Swyftx is holding a HUGE $1000AUD+ GIVEAWAY this #blackfriday
They’re giving 1 lucky winner 🏆 $1000AUD of assorted cryptocurrencies listed below, in addition to a Ledger Nano X to allow you to store it in the most secure way!
They’re giving away TEZOS in this package, and will help you get started with Staking (passive income with Crypto). So not only will you get the value of the portfolio, but you also will earn staking rewards on your TEZOS while holding it inside of your ledger too.
WHAT YOU GET
WIN this Portfolio valued at $1000AUD
$300 BTC $250 ETH $150 LINK $150 DOT $150 XTZ
PLUS your own personal cold wallet solution – Ledger Nano X
PLUS full guided Ledger set up by your own Account manager
HOW TO ENTER
You can enter for free by following them on social media, visiting their website and various other social tasks. The more you do the more chance you have of winning!
The emergence of DeFi and other Ethereum Tokens may have had an impact on the price of Ethereum. Some of these tokens have seen ridiculous gains this year including YFI, CRD and many others.
They also have decreased the MCO card referral bonus from $50 USD down to $25 USD.
Netflix Rebate Increased
The Netflix rebate has been increased to $13,99 USD per month.
New Card Shipping Delays and Out of Stock
Some users have reported that there has been serious delays in receiving their cards. And I personally have upgraded my card from Red to Purple, only to be told they are currently out of stock with no ETA.
This is our monthly Partners news recap for Swyftx to keep you updated on what’s been happening with them this month and what they have upcoming.
Competition: Win $250 of BTC – 8 October
Want to #WIN $250AUD of #Bitcoin (BTC) credited to your Swyftx account? Head over to our Facebook Page for your chance to WIN!
New website design
The Swyftx.com.au website has had a makeover. It’s now visually cleaner and a much improved modern design making it easier for people to use.
47 new Crypto Assets for trading
This month Swyftx added 47 new Crypto Assets for trading. Swyftx has also just listed 7 more assets including Polymath Network (POLY) and Filecoin (FIL) bringing the total assets added recently to 54. More information on this soon.
Dashboard Customisation
You can now edit the tiles by clicking the gear icon in the top right.
News feature low market volume warning
We’ve got a long-requested feature ready, notifying traders of “Low Market Volume”. In the instance liquidity is low for a period of time for a crypto asset now we’ll let you know as per the image below. Low Market Volume Warnings.
Keeping our Support Excellent
We are continuously improving our support for Australians and maintain a excellent standard as confirmed independently by our Trust Pilot reviews.
Expanding into New Zealand
Swyftx is expanding into New Zealand within 2020, currently working through onboarding of partners to support this location. More news on this soon!
Stay up to date with Swyftx
Buy, Sell & Trade over 100 Crypto-Assets on Australia’s most progressive Cryptocurrency Exchange. Swyftx is an AUSTRAC registered Australian crypto currency exchange & trading platform with tiny spreads, low fees and non-inflated market prices. Trade with stop losses, take profits and triggered orders on a mobile & desktop ready modern web based crypto currency exchange.
This is our monthly Partners news recap for CoinJar to keep you updated on what’s been happening with them this month and what they have upcoming.
All-new Trading Pairs on CoinJar Exchange
We have added four new ERC-20 tokens to our lineup and are now excited to announce the addition of the following new trading pairs to CoinJar Exchange.
Following the announcement of four new ERC-20 tokens to the CoinJar lineup, we have also created new CoinJar Bundles to help you diversify your ERC-20 portfolio.
From today, the following bundles are available for purchase through the CoinJar app:
ERC-20 Bundle which includes BAT, ZRX, USDC, DAI, COMP, LINK, MKR, OMG
DeFi Bundle which includes COMP, LINK and MKR
CoinJar is improving liquidity to bring you better prices
Now with 289 trading pairs available on CoinJar and 49 on CoinJar Exchange, and with new cryptocurrencies recently being listed including LINK, COMP, MKR, OMG and XLM, it’s more important than ever to provide deep liquidity and better buy/sell prices.
In September 2020, CoinJar launched a first-generation implied matching system for incoming orders with the goal to bring you better digital currency prices and improved liquidity.
