Khaleej Times

How blockchain technology is digitising trust in Europe

There is untapped potential for using the technology to provide citizens with new services

- Mariella radaelli & Jon Van Housen

As blockchain technology gains acceptance, entreprene­urs, industries and even some government­s in Europe are embracing a potential digital revolution, one closely related to crypto-currencies, banking and other highly secure applicatio­ns that could affect many aspects of daily life. A study by Osservator­io Start Up Intelligen­ce in Milan found that 32 per cent of European start-ups are using blockchain, a complex and fast-moving technology. The European Union is currently building a blockchain-based gateway designed to share informatio­n on listed companies and also follow challenges and opportunit­ies for European industry and government­s.

“I am not surprised, since there is untapped potential for using the technology to provide citizens with new services while improving regulation and markets are monitored,” says Christian Catalini, professor at MIT.

Catalini defines blockchain­s as “really a suite of technologi­es”. He thinks the technology will change our lives within the next five to 10 years — we will see many different, new types of digital platforms that will rely on a crypto-token for their operations. “At a high level, a blockchain allows a network of devices to agree, at regular intervals, about the true state of shared data,” says Catalini. “What that shared data represents can be many things: currency, equity in a start-up, intellectu­al property, attributes tied to identity or provenance of goods. This is why the benefits from it will affect multiple industries.”

The first distribute­d blockchain was conceptual­ised in 2008 by an anonymous person in Japan known as Satoshi Nakamoto and formed the core of bitcoin, the first digital currency. Like so many computing revolution­s, wider implementa­tion began in the US. Yet the centre of gravity of blockchain use could move toward Europe. “I think the verdict is still out on whether the US or Europe will lead in the blockchain race,” says Lasse Birk Olesen, co-founder of Coinify, a blockchain payment provider, and Bitcoin Nordic, a bitcoin brokers in Europe.

“The US has vastly greater risk-taking venture capital funds and the largest share of big tech corporatio­ns willing to adopt blockchain technology,” says Olesen. “However, what many think is overly strict financial regulation of blockchain companies, as seen in New York, has been making EU jurisdicti­ons more attractive.”

He points to “the so-called crypto valley of Zug, Switzerlan­d, where the government is accepting bitcoin payments”. Moreover, “many Initial Coin Offerings have been in Switzerlan­d, which counterbal­ances the advantage of the US as the start-up capital”, says Olesen.

Before blockchain­s, a fintech entreprene­ur had to get permission from banks to access the existing financial infrastruc­ture, says Olesen. “For many entreprene­urs, that meant asking competitor­s for permission to launch their products. Blockchain­s are democratis­ing finance by allowing anyone to access a global financial infrastruc­ture, enabling any entreprene­ur to do the same as the biggest banks of yesterday could. Blockchain­s are the internet of value. That’s incredibly powerful, and I can’t wait to see what people are building.”

The Danish entreprene­ur says “blockchain­s are digitising trust or even making trust obsolete in many cases”.

“For instance, blockchain­s can be used to issue election tokens to people during political elections. So even though it is digital, it can be issued in such a way that it is cryptograp­hically guaranteed for people to remain anonymous when they vote. And when the election result is published, voters can cryptograp­hically verify that their specific vote was counted as part of the election result. This can be beneficial particular­ly in countries that face problems with election fraud. Blockchain­s, in such cases, can remove the need to trust humans

The US has vastly greater risk-taking venture capital funds and the largest share of big tech corporatio­ns willing to adopt blockchain technology.

counting the votes. Every day people are discoverin­g new ways to use blockchain­s to digitise trust or make trust obsolete,” he says. But that seems to be a far cry from today. For now, the German Central Bank says consumers won’t yet accept crypto-currencies.

Ferdinando M. Ametrano, professor of Bitcoin and Blockchain Technology at Politecnic­o University of Milan, notes “any form of innovation has inherent risks and dangers, but to cast a bad light over bitcoins is short-sighted. For the first time in digital realm we have a scarce asset that can be transferre­d but not duplicated: the bitcoin aims to be the digital equivalent of physical gold.” Though still complex to use “as the technology evolves, it will become userfriend­ly and integrated with existing currencies”.

With a long history of ideologica­l revolution, Europe might be the centre of yet another, this time in the digital world. Mariella Radaelli and Jon Van Housen are editors at

the Luminosity Italia news agency in Milan

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