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Personal Data Privacy: Is It Even Possible In The Digital Age?

Personal data privacy: is it even possible in the digital age?

Personal Data Privacy: Is It Even Possible In The Digital Age?

A poll carried out last year revealed a staggering 90% of people were “very concerned” about their internet privacy. Personal data privacy and the importance of safeguarding personal data, along with how companies are using blockchain technology to empower individuals to take control of their own data, are among the topics explored in the commentary.

Personal data privacy
geralt / Pixabay

Nydia Zhang, Co-founder and Chairman of Social Alpha Foundation, a not-for-profit grant making platform supporting bitcoin technology for social good, commented:

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In this new personal data privacy data insecure world, privacy is the new premium service. But anonymity should not be yet another elitist benefit that disadvantages the poor. Privacy is a right that bitcoin technology natively solves, through a combination of cryptography and decentralized networks. If our governments and commercial institutions cannot be trusted or are incapable of protecting our personal data privacy data, then at least they can employ open source bitcoin technology that can guarantee this fundamental right.”

Robertas Višinskis, Co-founder of Mysterium Network, an open source, not-for-profit foundation focused on security and privacy, and the world’s first decentralised VPN bitcoin project, commented:

“Over the last 12 months we have seen a significant shift in public consciousness when it comes to personal data privacy ownership. Personal privacy data in a decentralized world will be one where no one person owns the internet and where access to information is available on a level playing field as opposed to being based on your location.

The introduction of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in May 2018 was a welcome move as we continue to look towards new forms of solutions that can safeguard personal data privacy data. However, striking the right balance between fostering innovation and enforcing regulation in a bid to protect personal rights is a fine line and we are seeing that new regulations can have a huge cost on enterprise and SMEs.

As we know, the law of the land moves slowly and, while regulators are grappling with new rules, we will see technology solving problems that the state simply cannot.”

Paul Madsen, Technical Lead at Hedera Hashgraph, a public distributed ledger for building faster, fairer, and more secure decentralized applications, commented:

“Many people assume that with DLTs granular privacy controls are not possible, and that their inherent immutability is incompatible with changing privacy regulation but, ultimately, privacy is giving the user meaningful control over their PII. Next generation DLTs must address this. As such, two particular mechanisms that may prove useful are — 1) a flexible permissioning model that allows for personal data privacy data to be removed from the consensus state and so support GDPR right to be forgotten, and 2) an opt-in model by which verified identities can be bound to a crypto account.”

Simon Harman, Co-founder and Project Lead at Loki, an Australia-based privacy network which will allow users to transact and communicate privately and anonymously over the internet, commented:

“Digital Privacy is the responsibility of the individual. Each one of us has the power to signal to companies that we are concerned about our privacy through our choices online. Through the usage of common security techniques, such as VPNs, SSL encryption, and 2FA, whilst also limiting the amount of information we put up on websites and social media applications, we can greatly reduce the chances of being negatively impacted by hacks, or being watched by companies and state level actors. Further still, we should realise that the cloud, while convenient, puts all of our personal information into the hands of others, and should act accordingly. I can see that the utilization of public key authentication is going to become much more prevalent, and that companies are developing products that perform more of the work client-side instead of in the cloud as a measure to protect the user’s privacy. A popular example of this design would be WhatsApp or Signal. If users are willing to try out and advocate for these kind of apps, the trend could be massive.”

Rikesh Thapa, Co-founder and CTO of ticketing platform Blockparty, commented:

“From the basic consumer’s perspective: The key to keeping personal data privacy data that one deems private is literally that — keeping it private. There is no tech out there that can fully promise privacy of information unless it’s bitcoin-based data with strong encryption that has direct access to the chain itself (so no dapps that have a company or app managing data entry). There is never any guarantee that a company truly keeps your data secure, let alone private. Most companies or applications will always have a God view or a super-admin access and that in itself is risky (take Uber for example); Although this is the case with nefarious companies with bad moral compasses, even companies with no bad acting employees may not have the security sophistication or security budgets to fully protect user information and data.

This is a bleak outlook on the state of security in the industry — however blockchain security and trustless ownership of user data is a significant leap forward. If it catches on, the industry can revolutionize how data is stored, accessed, permissioned and used. We also need a trusted 3rd party authority that evaluates the security status of every company that stores valuable user information similar to GDPR standards set by the EU (except better and more reputable).”

The post Personal Data Privacy: Is It Even Possible In The Digital Age? appeared first on ValueWalk.

Published at Fri, 25 Jan 2019 06:03:53 +0000

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Crypviser Will Encrypt Messages on the Blockchain for Private Communications

Crypviser is building a blockchain-based all-in-one network for secure social and business communications. ICO is currently ongoing.


Improving on Privacy with Blockchain Technology

In today’s Orwellian society, privacy has become a rare and valuable asset that some go to great lengths to protect while others simply throw it away in exchange for convenience. As technology evolves, however, so does access to privacy-oriented tools and their underlying technology.

Blockchain tech has gone a long way in the realm of financial privacy, now Crypviser wants to build upon it and extend its use onto end-to-end message encryption by providing a blockchain-based all-in-one network for secure social and business communications. The project is currently undergoing a crowdfunding campaign that will help fund the development of this network.

 

A unified and secure instant communication network, Crypviser provides real end-to-end encryption and unique blockchain based authentication, the latter of which allows users to truly identify and confirm each other’s identity through the user of private and public keys.

The end result is a secure and private messenger which will also feature its CVCPay system, allowing users to send funds to each other anonymously.

Crypviser ICO & CVCoin

In order to fund the development and marketing of Crypviser’s network, a crowdfunding campaign is currently taking place. Taking the form of an Initial Coin Offering (ICO), the Crypviser’s funding stage ill last until June 30, 2017, during which time investors can buy the CVCoin, the underlying token in the Crypviser’s platform.

The CVCoin is required in order to interact with the Crypviser platform and to cover its transaction fees. Transactions are required to authorize and identify the users’ access to public encryption keys, ensuring that messages cannot be forged nor can they be decrypted.

So far, the Crypviser ICO has managed to gather over $900,000. These funds will be used to cover mobile, backend, and infrastructure costs as well as licensing fees, legal services, operational costs, and of course, marketing.

The Initial Coin Offering is currently ongoing and will last until the 30th of June. Users can invest in the Crypviser ICO using bitcoin, Ethereum, and even USD. Most recently, support for the TIME token was also added. 15 million CVCcoins will be distributed, along with special benefits such as free subscriptions, access to special features, free access to the CVPay system, and more. 

Can Blockchain technology help the internet regain its privacy? Can Crypviser become the merged solution we need for financial privacy and message encryption?


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Crypviser

The post Crypviser Will Encrypt Messages on the Blockchain for Private Communications appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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