Data based on approximately 2 weeks before and after the launch of implied matching showed that CoinJar’s buy-sell spread between Basic Attention Token and AUD improved by 75% (from 2.16% to 0.53% on average). Improvements were also seen in other pairings such as the buy-sell spread between Bitcoin and AUD has improved by 13% (from 0.22% to 0.19%). Read more
Special offer for CoinTracker, CryptoTaxCalculator & Koinly
CryptoTaxCalculator is made in Australia and offers an annual plan which covers all previous financial years from 2013-2020. So if you need to amend your tax return for previous tax years the plan has you covered all under the one pricing. They offer a 30 day money back guarantee and you can cancel your subscription anytime.
CoinJar has partnered with CryptoTaxCalculator to provide you with following discounts:
40% off one time discount of any package (expires 30/11/20) Coupon Code: COINJAR_SPRING_TAX 20% off one time discount of any package Coupon Code: COINJAR_BUDDY
Established in 2013, CoinJar is the easiest way to buy, sell, store and spend cryptocurrencies in the UK and Australia. CoinJar’s iOS and Android apps allow users to trade cryptocurrencies on the go, while CoinJar Exchange and CoinJar OTC Trading Desk cater for professional traders, as well as individuals and institutions looking to make larger transactions.
This is our monthly Partners news recap for NGS Crypto to keep you updated on what’s been happening with them this month and what they have upcoming.
NGS Crypto Monthly Update – October 2020
October has been a very successful month for NGS Crypto, especially for our Self Managed Superannuation sector.
Quarterly Industry Superannuation statements have been issued across the board.
NGS Crypto has outperformed industry superannuation companies, continuing to deliver fantastic results for our members.
Performance results from 2019/2020 for our Self Managed Superannuation NGS Crypto members, saw them make a 19% ROI.
Now is a great time to look at your current superannuation and how it is performing against other superannuation options.
Self-Managed Superannuation
With industry superannuation’s underperforming across the board, now is a great time to take advantage of your options.
For a limited time NGS Crypto is offering a free, no obligation superannuation health check with our highly accredited and professional Financial Advisory team, valued at over $500.00.
Moving away from traditional investment vehicles, which are struggling to return single digit returns, has proven to be very successful.
Global organisations such as JP Morgan have moved to digital assets, holding Bitcoin (BTC) as a reserve asset. PayPal and Australia Post are too now adopting BTC and Digital Assets as a safe and reliable form of local and cross border payment options for their global customers.
Smart money is now moving into digital assets such as BTC and Gold.
It is no surprise that NGS Crypto has delivered outstanding results through Digital Asset mining and accumulation of hard assets like Bitcoin, which has a limited supply.
Australia’s leading Digital Asset Mining specialists, providing a safe, stable and reliable investment vehicle. Hundreds of everyday Australians are taking advantage of the NGS Crypto service, entering into the digital asset mining space and making returns between 10% – 15% ROI p/a.
The corporate governance structure in Australia largely gives power to those in senior positions and as a result many investors become disengaged with shareholder participation. For shareholders, it is necessary to receive efficient and accurate information to access shareholding rights and in order to participate in corporate decision-making, it is important that investors are assured they will receive appropriate information relating to the company that is verifiably correct.
Obtaining information as an investor can often be a costly and time-consuming process, and confidence in the outcome of meetings can be undermined by a lack of transparency.
When a company becomes public, maintaining shareholder records can become complex and difficult. This system is highly fallible and frequently results in communications being particularly time-consuming or not reaching shareholders at all. The voting process itself could be limited by incomplete ballot distributions and incorrect voter lists. In a procedure known as ‘empty voting’, some investors ‘may use borrowed shares to temporarily cast a vote in a company without suffering from the economic exposure to the financial risks in the price of its stock’. Such practices distort shareholding incentives and affect the balance of the vote for other shareholders.
Voting can be delegated to the president of the meeting, particularly where shareholders are dispersed and unengaged. Empowering the President necessarily favours existing management policies. To date these issues have not been met with sufficient regulation by policymakers.
The development of distributed ledger technology is perhaps the most significant innovation for company shareholders to date. Popularised by the invention of blockchain in 2008, distributed ledger technology refers to a peer-to-peer network of data spread across multiple nodes. Its key feature is the lack of a central administrator – instead, updates to the ledger are achieved by consensus. The correct record is replicated and updated on all nodes in the network.
This technology has since been used to register shares in early experiments, allowing investors and issuers to interact with each other more directly. In 2015, NASDAQ’s platform ‘Linq’ was the first use of distributed ledger technology to successfully complete a private securities transaction. In 2016, Overstock.com was the first public company to issue stock through a blockchain platform.
