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Data Firm at Center of Facebook Controversy Planned $30 Million ICO: Report

Data firm at center of facebook controversy planned $30 million ico: report

Data Firm at Center of Facebook Controversy Planned $30 Million ICO: Report

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Cambridge Analytica, a British data analytics firm, was planning to raise as much as $30 million by issuing a new cryptocurrency through an ICO before it got swept up in a scandal surrounding the misuse of Facebook Inc. personal data, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.

Cambridge Analytica had approached a company that advises companies on how structuring ICOs, the sources said.

Current Plans Uncertain

Cambridge Analytica’s current plans are unknown. An unnamed spokesman said the company is considering using blockchain to help secure its online data, but did not comment on the ICO.

The company was creating technologies to allow people to reclaim personal data and gain complete transparency over how their data is used before the Facebook controversy erupted, the spokesperson said in an email to Reuters.

Cambridge Analytica worked for U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign and has faced scrutiny over the past month after the Observer and the New York Times reported that the firm improperly gained access to personal data on millions of Facebook users. Facebook earlier this month acknowledged data from more than 87 million users could have been compromised.

Cambridge Analytica has said it properly licensed data on a much smaller number of users from a research firm.

Chief Executive Left Company

The company’s effort to provide personal data protection was overseen by its chief executive, Alexander Nix, who left in March after being tape recorded boasting about the company’s use of shell companies and strategies to help politicians entrap opponents, The New York Times reported.

The New York Times also reported Cambridge Analytica attempted to promote the Dragon Coin, a coin associated with a Macau gangster known as Broken Tooth. Dragon coin was to be used by gamblers and make it easier for people to get money to Macau casinos.

Facebook, meanwhile, is curtailing misleading and deceptive ad practices, including ICOs, cryptocurrencies and binary options, banning ads that “promote financial products and services that are frequently associated with misleading or deceptive promotional practices.”

Featured image from Shutterstock.

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Published at Tue, 17 Apr 2018 20:57:38 +0000

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The Future of Copyright: How Blockchain Will Solve Photography’s Oldest Problem

Photography can be doubtlessly regarded as one of the most thrilling inventions of modern times. The art dates back to the 19th century, where the earliest known surviving photograph captured by a camera was taken back in the late 1820s (either 1826 or 1827). Many regard this point in time as the birth of photography. However, the industry began to profoundly change with the invention of the first true digital camera in 1975, in a breadbox-size that took 23 seconds to take a single black and white image.

This invention marked the beginning of a new era that allowed people to document their lives on a minute-by-minute basis. Fast track to today, anyone with a camera can be a photographer. Anyone with a camera can use it to communicate an idea, a message or an emotion. However, this has come with its own share of demerits. Interestingly enough, ideas today are built on the works of others. Most images we see today, especially on social platforms are plagiarized in a rather unusual way by re-creating an idea from scratch rather than represent a whole new approach.

Put plain and simple; the problem exploded with the internet where 85% of the images used online are used without a valid license from the copyright owner. Modern technologies are of course revolutionary in content sharing but have given people the wrong impression. When people see images on the internet they, unfortunately, make assumptions that it’s okay to use without permission as long as it’s posted online. As the demand for images steadily rises, photographers lose potential earnings from the use of their material through illegal channels.

A lasting solution to fair and sustainable image licensing for both, creators and users have not been created yet. Existing solutions to this decades-old problem are still rather shortsighted to date: One of the more common methods to prevent image theft are watermarks. Watermarks work as an aforementioned deterrent and a promotional tool but take away from the consumption experience. The other common solution at hand are tracking pixels. Tracking pixels are tiny transparent, pixel-sized images embedded in images.

While the two can be considered as the best option for image theft prevention, the two – and any other method thereof – are no match for the new age of hackers. For this reason, photographers are uploading less of their work online while the time is right to do so. With blockchain gaining increased adoption, it is time technology works for the creator at the expense of the unauthorized user. Blockchain technology will pave the way for the creation of a decentralized copyright registry backed by smart contracts to help curb this growing discourse.

COPYTRACK, the platform with an ongoing ICO has developed a unique start-to-finish process for the enforcement of copyright. Once the rights-holder has confirmed the unlicensed use of an image identified by the algorithm, a fully automated  process is set in motion, which will only require minimal user interaction at 2 of the nearly 50 stages.

What is COPYTRACK today?

Established in 2014, it is a fair online platform for publishers, photographers, image agencies, and e-commerce vendors. The company was established for the fair management and enforcement of image licenses for its users on the internet.

Today, copyright infringement is difficult to pursue and is often considered a trivial offense. In contrast, COPYTRACK provides tools to comfortably search and match the online use of images worldwide. Even if images are cropped, edited or flipped – they will be found. Once the rights owner detects that an image was stolen, he can simply click & submit a claim to COPYTRACK and lean back. COPYTRACK offers post-licensing or legal enforcement without any risk or hassle to the right holder. The service is available worldwide and COPYRACK operates a network of qualified lawyers in 140 countries. One more added advantage, it’s free – of course, COPYTRACK will take a small success-related commission – but that’s it.

So far COPYTRACK has served thousands of photographers, image agencies and publishers and turns a claim volume of over $2.5 million USD each month for its clients.

More information about COPYTRACK’s existing business at: http://www.copytrack.com

So what about COPYTRACK’s new business unit?

Now COPYTRACK brings a new solution to the centuries-old problem by providing photographers with a decentralized register for their images. Using smart contract and blockchain technology, the photographer will retain control over their licenses and pricing, thereby retaining up to 70% of the revenue.

Rights owners will be able to authenticate themselves on the new platform and then upload their images for certification. Once approved by the COPYTRACK Global Register all data will be secured by hashes in the blockchain. From there on, those images will be permanently tracked for online use worldwide and licensing information as well as payments will also be stored in the BC.

This ultimately brings full transparency to the image licensing market and finally returns control back to the rights owner.

COPYTRACK will champion a new era of copyright protection with its upcoming ICO on 10th January which is intended to raise just enough capital to realize their vision.

More information about COPYTRACKs ICO is available at – http://www.copytrack.io/

The post The Future of Copyright: How Blockchain Will Solve Photography’s Oldest Problem appeared first on NEWSBTC.

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