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Topic: [ANN][EXCHANGE][LIVE] Blockchain.io, Your Gateway to the Internet of Value - page 148. (Read 321866 times)

newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
every thing is good! Great project
I think that the potential of the Blockchain to take advantage of the computing power of the entire Internet destroys the fictitious belief that the cryptocurrency has no value, is a bubble or the latest fashion of technology. BCIO Tokens are utility coins, designed to provide a smooth and secure experience for cryptocurrency traders and users on the internet of things. The trading platform, makes it more good for the holders for cryptocurrencies to enlist their coin in the crypto market like stock exchange , trade short time or long time holding for it value to appreciate over a period of time and makes one more money without much hard work . the only requirement is your wallet, time to be on your system and your resources like data to be on the internet. The trading platform, makes it more good for the holders for cryptocurrencies to enlist their coin in the crypto market like stock exchange , trade short time or long time holding for it value to appreciate over a period of time and makes one more money without much hard work . the only requirement is your wallet, time to be on your system and your resources like data to be on the internet.
newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
Great project!
I think that the potential of the Blockchain to take advantage of the computing power of the entire Internet destroys the fictitious belief that the cryptocurrency has no value, is a bubble or the latest fashion of technology. The truth is that cryptocurrency can act as a more intelligent and secure exchange system that improves the delivery of Internet technologies and applications. With the Blockchain, we can create a voluntary network, an Internet / Cloud 2.0, that improves cybersecurity and lends itself to advances in computing, AI, IoT and record keeping. It is a multi-million dollar solution to solve problems in all vertical markets and we are only scratching the surface. The cloud was the first step to move away from centralization.
Companies needed to store files and have access to processing power for applications with a wide network bandwidth to adapt to daily use. Now, the Blockchain is introducing the second iteration of the computational structure. Through a distributed ledger system, Blockchain has created computational networks that are secure, immutable and democratic. This could lead to non-hackable web programs and services, transparent networks and greater system reliability. It is important that new projects come to renew and evolve every day the idea by which the chain of blocks was created.
My best wishes to the team!
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
The platform is the coolest, in any case it looks very impressive and promising. The intentions of the developers are clearly and clearly spelled out in White Paper, the road map is being implemented as planned. After launching the platform, its users will be able to easily solve many tasks of their business. Taking part now, we lay the foundation for future financial relations.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 0
A Blockchain is a medium of buying & selling Crypto apart from buying it over the counter. If any exchange wants to be leader in market, it need to possess following qualities.
Decentralised, trustless, automic token swap, better liquidity, east to use & great customer support. I believe blockchain.io providing all these services should be leader in the market. Good luck to them.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
A blockchain is a decentralized, distributed and public digital ledger that is used to record transactions across many computers so that the record cannot be altered retroactively without the alteration of all subsequent blocks and the consensus of the network. This allows the participants to verify and audit transactions inexpen. A blockchain database is managed autonomously using a peer-to-peer network and a distributed timestamping server. They are authenticated by mass collaboration powered by collective self-interests. The result is a robust workflow where participants' uncertainty regarding data security is marginal. The use of a blockchain removes the characteristic of infinite reproducibility from a digital asset. It confirms that each unit of value was transferred only once, solving the long-standing problem of double spending. Blockchains have been described as a value-exchange protocol. This blockchain-based exchange of value can be completed quicker
newbie
Activity: 26
Merit: 0
Blockchain.io is your gateway to the Internet of Value. In the coming Internet of value, decentralized blockchain-operated value networks will become mainstream and compliant, enabling billions of Internet users to exchange value as quickly and as easily as they exchange information today.

Multiple cryptocurrencies will co-exist. Each cryptocurrency will serve the needs of a community of users to securely trade any type of assets, rights, goods, or services thatis of value to them in a decentralized value network, i.e. without supervision by a central authority.

As a cryptocurrency exchange, Blockchain.io will play a major role in the Internet of Value’s ecosystem. It will be the marketplace where cryptocurrencies will be traded against each other, a gateway to and a bridge across the multiple value networks powered by different blockchains/cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH).

Blockchain.io will combine the efficiency of a low-latency full-featured centralized exchange with decentralized “trustless” cross-chain settlement. The project leverages the latest developments in cross-chain atomic swaps, cryptographic protocols, and payment networks such as Lightning and Raiden. These developments will overcome the scalability issues of decentralized blockchains, allow transactions across heterogenous blockchains, increase the speed and lower the cost of these transactions, making them ready for mass adoption.

