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Blockchain-based Trading Platform to Launch on Swiss Exchange

Blockchain-based Trading Platform to Launch on Swiss Exchange

Legendary Swiss stock exchange, SIX, is to incorporate blockchain technology into it’s operations with the launch of the SIX Digital Exchange (SDX), this according to a report from Reuters, February 6, 2019.

The SIX Digital Exchange

According to the company website, SDX will be the first-ever exchange to offer customers “fully integrated end to end trading, and settlement and custody service for digital assets.” The platform is expected to roll out in the first half of 2019.

Currently, the SIX exchange takes several days to perform a transaction, as the request goes through a three-step process before it is completed. With the introduction of the new SDX platform, two of these steps will be replaced by a blockchain integrated ledger, which will essentially speed up the process by thousands of times and now, the approval of a transaction will only take several seconds.

The integration of the new platform will require technical time, as there are many developmental and legal hurdles. During the first few months of the new platform’s release, the original SIX exchange will run parallel to it, however, SIX expects that the new exchange will outrun its predecessor fairly quickly.

Valerio Roncone, Product Management & Development, Securities & Exchanges, SIX, in a stated:

“The challenge in the digital asset space is to ensure clean, transparent and legally binding title to the assets between parties.”

What is left to do before the launch?

The SIX digital exchange is bringing innovation to the financial worldbeyond that of Switzerland and SDX is going to have numerous advantages when compared to traditional online exchanges on.

However, SIX has a lot left to do before the launch is possible; notably, due to the platform streamlining numerous services all in one place, there is legal documentation that has to be prepared and negotiations that still have yet to be settled.

Currently, the company is presenting its plans to the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB). These talks are necessary so that SIX has the right to set up and operate a framework of regulations, which will streamline and govern the trading chain of the platform.

After all these legal procedures are settled, the platform will be allowed to go online. Talking about the future of the company and the future of the digital platform Roncone said:

“We do not believe in a sudden leap between the traditional and digital worlds of trading. We think there will be a transition period, which is why we want to build a bridge between traditional and digital platforms.”

Blockchain-based trading platform to launch on swiss exchange

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Published at Sat, 09 Feb 2019 11:00:56 +0000

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Bitcoin Miners Miss the First BIP 148 “Deadline”

Bitcoin Miners Miss the First BIP 148 “Deadline”

bitcoin miners at large have missed the first BIP 148 “deadline” to prevent a “split” in bitcoin’s blockchain.

As bitcoin’s scaling dispute appears to be heading for a climax, the next couple of weeks could prove pivotal. One scaling solution in particular, Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 148 (“BIP 148”), is scheduled to trigger activation of Segregated Witness (SegWit) on August 1, 00:00 UTC. As a User Activated Soft Fork (UASF), all users that run a BIP 148 node will then start rejecting any and all blocks that do not signal support for SegWit by the “deadline” — or, perhaps more accurately, “ultimatum” — set by BIP 148 users.

BIP 148 and SegWit are backward-compatible protocol upgrades, which means that non-upgraded nodes will still accept SegWit-signaling and SegWit-utilizing blocks. Therefore, if a majority of hash power in one way or another adopts SegWit before August 1, all current bitcoin nodes would follow the same blockchain.

However, if only a minority of miners activates SegWit through BIP 148, bitcoin’s blockchain and currency would “split” in two. This would result in two types of “bitcoin”: one that activated BIP 148 and one that did not, while even more types of “bitcoin” could emerge as a result. A split between BIP148-nodes and non-BIP148 nodes would last at least until a majority of hash power joins the BIP 148 chain, or until the BIP 148 chain is abandoned by all users and miners for good.

Miners essentially have three options to avoid such a split. This first option was to lock in SegWit before August 1 through the activation mechanism proposed by Bitcoin Core and implemented in many nodes on the network. This required 95 percent of hash power to signal support for the upgrade within a two-week difficulty period. Specifically, such a difficulty period consists of 2,016 of these sequential blocks, which means that a minimum of 1,916 blocks must signal support. Or, in other words, if more than 100 blocks — at least 101 of them — do not signal support for SegWit within a single difficulty period that ends before August 1, this BIP 148 deadline is missed.

Ignoring extreme statistical deviations or other unexpected events, the final difficulty period to end before August 1 started on Friday (UTC). And out of the first day and a half worth of blocks within this difficulty period, only about half of them signaled support for Segregated Witness. This means that the threshold of 101 blocks not signaling support has now been reached.

With two more BIP 148 deadlines ahead, the first one was probably also the most likely to be missed. Its threshold was the hardest of the three to achieve as it required the highest level of hash rate to succeed. Additionally, a large majority of miners (by hash power) indicates that they will activate SegWit through BIP 91 instead. This is the next BIP 148 deadline.

This next deadline will be on July 29. This is the last day that BIP 91 can activate in time to be compatible with BIP 148. In order to do so, 80 percent of hash power must have signaled support for SegWit2x within 2 1/3 days. As such, miners should at the very latest start signaling support for BIP 91 on the 26th of July. Though like the now-missed BIP141 deadline, which is technically not until August 31, the BIP 91 deadline could actually be either missed or met before July 29 as well.

If this next BIP 91 deadline is missed too, miners will have one more chance to avoid a “split.” A majority of hash power would have to activate SegWit through BIP 148 itself by August 1, 00:00 UTC. Alternatively, a majority of hash power could switch to the BIP 148 chain even after August 1 to reunite both chains, but this will likely cause significant disruption on the bitcoin network(s), and potentially a loss of funds for users not aware of the risks.

For more information on how to keep your bitcoins safe during a potential coin-split, click here.

The post Bitcoin Miners Miss the First BIP 148 “Deadline” appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.