Following pilot phases of this technology, several governments have set up conditions for companies to further integrate distributed ledgers in stock management. In 2017, amendments to Delaware law allowed corporations to use blockchain technology to maintain stock ledgers and communicate with stockholders. Any records can be kept on electronic databases and communication between stockholders can take place electronically. France has allowed share registration via blockchain since 2017. The French Government has authorised the use of distributed ledger technology for the issuance and transfer of ‘mini-bonds’ and unlisted securities. Following this direction, the French international banking group BNP Paribas announced that it was ‘expanding its blockchain platform for private stocks’.
Distributed ledger technology has also transformed shareholder voting. In a distributed ledger system, tokens may be allocated to eligible voters, who would subsequently transmit their vote to be registered on the blockchain.
Permitted blockchain technologies can then be used to manage vote counting. NASDAQ has developed a successful e-voting platform on their Tallinn exchange to facilitate voting transparency and increase investor participation.
As of 2017, NASDAQ confirmed a functioning proof of concept identifying users based on their Estonian digital ID, allowing investors to view information about meetings and vote before or during the meeting, manage proxy votes and review previous meetings and transactions.
A similar scheme of electronic voting was announced by NASDAQ in November 2017 for South African capital markets. In the same year, Broadridge declared a successful test use of blockchain to complete proxy votes in a private transaction.
The pilot program demonstrated the capabilities of distributed ledger technology in providing ‘insight into vote progress throughout the issuer’s proxy voting period, from meeting announcement date to the annual general meeting’. The technology also allows for role-based access to voting data.
Even the world’s biggest stock exchanges have decided to incorporate distributed ledger technology in their transactions, with several outlining plans for overhauls of their core settlement systems. In 2018, the Shanghai Stock Exchange concluded that distributed ledgers had broad applicability in the securities industry, assisting in information disclosure, issuance and transfer, clearing and settlement, shareholder voting and dividend payment. The Australian Stock Exchange and Japan Exchange Group have also been investigating blockchain solutions for clearing, settlement and low-liquidity assets. The Japan Exchange Group has noted that securities transactions have broad potential to expedite the confirmation of information in the post-trade process.
As of 2019, the JPX Group had performed two proof of concept tests in collaboration with Japanese financial institutions. The ASX is developing a distributed ledger replacement to conduct post-transaction clearing and settlement activities, with the intention of facilitating greater accessibility and efficiency in the register. The project currently has a proposed go-live date of April 2022.
By offering an alternative to traditional database registers, blockchain technology has made company information readily accessible and more cost-effective. Complex information can be efficiently sourced from the register, stored indefinitely and timestamped. A blockchain system would be based on shareholder identity, allowing both open and pseudonymous ownership.
Voting information and tokens can be transmitted directly to investors without the need to ask each intermediary for the identity of their client. This information is effectively automatic.
As each change to the blockchain record is catalogued and verifiable, the expected benefits of blockchain for the voting process itself are also significant, promising greater accuracy and transparency. This acts as an incentive for more shareholders to directly participate at the annual general meeting, enhancing shareholder democracy and mitigating the effects of delegated voting. Both companies and shareholders would gain better understandings of shareholding. Using blockchain technology would also limit the use of ‘empty voting’ – providing transparent share registration and notice of changes to voting rights. This ensures that voting rights are aligned with economic interests. The consequence of these benefits is to vastly improve shareholder participation in corporate governance. These reforms will allow investors to have a direct say in meetings with greater ease and confidence.
Within a span of five years, the impact of technology on companies has been exponential. Though distributed ledgers are still being developed in company settings, the promise of emerging technology is persistent. Successive pilot programs tell us that the concepts work, and that the possibilities to enhance accessibility and efficiency for shareholders are substantial and significant. The modern company is changing – and technology will play a key role in driving its evolution. Marginalised shareholders now have an opportunity to benefit from technological improvements to transparency and participation.
Lecturer, Weiping He
Weiping He is a lecturer at Monash Law Faculty. Her research interests primarily lie in the areas of financial services regulation (securities markets and banking) and corporate law. She is interested in how regulatory regimes differ in terms of nature and dynamics as a result of varied historical, political and economic circumstances and in particular how regulatory regimes could work better. Her research also incidentally attempts to evaluate the proper role of government vis a vis the market, for example in assessing the efficiency of various regulatory regimes and the competence and effectiveness of regulators.
