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Coinbase Shellacking: Crypto Exchange Cuts Staff, Shutters Chicago Hub

Coinbase shellacking: crypto exchange cuts staff, shutters chicago hub

Coinbase Shellacking: Crypto Exchange Cuts Staff, Shutters Chicago Hub

Coinbase shellacking: crypto exchange cuts staff, shutters chicago hub

By CCN: The markets may be moving into the green, but 30 Coinbase engineers will be seeing red tonight after they were reportedly laid off and the firm’s Chicago office closed.

It’s a sure sign that despite positive sentiment returning, the crypto bear market is still determined to shrink a few more businesses before it’s over. It’s also a signal that mainstream financial players haven’t been ready to take the plunge into crypto.

A Coinbase spokesperson told CCN:

“Coinbase has consolidated our matching engine efforts into our San Francisco office. This means we are shutting down the matching engine efforts in the Chicago office. We assembled a talented team there and look to relocate a number of them to San Francisco. We’re incredibly grateful to the Chicago matching engine team for their contributions to Coinbase and have benefited from their unique perspectives and skill sets.”

They added:

“We are a culture that is committed to repeatable innovation, knowing full well that not everything we attempt will succeed. We continue to grow our institutional team and build on our foundation of products such as Coinbase Pro, Coinbase Custody, and our recently launched OTC trading desk.”

High volume, high returns?

It also signals indecision by the San Francisco-based firm. The Chicago office was proudly announced in May 2018, but 11 months later it’s closed. What went wrong?

The aim had been for the Chicago team to tap into the city’s wealth of financial and market knowledge. Coinbase also sought to expand its services to include a “matching engine” – the system that brings together buy and sell orders – while luring high-frequency traders to the platform.

Coinbase makes its money from trading fees, after all. The higher the trade volume, the more it makes. But something wasn’t clicking, leading Coinbase to announce high-frequency trading was no longer a priority.

The 30 engineers were upgrading Coinbase’s back-end systems to cater to high-speed traders.

The firm expressed its regret for having to cut staff. Coinbase President and Chief Operating Officer Asiff Hirji, meanwhile, told the WSJ that a San Francisco-based team had managed to speed up Coinbase’s trading platform by a factor of 20 compared with late 2017, which begs the question why did they open a Chicago office in the first place?

They got greedy.

High-frequency trading firms reportedly account for around half the daily volume traded on the U.S. equities market, which represented a massive source of potential fees for Coinbase and an opportunity too good to miss.

Bad start

After a rampant 2018 where it trebled its numbers to around 800 staff, Coinbase has had a pretty rotten 2019 so far.

It’s struggled to remain relevant while main rival (and some might argue more crypto-friendly exchange) Binance has taken huge steps forward.

It’s faced condemnation from the crypto community for its poor handling of the Neutrino affair and the hiring of ex-Hacking Team members who sold snooping technology to the governments of repressive regimes, a move that led to a fresh wave of the #DeleteCoinbase movement.

Victim of Their Own Success?

The announcement comes just days after the company revealed it’s expanding into 11 countries in Latin America and Asia, bringing its footprint to a total of 53 countries globally.

Binance has taken huge leaps forward with its native BNB token gaining massively in recent weeks, an expansion into the fiat-to-crypto markets in Jersey and Singapore, and the launch of a decentralized exchange. There’s a definite sense that Coinbase needs a win and to regain the momentum it had in late 2017 and 2018 to compete. Unfortunately, the job cuts and shuttering of the Chicago office could be just the beginning.


Published at Tue, 23 Apr 2019 22:07:28 +0000

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Confideal’s Crusade to Harness the Power of Smart Contracts

Confideal Thumb

In his book “Down The Rabbit Hole: Discover The Power of Blockchain,” author Tim Lea
highlights the evolution of smart contracts and their use ensuing from the
blockchain.

“The term smart contract was first coined by a
computer scientist Nick Szabo,” Lea writes. “In his 1996 article in the
magazine
Extrophy, he broadly described a smart contract as the
ability to bring refined legal practices of contract law to the e-commerce
protocols between strangers and the internet.”

