Haven, a New App From OB1, Lets Users Chat, Shop and Send Crypto Privately
Blockchain startup OB1, the developers of decentralized shopping platform , have announced , a privacy-focused app for socializing with friends and making purchases with cryptocurrencies.
The project was announced by Brian Hoffman, founder and CEO of OB1, at the North American bitcoin Conference in Miami. The developers claim that Haven will “enable users to shop, chat, and send cryptocurrencies privately from their mobile device.”
The ability to chat with friends and family on social networks has been tainted with data breaches and reports of the networks tracking user activity and selling collected data to third parties.
According to a company announcement, Haven will have a little bit of everything. It will “combine a multiple-cryptocurrency wallet, a social network and a truly peer-to-peer marketplace” for an inclusive economy and global participation with a focus on privacy.
Users can set up an e-commerce store using just their smartphones. They can also purchase items through the marketplace using cryptocurrencies like bitcoin $BTC. To speed up the shopping process, Haven features a multi-wallet where you can keep, receive and send the four cryptocurrencies supported on the platform: bitcoin $BTC, bitcoin $BTC cash, zcoin and litecoin.
Haven comes with a social feed, complete with features that allow users to share, like, comment and repost, prominent on the app.
To ensure a secure shopping experience, Haven leverages the software and InterPlanetary File System (IPFS), a decentralized and distributed file storage system.
OpenBazaar is an open source project for building decentralized e-commerce stores that doesn’t require go-betweens to function. Think of it as an eBay without fees.
“We believe users should be in control of their own data and are inspired by how cryptocurrencies allow them to trade with one another around the world. Users can connect this way now without needing access to traditional payment processors or using giant e-commerce platforms that collect all their personal data,” Hoffman explained in the company announcement.
“Haven is OB1’s most advanced project representing our mission to bring a convenient but private social marketplace experience to users.”
Trouble for bitcoin if Price Corrects Below $7,500 A prominent analyst fears difficulty for bitcoin if its spot rate drops below $7,500. Nick Cote, the chief information officer at US-based Redacted Capital, said holding the […]
“Trustlessness” is a term often
quoted as a feature of blockchain technology but what does that mean and is absolute
zero trust a myth or really true? Praised as one of the characteristics that
make the blockchain so revolutionary, a trustless system is one where two peers
can enter a virtual hand shake agreement, i.e. , without relying on a
trusted third party to facilitate.
Blockchains are good at being
permissionless and having decentralized tasks that are recorded on an auditable
ledger, yet not all blockchains are completely trustless, and achieving full
trustlessness is challenging if not impossible. Even
an open-source project like bitcoin that is constantly being reviewed can have
trust issues, not from the code but by the developers and reviewers of the
code. So trustlessness is more of a term describing an ideal state on the
blockchain where code is law with the caveat that humans write code and to err
is human.
Before looking at how a fully
trustless blockchain can be implemented by privacy advocates like — an open-source project that is building
a decentralized ecommerce application on the blockchain — let’s look at the
obstacles standing in the way.
I Trust
You, Until I Don’t
We’re conditioned to think of
trust as a good thing. Traditionally, positive human relationships have
required a level of trust.From an economic perspective, however, trust has significant
downsides.
The greatest drawback is that trust
can be broken. When you engage in a transaction with someone you believe to be
trustworthy, but then they fail to deliver the promised goods or services, you
suffer.In
addition, trust is not efficient. It has to be cultivated and you have to
invest time in evaluating how much another party can be trusted before you
engage in a trade.
Blockchain technology can be
leveraged to overcome the risks and inefficiencies that are associated with
trust.With
the right approach, it’s possible to make reliable transactions on the
blockchain without knowing or trusting the person or group you are dealing with.
That is because the blockchain can be used to enforce good behavior.
In Particl’s case, by creating
a simple smart contract, you can ensure that if one party in a transaction
fails to uphold their end of a deal, the blockchain can automatically cancel
the transaction or punish the misbehaving party in another way. In effect, this
feature makes it impossible for a malicious user to profit by taking advantage
of the trust that another user places in them without inflicting harm on
themselves as well.
The
Trustless Challenge
If you buy or sell something
using bitcoin, you don’t automatically gain protection against being cheated: default bitcoin transactions are non-reversible. The ability of the blockchain to
enable transactions that are both trustless and reliable is difficult because
it needs to be done without the intervention of a third party. In conventional
trading contexts, transactions are typically policed by a central authority that
evaluates claims about broken trust and responds accordingly. For example, if a
seller cheats you on eBay, you can complain to eBay and request a refund. These
authorities also charge fees or percentages of sales revenue whether they are
used or not.
The downside to this approach
is that it compromises privacy. In order to provide this protection against
broken trust, a platform like eBay oversees transactions. It knows what buyers
and sellers are doing.With a two-person trustless escrow, in contrast, reliable
transactions can be implemented without the oversight of a third party. You
don’t have to lose privacy to gain reliability.
The tricky thing about
achieving true trustlessness on a privacy-focused blockchain is that it doesn’t
happen by default. Although multiple times more efficient than building trust
in public, smart contracts still need to be signed and the exchange of goods or
services still needs to happen. The beauty is that an agreement can be made and
successfully carried out even if one or both parties don’t fully trust each
other.
A Trustless
Solution
Particl leverages bitcoin as
the underlying blockchain protocol, but adds privacy enhancements that make it
possible for users to perform transactions that are trustless, reliable and
private. In an innovative development, PART transactions do not require users
to write smart contracts themselves. Instead, this feature is built into the
platform.
Central to Particl’s approach
to trustless transactions is mutually assured destruction (MAD) escrow. is a special type of smart contract that prevents either party from
profiting in the event that one cheats during a transaction.
In addition, because the smart
contract is enforced automatically via the blockchain, Particl developers play
no role in overseeing transactions. Their platform guarantees privacy while
achieving trustlessness at the same time. Two people from anywhere in the world
can enter into a binding agreement that is only finalized when both agree it is
completed.
Blockchain technology’s promise
is that users are no longer bound by the inefficiencies and risks associated
with trust in order to make transactions. Most blockchains, however, do not yet
implement truly trustless transactions. Particl is an exception, as it was developed
with trustlessness at its core from the start. Particl developers aim to “square
the circle” by delivering trustless ecommerce without compromising reliability
or privacy.