Assoc Professor and Director of the Monash Blockchain Technology Centre, Joseph Liu
Joseph Liu is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Information Technology, Monash University. He got his PhD from the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2004. Before joining Monash in 2015, he worked as a research scientist at the Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) in Singapore for more than seven years. His research areas include cybersecurity, blockchain, IoT security, applied cryptography and privacy-enhanced technology. He has received more than 6500 citations with more than 200 publications in top venues such as CRYPTO, ACM CCS. Joseph is currently the lead of the Monash Cybersecurity Group. He established the Monash Blockchain Technology Centre in 2019 and serves as the Centre Director. His remarkable research in linkable ring signature forms the theory basis of Monero (XMR), one of the largest cryptocurrencies in the world with current market capitalization more than US$1 billion. Joseph received the 2018 Dean’s Award for Excellence in Research Impact. He was also named the 2018 ICT Researcher of the Year by the Australian Computer Society (ACS), the largest national professional body representing the ICT sector, for his contribution to the blockchain and cybersecurity community.
Arbitrage is the market behaviour of taking advantage of the market economy’s imperfect price system to get additional profits through buying and selling. Arbitrage helps financial markets operate effectively, improves the asset pricing efficiency, and increases the market liquidity all at once.
The whole cryptocurrency industry is in its infancy. The entire trading market still lacks a comprehensive trading system and regulatory measures. Therefore, the arbitrage space is broad. Let us see how popular DeFi projects do arbitrage.
DeFi arbitrage usually stands for borrowing at low interest rates in one DeFi market and depositing assets to another DeFi market to earn high interest rates. When there is a positive gap between the deposit and borrowing rates, arbitrage opportunities appear.
Unlike the traditional arbitrage, DeFi uses the interest rate gap of cryptocurrency products to make profits instead of directly using the price difference of the underlying assets. Generally, DeFi market interest rates are relatively high. Here is why.
Decentralized Finance protocols are new. Factors like high volatility of cryptocurrencies, over-collateralization, and smart contract risks are all risks that define high interest rates. Similarly, funds deposited to the lending market of traditional finance bear lower risks. DeFi market needs to leverage high interest rates to make up for the risk brought by decentralized mechanisms.
High interest rates help the cold start of some new DeFi projects. Currently, most of the funds are in the mature DeFi markets with liquidity mining. Some new projects have not yet issued governance tokens and cannot provide liquidity incentives, resulting in poor early liquidity, so high interest rates can be useful. This also allows for more arbitrage opportunities between DeFi markets when the user base expands.
Detailed Arbitrage Process
For example, the annual interest rate of USDC loans on Compound is 6.07% while the annual deposit rate is only 2.21%. At the same time, USDC deposit interest rate on Nuo Network is as high as 11.8%.
Thus, holders of the same cryptocurrency USDC can choose to borrow on Compound and deposit to Nuo Network. If the interest rate stays the same, annualized profit is 5.73% (no fees and other costs included) and there is quite an arbitrage space.
Another high-level DeFi arbitrage method is to borrow ETH (which has the lowest loan interest rates in one market) on Compound, exchange it to USDC (which has the highest deposit interest rate in another market) and deposit to Nuo Network to get a higher annualized return of 9.19%. Eating the spread between deposits and loans on different platforms equals to risk-free arbitrage.
Among the new DeFi projects, strategies of some are more aggressive. Take the aggregated InfinityDefi (INFI) for example. It is similar to Compound, except that its arbitrage space and lending functions are richer and more flexible than those of early collateral projects.
Besides collateral lending, InfinityDefi protocol has an adjustment mechanism in its fund pool (dubbed Polymerization Pool or PP) to dynamically adjust interest rates along with the changes of currency ratios, so that supply and demand of any currency are balanced. When users borrow some currency, they pay interest. When users pledge (deposit) some currency, they earn interest. The higher the supply and demand, the higher the interest rates.
x axis is the total non-lent market value of the fund pool divided by the non-lent market value of currency i, range is 1 to 10. y axis is the corresponding annualized interest rate.
x axis is the total non-lent market value of the fund pool divided by the non-lent market value of currency i, range is 1 to 1,000. y axis is the corresponding annualized interest rate.
Example: a user wants to borrow ETH of 10,000 USDT market value. What is the current annualized interest rate for ETH?
The total non-lent market value of the fund pool is 100,000,000 USDT. The current market value of non-lent ETH is 10,000,000 USDT. Then, M(ETH) = ln10 = 2.303
The current annualized interest rate for ETH loans is min(2%+3%*2.303, 200%) = 8.9%.
