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Topic: How Blockchain Will Disrupt Real Estate (Read 103 times)

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Tokenize and Discount Real Estate Commission
April 13, 2018, 03:31:49 PM
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​How Blockchain Will Disrupt Real Estate

Excerpt from Article published on startupgrind.com. Read more at:

https://www.startupgrind.com/blog/how-blockchain-will-disrupt-real-estate/

DAVID WITHER |

The blockchain is already revolutionizing the digital currency landscape. A few years ago, a decentralized currency was unthinkable — how volatile would it be when not backed by a government? However, with the success of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin that are supported by the blockchain, people are realizing that it could have far more uses than expected — and the next landscape blockchain has the ability to disrupt is real estate.

What blockchain can do.
Make the process faster: The process of buying a house can be a long one, and even longer with government entities adding additional restrictions meant to slow down said process thanks to high demand. The blockchain has little power over sales restrictions and legislators’ decisions, but it is a powerful tool regarding financial verification.

Techcrunch reports, “At current, most buyers and sellers make use of escrow and title companies for third-party verification — a safety net to make sure both parties keep their end of the deal, as well as to reduce the risk of fraud.” This third-party verification is important, of course, but it can cost around 1 or 2 percent of the property’s total value (and it takes extra time, of course). Blockchain, however, could replace the escrow company or other third parties by vouching for parties’ identities with its far-reaching distributed database.

Reduce the risk of fraud and offer complete transparency: The real estate industry is rife with fraud, unfortunately. It’s a prime nesting ground for scammers especially because there are so many steps during transaction processes where it’s easy to trip people up. However, thanks to some of blockchain’s key and most famous qualities — the abilities to record every transaction and protect them with cryptography — blockchain is almost impossible to hack, therefore decreasing the potential for fraud.

Fraudsters can forge all sorts of things, like IDs, deeds, and necessary documents. On the other hand, “blockchain-based digital certificates would be linked to a single real estate property in the system, which would make it impossible for an actor to sell a property they don’t own. It would also make it impossible for a fraudster to put themselves between the buyer and the title company to steal funds.” Fundamentally, putting real estate transactions on the blockchain makes them a whole lot safer.

Deedcoin: a new player on the block(chain).
Bitcoin changed banking, so now Deedcoin is set to change the future of real estate. Deedcoin is a platform that “replaces the way customers find their next real estate agent. Instead of choosing a random 6 percent commission agent, customers access [the] platform, input their property information, and link up with their local Deedcoin agent for 1 percent commission.” You don’t need to alter your entire understanding of how the market works because Deedcoin fully integrates with the real estate infrastructure you’re already familiar with.

Why does the commission rate matter? Well, according to their website, US property owners hold $15 trillion in private property but are on the verge of losing $900 billion to future commissions. That’s money you don’t have to be spending. Because they decentralize and streamline the way real estate is exchanged, Deedcoin “returns up to $750 billion to homeowners by tokenizing real estate commission and connecting customers with agents directly.”

To sign up for the Deedcoin whitelist go to www.deedcoinlaunch.com
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