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The Third Web #11 – An Emerging India

The third web #11 - an emerging india

The Third Web #11 – An Emerging India

The third web #11 - an emerging india

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Recently I visited India representing the DFINITY Foundation. The trip was supported by upstart venture production and consulting group, Dunya Labs, and advocacy group, InCrypt. Those ten days altered my understanding of the way technology manifests products and the driving role the needs of high growth nations will have in defining the digital landscape of tomorrow.

In this episode, I’m joined by co-founder of Dunya Labs, Cathy Guo, and co-founders of InCrypt, Nitin Sharma & Sumukh Shetty. We examine the Indian startup, business and regulatory environments. We also look at the growth of telecommunications infrastructure alongside macro demographic trends and the unique business conditions they create.

https://www.incrypt.co/
https://www.dunyalabs.io/
https://twitter.com/thethirdweb

Incrypt
Investment, community building, and policy research and advocacy
Has produced study and guidance on regulation

Dunya Labs
Research Arm
Product specific research
Infrastructure team connecting applications to protocols
Community and incubation

Cathy’s Book
Entrepreneurial philosophy
Corporate responsibility
Emerging tech landscape in India
Emerging startup ecosystem
The way that Indian startups create social and economic value

How do you see blockchain technology being deployed in India?
Low trust, high administrative friction in India
Middlemen are a big problem
Desire for transparency and automation
More data is moved through Indian infrastructure than the US
Beginning with banks and private ledgers
Supply chain, etc. basic pilots that we are used to seeing in the first phase of blockchain experimentation
Next step is public blockchain
This is limited by the regulatory environment
Look at India for talent, users & capital

The 4g Rollout
India is experiencing a leapfrog effect for technology rollout

Tech companies
Indian tech companies are moving from a service based model through a period of optimizing external business models for the Indian market to a native innovation model where they will begin exporting technology
There are 18 tech companies valued at over USD1b
It is important not to overestimate the Indian consumer base
There is limited local market protectionism
There may be 1.3 billion people but the number of consumers of tech products may be 30-50 million
Users can’t pay the way that they can in China or the US
Companies survive by being very lean
Talent is cheaper, this makes it a good place to launch
Deep tech is still limited
Need funding and educational support
If we compare the Indian market to where it was 10 years ago you see 10 – 100x growth but it is still an order of magnitude lower than China/US
There is a huge impact in reducing fees on increasing addressable market
Almost 50% of Indians are under 30
Little legacy infrastructure but high web and mobile penetration
3 million software developers in India with a 50-70% increase in graduates yoy

Legacy
Primacy of agriculture
Fear of automation (computers)
This has changed

What are the business models that will drive the next generation of Indian unicorns
Many current unicorns are already expanding overseas
Enterprised focussed, or SaaS companies can be based in india and address markets abroad – Zoho, Freshworks
A new crop of SaaS companies are emerging with that model
This allows the targeting of specific niches because of the lower cost of talent
Many blockchain projects fit this model

Engineering Education
Theoretical
Lack of innovation focus
Desiged to pass you on to a services company
MOOCs and open source are enabling autodidacts and hackers to innovate
Tertiary education is of variable quality
Brain drain is a major problem

Regulation
Indian government is pro-business and pro-innovation
Has supported identity and digital payment work
State and national government are experimenting with private blockchain
Ponzi schemes have damaged the support for public blockchain
Fear of capital flight

Bit Connect took USD3b equiv from India

https://factordaily.com/walmart-turns-to-flipkart-for-tech/

https://www.dunyalabs.io/
https://www.incrypt.co/

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Published at Thu, 08 Nov 2018 19:17:00 +0000

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Bitcoin Gold Is About to Trial an ASIC-Resistant Bitcoin Fork

Bitcoin Gold Is About to Trial an ASIC-Resistant Bitcoin Fork

It’s forking season.

After bitcoin Cash (Bcash) forked from the bitcoin blockchain to create a new cryptocurrency (BCH), and ahead of the SegWit2X fork that may do the same thing, a third bitcoin fork is in the making: bitcoin Gold (Bgold; BTG). But where Bcash and SegWit2X are scaling-related forks — both mainly increase bitcoin’s block size limit — Bgold wants to re-decentralize mining by implementing a new proof-of-work algorithm.

“What was born as decentralized is now centralized,” bitcoin Gold contributor J. Alejandro Regojo told bitcoin Magazine, referring to the current state of bitcoin mining. “With this fork, we want to show how bitcoin can be as ‘Satoshi’ as possible, as social as possible, and as decentralized as possible.”

Mining Centralization

bitcoin Gold was initiated by Jack Liao, CEO of Hong Kong–based mining hardware producer LightningASIC, and was first announced in late August. The open project has been gaining traction and support in the wider cryptocurrency space since, with a dedicated Slack as a main hub for discussion and organization. Bgold is currently being developed by the pseudonymous developer “h4x3rotab” along with a small group of volunteers contributing to the project in other ways.