Then what interest can user A earn if the market value of ETH it deposited is 10,000,000 USDT?
The total market value of ETH pledged in the fund pool is 200,000,000 USDT.
Users B and C each borrowed ETH worth of 50 million USDT and no other users borrowed ETH. User B pays 600 USDT interest for the past 1 hour (as per the formula for the interest on borrowing) and user C pays 800 USDT interest for the past 1 hour (because B and C borrowed ETH at a different rate). Thus, A’s accrued interest for the past hour is 10,000,000*(600+800) /200,000,000 = 70 USDT.
3. How to Use INFI’s Low Borrowing Rate for Low-risk Profit
According to INFI’s dynamic interest rate algorithm, INFI collateralized loan interest rate is quite low. With its low interest rate for mainstream coins (4%) INFI attracts borrowers who then deposit these coins on other platforms with higher deposit rates (say, 7%)*. This is the low-risk spread arbitrage. Profit!
*Comparing to the data collateralized DeFi deposit interest rates by Feixiaohao, September 24, 2020
What sets InfinityDefi and traditional DeFi apart:
INFI has the regular collateral lending. What’s more, users can do secondary collateral. That is, you can pledge your collateral agreements from other platforms. This gives you a better arbitrage space. INFI also has multi-value-added loans (MVA). When the value of your collateral increases (the price of the locked coin rises), you can also pledge this value-added part to increase your collateral multiple times and thus get more loans.
INFI is lower pledge ratio (around 5% compared to traditional DeFi), higher loan amounts (20% compared to traditional DeFi), and faster capital turnover.
An example of a secondary loan: one platform, ETH and USDT. A is a borrower with primary and secondary collateral. B is the secondary collateral pool under PP.
A pledges ETH with a market value of 1.45 USDT, gets a loan of 1 USDT from the InfinityDefi Protocol, and pays a 5% interest (see the payable interest formula). A needs short-term funds. It transfers the pledge agreement to B, becomes the borrower with secondary collateral, gets a secondary loan of 10% of the primary loan (0.1 USDT), and pays a 7% interest (see the payable interest formula). B only lends 0.1 USDT to get a collateral agreement with a 7% interest.
For redemption, A pays 0.1 USDT plus interest and redeems the agreement from B. Then A pays 1 USDT plus interest and redeems ETH from the Protocol.
Position coverage is required at 145%. When ETH price falls and the pledge ratio is below 1.45, A needs to cover the position within the defined time.
Liquidation happens at 125%. When ETH price continues to fall and the current pledge ratio is below the minimal level (125%), liquidation starts. The Protocol liquidates at the current market price and B gets the remaining ETH (if any) after the payment of the principal of 1 USDT + interest + liquidation fee (8%).
If B fails to pay, the platform liquidates the collateral at the market price to repay B’s debt / Protocol debt and the 8% liquidation fee. The remaining balance returns to A.
PPT (equity token) and INFI (governance token)
User earn PPT for each loan and primary/secondary collateral. PPT has decentralized generation and distribution. PPT rewards depends on the amount and duration of the respective collateral or loan. Users can exchange PPT to INFI, the latter one will hit mainstream exchange platforms.
You may have noticed the industry trend. The requirements for investors are getting higher and higher in terms of both time and knowledge. When public chains appeared, you probably knew the basic concepts like PoW, DPoS, and TPS. Now it’s the next level and you have to understand channels, side chains, rollups, parachains, shards, cross-chain… the endless list of new things, each one running on its own new consensus mechanism.
Similarly, in the early days of DeFi, it was just DEX, decentralized trading, and borrowing. Now you have to understand liquidity, AMM formulas, derivatives, stablecoins, liquidation, aggregation… plus everything that the next level of public chains has brought about because many new DeFi products will soon be available on ETH 2.0 and new public chains like Polkadot and Solana that are about to launch.
The current blockchain DeFi needs you to be good at both blockchain and finance. This is the fastest growing space now knowledge and opportunity-wise.
Sydney company Chrono.tech’s flagship exchange now offers its traders the experimental new ‘adaptive base-money’ asset.
Sydney, 17 October 2020 –– Australian cryptocurrency exchange TimeX has listed Ampleforth (AMPL), a new form of digital asset that features a novel approach to mitigating the volatility for which crypto is notorious.