Blockchain.io is driven by the highly experienced team of cryptocurrency experts who, seven years ago, founded Paymium, a fiat/bitcoin exchange catering to the underserved Euro market. Blockchain.io shares Paymium’s highest security, reliability, and accountability standards. It strives to overcome the shortcomings of rival crypto exchanges that have repeatedly caused severe losses for issuers and token holders. To achieve this, the team relies on its advanced knowledge of cryptographic technology, its operational in-depth understanding of the crypto world, and a strong company culture committed to security and compliance.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
Thank you for your message. We are happy to hear that you find our advisory board impressive. Regarding our team, we only displayed C-Level team members on this thread. In the manifesto, please note that we did not mention all members of our team (both those in tech and on the marketing side) because we are running an exchange and we need to keep some members anonymous as failsafes. It's true that we could have mentioned their presence.

I respectfully disagree concerning your remarks about the team. The project here is building an exchange; not a blockchain. Our team is composed of exchange experts from both the crypto-sphere and the traditional financial world. To remove any doubts about our capabilities, the Blockchain.io platform is currently being developed as we speak. The Alpha is planned for June 2018 and the Beta for late July. Early investors will get access to Alpha & Beta.

Concerning volume, the situation will shift soon. We are currently working with a French bank and are constrained by French banking regulation, which is one of the strictest in the world. The banking cartel is very strong and proactively undermines our business. Following our migration to a different banking partner, they have imposed uncompetitive funding limits (10K€/year), preventing any significant high-volume traders from boosting volume and fueling platform liquidity. We are currently working on an alternative banking solution in Europe, and we plan to add USD & JPY to our bitcoin exchange. We are confident that volume will be back on Paymium once this is settled.

On the profitability side, please note that we have been operating a bitcoin exchange since 2011, thus we have significant reserves. The two previous years have been good regarding volume. The last few months have been tough, but we still largely benefited from the price rally of 2016 and especially that of last year.
When considering hacking, this is one of our main concerns. 24H volume has little bearing on the funds held on our platform. With around 200,000 users, hackers will certainly try something, but we have developed very high security standards (more than 98% of cold storage), keeping our customers' funds safe.

Concerning the Blockchain.io exchange, our main exclusive feature is decentralized settlement. Blockchain.io will offer the possibility to settle trades without giving the custody of coins, which erases the last potential point-of-failure. Order Books will remain centralized, guaranteeing high-performance matching and liquid markets. Of course, this feature will be optional, as it could not fit some user profiles, such as market-makers (who prefer velocity over high security).
Moreover, Blockchain.io will also offer basic & advanced trade orders from the start. In the long run, we plan to implement margin trading and peer-to-peer lending. Please check out our roadmap at this end of the thread.

Last, but not least, Blockchain.io will have a strong focus on institutions. We believe that ICOs will become the main way to raise funds, and that large companies will approach us to launch their respective tokens for new product launches. Our team is highly experienced and has strong connections in the traditional financial world, therefore, we are aiming to become the primary interlocutor for such companies. Blockchain.io will offer its expertise and knowledge to provide complete ICO services, from planning and execution to token listing on our platform.

Please feel free to ask further questions if you have any. In all, development is ongoing, but coming along very well.

Thank you very much.
The Blockchain.io Team
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
this is a wonderful project that have made  life easy for the humanity. I am a blockchain user, the coming of cryptocurrencies have made life fair to customer who can now conduct transaction without the consent of a third party eg the banking system that act as middleman and change you transaction fees for doing nothing. the blockchain .io has made possible for a customer to make transactions any time while at the same time maintaining his/her privacy, paying lower or zero changes on transaction whether on online or in a store. The future of digital currency is growing and moving faster than light . God grace to the team behind this project ,good work and keep it up. we have entered the third industrial revolution, which is the age of sharing .
newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
Hi, i am glad to join your channel and project . i really appreciate your work and project. we all need this technology . And you are serve for us . i am waiting this project . This project is too much promising and i want and have to invest this project .nice team work keep it up and best of luck . thanks
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
This is one of the project that really got my interest and I am looking forward to this one. What I really like about it is the features listed really catch my interest. I love crypto since last year Smiley and I really like on how the future on digital money grow. So to the people behind this project, I really glad you exists  Grin kidding, but yeah, kudos to the team who made this possible. Also I really want to be part of this project and I am part of it. So have a nice day everyone
newbie
Activity: 36
Merit: 0
Hi,
There are so many advantages of this project that I cant find any minuses. Almost fully cold storage, trusted advisorg, beautifull design etc - no doubts! It will defenitely succeed

