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ING Bank Is Bringing Bitcoin ‘Bulletproofs’ to Private Blockchains

Ing bank is bringing bitcoin ‘bulletproofs’ to private blockchains

ING Bank Is Bringing Bitcoin ‘Bulletproofs’ to Private Blockchains

Ing bank is bringing bitcoin ‘bulletproofs’ to private blockchains

ING’s blockchain team is testing a privacy technology called “bulletproofs,” the latest in a series of seemingly unlikely cypherpunk experiments at the Netherlands-based global bank.

Developed and refined by hardcore cryptographers at Stanford University, University College London and startup Blockstream, bulletproofs are designed to hide the amounts being transferred in bitcoin transactions, which are normally visible to anyone. But banks have privacy concerns about blockchains too, since they don’t want to expose competitive or sensitive client data to rivals.

One early solution was zero-knowledge proofs (ZKPs), a way of proving possession of a secret without revealing the secret itself. Over the past year or so, ING has explored ZKP variants such as range proofs (where a hidden number is proven to be within a certain range) and zero-knowledge set membership (where alphanumeric data can be validated within a specified set).

But ZKPs eat up a lot of computation and so potentially slow down a blockchain. Now, ING sees bulletproofs as a much more efficient, therefore applicable, version of these proofs.

The bank found bulletproofs turn out to be “roughly ten times faster than other range proofs, for a single range proof,” said Mariana Gomez de la Villa, global head of ING’s blockchain program.

And when aggregated together these proving schemes gain efficiency. Gomez de la Villa gave the example of a cryptocurrency exchange using range proofs to show it has enough funds to pay all its clients if they want to withdraw their money at the same time.

In this case, “bulletproofs would allow a solution that is 300 times more efficient than other alternative range proofs,” she said.  

While a lot of this stuff is academic, ING is now looking to where it can apply the tech. Potential uses touch on the need to obey the Europe Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR); for instance, ZK set membership can prove an individual belongs to a given EU member state without disclosing any other information about their identity.

Meanwhile, academics and cryptocurrency scientists seem encouraged, if a little bemused. Blockstream mathematician Andrew Poelstra told CoinDesk via email:

“When we developed bulletproofs in 2017, we did not expect such an uptake. We’re very excited and proud whenever we see the technology being applied to real world problems, if a little surprised its found a use-case in traditional banking!”

Trade and trolls

ING is also looking at applying ZKPs to the testing out of trade finance blockchains, an innovation which in turn looks ahead to a world of blockchain interoperability, said Gomez de la Villa.

“We are setting up a whole [ZKP] shop to help developers find these use cases and are in contact with some of our customers to ensure they have a good understanding of how they can leverage these open source projects that we have,” she said.

To illustrate how the bank’s blockchain projects might apply ZKPs, Gomez de la Villa said imagine tracking a commodity from its origin and keeping the certificate of origin throughout the supply chain but without disclosing the supplier, price or the quality of the commodity.

Looking ahead, this could involve that commodity touching several distributed ledger networks (interoperability is something ING is thinking about now, given the bank has close ties with R3, ethereum-based oil and gas consortium Komgo, and recently IBM’s MineHub on Hyperledger Fabric).

“We need to ensure that the specific properties of the commodity worth passing along the chain in terms of semantic (meaning and interpretation of the fields) and the syntactic (format and fields) remain intact,” said Gomez de la Villa, “and at the same time being able to hide the ones that do not need to be passed on along the value chain but still are useful to record for other purposes.”

Proving the bank has reached the highest levels in this field, ING takes part in the annual ZKProof Workshop alongside the team behind cryptocurrency zcash, Blockstream and QEDIT. The bank also said it compares notes with the likes of JPMorgan, another enterprise consumer of zero-knowledge cryptography, to help make the tech a reality for clients.

Gomez de la Villa said:

“Everybody helps each other, everybody bounces stuff with each other and the important thing is not what you have learned but it’s more like how do you apply those learnings.”

But not everybody likes the idea of a bank getting involved with technology seen as the reserve of privacy-driven libertarians for use on public blockchains. Gomez de la Villa said her social media has been trolled by certain people claiming the bank “just copy and pasted” the technology.

“There are people that are quite anarchist about it and they are obviously 100% pro-bitcoin and they believe that indeed they are doing all this to circumvent financial institutions,” she said.

However, Gomez de la Villa is unfazed by her trolls, concluding:

“I like it. Cause that means that it matters.”

