Ripple Labs, which has gained traction within banking circles, is developing other
clever ways to relieve Faust. “Ripple Labs is aimed at wholesale banking, and we use
a
consensus method, rather than a proof-of-work system,” said CEO Chris Larsen,
meaning no miners and no anonymous nodes are validating transactions.
30
The
company Chain has its own strategy. With $30 million in funding from Visa,
NASDAQ, Citi, Capital One, Fiserv, and Orange, Chain plans on building enterprise-
focused blockchain solutions, targeting the financial services industry first, where it
already has a deal with NASDAQ. “All assets in the future
will be digital bearer
instruments running on multiple blockchains,” argued Chain CEO Adam Ludwin. But
this won’t be the siloed world Wall Street is accustomed to, “because everyone is
building on the same open specs.”
31
Wall Streeters might want to capture this
technology, but they will have to contend with the value innovation it enables,
something they can’t control or predict.
Masters also sees the virtues of permissioned blockchains. For her, only a small
coterie of trading partners, some vendors and other counterparties,
and regulators
need have access. Those select few chosen will be granted blockchain credentials. To
Masters, “permissioned ledgers have the advantage of never exposing a regulated
financial institution to the risk of either transacting with an unknown party, an
unacceptable activity from a regulatory point of view, or creating a dependency upon
an unknown service provider such as a transaction processor, also unacceptable from
a regulatory point of view.”
32
These permissioned blockchains, or
private chains,
appeal to traditional financial institutions wary of bitcoin and everything associated
with it.
While Blythe Masters
is the CEO of a start-up, her keen interest represents
broader involvement of traditional financial actors in this sector. This embrace of new
technology reflects a growing concern that tech start-ups can also upend high finance.
For Eric Piscini of Deloitte, whose clients have undergone a great awakening over the
past year, the “sudden interest in tech was not something that anyone was
expecting.”
33
The enthusiasm is spreading like a contagion into some of the largest
and oldest financial institutions in the world.
Barclays is one of dozens of financial institutions exploring opportunities in
blockchain technology. According to Derek White, Barclays’s
chief design and digital
officer, “technologies like the blockchain are going to reshape our industry.” White is
building an open innovation platform that will allow the bank to engage a wide array
of builders and thinkers in this industry. “We’re keen to be shapers. But we’re also
keen to connect with the shapers of the technologies and the translators of those
technologies,” he said.
34
Barclays is putting its money where its mouth is, cutting tens
of thousands of jobs in traditional areas and doubling down on technology, notably by
launching the Barclays Accelerator. According to White, “three
out of the ten
companies in our last cohort were blockchain or bitcoin companies. Blockchain is the
greatest evidence of the world moving from closed systems to open systems and has
huge potential impact on the future of not just financial services but many
industries.”
35
Banks talking about open systems—
mon Dieu!
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: