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Logistics Firm Completes First Truckload Shipment Using Bitcoin Smart Contracts

Logistics firm completes first truckload shipment using bitcoin smart contracts

Logistics Firm Completes First Truckload Shipment Using Bitcoin Smart Contracts


Bitcoin trucking shipping
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DexFreight, a blockchain start-up that is building a freight transportation platform using Rootstock (RSK), has announced that it successfully facilitated a shipment of frozen food between Medley and Sunrise, Florida. DexFreight’s smart contracts, which rely on the bitcoin blockchain rather than the more-often used Ethereum, enabled the successful delivery and automated the payment to the carrier, Arel Trucking.

From their press release on the subject (emphasis added):

“For this first truckload shipment, dexFreight partnered with Netuno USA, one of the fastest growing seafood wholesalers, Arel Trucking, Inc., an asset-based motor carrier with over 180 trucks, and RSK, the first smart contract platform secured by bitcoin. Funds for the transaction were held in escrow by the smart contract on the integrated RSK platform and were automatically released to the carrier upon delivery.

This last part is perhaps the most important part for the trucking industry. In two respects, it represents major possibilities. The first respect is that carriers who down the road integrate the technology can be paid reliably. The second respect is that of transparency and competition. Although the platform is nascent, it could eventually develop into a thriving and competitive market where smaller outfits can compete for business they could not have previously procured due to the tendency of shippers to stick with who they know.

A merit-based system where real-time statistics of delivery times, damages, and the like would give any company an equal chance at competing for business. Moreover, smaller outfits that cannot necessarily wait weeks or months for contracts to be paid out would no longer have to do so, and bidding becomes a realistically easy process — potentially as easy as sending an e-mail.

The truckers appear to be excited about the prospect, with Arel Trucking CFO Robert J. Julia being quoted as saying:

“dexFreight solves the issue of false documentation by making our transactions with shippers completely transparent, and so we can get paid for the service we provided. This technology is the way of the future for the whole trucking industry.”

Decision to Use RSK/bitcoin Instead of Another Token Platform

Blockchain bitcoin trucking

An immutable ledger such as the Bitcoin blockchain (or any blockchain with sufficient hashrate/security) presents important possibilities for various industries, especially those which involve the moving and tracking of physical goods. While on a consumer level this means knowing beyond a shadow of a doubt where one’s package is or where your home goods are when you move, on an industrial level this means a much more robust ability to track performance and productivity. Trucking and shipping companies in particular stand to benefit from the transparency of an immutable ledger.

A ledger in and of itself isn’t good for much beyond tracking transactions, generally of a monetary sort. However, when you build on smart contracts, basically anything is possible. This is the model that Ethereum followed, building the Ethereum Virtual Machine from the outset complete with its own Turing-complete programming language so that it could process more than just transactions.

The popularity of the Ethereum platform incentivized the development of numerous other token platforms, from NEO (general purpose) to WaltonChain (aimed at industries which use RFID tracking technology). It has also encouraged developers to create smart contract platforms which could harness the amazing power of the bitcoin blockchain itself — possibly the most powerful computing platform in history (and perhaps one of the most expensive to use, historically speaking). RSK  is one such platform, and it is the basis of the dexFreight application. Another option developers can consider is Qtum, which is the Ethereum Virtual Machine adapted to run on the bitcoin network (the best of both worlds.)

Such platforms work in a similar way to Ethereum. The base token of the platform is required to operate smart contracts and applications on their network, and these are generally exchangeable for the blockchain’s native token — in the case of Rootstock, bitcoin.

The dexFreight platform itself, as a service, plays an important role to both consumers and providers in the freight transportation industry. Firms can pay a fee to the dexFreight network to have the tokens they’ve earned exchanged into fiat cash. As a result, the barrier to entry is drastically lowered. Another important service that they are developing is the use of machine learning to help clients select providers.

“The way of the future for the whole trucking industry,” among several other industries, indeed.

