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Crypto Startup Wants You to Trade on Exchanges Without Trusting Them

Crypto startup wants you to trade on exchanges without trusting them

Crypto Startup Wants You to Trade on Exchanges Without Trusting Them

Crypto startup wants you to trade on exchanges without trusting them

A new protocol aims to allow crypto users to maintain control of their private keys while trading on centralized exchanges.

Arwen, a startup formerly known as Commonwealth Crypto, launched a testnet version of its namesake protocol Monday. CEO Sharon Goldberg described it as “a layer-two protocol specifically for trading.”

In other words, trades will take place off-chain. As Goldberg explained:

“You put a smart contract on a blockchain where it locks up coins and once it’s locked up, you can do all sorts of transactions … without posting those transactions to the blockchain.”

All the while, the user will always have full custody of their coins, said cryptographer Ethan Heilman, one of the authors of the company’s white paper. Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Arwen has developed an app which acts as the user portal, and will generate the users’ private keys from a seed phrase, “and as long as they have those words, they will be able to recover their funds,” he said.

As such, Arwen says, its technology will enable traders to take advantage of the high levels of liquidity available on centralized exchanges without having to trust those frequently-hacked platforms to safeguard their funds.

“Even if the exchange is hacked, even if the exchange is malicious the entire time and goes offline, we don’t care,” Goldberg said. “What would happen is Arwen would freeze those coins and give you a time window for when you’d recover the coins.”

While non-custodial trading is also a feature of so-called decentralized exchanges, Arwen notes that such platforms lack the liquidity of their centralized counterparts. Also unlike DEXs, the protocol utilizes atomic swaps for greater security and speed.

While at launch, Arwen will not be open source, Goldberg said the plan is to publish the code behind its daemon at some future point.

At present, Arwen supports transactions made with bitcoin [BTC], litecoin, bitcoin [BTC] cash, zcash, ethereum and ERC-20 tokens.

Launch partner

At launch, crypto exchange KuCoin will be integrating a beta version of the Arwen protocol. The exchange’s president and founder, Eric Don, told CoinDesk through a spokesperson that the move may increase user trust in crypto exchange services.

“It’s totally understandable to question about the security of such operation. What if the security level of this exchange is not strong enough and gets hacked? What if the exchange takes my money and shuts down? We know some people may have such concerns,” he explained.

Don said the exchange conducted security audits on the protocol, and has assessed the overall plan’s feasibility.

To integrate the protocol, KuCoin had to develop systems to support the “Request for Quotation” model, as the exchange currently uses a “Central Limit Order Book” model. The two companies will continue to work together to continue to integrate the system, he said.

Goldberg noted that the integration process is only beginning, but expects to KuCoin to launch full support on testnet by the beginning of the second quarter (around the beginning of April).

Despite the touted benefits to the protocol, Don was cautious about what sort of reception the protocol might see among KuCoin’s users, concluding:

“I have to say that this is a bold move in the crypto world. We do not expect a mass adoption among our users in the short term, but we believe as blockchain technology continues to progress, the Arwen system will bring confidence to crypto investors with convenience as well as security.”

Lightning image via Shutterstock

Published at Mon, 28 Jan 2019 15:41:38 +0000

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University Student Involvement Supports Australia’s Booming Blockchain Community

University Student Involvement Supports Australia’s Booming Blockchain Community

The blockchain industry is booming in Australia recently after the Australian Tax Office (ATO) announced changes to tax laws in the 2017–2018 budget summary by the Australian government, surrounding how digital currencies are treated in the country. In the few weeks since the announcement, active blockchain communities and events such as RegHack DownUnder have launched across the country, supported by universities and government regulators.

Australia has traditionally held strict tax laws when it comes to how they handle bitcoin and other digital currencies, defining bitcoin as a separate asset class to fiat currency and requiring that transactions involving digital currencies are taxed twice by the Australian Tax Office. The new budget summary removes any general sales tax made more than once in the supply chain using digital currency, in an attempt to “make it easier for new innovative digital currency businesses to operate in Australia” and to grow their nascent community into a global innovation hub.

The summary states, “The Government is committed to establishing Australia as a leading global financial technology (FinTech) hub and is announcing a new package that aims to position our local fintech industry as a world leader.”

This new regulatory environment has spurred growth in the community, from university campuses all the way up to the government regulators. Students have begun to launch clubs at universities across the country, and regulators and business executives have begun to take notice.

“We’re excited blockchain [technology] can finally move to our campus and Australia in a big way. There’s been a significant increase in interest from the community in the past few weeks,“ said Ryan Pousson, the regional head of the Blockchain Education Network (BEN) in Brisbane and the founder of the UQ Blockchain Club, in a statement to bitcoin Magazine. This perspective was echoed by Jared Piper, a region head of the Blockchain Education Network in Melbourne.

Aaron Schwartz, the director of global engagement at BEN and partner at MLG Capital, told bitcoin Magazine, “It’s super exciting to be part of a decentralized organization like BEN that is doing something unique with a swarm-style model. We are quickly spreading to countries all across the world with new chapters opening up across Australia, Colombia, Nigeria and Bangalore, just to name a few. We encourage anyone in a blockchain community around the world to reach out to get started growing their local community.”

On the weekend of May 12–14, government representatives in the energy sector and banking executives in the financial services industry came together to judge RegHack DownUnder. The brightest developers, UI/UX designers and entrepreneurs across Australia were encouraged to spend the weekend in Melbourne to develop blockchain technology solutions to solve some of the problems it faces in these two heavily regulated sectors.

In advance of the hackathon, Adam Lemmon, a blockchain expert from Toronto, flew down to Melbourne to present an overview of Ethereum development and Solidity to the community. Following the event, Lemmon said, “RegHack was an amazing experience and it was inspiring to see such a young blockchain community so excited about the technology.”

Chami Akmeemana, the organizer of RegHack DownUnder, predicts a fast growth in the community. He said to bitcoin Magazine following the event: “It was a mammoth success. Close to 100 participants spent three days exploring tech solutions to regulatory issues. We now have 100+ blockchain enthusiasts, that I expect [will grow] to over 1000+ by the end of the year. I’m hoping to see some world-class blockchain applications coming out of Australia and I’m stoked to be part of this boost to the ecosystem.”

The regulators in Australia are on board too with this digital transformation. Igor Simunovic, a representative from the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC), said in a statement following the event that “the event provided opportunity for industry (including government) and freelancers/students/developers to meet, integrate and share through the problem solving required to address the Hackathon ‘problems.’ Such meeting and teamwork opportunities are rare and often bound by the [confines] of conferences or meet-ups. The process of discovering new technologies and frameworks was just a bonus.”

It is still the beginning in the growth trajectory of the blockchain community in Australia, but it is an exciting time to be part of a global movement. For example, in the few months following November’s RegHack TO, the first hackathon hosted by a securities regulator in Canada and inspired by Chami Akmeemana, the number of people attending meetups in Toronto has tripled from 200 to over 700 at the most recent blockchain meetup in Toronto. Getting the entire community on board from universities to business executives to government regulators is an important milestone for any community striving to become a blockchain hub.

The post University Student Involvement Supports Australia’s Booming Blockchain Community appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.