4.8/5 rating for our project and #BCIO #Token on @ICObench! #ICO #cryptocurrency #blockchain

Wish good luck
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
I think I have already done this. What a shame I think the computer isn;t working properly:


Glenn Chan's Random Notes on Investing
DISCLAIMER: Some of the information on this site is wrong. Always do your own research.
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February 20, 2018 by GlennC   
Blockchain is a useless technology

Blockchain, a way of implementing a distributed ledger (distributed record-keeping), is a novel technology with little real-world practicality.  The original Bitcoin white paper published back in October 31, 2008 spurred little interest in distributed ledgers.  The distributed ledger was ignored for years until Bitcoin started receiving mainstream attention and a few years had passed.

I simply couldn’t find much evidence that distributed ledgers are useful for any real-world applications (other than speculative asset bubbles).  Once you understand that blockchains are bad at solving real-world problems, then you will understand why Bitcoin will fail.  The blockchain imposes limitations that makes Bitcoin a bad version of something that has been tried in the past: e-gold (description here and Wired profile here).

A company’s stance on blockchain can also serve as a test of a company’s management.  In my view, companies pushing blockchain technology (e.g. IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle) are disconnected from customers’ actual needs and have mediocre management.  Companies that don’t talk about blockchain (e.g. Facebook, Amazon, Google, Apple) are more likely to produce sensible technology that will work in the real world.

Blockchain and its “benefits”

The only truly innovative part of Bitcoin is its implementation of a distributed ledger.  Instead of having a single trusted party maintain a single ledger (that an oppressive government can coerce), anybody can join the network and receive their own copy of the ledger.  A set of fixed rules governs how the copies of the ledger should be maintained.  In theory, this does not allow for a single party to exert control over the network.  The supposed benefits of decentralization are:

    The ledger can’t be changed without the Bitcoin owner’s permission.  An oppressive government can’t seize a citizen’s assets since a transfer of funds would require the owner’s private key (which is like a password that grants control over someone’s Bitcoins).
    The rules governing Bitcoin can’t be changed.  Central banks can’t devalue the currency by printing money.  (In reality, Bitcoins devalue due to inflation built into the system.)

In practical use, the upsides will never materialize.  For Bitcoin to see mainstream adoption for legitimate purposes, the surrounding ecosystem of Bitcoin exchanges will have to follow government regulations and interface with traditional banking.  Otherwise, governments concerned about illegal activities (and therefore money laundering) will force banks to cut off ties with the Bitcoin ecosystem, preventing ordinary citizens from buying and selling Bitcoin on exchanges.  Governments can attempt to seize Bitcoins by arresting individuals and threatening them with jail time.  In that sense, the government can exert a lot of control and influence over Bitcoin.  This is currently the case as banks are afraid of the fines they would have to pay if they were to breach anti-money laundering laws.  Many of them limit access to the Bitcoin ecosystem.

And while the ledger and rules governing Bitcoin “can’t” be changed, users actually want changes to the ledger and changes to the rules of the game.

    Somebody exploited a bug to create 92 billion Bitcoins in a system designed to reach only 21 million Bitcoins (see here and here).  Bitcoin’s extreme hyperinflation needed to be fixed… by swapping the ledger (with the ledger from an earlier point in time before the bug was exploited) so that the ‘money printing’ exploit could be reversed.
    If Bitcoin is to see wider adoption, it will require fundamental changes to increase its transaction capacity.  Current capacity limits have caused transaction fees to skyrocket to a peak of around US$55 (chart) and for confirmation times to increase to several hours.  However, the Bitcoin community has been divided as to the best technical path to take to solve the issues.

