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Telegram Gets Set to Emerge with Secure Crypto Revolution

Telegram gets set to emerge with secure crypto revolution

Telegram Gets Set to Emerge with Secure Crypto Revolution

Telegram gets set to emerge with secure crypto revolution

Photo: Telegram

Blockchain technology is delivering solutions to the world’s most evasive problems. Secure payments, data storage, logistics, encryption, commodity digitization – you name it and blockchain has the power to make it happen.

Meanwhile, cryptocurrencies have arrived to liberate the masses by decentralizing functions carried out by governments and central banks. As a concept, blockchain could help deliver security and self-governance.

However, the so-called “establishment” may have other plans. Legislators are fearful that blockchain technology could serve as a foil for terrorists and organized crime given its ability to conceal user activity.

As things stand, hundreds of blockchain-powered solutions are vying for dominance in order to serve the world’s consumers and businesses. Despite the hype, a consensus-backed currency or blockchain application has not managed to garner favor with most users, let alone policymakers. The blockchain ecosystem needs a decentralized counterpart to everyday money — a truly mass-market cryptocurrency that appeals to all market participants and thereby reaches mainstream adoption.

Currently established blockchain networks (Bitcoin and Ethereum) play important roles in the ecosystem, but don’t have the capacity to replace dominant payments systems because the current architecture allows a maximum of 7-15 transactions per second, resulting in insufficient speeds and high transaction costs.

To synchronize the existing crypto movement, two Russian brothers have raised US$2 billion in exchange for developing what users have always wanted: a fast, secure and scalable user-focused blockchain project capable of handling millions of transactions every second.

From Russia with Tech

Pavel and Nikolai Durov have developed what they claim is a method of hosting all conceivable applications simultaneously which “preserves freedom through encryption”.

The ambitious duo has created Telegram, an encrypted platform that makes it nigh on impossible for governments to spy on users. Some tech commentators speculate it was a response to the intrusion by the Kremlin into VKontakte, whereas the Durov brothers claim they’re offering users services they deserve.

Russian authorities ordered the Durov brothers hand over the keys to their brainchild in the name of national security and crime detection – but the brothers emphasized their libertarian roots and refused, counter-claiming that Russian authorities were hellbent on actualizing an Orwellian ‘Big Brother’ state that treats people like cattle. “Privacy is not for sale!” was their resolute answer to the Russian state.

Such belligerence was not well received in Putin’s Russia, a country where old habits die hard and authoritarianism still rules supreme. The clash with Russian authorities raised the same questions other tech firms have faced for years: is privacy truly sacrosanct? Should reprehensible behavior of the few, warrant restrictions on liberty for the many?

According to government rhetoric, privacy is worth sacrificing in exchange for security. For billions of average people, it’s not. After being forced out of VKontakte and fleeing Russia, the Durov brothers have set up camp in Dubai to raise their next social media project for the world’s privacy-focused users – to the applause of millions of users and the wrath of alphabet-soup government agencies such as Russia’s FSB, Britain’s GCHQ and America’s NSA.

Waiting for Telegram

After months of anticipation and multiple delays, Telegram has finally launched a beta testing phase with the app already amassing 200 million users, and according to the company, picking up around 700,000 users per day.

In Iran alone, Telegram has around 40 million users with the country’s authorities blocking it for national security reasons and claiming that its coin offering could rival the local currency, thereby jeopardizing the entire Iranian economy.

With a pile of money raised and expectant users queuing up, Telegram has commenced testing TON Blockchain via a limited number of developers. Russian news sources have reported that dev teams have demonstrated “extremely high transaction speeds” – exactly what users are looking for in the modern world of crypto-powered digitization. Telegram is also planning to offer its own cryptocurrency called the “Gram”, which is set to become a direct rival to Ethereum for the launch and execution of smart contracts and decentralised applications.

Making Money in Crypto

As a platform, Telegram is a direct competitor to not only popular consumer-focused messaging apps such as Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp but also payments systems including Visa, Mastercard and PayPal that handle B2B and B2C payments. As cryptocurrencies gain unprecedented traction, Telegram wants to expand its sphere of influence by offering an innovative blockchain platform and its native Gram token.

