank, stealin' ur moneyz!!
Trusting Microsoft with banking is like hiring John Wayne Gacy as your babysitter.
Anti-Christ (Score:2)
Evil partners with Super Evil....
The anti-christ has been born.
Oh great, just what we need... (Score:3, Insightful)
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I don't suppose it would be much of a problem - as long as they don't change it a little, patent it, and establish a new 'standard' where noone else can play. Would Bitcoin be prior art enough to prevent that?
Not gonna happen (Score:1)
The auditors will have none of it. Easy to audit means less billable hours for them. They will insist that these blockchains need to be 'editable' under rules and governance to be audited by them. Anything in the financial services industry that is 'easy' lasts about 6 months until some joker comes up with an excel sheet that needs to be filled in for audit and compliance.
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"Easy to audit" is bullshit. It's hard to hide; it's not easy to audit. The "public ledger" is a history of when each object has had its blockchain extended. The problem is an account consists of assets of value, such as dollars; those assets are semi-fungible, in the sense that the account has value and any set of assets producing that value is representative. Accounts typically have one or several kinds of fungible assets--a single currency or separate lots of fungible assets (e.g. your commodities a
The dumb leading the blind (Score:2)
I'm still working on who is who.
This may explain ... (Score:3)
I have no accounts with BofA (Score:1)
Microsoft Partners With Bank of America On Blockch (Score:1)
Barclays have already done it (Score:2)
MS hosting blockchain, forget it (Score:2)
Sorry, I'll keep with bitcoin
Microsoft and BofA team up? What could go wrong? (Score:2)
I am really looking forward to seeing this cutting-edge technology when they complete it in 2025.