In their most basic form, smart contracts are
self-executing contracts that function within mutually agreed upon terms
between two or more parties. These agreements, which are written into lines of
computer code, exist as part of a
distributed, decentralized blockchain network facilitating the
automatic execution of contractual terms with no further involvement from any
of the parties involved, including external third-party intermediaries.

This disruptive approach runs counter to the prevailing tradition of
drafting and enforcing deals through involvement with external players like
banks, lawyers and escrows. This practice is both time consuming and costly,
especially in cases involving overseas deals. While smart contract
technology helps to overcome these and other administrative and legal
roadblocks, a complex set of programming skills are required to draft
blockchain-based digital contracts.

Enter Confideal

One company that’s making major inroads in this new
age of smart contracts is
Confideal, a platform for
managing and enforcing smart contracts. Based in Ireland, a hub for crypto
adoption in Europe, Confideal is forging a path toward the removal of barriers
to digital transactions throughout the world. The company champions
transparency, opening up essential business tools to those without legal or
coding skills.

Confideal is a service designed for a wide audience
from individuals to business owners, and available for everyone,”
said Petr Belousov, Confideal’s founder and
CEO.

“Our ultimate goal is mass adoption of blockchain among real sector businesses worldwide.”

Because Confideal’s data is encrypted and
protected by the Ethereum blockchain, the immutability of the agreement terms
is assured. In addition, Confideal offers the following value propositions:
 

    
An internal arbitration module with top-rated arbiters
and unbiased ratings. Arbiters selected to resolve a dispute on the Confideal
platform are either a qualified third-party legal firm or a professional.

    
A smart contract management option that provides
full control over transactions (e. g. close deals, end them, set up fines and
down payments).

    
Cryptocurrencies are utilized to eliminate all
payment barriers. No need for intermediaries which results in lower costs.

With the groundbreaking advancements of blockchain
technology,
Confideal is on a
steady path to bridge the gap between the smaller circle of computer
programmers and coders who understand the inner workings of the technology and
the larger population of average, everyday users. With efforts to move smart
contracts toward mainstream adoption, efficient models of user interface become
vital. With Confideal’s efforts as a visual smart contract builder, it’s clear
that momentum in this space is heading in the right direction. Of course,
Confideal is not only about the builder itself. The three main features of
Confideal are: smart contracts, built-in arbitration, and CDL tokens. There are
tons of projects out there that offer only one feature and often they don’t
even have a ready to use product. Confideal, on the other hand, does have a
product and the project created a complete ecosystem that comes together into a
harmonious product. The built-in
arbitration module is used in case of a dispute and basically it means that a
third party arbitrator will help you resolve or mediate the dispute.

Confideal’s initial coin offering (ICO) will commence on November 2,
2017, under the token name “Confideal” or “CDL.” The total supply of CDL tokens
will be 100,000,000 with a price breakdown of 1,000 CDL to 1 ETH. The total
supply will never increase and no additional tokens will ever be released.

CDL tokens are the internal, native currency for the Confideal
platform. For all transactions made in CDL, 1 percent of the contract fee is
exempted. Moreover, token users can participate in voting for arbiters.

Of the total ICO supply, 74 percent of the tokens will be sold via the
ICO. The remainder will be distributed as follows: 6 percent were sold during
the pre-ICO; 10 percent have been set aside for the team behind the platform; 4
percent for promotional activities; 4 percent for advisors; and 2 percent for a
bounty campaign.

“Following our ICO, we have a detailed roadmap
planned for developing the product,”
Belousov said. “It includes the launch
of the arbitration module, API and widget, implementation of multiple smart
contract templates for various purposes, multi-language support, integration
with other technologies and blockchains. It is with this that we are excited
about the future of smart contracts.” 

You can reach out for more on Confideal through Telegram.

Note: Trading and investing in digital assets is speculative. Based on the shifting business and regulatory environment of such a new industry, this content should not be considered investment or legal advice.

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