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Meet the ENS Winners at the EDCON Hackathon!

Meet the ENS Winners at the EDCON Hackathon!

ENS lead developer Nick Johnson with the members of the 5 teams that won $200 each for being the best projects to integrate ENS.

The Ethereum Name Service (ENS) is proud to have been a sponsor of the inaugural EDCON Hackathon last week!

Set on the campus of the University of New South Wales in beautiful Sydney, Australia, it was a great success, with 53 hackers and 18 projects submitted. (You can see all the submissions here.)

On our part, our lead developer Nick Johnson served as a judge and gave a tech talk on ENS and how to integrate it.

We also offered $200 to each of the five best projects to integrate ENS (of the nine projects that did!), and we are happy to feature them below.

Our lead developer Nick Johnson finishing a presentation on how to integrate ENS.

With some of the projects, you may think that the ENS integration is “minimal,” that it’s really a project about something else with a little bit of ENS sprinkled on to qualify for our side-prize.

But that’s the point: ENS is a basic part of any complete Ethereum dapp.

We believe that in every instance a user might otherwise see an Ethereum address or content hash, they should instead see an ENS name. ENS is not something your dapp might use, it’s something without which your dapp is unfinished.

So our goal with this prize was not necessarily to get people to build cool things entirely with ENS, but to get more people integrating ENS into whatever dapp they’re already building. (To integrate ENS into your dapp, see our documentation.)

WIMM (Where is my money?)

Created by Felix Leupold, Tobias Schubotz, and chris (Devpost username), WIMM is a simple online interface that let’s you quickly view all the tokens and digital assets you own in one place… in case you forget what you have!

ENS integration: You can look up your information using your ENS name (instead of your Ethereum address).

You can view their submission page here and try it out online here.

ZEXE on Plasma

Built by Dominik Harz, Yohei Oka, Osuke, and Shun Tak, ZEKE on Plasma is a protocol to create arbitrary contracts and let’s you execute transactions protected by zk-SNARKS.

ENS integration: Used ENS to name plasma addresses.

You can view their submission page here.

Plasma Bootstrap

Built by Kendrick Tan and Adrian Li, Plasma Bootstrap adds monitoring, visualization, and an alert system to an existing plasma node.

ENS integration: Used ENS in their monitoring configuration.

You can view their submission page here.

Fire

Created by real-python (Devpost username), Fire is a data analysis framework for tracking how users are using a service.

ENS integration: Set up to track ENS usage.

You can view their submission page here.

Stryve.network

Unfortunately, we didn’t catch a photo of the Stryve.network team presenting. 😔

Built by Joseph Hilsberg, Chad Lynch, Sidney Amani, and Nikesh Nazareth, Stryve.network is a dapp that let’s you set a personal challenge, raise money, and then have the money automatically go to different places depending on whether you meet that challenge (as determined by a pre-set referee).

ENS integration: You can input an ENS name in all the fields that also accept Ethereum addresses.

You can view their submission page here and try it out online here.

Published at Mon, 15 Apr 2019 09:13:19 +0000

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South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges

South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges

Since late November 2017, South Korea has looked to regulate cryptocurrency trading in domestic exchanges, including Bithumb, Coinone and Korbit,  The Korea Herald reports. Now, trying to tame the wave of wild cryptocurrency speculation in the country, South Korea is imposing trade bans for minors and looking for ways to impose taxes on investment returns.

South Korea is the world’s third largest market in bitcoin trading, after Japan and the U.S., and the largest exchange market for ether, accounting for more than 33 percent of its market share, according to a recent MIT Technology Review report. The country is also home to two of the top 15 global digital-currency exchanges (Bithumb and Coinone) and believed to have about one million registered daily traders in virtual currencies, which is equivalent to about one out of every 50 citizens.

This is worrying the South Korean government. In September 2017, the country’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) ordered a ban on Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs). In November 2017, the head of South Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service said that the agency was monitoring cryptocurrency trading inside the country, and the country’s National Tax Agency revealed that it was considering a value-added tax, a capital gains tax or both on cryptocurrency trades. If the plan is implemented, South Korea will become one of the few countries to tax cryptocurrency-to-cash exchanges.

The government’s concern is also motivated by the risk of cyberattacks from the country’s rogue neighbor, North Korea. According to South Korea’s National Police Agency, North Korean hackers could be targeting South Korean bitcoin exchanges.

With these newest measures, North Korean banks that offer accounts for cryptocurrency trading will have to verify the identification of new account holders and prohibit minors from opening accounts. Woori Bank and Korea Development Bank will shut down virtual accounts offered to cryptocurrency exchanges before year-end, according to the banks.

The regulators will also bar financial institutions from investing in or obtaining cryptocurrencies, and is considering ways to oblige cryptocurrency exchange operators to verify users’ real names, strengthen storage security of encryption keys, and disclose purchase price and order volumes. The authorities will also take strong-handed punitive actions against the perpetrators of cryptocurrency-related scams.

In a press release, the government said that the new regulations were necessary “to prevent a general public without expertise from suffering losses by participating in virtual currency investments that have massive fluctuations.”

These issues were discussed on Wednesday, December 13, 2017, in a meeting presided over by Hong Nam-ki, minister of the Office for Government Policy coordination, and attended by officials from the ministries of justice, finance, and science and ICT, as well as from the Financial Services Commission, the Korea Communications Commission, the Fair Trade Commission and the National Tax Service.

While some news headlines are presenting this as a catastrophic development that will shut down the cryptocurrency industry in South Korea, the initiative of the South Korean authorities is in line with current trends toward stronger cryptocurrency regulations in China, Europe and the U.S.

“A right set of regulations will rather nurture the (virtual currency) market, and we would welcome that,” Bithumb representatives told Reuters, adding that such a code of conduct could add legitimacy to the market.

The post South Korea Moves to Regulate Domestic Bitcoin Trading, Exchanges appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.