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S2 Ep. 9 - Teamblockchain's Blockchain Masterclass Feb 2020

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Kandungan disediakan oleh Frontier Tech Radio. Semua kandungan podcast termasuk episod, grafik dan perihalan podcast dimuat naik dan disediakan terus oleh Frontier Tech Radio atau rakan kongsi platform podcast mereka. Jika anda percaya seseorang menggunakan karya berhak cipta anda tanpa kebenaran anda, anda boleh mengikuti proses yang digariskan di sini https://ms.player.fm/legal.

This episode covers. The team blockchain. Masterclass for February, held on the 17th of February. Where I talk with Anthony Abell. Director and co-founder of Trust Me and T-P X about the property exchanges due to launch this year, which will revolutionise the ownership of property by making it liquid. Amongst other things, it will allow equity release on a much fairer basis and will help to power a whole new market by releasing liquidity around the world.

I talk also to Ferry Tilekens, who is working with a various groups, including government, in the Netherlands to work out the wrinkles in tokenization and normalise it for the economy. There's a huge educational aspect to this, as well as working on the taxonomy.

Finally, John Small, a programmer with over far 35 years experience in finance, supply chains and media and a deep understanding of mathematics and physics, which he brings to the blockchain world with a new insight and a project to go with it - to create something beyond blockchains that you might call a block-lattice with many advantages - especially or high volume use cases were adaptability and simplicity are at a premium. Could this be Blockchain 2.00 [00:01:38][0.0]

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Manage episode 310092989 series 3048077
Kandungan disediakan oleh Frontier Tech Radio. Semua kandungan podcast termasuk episod, grafik dan perihalan podcast dimuat naik dan disediakan terus oleh Frontier Tech Radio atau rakan kongsi platform podcast mereka. Jika anda percaya seseorang menggunakan karya berhak cipta anda tanpa kebenaran anda, anda boleh mengikuti proses yang digariskan di sini https://ms.player.fm/legal.

This episode covers. The team blockchain. Masterclass for February, held on the 17th of February. Where I talk with Anthony Abell. Director and co-founder of Trust Me and T-P X about the property exchanges due to launch this year, which will revolutionise the ownership of property by making it liquid. Amongst other things, it will allow equity release on a much fairer basis and will help to power a whole new market by releasing liquidity around the world.

I talk also to Ferry Tilekens, who is working with a various groups, including government, in the Netherlands to work out the wrinkles in tokenization and normalise it for the economy. There's a huge educational aspect to this, as well as working on the taxonomy.

Finally, John Small, a programmer with over far 35 years experience in finance, supply chains and media and a deep understanding of mathematics and physics, which he brings to the blockchain world with a new insight and a project to go with it - to create something beyond blockchains that you might call a block-lattice with many advantages - especially or high volume use cases were adaptability and simplicity are at a premium. Could this be Blockchain 2.00 [00:01:38][0.0]

  continue reading

79 episod

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At the close of the Bank of England's consultation on the Digital Pound Barry interviews Danny Kruger MP, of the UK Parliament's Treasury Select Committee, who oversee the project, discussed the deep implications of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) on financial stability and liberty. While Danny expressed concerns about the potential negative effects, he acknowledged that he and his colleagues on the Treasury Select Committee were not experts on the topic and that there was a general perception that CBDCs were a natural evolution of the digital revolution. Barry and Danny discussed the need for serious consideration at the legislative level regarding the introduction of a digital pound, as it could have implications for financial and economic stability. They also expressed concern about the lack of public engagement from the Bank of England's consultation and emphasized the importance of government and parliament's role in making decisions about the use of a digital pound. Danny and Barry discussed the potential risks and dangers of a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). They also discussed the need for greater attention and a new institution to ensure transparency and accountability in the use of CBDCs - the potential benefits of a digital money commissioner, with Danny saying "Yes, I do. I think that is a good suggestion, a digital commissioner of some sort" Danny congratulated Barry on raising the debate and they talked about working together to continue raising the debate towards creating the needed structures and safeguards for the future. Quotes include: " China is going full ahead. That in itself should cause us to pause and think about what we're doing." Q. James: “This seems to me something akin to rewriting part of a constitution, in the sense that it will live with us for generations to come. Do you feel that the Treasury Select Committee is… replete [with all it needs]? Kruger: No, not to approach the topic in that sense. No, definitely not. Nor should it be. I mean, if it's a constitutional question, that's not for the Treasury Select Committee. They're particularly focused on the Treasury's remit, which is to grow the economy, and to maintain stability and so on.” "We need to remain at the cutting edge of financial technology and market developments [but…] “The UK should not adopt a digital currency simply because other nations are doing so." "The case for a retail CBDC, in answer to your question, I don’t think has yet been made. It does have the sense of a solution looking for a problem." “There's a financial stability question. And then the other [that’s] more obvious and pertinent is liberty. What does it mean for you and me if we are being encouraged, or at what points does it become required, to hold our wealth in this new form? And what powers does government have to oversee these transactions? “Obviously they [governments] make a strong case that they wouldn't assume that power. But once the technology exists you can see the way that a crisis comes along, as it did for the Canadian government when they were besieged in Ottawa by a lot of angry anti-COVID truckers, they reach for the levers that are available to them.” These technical, technological, innovations are not neutral… By creating the thing, you put the country on a path to making use of it… But fundamentally it'll be for Parliament, not even government, [to decide] because Parliament would have to pass legislation for this… and I worry that we don't have the political culture and that we're not asking the right questions at the moment to ensure that that's what happens. “You also need distribution and individual liberty. And it might be that, as you suggest, some sort of statutory commissioner who has some meaningful sort of agency in the world of information and financial information could be the necessary stabilising influence [providing] the sense of security that the system needs so we can have a more genuinely distributed arrangement whereby people might well be holding their wealth in these innovative different forms” They said to us the introduction of a digital pound will not, in itself, increase the reduction in the use of cash when, of course, it will. It's unthinkable that it wouldn't. This will further squeeze cash out of the system. "It's unthinkable that it wouldn't. This will further squeeze cash out of the system." -…
 