The users of a system might as well rely on a trusted party to make changes and to choose a direction in driving the software forward.  That trusted party could be a democratically-elected party or a benevolent dictatorship.  If there is dissatisfaction with the project’s leadership, open-source projects can be ‘forked’- those wishing to take things in a different direction can make their own version of the software as the software’s source code (the secret recipe for making the software) is open to everybody.  A centralized open-source project (or a number of them) would do the same thing.  The distributed ledger isn’t necessary.  Unfortunately, distributed ledgers have technical downsides.  In practical usage, distributed ledgers impose technical limitations onto a system with no benefit.
Bitcoin’s strength is in speculative asset bubbles

It is unlikely that Bitcoin will survive as a platform with legitimate uses.  Bitcoin is a bad payment network tied at the hip to an intrinsically worthless currency.

As a payment network, Bitcoin is slow, expensive, has terrible security, and is not user-friendly.  Something similar to Bitcoin has been tried before with e-gold (description here and Wired profile here).  The major advantages of e-gold over the current Bitcoin system are:

    Fast confirmations.  Payment confirmations did not range from minutes to 16+ hours.
    Lower fees in some cases- e-gold’s 1% storage fee is comparable to Bitcoin’s current inflation rate of 4.3% (chart) that pays for overhead.  E-gold transactions were 50 cents or 1% of the transaction (whichever is lower) versus Bitcoin’s average ranging from $2 to $55 last year.
    Far superior security.  Bitcoin’s security is abysmal.
    More user-friendly.

Bitcoin’s supposed advantage over e-gold (decentralization) will likely be irrelevant in practice.  It offers no advantages over current payment systems.

The other major difference between Bitcoin and e-gold is that Bitcoin is backed by ones and zeroes (inherently worthless numbers generated by a computer) whereas e-gold was backed by gold and other precious metals.  Currently, financial markets are ascribing significant value to Bitcoin’s 1s and 0s.  Here are some misconceptions fueling the speculative bubble in Bitcoin:

    Decentralization will provide freedom from the government, money printing, central banking, and (risky) fractional reserve banking.  E-gold was designed to do all of those things but was forced by the US government into changing its business practices.  This ultimately forced e-gold to shut down.
    Bitcoin or some other cryptocurrency will be the dominant currency in the future.  E-gold’s failure strongly suggests that cryptocurrencies will fail because it is unlikely that cryptocurrencies will be more effective than e-gold.
    Bitcoins are safe because they are protected by encryption and cryptography.  In reality, Bitcoin’s security is abysmal.  Gold and fiat currencies have never experienced incredibly high losses due to theft.
    Bitcoin will have lower fees than price-gouging banks.  In reality, Bitcoin’s current inflation rate of 4.3% goes towards overhead while transaction fees have spiked as high as US$55 / transaction.
    Blockchain is a disruptive technology.  In reality, nobody cared about distributed ledgers for years.

What allows the misconceptions to exist is blockchain.  There is the mistaken belief that Bitcoin’s key innovation will actually allow a decentralized system to work.  The reason why the bubble exists is because speculators don’t understand why blockchain is useless.  Mostly, the situation exists because people don’t understand Bitcoin and simply assume that it works because the technobabble sounds so complicated.
Why Bitcoin is a bad payment network (feel free to skip this section)

Many many ideas have been tried in payments and in digital money, especially during the Dot-Com era when there were many well-funded startups (some of which had the backing of big banks).  Paypal saw something like 30 or so of its competitors go out of business.  There isn’t much that hasn’t been tried in payments and there is a graveyard full of failed ideas.

Bitcoin bears similarities to Paypal and the defunct e-gold (description here and Wired profile here).  However, Bitcoin lacks any useful innovation over previous systems.  The key innovation, the distributed ledger, solves a non-problem (centralization).  Other than that, Bitcoin doesn’t attempt to solve any of the difficult problems in payments.  It is also inherently flawed at dealing with some of the existing problems in payments.