Crypto analyst Alex Sofpel from crypto trading platform Monfex predicts that the Gram token could generate as much as US$4 billion in revenue by 2022. Other analysts have claimed that Gram’s total market capitalization could be worth as much as US$30 billion in its first year. That equates to a return of over 1,000% for early investors.

Forked Road to Success

Despite the glowing predictions and plausible rationale for its success, there are clouds on the horizon. Telegram’s founders have a prickly relationship with regulators and despite vowing to have resolute KYC and AMLR procedures, the service could fall short of being approved at the top levels of government, and therefore, struggle to accrue the user numbers it needs to become a worldwide sensation.

Achieving market success is hard enough without the scorn of regulators. If the Durov brothers can reconcile governments’ predisposition for surveillance with users’ desperation for privacy, Telegram could spearhead a fintech revolution while making its investors millions of dollars in the process.

On the flip side, if reconciliation is not possible then Telegram will, unfortunately, reach a glass ceiling with the keys to its kingdom either bought, retrieved or stripped away from the benevolent Durov brothers. This would entice users to seek out an alternative method to exchange information with yet another platform presumably arising to accommodate the herd.

In a world where such polar opposites exist between security and privacy, centralization and decentralization, authoritarianism and self-governance – relentless revolutions and platform migration may be the best thing that users can hope for. For investors, it may be a case of cashing in at the right time.

Published at Sat, 11 May 2019 07:24:01 +0000

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Australia: Firms Should Help Authorities Hack Encrypted Messages

Australia is the latest country to announce plans for mandatory decryption powers against services such as Telegram and WhatsApp.


Senator: ‘All Communication Will Use Encryption’

Stating concerns surrounding terrorism monitoring, Attorney-General George Brandis said that “more than 40%” of intercepted messages were encrypted.

“Within a short number of years, effectively, 100 per cent of communications are going to use encryption,” local publication The Age quotes Brandis.

This problem is going to degrade if not destroy our capacity to gather and act upon intelligence unless it’s addressed.

While he added the government would no longer pursue legislation forcing firms to include “backdoor” features to allow state hacking, requiring participation in assisting inquiries may be stepped up in future.

Attorney-General George Brandis

The law, the Senator said, should be “sufficiently strong to require companies, if need be, to assist in response to a warrant to assist law enforcement or intelligence to decrypt a communication.”

Hacking Versus ‘Protection’

Lawmakers will look at updates in the context of international data-sharing, gathering ideas from Australia’s intelligence partners.

Reacting to the idea, industry officials appeared supportive. Former Australian Signals Directorate deputy director Mike Burgess told The Age:

Former Australian Signals Directorate deputy director Mike Burgess

I personally want to live in a world where reasonable people and companies would say, ‘You know what? Under the rule of law, and with the right oversight and a warrant, communications can be listened to when it’s needed to protect us.

While disturbing to users of encrypted messaging platforms, schemes to crack them are by no means limited to over-zealous policymakers responding to perceived terrorism threats.

Russia Mulls Blanket Bans

Across the globe in Russia, encrypted consumer tools are also currently subject to investigation, with authorities publicly calling for an outright ban on the anonymous use of services such as Telegram.

In a May interview with RNS, Telegram  stated:

Not one government or special agency has managed to get one bite of information out of us, and they never will.

It added that due to data being stored in various locations, “forcing Telegram to surrender any form of data would require an unrealistic level of mutual cooperation involving several states.”

Telegram Messenger

Telegram also recently partnered with bitcoin-accepting payments provider Stripe to allow in-app purchases from chatbots. The partnership includes support for Russian domestic payment gateways including Yandex.Money and Qiwi, which are popular with Russian bank card holders.

Regulation of cryptocurrencies, and well as a so-called ‘Russian bitcoin,’ are all part of Russia’s central bank activities this quarter.

What do you think about Australia’s plans for encrypted messaging regulation? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of AAP, LinkedIn, Telegram, AdobeStock

The post Australia: Firms Should Help Authorities Hack Encrypted Messages appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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