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Arrington-Backed Startup Launches Crypto-for-Cash Credit Platform

Arrington-backed startup launches crypto-for-cash credit platform

Arrington-Backed Startup Launches Crypto-for-Cash Credit Platform

Arrington-backed startup launches crypto-for-cash credit platform

Cryptocurrency startup Nexo, which is backed by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, has launched a cash-based lending platform.

Announced Monday, Nexo provides loans or extends a line of credit using its own assets, said managing partner Antoni Trenchev. To that end, the startup raised $50 million from investors, which will be used to provide liquidity to the company’s platform. This departs from existing crypto-backed lending solutions, which instead connect borrowers with other individuals willing to loan out their funds.

This structure allows Nexo to provide instant loans without requiring credit checks or the time delay that manual approval processes require, Trenchev said.

The startup, which was spun off from European fintech firm Credissimo, has also partnered with blockchain security firm BitGo, which acts as its custodian, Trenchev told CoinDesk. Further, the company is now looking to team up with a small Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation bank to store assets.

He added:

“All of the software, all of the automation process is something we have developed ourselves, and most of the tools, we have used them for several years. All of our software and automation process are [use by Credissimo]. … We have developed our own models of insuring and protecting our business.”

Notably, the company is backed and advised by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, who told CoinDesk that he is one of the startup’s financial backers.

Nexo is acting similarly to a bank with its lending model, according to Arrington.

“I haven’t seen anyone do a good job so far of providing liquidity for people who have cryptocurrencies without forcing them to sell the cryptocurrency, or to put it more succinctly, provide a proper credit line to people who own cryptocurrencies,” he said.

Trenchev said Nexo wants to set a precedent for traditional financial institutions, namely banks, and prove that cryptocurrencies can be trusted as an asset.

“If you look at the trend with cryptocurrencies, volatility is going down, it’s still very volatile … [but] we are pretty confident that volatility is on a downward trend and will continue to do so, which will make our model even more robust than it is,” he said.

Ultimately, Trenchev concluded, Nexo’s benefit comes from the fact that it lets clients “spend the value of [their] crypto without having to spend it.”

Bitcoin and dollars image via Shutterstock

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

Published at Mon, 30 Apr 2018 14:00:41 +0000

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IBTimes report that as many as 105,000 users of the software have been discovered to be secretly mining the privacy-focused digital currency, Monero. It’s believed that the choice to mine this particular coin was made due to the anonymity features embedded within its code, as well as the fact that regular computers possess sufficient processing power to successfully solve the algorithms which are required to generate additional coins for those behind the attack.

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“Do not use this extension as it comes loaded with a cryptocurrency mining script. Once installed it makes requests to coinhive which eats up your CPU time and slows your computer down massively. Avoid.”

The developers behind the software, Essence Labs, believe that their program was hacked by someone who had targeted an ex-employee. A representative of the company spoke to PCMag:

“An old team member who was responsible for updating the extension had his Google account compromised… Somehow the extension was hijacked to another Google account. In the meantime we have alerted the users to use a safe version of the extension on a different link.”

This example isn’t the first of covert mining software targeting unsuspecting internet users. In recent months The Pirate Bay, Showtime, Starbucks, and even the UFC’s websites have all been reported to be running CoinHive software to mine cryptocurrency without their visitors’ consent.

Programs like CoinHive were intended to provide a way of monetising internet content. When used with express consent, they offer an opportunity for publishers to provide their services without relying on oppressive levels of advertising. However, examples like those listed above show how easy they make it to infect users’ machines without their knowledge. Without consent from the owner of the machine, the schemes such as the Archive Poster hack are morally suspect. Since they use large percentages of the target machines’ processing power, users might mistake the slowdowns they’ll inevitably experience to some other fault with their machine. This can understandably cause great frustration for computer users who are less experienced with diagnosing system faults.

 

 

The post Is this Google Chrome Extension Secretly Using Your Device to Mine Cryptocurrency? appeared first on NEWSBTC.

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Epicenter is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain, S?ƒbastien Couture & Meher Roy.