    Account security:  As with any financial account, scammers will try to trick consumers into giving away their passwords via phishing scams.  A good payment processing system will look for footprints of such attacks, e.g. the IP address used to log into an account when it is emptied.  Because IP addresses reveal the user’s location, a good payment processing system will flag logins where the user has traveled faster than commercial aviation (since that is highly improbable).  This type of surveillance goes against the ethos of Bitcoin.  But it’s worse than that.  Historically, a significant fraction of the Bitcoins in circulation have been stolen.  The second Mt Gox breach was estimated to have resulted in a loss of 650,000 Bitcoins, which was roughly 5% of all Bitcoins in existence at the time.  Bad actors (some of whom are likely exchange employees) have been very good at stealing Bitcoins.  Bitcoins are attractive targets because today’s complicated computer systems have a huge attack surface (this includes crooked employees and social engineering), because Bitcoins don’t have weight like cash or gold (a single person will take a long time to physically move millions of dollars), because Bitcoin is designed to be irreversible, and because the banking industry has yet to develop strong money laundering controls to stop thieves from converting stolen Bitcoins into cash.
    “Fast” settlement:  The reason why many financial transactions take a long time to clear (days or months) is to allow for fraudulent transactions to be reversed.  However, many financial institutions will allow low-risk transactions to clear immediately and will bear the risk of losing money if it turns out that the transaction was fraudulent.  This makes the system far less inconvenient without losing the fraud-fighting properties of long settlement times.
    Fraud:  Fraud is the reason why all of Paypal’s competitors failed in the eBay auction payments market.  It’s a very difficult problem.  In its early days, Paypal was ruthless in freezing accounts (especially those of legitimate customers- just Google “Paypal sucks”), saying no to risky business, and in providing no customer service.
    Convenience:  Customers like payment systems that are easy to sign up for, clear quickly, and have good user experiences.  Bitcoin’s design is not very user friendly.  A consumer needs to get a bank account.  Then they need to fund an account at a Bitcoin exchange, which will require a credit card or wire transfer… requiring them to participate in the traditional financial system.  This is inconvenient if the customer tries to do this at a financial institution that closes accounts associated with Bitcoin (the anti-money laundering burden is not worth it for most banks).  If the consumer is worried about their Bitcoins being stolen (roughly a third of all Bitcoin exchanges have been compromised), they can transfer the Bitcoins to their own Bitcoin wallet (many of which have been compromised).  Then they should make a backup of their private key on paper because they will lose their Bitcoins if their hard drive crashes or if they forget the password protecting their private key.  Compare all this to credit cards- consumers don’t worry much about losing their credit card, rarely have their money stolen, and don’t have to learn about computers.
    Money laundering:  Most countries have laws that require financial companies to police their customers and to implement safeguards against money laundering.  This includes knowing the identity of the customer.  On the compliance front, the Bitcoin system does not allow for accounts to be frozen and would have to rely on (centralized) exchanges to comply with money laundering safeguards.  The Bitcoin ecosystem would also need to develop safeguards against the current tumbling services (which masks a user’s public paper trail on the Bitcoin ledger) and should implement some way of blacklisting stolen Bitcoins currently in circulation.  Such blacklisting would require centralization.

Bitcoin also fails in areas that aren’t difficult:

    Fast payment confirmation:  Due to Bitcoin’s distributed ledger design, the fastest a transaction can be confirmed is around 10 minutes.  Paypal and Visa can confirm transactions in seconds, so somebody purchasing a good can receive it in seconds rather than waiting for minutes.
    Overhead that does not cost billions of dollars a year:  The Bitcoin system is supported by Bitcoin ‘mining’.  The idea is that users would use their CPU to perform a lot of math calculations to support the integrity of the blockchain.  Record keepers in the network will trust the side that has poured more computing power into its calculations; cryptography allows each node in the network to easily verify the amount of math performed.  If the honest users do more math than bad actors trying to disrupt the system, then the Bitcoin network will function as intended.  If the good guys don’t dedicate a lot of computing power to Bitcoin mining, then a bad actor can simply round up more computing power than the good guys and gain the trust of other nodes on the network.  To try to prevent this, there’s an incentive system for the good guys to build up a large standing army of CPUs.  Inflation is designed into Bitcoin to encourage the good guys to maintain a large army.  This is done by giving out Bitcoins to Bitcoin miners depending on how much work they put in (the number of Bitcoins given out in a year is more or less pre-determined).  Because the price of Bitcoin has skyrocketed, billions of dollars in Bitcoins will likely be given away this year to miners fighting over their share of Bitcoins.  The ‘mining’ analogy is used because Bitcoin miners put in work and are rewarded with digital ‘gold’.  Unfortunately, the current system results in an overhead of billions of dollars for a very low volume of transactions.
    Network capacity:  Bitcoin is currently limited to around 3 transactions a second.  As the Bitcoin network approaches this limit, fees skyrocket and payment confirmations can take several hours.  This has caused some retailers like Steam to drop Bitcoin as a payment option.  While this technical obstacle can be overcome, Bitcoin has dysfunctional governance that has prevented work on the issue.  In the Bitcoin community, there was a civil war over whether the block size should be increased.  (Doing so would solve impending capacity issues of the Bitcoin network in a simple, elegant fashion.  The motivations for opposing it are unclear.)  Opponents of a larger block size used denial of service attacks, propaganda, and censorship to fight this change.  Ironically, a system that is supposed to be free from oppressive governments is being influenced by bad actors launching cyberattacks on their opponents.