The attention Bgold has attracted is probably in part because anyone who owns bitcoin (BTC) on October 25th will receive the equivalent amount of BTG. While this model has been criticized, particularly because it presents a burden on service providers and users, it has also proven successful. With the launch of bitcoin Cash in particular, users eagerly accepted their batch of “free money,” while exchanges, wallets and other service providers proved relatively willing to integrate the new coin.

Further, the Bgold team believes that this distribution method should also benefit bitcoin over altcoins as it provides an extra incentive to hold BTC on particular dates.

“But the key goal that we are trying to achieve with this fork is to build a perpetually ASIC-resistant version of bitcoin,” said Robert Kuhne, another bitcoin Gold contributor, in explaining the purpose of the project to bitcoin Magazine.

Bgold contributors like Regojo and Kuhne think that bitcoin’s proof-of-work hashing algorithm was essentially broken by the introduction of specialized ASIC (application-specific integrated circuit) mining hardware. In the early years of bitcoin’s existence, individual users were often also miners; this has since become concentrated into relatively centralized data centers operated by professionals.

“And we’re now in a situation where 65 percent of hash power comes from a country that doesn’t like bitcoin,” Regojo noted, referring to China’s recent clamp down on cryptocurrencies.

An Uneven Playing Field

And while mining is centralized, ASIC production is even more centralized, the Bgold contributors pointed out. Only a handful of companies currently produce such specialized chips.

This means that anyone who wants to be a miner in any meaningful way is beholden to these companies, Kuhne argued.

“The way the monopoly manufacturer currently operates is abusive to its customers — individual miners — and the industry at large,” he said, referring to major Chinese ASIC producer Bitmain. “Manufacturers can produce ASICs at a tiny cost, but miners have to buy at a high price. This violates the one-CPU-one-vote ethos as described in the bitcoin white paper, because while everyone can buy CPU at the same price, the same is not true for ASIC hardware.”

Regojo and Kuhne see this as a fundamental problem — not something that free market dynamics can realistically resolve. They suggest that the barrier of entry to the ASIC market to compete with existing manufacturers is fundamentally too high to allow for open competition.

“You can’t build a factory without approval from the government and banking system. So there are really only a handful of entities in the world that have total authority over who can and can’t manufacture ASIC machines. And all this could potentially get much worse if and when those institution really start feeling the disruption from bitcoin, which hasn’t begun in earnest yet,” Kuhne said.

bitcoin Gold

As opposed to the bitcoin Cash and (especially) the upcoming SegWit2X forks, bitcoin Gold very specifically does not make a claim to be the “real” bitcoin. Instead, the Bgold project hopes it can prove a valuable exercise for bitcoin; a sort of test case for a hard fork that bitcoin itself may one day require.

Concretely, bitcoin Gold is now implementing the Equihash proof-of-work algorithm. This is already used by Zcash and is relatively ASIC-resistant.

Full ASIC-resistance, however, is thought to be impossible: Any mining algorithm could be subject to specialized chips. Like Vertcoin, the Bgold community therefore plans to re-deploy a new proof-of-work algorithm hard fork if it is found out that ASIC-chips for Equihash are being produced. (This plan alone, of course, could be a deterrent for any potential ASIC-producer.)

For security, the project plans to implement strong replay protection to avoid loss of funds for unsuspecting or non-technical users. It will also adopt a new difficulty re-target algorithm to prevent the blockchain from stalling: Difficulty is re-adjusted at every block instead of once every two weeks.

While the coin is set to launch two weeks from now, the Bgold codebase is not yet fully developed and ready to be deployed. Implementation of the new proof-of-work algorithm and replay protection, as well as the new difficulty re-adjustment scheme, are yet to be finished.

Nor are all the details for the project even ironed out.

Early announcements indicated that bitcoin Gold would have a closed launch and a presale of coins. A new batch of BTG was to be mined in the first week after the fork and subsequently distributed to designated investors, not unlike an ICO. Proceeds of this “ICO” were then to be used for development and other Bgold-related purposes.

However, as interest in the project grew, this idea became more controversial. Not everyone involved with bitcoin Gold likes the idea of an additional founders reward — something Bcash, for example, did not have.

Kuhne addressed the issue by stating: “We have heard a lot of feedback from the community, so this proposal will be replaced with an updated and improved plan. But we will not completely rule out the possibility of a modest pre-mine to provide a basic level of funding for the project.”

Disclaimer: The author of this article holds BTC and will therefore also own BTG at launch.


The post Bitcoin Gold Is About to Trial an ASIC-Resistant Bitcoin Fork appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Decentralized Exchanges Can’t Escape the SEC, Warns Its Cyber Chief

Bitcoinist.com Decentralized Exchanges Can’t Escape the SEC, Warns Its Cyber Chief The U.S Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has filed charges in the first-ever case involving a decentralized Ethereum-based exchange. The head of the SEC’s […]