Blockchain Platform Developed by Banks To Be Open-Source (reuters.com) 32
A blockchain platform developed by a group that includes more than 70 of the world's biggest financial institutions is making its code publicly available, in what could become the industry standard for the nascent technology, reports Reuters. From the article: The Corda platform has been developed by a consortium brought together by New-York-based financial technology company R3. It represents the biggest shared effort among banks, insurers, fund managers and other players to work on using blockchain technology in the financial markets. Blockchain, which originated in the digital currency bitcoin, works as a web-based transaction-processing and settlement system. It creates a "golden record" of any given set of data that is automatically replicated for all parties in a secure network, eliminating any need for third-party verification. Banks reckon the technology could save them money by making their operations faster, more efficient and more transparent. They are racing to build products using the technology that will generate new revenue, with dozens of patent applications filed for blockchain-based products by Wall Street's top lenders. R3 says it hopes its platform will become the industry standard, although its intention is indeed for firms to build products on top of it.
life imitating pardoy (Score:2)
Re:life imitating pardoy (Score:4, Interesting)
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XML is patented by Microsoft! Look how far that technology went.
Re: Its not open source (Score:3)
Yes, but xml actually served a need. Bank controlled blockchains don't serve a need. Banks establish trust by being a fucking Bank. Bitcoin needs a proof of work function to establish trust. A blockchain with a backdoor still depends on the original trust of the bank. If you can trust a bank why do you need a blockchain. If you can't trust a bank then the backdoor they build into the blockchain isn't going to make me trust it anymore.
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Banks establish trust by being a fucking Bank.
And they lost most of that with the GFC (yes I am including the finance industry in the term "Banks" because they are a home for our money too)
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Re:Its not open source (Score:4, Informative)
Most industry standards I know are patented to hell and back. About 30% of every smartphone's cost is from patent royalties. If the patent is on some good technology, other companies will pay the royalty. Not all IP is rounded corner bullshit.
http://www.androidauthority.co... [androidauthority.com]
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All the US currency transaction reporting, suspicious activity reports, monetary instrument logs and structuring tracking gets coded in.
Follow the money (Score:3, Insightful)
Blockchain? Open-source? Kind of like Bitcoin : sounds good eh?
Remember this: whatever banks concoct and why they decide to do it isn't for the good of their customers, but that of their rich fuck shareholders. Yes, that's the same rich fucks who caused the latest recession - and the one before that, and the one before that...
Still want in on their latest project? I don't...
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Can anyone please explain (Score:2)
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15 minutes? That would be an infinite improvement over the current settlement system response time.
If 15 minutes is an infinite improvement over some other time then surely that other time must be converging on infinite?
Re:Can anyone please explain (Score:5, Interesting)
The big deal is about big transactions. This most likely isn't going to be used in the consumer credit card / debit card market, but more likely in the large purchase department. Buying a car/house? Waiting a few minutes vs hours/days for credit reports to return. Transferring millions/billions of dollars between accounts, who's auditing it? Blockchains significantly reduce the amount of work in this department while essentially eliminating fraud, since the dollars can be tracked from transaction to transaction.
Re:Can anyone please explain (Score:4, Informative)
The big deal is about big transactions. This most likely isn't going to be used in the consumer credit card / debit card market, but more likely in the large purchase department. Buying a car/house? Waiting a few minutes vs hours/days for credit reports to return. Transferring millions/billions of dollars between accounts, who's auditing it? Blockchains significantly reduce the amount of work in this department while essentially eliminating fraud, since the dollars can be tracked from transaction to transaction.
Actually, this technology is targeted a contractual transactions in the financial realm (think bank cash claims, credit default-swaps, derivative securities that rely on precise timing, etc.). As far as I can tell, there no concept of proof-of-work or mining, but it's purely a distributed financial ledger concept for banks to use. The block chain concept and the chain history being held simultaneously held by multiple partner institutions simply makes the ledger un-eraseable (any corrections need to be recorded by future transactions, not erased). Unlike bit-coin, there isn't intended to be a single global ledger of all transactions everywhere, but a ledger per domain.
Re:Can anyone please explain (Score:5, Interesting)
Patently obvious (Score:1)
"with dozens of patent applications filed for blockchain-based products by Wall Street's top lenders"
I thought software patents weren't allowed in the US any more?
Corda Demo from Barclays and Concord Information (Score:2)
Here is some information about a demo that Barclays gave of Corda:
http://www.coindesk.com/r3-corda-demo-barclays-distributed-ledger/ [coindesk.com]
It would appear that the banking consortium R3 is going to build a platform on top of Corda. They are going to name that platform Concord and the WSJ has an interesting blog post about how it all works together:
http://blogs.wsj.com/moneybeat/2016/08/24/a-closer-look-at-r3s-concord/ [wsj.com]