Problems unique to Bitcoin:

    Security vulnerabilities:  The distributed ledger has some outstanding security vulnerabilities that have yet to be resolved (e.g. malleability attacks, denial of service attacks on the peer-to-peer network, Sybil attacks, etc.).
    Centralization of Bitcoin miners:  In practice, Bitcoin mining has been concentrated in undesirable ways… making it much easier for one party to disrupt the Bitcoin network with a 51% attack (see the earlier discussion about “overhead that does not cost billions of dollars a year”).  Bitcoin mining will concentrate in countries with lots of cheap electricity.  It will be concentrated among big companies that build large, efficient data centers.  And it will continue to be dominated by ASICs, computer chips designed to do one thing and one thing only (mining Bitcoins in this case).  Whichever company designs the best ASIC will see their ASIC dominate Bitcoin mining.  Ideally, there should not be any backdoors programmed into that ASIC… such as the one programmed into Bitmain’s Antminer S9.  If most of the mining power is concentrated in a single country (currently this is China), among a handful of companies, or in a single ASIC design (Bitmain, a Chinese company, currently has the best ASICs)… there is a risk of a 51% attack.
    Unknown economics:  When the Bitcoin ‘money printing’ stops after all 21 million Bitcoins are mined, it is unclear if the economic incentives will still lead to a well-functioning system.

Bitcoin is a terrible store of value

    It is far, far easier to lose Bitcoins to theft than it is to lose gold.
    Various technical and economic obstacles need to be overcome for Bitcoin to be a usable payments network for mainstream use.
    Why would you trust a system where a software bug was exploited to create 92 billion Bitcoins?!

Blockchain as a litmus test

Companies that promote distributed ledgers are more focused on appearing to be innovative rather than solving their clients’ problems.  To spot many of these companies, you can simply look at those donating to the Hyperledger project (which is developing distributed ledgers and giving away the source code).

    The publicly-traded Premier members are ACN, AXP, EADSF (Airbus), BIDU, CSCO, DDAIY (Daimler), FJTSY (Fujitsu), HTHIY (Hitachi), IBM, INTC, JPM, NIPNF (NEC Corp), and SAP.
    Some publicly-traded general members are: AMS:ABN (ABN AMRO), AET, BBVA, BNP Paribas, CME, ETR:DB1 (Deutsche Boerse), LLY, GM (GM Financial), TYO:9613 (NTT Data), ORCL, RHT, KRX:018260 (Samsung SDS), SBRCY (Sberbank), LON:SDR (Schroders), STT, EPA:HO (Thales), TRI, TSE:X (TMX Group), VMW, WFC, and WIT.

I raise my eyebrows at the technology and IT services providers on that list such as Microsoft, IBM, and SAP- these guys should know better because it’s their core business.

I would point out that it would make sense for companies to sell sensible solutions and to slap the word “blockchain” onto them for marketing reasons.  However, I’m not aware of any publicly-traded companies that do this.  Seeing the words “blockchain” and “distributed ledger” should be a reasonably reliable shortcut in figuring out whether or not a company is crazy.  Some companies like Microsoft and IBM even offer buzzwords Blockchain as a Service while Intel and Oracle have teamed up for a Blockchain Cloud Service… perhaps working a little too hard in trying to appear cutting-edge.

