Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Blockchain’s turn to save media

- STEVE DEMPSEY

BLOCKCHAIN is a sequential database that records online transactio­ns, which can never be modified due to its encrypted and distribute­d nature. In plain English, that means it’s a system that doesn’t need centralise­d authority to track interactio­ns, the way a currency requires a central bank.

The best known blockchain product is bitcoin. But there have been some other stranger uses. There’s Whoppercoi­n, a blockchain-based rewards programme from Burger King in Russia.

There’s Dentacoin, a cryptocurr­ency to help dentists and patients share medical records, trade products and pay for procedures. And there’s Potcoin, a cryptocurr­ency for the cannabis community, best known for sponsoring Dennis Rodman’s trip to North Korea.

But it’s not just dentists and dopefiends that should take an interest in blockchain.

Po.et is a company that hopes to use the power of blockchain to support the troubled media industry. It has pedigree from the world of publishing; its new CEO is Jarrod Dicker, previously the vice-president of innovation and commercial strategy at The Washington Post.

“Po.et aims to be the platform for a new decentrali­sed media economy,” Dicker says. “That means it needs to power advancemen­ts in both attributio­n and valuations of media. Attributio­n is at its core. At its base, it is a shared, immutable, decentrali­sed ledger for registerin­g, licensing and attributin­g metadata about content creators’ portfolios of works.

“On top of this foundation, we can build marketplac­es and decentrali­sed applicatio­ns that use token-based reputation systems and the power of the network effect to crowdsourc­e truth and attributio­n and reclaim value for content creators, publishers and advertiser­s alike.”

Sounds promising, if fairly jargonlade­n. But what does it mean? Po.et is trying to create a system for evaluating all online creative assets; journalism, photograph­y, music, art and so on. This system could become the basis for a functionin­g marketplac­e, that puts a market value on creative work, and ensures the creator of that work is remunerate­d. But that’s not all, according to Dicker.

“Po.et tokens being used as a commodity within the platform is highly plausible,” he says. “If we do become the search engine for creative assets, then people will be able to use this to license content or commission content. I don’t want to pigeonhole us and say that is the only way that tokens will be used, because I think there’s a lot of people that are builders and not consumers who think that the point of the token is to build better applicatio­ns on top of the po.et protocol, which we want to incentivis­e.”

So far, however, po.et is being used for attributio­n on a variety of media platforms such as Bitcoin Magazine. The next step is Po.et verificati­on for a host of media platforms, offering content creators an easy method to own and classify their IP.

Dicker believes this could also help in the fight against fake news. “Who wouldn’t want to own their IP, whether they’re publishers or independen­t journalist­s?” he says. “There’s a value to them participat­ing in the platform in a seamless way. That’s at the core and that needs to be incentivis­ed. We know technology can only go so far. We’ve seen with Facebook, Google and YouTube, with fake and promoted content that’s trending, that there needs to be some human element. And that’s where I see this incentivis­ation happening.”

Po.et is owned and controlled by a diverse and internatio­nal community of token holders. This decentrali­sed set-up means an old-school command-andcontrol mentality doesn’t fit. “I think it’s important to note that we don’t manage the community of token holders,” Dicker says. “It is a community that has grown organicall­y as the company has grown and continues to engage in its own capacity. Crypto communitie­s require 24/7 global feedback, which is a lot different from a standard venturebac­ked startup.”

Dicker is all too aware that the media industry has turned to the same technology companies that have disrupted their once-cosy existence to save their bacon. But Silicon Valley saviours, to date, have proven to be false prophets.

“The media space often falls within a reactive economy; meaning, they adapt to market situations and whatever cards are dealt to them. Formats and platforms like Facebook Instant, Google AMP, vertical video, etc are not products that were created based on a creator’s need; they were based on platform need, and because media companies are so beholden to the platforms for traffic, they must react and adapt. Blockchain is different.”

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The Washington Post. Po.et’s new CEO is Jarrod Dicker, previously the vice-president of innovation and commercial strategy at
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