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Facebook is diving headfirst into the blockchain.Recode reports the social media giant is creating a team dedicated to blockchain, headed by former Messenger lead David Marcus, who also has experience at Coinbase and PayPal. Marcus later confirmed this shift in a Facebook post.
But so far, no one is quite sure what that means what Facebook’s actually up to here. Are they making a cryptocurrency that will rival bitcoin, or are they just haphazardly adding blockchain to the laundry list of things they say they do, like that Long Island Iced Tea company did?
We rounded up the best (and a couple of the worst) predictions for what Facebook is up to.
Facebook is getting ready for the day when blockchain is a crucial part of the internet.
Facebook has done whatever it can to prevent people from using other services. It’s purchased dozens of other companies, either to acquire their IPs or to keep its audience from even having the choice to go elsewhere. Some of these include Instagram, Oculus VR, and WhatsApp (plus some other services you might not have heard of, such as a check-in service called Hot Potato).
And whatever it can’t buy, it’s copied — from video chat apps to disappearing stories eerily similar to those offered by competitor Snapchat.If and when blockchain becomes integral to how we regularly use the internet (as blockchain evangelists may claim), Facebook will want to make sure it doesn’t get left behind a potential competitor.
You can’t own the blockchain, but you can make sure your platform has a better grip on it than most.
Facebook wants to make everyone’s data blockchain-level secure.
The recent Cambridge Analytica scandal didn’t cause the mass exodus from the platform that some thought it might. But the public is still skeptical of Facebook and how it handles all of our private information.
One of the big selling points for blockchain technology is that it decentralizes all of the information held on it, keeping it out of any one organization’s hands.
Put these two things together: some people have speculated that a blockchain social network, or integrating blockchain into how Facebook stores our information, could make our data much more secure.
But Facebook has all sorts of financial incentives to continue storing and selling data. It doesn’t make too much sense for the company to, you know, stop making Scrooge McDuck-levels of cash.
Also, distributing your private information over a blockchain ledger means that the information goes to everyone else on the network instead of right to Facebook. Even with sophisticated encryption that keeps your data secure, it would essentially be out there forever.
And if you delete your Facebook account, you still can’t retroactively scrub your data from the blockchain.FaceCoin!OK, yes: Facebook could make its own cryptocurrency. Facebook has dabbled in digital currency — the company used to offer credits that turned its on-site apps into a sort of arcade.
So maybe it hasn’t given up the ghost quite yet.Facebook could even end the charade of trying to create meaningful interactions and incentivize people to stay on the site by rewarding successful posts with a tiny chunk of cryptocurrency, as WIRED speculated.
What seems like a more natural fit for Facebook, though: cryptocurrency trading integrated with Facebook’s growing marketplace. It could fold in trading features to its existing Facebook payments feature, which would immediately bring cryptocurrency to fingertips of a huge proportion of the world’s population. Heck, it might even get all our parents on the crypto train.
This might not be all that likely — David Marcus is still involved with Coinbase (an easy-to-use platform for trading cryptocurrency), so it’s unlikely that Facebook would endeavor to make a competing product (or would it?).
Ultimately, we don’t know exactly what Facebook is planning.
But it’s clear that the company is taking blockchain very seriously, and it doesn’t want to get left behind by what might someday be a major technological wave. If nothing else, this newly formed team could reignite interest in the company, both from the disgruntled public and investors alike.
Discover more from Futurism here: https://futurism.com/facebook-blockchain-team-what-are-they-up-to/-
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst Since the news of Facebook getting interested in Blockchain came this week, the questions arise: why? What do they want blockchain for exactly? We don´t know yet, but we know it doesn't want to be behind the times and te new economy. See what is going on with these news by following our page and BCtv- 10 1 vote
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'Use-cases of Distributed Ledger Technologies'
Also showing on Blockchaintelevision.info BCtv. Switch it on for continuous streaming in your browser 24/7
Panels:
Colin Platt - Co-host of Blockchain Insider,
11:FS
Alex Batlin - CEO, Trustology
Makoto Takemiya
- Co-CEO, Soramitsu
Alexander Yakovlev
- Head of Solutions Direction, NSD
Tom Tao
- Vice President, Wanxiang Blockchain-
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst What is DLT? Defining what it means and for what they are used clarifies how Blockchain may change the rules. Interesting debate here to watch, to build knowledge, opinion and open minds. It is for me very interesting how the same thing can mean different things for people and somehow work in a such way that everybody agrees that the final result will be the same: Blockchain needs DLT to grow, to spread around and to build a resilient ecosystem. Uses cases presented here underline that.
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This Emerging Issues Video is the first in a three-part series on Blockchain. In it, partners Harriet Territt (London), Mark Rasmussen (Dallas), and Stephen Obie (New York) discuss the Firm’s approach to advising clients on blockchain technology, including issues related to its development and implementation, how the technology impacts real world legal matters, and some of the legal risks associated with cryptocurrencies...
Also showing on Blockchaintelevision.info BCtv. Switch it on for continuous streaming in your browser 24/7
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Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst Blockchain is a technology which is touching everything even if at its infancy, including the legal sector which is also around all economic, social and finance issues. This introduction to a legal firm idea on how to approach to advising Blockchain clients is very interesting. Soon we will see many more legal firms doing this kind of approach.
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Facebook is reportedly shaking up its management team in a gigantic way today -- and according to Recode, the head of the company's popular Facebook Messenger app will now be in charge of "a new internal team dedicated to exploring blockchain technology.
" Recode reports that several prominent Instagram executives will be joining the blockchain team as well.You might be wondering: What is Blockchain? And why would Facebook be pursuing the technology?
We've got a whole article dedicated to answering the former question -- not to mention our series Blockchain Decoded -- but if you're in a hurry: Blockchain is the digital ledger technology that famously powers cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, but is more generally an encrypted way to keep a record of digital transactions, and can be used as a way to figure out who to trust online.
Recode doesn't say specifically why Facebook might be looking into Blockchain right now, and Facebook didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.
But in his January memo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that he wanted to study decentralizing technologies like encryption and cryptocurrency -- "that take power from centralized systems and put it back into people's hands," in his words -- and figure out how to use them in Facebook's services.
Blockchain's promise hasn't kept pace with the hype, but it's catching on for everything from tracking shipments through ports and across oceans to guaranteeing the provenance of a diamond necklace.
At Facebook, it could be used in any number of areas, from running advertising infrastructure to easing person-to-person e-commerce to assuring user identities in an era of scams and bots.
Facebook has a lot of users and a lot of industry clout, and that increases the importance of any efforts to form industry-spanning partnerships built on blockchain.
That said, exploring blockchain is hardly a surprise. In this day and age, a tech company doing so is about as shocking as exploring mobile phone apps or artificial intelligence tools.
Disclosure: Sean's wife works for Facebook as an internal video producer.
Discover more on CNET here: https://www.cnet.com/news/facebook-is-reportedly-starting-a-blockchain-team/
https://www.cnet.com/news/facebook-is-reportedly-starting-a-blockchain-team/
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