Granted, it likely won’t end in tears.  Some tech giants will continue to make money despite wasting resources on useless technologies.  A few of the companies are blessed with scale advantages (Intel, Visa, Mastercard), network effects that lead to a near monopoly situation (Microsoft Windows), or a big competitive lead that will take a long time to catch up to (Microsoft, SAP, Oracle).  These companies will simply make less money and their competitive advantages will erode over time.  Others may not be so lucky.  Cisco currently faces very strong competition so its political rot will likely cause Cisco to fall even more behind its competitors.

Banks and financial companies will not be hurt that much by their incompetence when it comes to technology.  The reason why many financial companies are so bad at technology is because technology rarely determines the winners and losers in their field.  As long as their core business is strong, their profits will greatly exceed the waste from bad technology.  The real issue with banks is that they constantly find new ways of losing money as they get into trouble from non-core businesses, e.g. competing against Paypal in the early 2000s, the subprime housing bubble, subprime auto lending, etc.  I wouldn’t focus too much on their skill in technology.

Conversely, I’m interested in technology, database, and IT services providers that aren’t talking about blockchain (e.g. the FANG stocks + Apple).  These companies have more sensible corporate cultures.  Google/Alphabet shareholders should be pleased to see that its only serious competitor in search (Microsoft) is wasting resources on blockchain.
AMD’s stock promotion

In this CNBC interview, AMD’s CEO Lisa Su claims that blockchain is a “positive foundational technology” and that cryptocurrencies only accounted for a small fraction of the company’s revenues.  That’s crazy talk.  Cryptocurrencies are the only blockchain implementation that has seen any mainstream adoption.  When the crypto bubble bursts, AMD will be hurt as video card demand will drop dramatically (see a previous blog post for more detail).  Yet AMD’s CEO would like to mislead investors regarding AMD’s sensitivity to cryptocurrencies, suggesting that AMD’s exposure is low.  She is likely trying to mislead because the growth in cryptocurrencies has been masking poor performance in some of AMD’s business lines.

AMD’s technology is pretty good but the company has a problem with generating profits.
Closing thoughts

Unlike other manias, blockchain lacks a kernel of value creation.  Asset bubbles in Dot-Com stocks and the Nifty Fifty were based on ideas that have merit as the Internet did change the world and quality businesses did perform better over very long time periods.  Current excitement over cloud-based delivery of software (a technology that has been around for decades), fintech (making software for the financial industry), and venture capital (investing in startups) does have merit if you ignore valuations.  Distributed ledgers on the other hand are useless.

I just don’t know when the bubble will pop.

*Disclosure:  I am short a company (not mentioned in this article) that hypes its ‘blockchain’ solutions.  Short AMD.  Long FB and GOOGL.
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
Lovely project
The centralized part of the exchange offers highly secure custody services with cold storage and cryptographic proof of reserve.

Cryptocurrencies are held in cold storage (offline) for at least 98% of reserves.
A cold wallet access requires multiple signatures.
A cold wallet private key is split and held in a number of different vaults in multiple locations.
Other in-house security processes and technological features.
Internal procedures protect the exchange from social engineering attacks. Periodic technical audits and timestamped logs allow detection of any tampering 
attempts in the accounting database.
Periodic financial audits verify that the inventory of coins (assets side) matches the records of liabilities with cryptographic proof. If the exchange’s customer balances are checked against a blockchain inventory of coins (utxos in Bitcoin language) every block interval, there is little or no room for a rogue intruder to alter database records with profit.
Decentralized settlement relies on fair-exchange protocols allowing atomic swaps of cryptocurrencies to eliminate the counter-party risk inherent to a custodial exchange.

Fully Compliant & Transparent

Exhaustive accounting records are audited by independent professional auditors to ensure the integrity of the trading platform. 

The exchange aims to comply with all current applicable EU regulations, ensuring that assets never get seized or frozen. 

Customer balances on the liability side must match exactly the inventory of coins held by the exchange. Blockchain.io aims to perform such balance check and to publish its cryptographic proof at every block interval.


Reliable Infrastructure

Minimal downtime, typically restricted to server maintenance, application upgrades, or database migration.
Resilience under high volume, heavy traffic conditions, or DDoS attacks.
No technical debt: exchanges that quickly add new altcoins or new features without proper testing or careful software design accumulate technical debt by taking shortcuts. Technical debt translates into applications that are harder to maintain and prone to 
bugs and security holes.

Blockchain.io will attract high volume traders with specific features such as a FIX 
API and a borrowing facility, but also with the high level of availability of the trading 
platform.
Processing capacity in the first phase will be of up to 2 million orders per day.