Images from Shutterstock

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Published at Thu, 25 Oct 2018 00:25:48 +0000

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Second Life Creator Uses Blockchain Tech to Enhance New VR Gaming Experience

Second Life Creator Uses Blockchain Tech to Enhance New VR Gaming Experience

High Fidelity, a next-generation platform for virtual worlds currently in open beta, is the brainchild of Philip Rosedale, the creator of Second Life. Readers who don’t know what Second Life is are excused because it’s not on the media’s radar these days. But 10 years ago Second Life was often hailed as the Next Big Thing in social media.

In Second Life, players can create an avatar and explore a huge 3D virtual world created by the users themselves. The expectation was that the “Metaverse” imagined by science fiction writer Neal Stephenson in his cult novel Snow Crash (1992) would soon materialize and billions of users would flock to Second Life.

Therefore, a strong presence on Second Life would be a strategic need for all sorts of businesses and organizations, from online retailers and advertisers to universities and government agencies. This perception created a thriving Second Life development and consulting sector, and some companies (this writer owned one) made good money for a couple of years.

Then, Second Life faded into oblivion, sort of. In hindsight, the problem was that Second Life isn’t immersive enough (users don’t really have the impression of “being there”) and it is too difficult to master.

High Fidelity wants to change that by supporting highly immersive Virtual Reality (VR) interfaces, including VR headsets like the Oculus Rift, sensors for hand and body motion, and 3D audio. Rosedale hopes that a fully immersive 3D world, like the OASIS world described in a more recent cult novel (Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One, 2011), will be both more appealing and easier to use than Second Life. For example, if you want to shake another avatar’s hand, you just do it, instead of having to remember a Ctrl-Alt-Something command.

Another important difference is that High Fidelity is much less centralized than Second Life, and it allows creators to host independent virtual worlds using their own equipment and infrastructure.

As for Second Life, it’s still there and business hasn’t entirely disappeared. While the big corporations and organizations are mostly gone or inactive, there’s a thriving virtual retail market for things like design avatars, virtual clothes, gadgets and prefabs. It’s small business, but some developers earn a living on the Second Life Marketplace. Of course, counterfeited and pirated virtual goods represent a problem.

Second Life virtual goods are priced in Linden dollars, a virtual currency fully integrated with the Second Life platform. Introduced long before 2009, the Linden dollar is not a blockchain-based cryptocurrency.

Now, Rosedale has a cryptocurrency in the works dubbed HFC for the High Fidelity Marketplace and a whole ecosystem including externally-operated servers. Contrary to the Linden dollar, which is only a payment means, the HFC will leverage blockchain technology’s ability to track transactions and ownership.

“We are getting ready to deploy blockchain software to create a new currency for virtual worlds, called HFC,” says Rosedale. “In addition to providing the basis for in-world transactions, the HFC blockchain will also be used to store information about the ownership of digital assets in virtual worlds. We plan to use this aspect of the blockchain to provide an open way to protect intellectual property by embedding certification, affirming item ownership into the blockchain.”

In another post, Rosedale provides more details on the intellectual property protection mechanisms envisioned for High Fidelity. “This system will work across an open network of many different servers, does not need to use ineffective DRM systems, and is not dependent on or controlled by any central agency (other than the initial first registration of unique assets),” he explains.

According to High Fidelity, the open, permissionless nature of the bitcoin and Ethereum blockchains cause limited throughput (transactions per second) and high transaction fees, which makes them unsuitable for HFC. Therefore, Rosedale’s team is developing a public but “permissioned” blockchain, where only a subset of trusted participants can verify transactions. It could be argued, however, that High Fidelity is being too quick in dismissing new scaling solutions that could lead to higher throughput and lower fees in the bitcoin and Ethereum blockchains.

Rosedale notes that the Linden dollar, not based on a blockchain, shows remarkable stability in price, with much less volatility than blockchain-based cryptocurrencies. High Fidelity plans to achieve a similar stability “through active management […] voting, smart contracts and other mechanisms to regulate the monetary policy.”

The High Fidelity community is encouraged to provide feedback on HFC. “We’ve been discussing and getting feedback on these designs in our ongoing community meetings in High Fidelity,” says Rosedale.

More information is available on related discussion threads in the High Fidelity Forums.

The post Second Life Creator Uses Blockchain Tech to Enhance New VR Gaming Experience appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.