Developed by Sydney blockchain firm Chrono.tech, TimeX is one of the fastest-growing crypto exchanges to be based in Australia. Unlike conventional, first-generation exchanges, the hybrid platform uses both centralised and decentralised technologies to deliver a unique combination of benefits to its users, offering the security of blockchain settlement with the user experience of the best traditional trading platforms, along with privacy and high-speed order matching thanks to the use of Ethereum Plasma.
A new class of digital asset
TimeX is the first Australian exchange to list Ampleforth (AMPL), a project that has generated considerable buzz in the cryptocurrency space. Unlike bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, which can be extremely volatile, AMPL aims to dampen volatility while remaining fully decentralised.
The low-volatility crypto asset space is dominated by stablecoins. Most of these – including the popular USDT and USDC – are backed by fiat reserves, held by a centralised entity. Others, like MakerDAO’s Dai, are decentralised but collateralised by digital assets. Ampleforth, which aims to reduce price fluctuations but does not aim to track the dollar precisely, takes neither of these approaches. Instead, its supply is adjusted by a smart contract in response to changing price in the market, thereby maintaining a balance with demand at any given time.
‘Ampleforth is an intriguing and innovative new kind of asset that pushes the boundaries of what is possible in the blockchain and DeFi space,’ said Sergei Sergienko, founder and CEO of Chrono.tech. ‘With a radical new concept and technology, such a forward-thinking and potentially revolutionary project is the perfect match for TimeX, which itself has a strong track record of applying the latest blockchain developments to deliver benefits to the crypto world.’
AMPL can be traded on TimeX against USDT stablecoin.
About Chrono.tech
Chrono.tech is one of the foremost Australian blockchain initiatives. Founded in 2016, the company was launched to transform the HR and recruitment sector using blockchain-based technologies. Chrono.tech has developed a suite of initiatives in the crypto and HR space, including its decentralised freelance marketplace, LaborX; the TimeX exchange; cryptocurrency payroll service PaymentX; and the stablecoin AUDT.
About Ampleforth
Ampleforth was launched in 2019 by a team of software engineers, academics and crypto investors and enthusiasts. AMPL is an adaptive base-money cryptocurrency project that seeks to mitigate volatility by automatically adjusting supply in response to demand. As the price of the token on the open market moves up and down, according to oracles that post exchange data to the blockchain, the number of tokens held in each wallet is diluted or decreased, while the proportion of all tokens owned by each holder remains the same.
The only Australian researcher to be honoured with a 2020 IBM Academic Award, Monash University’s Dr Jiangshan Yu has received international recognition for his groundbreaking work on cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.
Of the 27 awardees for the 2020 IBM Academic Awards announced last night,Dr Yu, Associate Director (Research) in the Monash Blockchain Technology Centre, was one of two recipients to receive an award for research in this important field.
I’m absolutely ecstatic about being nominated for an IBM Academic Award! This achievement is not only great recognition for my research but it’s also an opportunity to foster future collaborations with IBM to further the use of technology for social good.
Dr Yu speaks to Crypto News about his award
The IBM Academic Awards promote collaborative research projects that advance the emerging technologies of today and encourage a sharing of knowledge amongst the global technology community.
A researcher in the Faculty of Information Technology at Monash University, Dr Yu is known for his research into blockchain systems. His most recent work demonstrates how businesses can realise their potential by adopting blockchains that can communicate with one another.
“Currently, there are over 5,000 blockchain systems and each represents an ecosystem. Personally, I believe that there will be many blockchain systems built for specialised applications. Our research explores how these blockchains can communicate with each other, enabling distributed users to exchange their data and assets between different blockchains without the need for a central go-between,” says Dr Yu.
Over the last decade, the rapid growth of blockchain technologies and their applications has seen governments around the world develop strategies to boost the blockchain industry.
More recently, the Australian Government also announced a National Blockchain Roadmap to help position the country’s blockchain industry to become a global leader, where interoperable blockchain is a key focus.
“Ultimately, the goal is to manage cryptocurrency and blockchain-based asset exchange with the same level of scalability, performance and equity that businesses and traders now enjoy in the financial world,” explains Dr Yu.
“If we can provide a mechanism generic enough to allow the communications between blockchains, we can bridge the gap between what would otherwise be isolated blockchains and enable a more connected network of ecosystems. I believe this will be the next advancement in technology that will shake the world.”
Congratulations to all those who have been selected for a 2020 IBM Academic Award.