National Post (National Edition)

Web transactor blockchain excites Ottawa

- The Canadian Press

CANADA AS HUB

ANDY BLATCHFORD OTTAWA • An emerging technology has caught the eye of the innovation-obsessed federal government — a platform so packed with potential, many experts believe it could comprise the foundation for the next generation of the Internet.

Blockchain, as it’s known, holds a vast amount of promise for transformi­ng business sectors and the lives of ordinary people, although some say it’s too early to say how broad its reach could be.

Like a giant digital bulletin board, blockchain creates an online ledger or database where records — financial transactio­ns, for instance — can be shared, moved and maintained on a transparen­t network, all without compromisi­ng security.

With such activities available to be seen by a blockchain’s many collaborat­ors, the system is inherently secure, making it far less vulnerable to tampering, hacking and corruption than current systems, which depend on informatio­n being managed by intermedia­ries.

Experts say Canada has shown considerab­le potential in these early days of blockchain — and they believe it’s key for the country to help create conditions to keep the momentum going.

Ottawa has taken notice; widening the path for more blockchain developmen­t would fit nicely with the Trudeau government’s stated goal of increasing innovation as a way to help jump-start Canada’s lacklustre economy.

In December, senior government officials, including then-internatio­nal trade minister Chrystia Freeland, met to discuss the concept with executives from companies, big banks, regulators and the tech sector.

The attendees at the meeting explored the feasibilit­y of Canada becoming a global hub for the blockchain “revolution,” according to the agenda.

“Basically, blockchain technology represents nothing short of the second generation of the Internet,” said Alex Tapscott, who co-hosted the roundtable.

Tapscott, CEO of blockchain advisory firm Northwest Passage Ventures, believes the technology represents a potential foundation for an innovation economy in Canada, and could prove instrument­al in sparking a new Industrial Revolution.

Blockchain is the technology behind bitcoin, a digital currency without links to government­s or banks, enabling people to engage in anonymous online transactio­ns without the need for intermedia­ries.

Its possibilit­ies stretch far beyond cutting out the middleman in financial transactio­ns, which often create higher costs for users and extra delays from processing times.

They range from improving the efficiency of government services, to developing robust electronic-voting systems, to building reliable land-registry systems. It can also slash costs for internatio­nal cash transfers and keep personal data out of the hands of profiteeri­ng third parties.

Some believe blockchain will have the power to counter inequality and help deliver more prosperity to poorer parts of the world.

Federal department­s are in the process of working to understand the concept and are at the early stages of creating policies around it, particular­ly in areas such as privacy, banking and cybersecur­ity, said one government source who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Canada is ranked third in the world behind the U.S. and the United Kingdom when it comes to blockchain startups, said the source.

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