Select Digital Currencies

Cryptocurrencies will be listed on the trading platform following a strict vetting process (sustainability, technical, and deep protocol review) by our team of blockchain experts. 

Regular updates and publications will inform platform stakeholders and the community through altcoin technical reviews and financial analyses.

ICO Execution & Token Listing

Blockchain.io will provide ICO campaign support and token listing services to assist entrepreneurs and technologists in the planning and execution of their fundraising campaigns.
Following the ICO campaigns, Blockchain.io will ensure that newly created tokens are listed on Blockchain.io to provide liquidity to investors and traders.
In addition, Blockchain.io will create Token liquidity through:
Market making using Blockchain.io’s inventory
Incentive program for Paymium users
member
Activity: 266
Merit: 10
Let's start typing in order of importance.

The European cryptocurrency exchange of trust for individual and institutional traders and investors. Blockchain.io is a comprehensive ecosystem for secure and efficient access to the Internet of Value :
- Gearing up to become the leader in European cryptocurrency exchange
- Combining a centralized exchange with decentralized settlement
- Offering liquidity services to assist ICO campaigns and ICO listings
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
 an excellent project, an amazing team, very promising,The best is because:
1. Ultra-Safe & Decentralized
2. Fully Compatible And Transparent
3. Reliable infrastructure

I was interested in these tokens and an interesting proposal airdrop
Blockchain.io provides new forms of financing to companies wishing to raise funds for their startup projects.
That is really cool ! I hope you will succeed, everything looks fine, WP is detailed, the team is good.
Congrats your team !
newbie
Activity: 8
Merit: 0
I like this project very much. Here we have some ico service going from planning and execution of ico campaign to  providing ico token liquidity via listing on blockchain.io at the outset  of the ico.I will subscribe to annoucement and check news. I hope you will succeed, everything looks fine, WP is detailed, the team is good, well experienced and the "real economy", that's make me really confident for the future.Blockchain.io is a comprehensive ecosystem for secure and efficient access to the Internet of Value. It aims to become the leading European cryptocurrency exchange by 2020
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
Hi,

There are so many advantages of this project that I cant find any minuses. Almost fully cold storage, trusted advisorg, beautifull design etc - no doubts! It will defenitely succeed

Wish good luck 
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
Hi to the community!
I am thrilled by this project, and I hope very much the team will succed to achieve its vision of the internet of value.
Potential of the underlyng ideas are so vast, potential is so signficiant, that it may well be the Bitcoin 2.0, while Bitcoin is only in its childhood Smiley!
ICO management protfolio is successful so far, as I can see it, with ICO service going from planning and execution of ico campaign to  providing ico token liquidity via listing on blockchain.io.
I hope you will succeed, everything looks fine, WP is detailed, the team is good, well experienced and the "real economy", that's make me really confident for the future.Blockchain.io is a comprehensive ecosystem for secure and efficient access to the Internet of Value. It aims to become the leading European cryptocurrency exchange by 2020. It will offer Crypto and Altcoin listing facilities as well as ICO Services. The platform will offer all the features needed to a comprehensive trading experience including basic and advance orders, peer-to-peer leading and margin trading. Blockchain.io will provide advisory and technology services to execute third-party ICOs, new listing and market making services to foster enhanced token liquidity.
I wish you the best success!
newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
Blockchain.io is a very good project that i think we need in the future. It is like a one stop shop where you can trade to the point where you can browse for new ICOs. In the trading part where there will be basic to advance feature is something and new and that we all must be looking forward to. For ICOs, this will be very good so for us to eliminate scammers and fake ICOs which you will often find a lot in other social sites. And of course, any consumer or customers are looking forward on excellent 24/7 customer support which a lot of different cryptocurrency exchanges lacks. Also imagine if you can also borrow money from other platform. I can also see that this project is being lead by trusted parties which we also know that are well knowledgeable in the cryptocurrency space. Since this is a European exchange, the trading pair will be most likely BTC/EUR instead of commonly associating BTC to dollar. Since this is also created and backed up by Paymium, we can say that this echange will be most likely be what we are looking forward to launch. We are all looking forward and be expecting greatness in this project. Can't wait for it to be launch and i am sure this will be very big.
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