Enigma decryption pic: Shutterstock

Published at Mon, 15 Apr 2019 08:00:34 +0000

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Dashing Forward – BANKEX Develops World’s First Working Plasma-like Protocol Bringing Vitalik Buterin’s Idea to Life

The BANKEX technical team has recently announced they have developed the world’s first private blockchain that supports the Plasma Protocol for public audit which will allow users to transfer different assets directly to each other leaving intermediaries behind and solving one of the most pressing problems of the current crypto world – high gas consumption. The Plasma-like protocol open source code is already available here.

[Note: This is a sponsored article.]


Inspired by the Plasma project’s working draft written by Vitalik Buterin and Joseph Poon, the BANKEX team has successfully completed the development of the first working version of the protocol after successfully developing its demo during a 36-hour hackathon. The protocol can sufficiently reduce the load of the main Ethereum blockchain by redirecting transactions into a subsidiary blockchain, thus creating faster and cheaper transactions.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbjIe_PbrM4?feature=oembed&w=500&h=281]

Low transaction speed is not the only problem Ethereum users are currently facing. In order to keep track of the transaction history, users are forced to retain copies of the entire blockchain with full transaction history and calculations. As the blockchain grows, the amount of available space needed is causing a lot of grief for its users.

Tackling these problems, BANKEX has released a Proof-of-Concept in the form of a Plasma-like protocol, a solution that is compatible with the Ethereum blockchain. BANKEX strongly believes that the Plasma protocol is “a prominent upgrade of the Ethereum blockchain”, calling it “bitcoin in Ethereum”  Find out more information about BANKEX’s solution here.

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BANKEX has developed a server-side solution comprised of an operator and a smart contract that facilitates the return of input funds which have not been included by the operator into the Plasma-blocks and also allows UTXO withdrawal from the Plasma sidechain to the main network. The functionality of the BANKEX solution also includes proof of double spend and proof of ownership that prevents duplicate transactions.

As more transactions demand decentralization, openness, and higher processing speeds, the BANKEX breakthrough is a long overdue evolution that everyone has been waiting for.

What do you think of BANKEX’s new protocol? Will it speed up and reduce the cost of transactions on the Ethereum blockchain? Let us know in the comments below.


Images courtesy of BANKEX

The post Dashing Forward – BANKEX Develops World’s First Working Plasma-like Protocol Bringing Vitalik Buterin’s Idea to Life appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

China’s Over-the-Counter Bitcoin Price Breaks 20K Yuan

Amid a continued stranglehold on bitcoin withdrawals at exchanges, China’s over-the-counter (OTC) market is exploding with a premium on bitcoin price.


Bitkan Celebrates 20k+ CNY OTC Trade Prices

Data compiled by OTC marketplace Bitkan shows bitcoin’s price rise contributed to a tenfold increase in users over the past three months, with prices per coin now above 20,000 yuan ($2,900).

China Bitcoin Core attack

“[…] Because of (sic) the major bitcoin exchange platforms have been banned from withdraw (sic) by the PBOC, a lot of bitcoin traders have moved to OTC trading,” the company said in a blog post Thursday.

Compare (sic) to the depression in spot market, the OTC price is rapidly rising at the same time. That is the only way for now, buying and withdrawing bitcoin in China.

The spot rate for bitcoin in China is currently around 2,000 yuan lower than Bitkan’s OTC rate.

WannaCry Drove Newbies Into bitcoin

In its blog post, CEO Yang Liu identifies what it considers to be three major factors which have motivated the boom in both price and user acquisitions, these being the WannaCry cyberattack, favorable Japanese regulations, and a potential end to the scaling debate.

“[The] Japanese government has identified bitcoin as currency in April, the Australian government is going to admit bitcoin as currency in the coming July (sic),” it continued.

On the other hand, demand surge in Japan and political instability in Korean (sic) is also driving the bitcoin price to rise, especially the OTC price.

Localbitcoins Cools

Figures from elsewhere in the OTC arena provide an interesting counter perspective to Bitkan’s buoyant data.

Localbitcoins, which had long been the go-to resource for Chinese investors after the exchange freeze, reported significantly lower volumes the week ending May 20 compared to the week before.

Comments below Bitkan’s post today state that users now prefer it to Localbitcoins, but did not give further details.

A closer look at new user acquisitions also shows a spike during the week in which WannaCry hit the headlines, indicating that these users had read about bitcoin in the media and have no previous relationship with cryptocurrency.

That trend was repeated by exchanges earlier this month, specifically Bitstamp and Poloniex, which both released statements highlighting huge surges in user numbers and support tickets from inexperienced traders.

What do you think about the OTC trading phenomenon in China? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of coin.dance, shutterstock

The post China’s Over-the-Counter Bitcoin Price Breaks 20K Yuan appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.