Monday, September 10, 2018

Bitcoin Magazine’s Week in Review: Lightning, Launches and Broken Promises

Week in Review

A handful of projects brought their tech to life this week, introducing new payment systems and coins to the industry's offerings. Meanwhile, Bitcoin's Lightning Network makes headway for the dev community, and one of crypto's older and more respected exchanges (arguably) takes a step against the space's principles.

Finally, in a spurious game of he-said-she-said, a report from Business Insider, which was in turn picked up by various outlets, gets blasted by Goldman Sachs as fake news.

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Projects Get off the Ground

IBM Introduces "World Wire" Payment System on Stellar Network

A Newly Launched Stablecoin You've Never Heard of Is Coming to Stellar

IBM launched its much-anticipated payment network on Stellar's blockchain this week. Like Ripple, the protocol intends to give financial institutions a fiat-to-crypto bridge to streamline cross-border payments.

"IBM's implementation of the Stellar protocol has the potential to change the way money is moved around the world, helping to drastically improve international transactions and advancing financial inclusion in developing nations," Stellar Co-founder Jed McCaleb told Bitcoin Magazine.

In its own corner of influence, the little-known stablecoin project Kowala launched the alpha version of its mainnet this week. While not as famous as its fiat-backed competitors Tether and TrueUSD, Kowala by no means takes a back seat to everyone. Popular hardware wallet provider Ledger, for example, is integrating Kowala's kUSD into its models, making Kowala the first stablecoin to find support from a hardware wallet.

Lightning Strikes Devcon Apps, Point of Sale

Lightning Is Made at the #LightningHackday Series in Berlin

Aaron van Wirdum traveled to Berlin last week to cover the third installment in the Lightning Hackdays series. The gathering was reminiscent of those early Bitcoin conferences and Meetups: makeshift, structureless, but by no means lacking in energy and ingenuity. Among enthusiastic talks and plenty of brainstorming, a slew of intuitive projects were showcased, including a Lightning-powered candy dispenser and a Lightning-rendered 16-bit video game.

A Bit of Backtracking

ShapeShift Will Now Require "Basic Personal Details" for New Membership Program

Goldman Sachs Puts Plans for a Crypto Trading Desk on Backburner (Updated)

ShapeShift is rolling out a new membership program, one that will require know-your-customer (KYC). ShapeShift Membership, as it's called, will require users to submit "basic personal details" in return for higher trading limits and lower fees. Optional for now, the program will reportedly be mandatory later this year. Andreas Antonopoulos expressed his "disappointment" in the news, tweeting that it "[shows] that any centralized entity will be pushed in that direction."

Media outlets also jumped on a story this week that reported the untimely fate of Goldman Sachs's crypto trading desk. Quoting anonymous sources, Business Insider broke the false report, claiming that Goldman Sachs was nixing plans to establish the trading desk. The next day, September 6, 2018, CFO Martin Chavez decried the report as "fake news" at TechCrunch's Disrupt conference.

A Note on Privacy

Bitcoin as a Privacycoin: This Tech Is Making Bitcoin More Private

Many people in the mainstream community often regard Bitcoin as an anonymous currency, and while privacy was one of Satoshi Nakamoto's goals when he invented the coin, the feature hasn't held up. With the right know-how, the wrong user (we call them "spies") can decode a user's IP address from their wallet's public address. Luckily, there are half a dozen or so promising projects that are dedicating their time to enhancing privacy and frustrating attempts to deanonymize network users. In this month's cover story, we take a look at these projects, one by one, to see how they stack up and to measure their contribution to the ecosystem.


This article originally appeared on Bitcoin Magazine.

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