Summary Jasmine and Barry discussed the Bank of England's consultation on creating a digital pound. Jasmine expressed her concerns about central bank digital currencies, stating that they allow for too much control and monitoring by the government. Barry and Jasmine discussed the differences between cryptocurrencies and central bank digital currencies, with Jasmine expressing concerns about the centralized nature of CBDCs and the potential for government control over people's finances. They also talked about the impact of taxation on small businesses and the extractive nature of the economy. Jasmine and Barry discussed the potential risks and benefits of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and how they have been implemented in different countries. They also talked about the possibility of abuse of power and loss of control for individuals once CBDCs become the only form of currency. Barry and Jasmine discussed the lack of media coverage on the restriction of access to cash in Nigeria and the potential dangers of CBDCs in terms of data privacy and inequality. They also expressed concern about the mainstream media's reluctance to report on alternative views and the need for more protests to protect individual freedoms. Barry and Jasmine discussed the potential implementation of CBDCs and the impact it could have on society. Jasmine suggested using cash, investing in gold and cryptocurrencies, and not keeping too much money in bank accounts. Barry and Jasmine discussed various alternative options to traditional banking and currency, including Tally Money, a gold-backed bank account and payment card. They also talked about potential collaborations in the future. Join us at the event: The Great Digital Pound Debate: Do We Need It, Is it Safe or Is It Great? Thu, Jun 1, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM BST https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7066732162867154946/…
 
Barry talks to David Palmer, Blockchain Lead at Vodaphone and Jamiel Sheikh, Founder & CEO of Chainhaus - a leading advisory, education, events and app studio about the rapid rise of DeFi and the advent of 'Central Bank Digital Currencies' in the week that the Bank of England announced its digital Pound project - closely following the digital Euro. Jamiel Sheikh reveals the activities of central banks around the world and talks about the coming digital battles he sees to establish DeFi - decentralised finance.…
 
In this fascinating conversation with David Palmer, a visionary, who is also the blockchain lead for Vodafone, we range widely across digital transformation, including the fact that we're all increasingly cyborgs living in a digital, as well as physical environment. The potential to increase human joy and human creativity through digital transformation, based on blockchain and DeFi, and the future at not just government level, but at every level, including the future of democracy, and of finance.…
 
So, today we interview. Finexos, the winners of the fair finance hackathon about their solution to the mountain of stress and distress already at a peak before the pandemic and the mental health crisis it is driving. And what can be done. President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists Dr Adrian James has predicted: "there is going to be a big surge – we refer to it as a tsunami – of mental illness as a result of the pandemic". Meanwhile according to the FCA 26 million people in the UK showing signs of difficulty in terms of their finances - via an an analysis of bank accounts. "So this is a massive problem. There's £450 billion of unsecured debt out there, where individuals in the UK are reliant on high interest revolving credit, just to meet day to day finances. So our challenge is to disrupt that circle of high interest, low disposable income - and so stress on the individual mental health." Says Steven Bone, chair of Finexos. As he points out this situation fundamentally bad for society - as UK poverty and the poverty trap is growing driving poverty, financial stress and anxiety. Pre pandemic over 20% of the UK population was in Poverty with 14.9 million consumers now behind on their bills and 5.7 million people in receipt of Universal Credit - many using food banks due to the cost of repaying debt. So our 'safety net' has been so shredded that many have no choice other than the high cost lenders. We talk about the five years of development to create an innovative fintech platform that can help people not just by ensuring their finances become more controllable and intuitive, but that they have support and better alternatives too. And the new solutions coming in the first half of 2021 - not a moment too soon! Watch the video interview at https://youtu.be/XTHrpDoGUko See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
What has gone wrong with capitalism? It seems it has taken a wrong turn. But how? Staring at the scenes of the redundant workers leaving Lehman Brothers in 2008 – followed by all the subsequent carnage - started, for me, a decade of thinking and research and that's yet to complete -seeking Humane Economics. Like millions of other people I knew then, in my gut, that something had gone wrong. That we're working harder and longer – yet increasingly ordinary people have trouble making ends meet, and many more live in fear that their jobs could disappear at any moment. The anger over the bank bailouts was palpable. And it's not going away. My guest today is Les Leopold, his book Runaway Inequality was, for me, something of a revelation not only putting flesh onto the bones I have been discovering but giving scale to the enormity of the situation we find ourselves in post COVID. Because he not only documents, from public sources, how this inequality has been growing since the 1980s, but how that it continues to accelerate to this day – and why. He also lays bare the mechanisms that explain why the assumption that market forces will reassert balance has proved to be wrong. The mechanisms behind the accelerating inequalities that means that in that time the average CEO has moved from being able to own the equivalent of 45 homes, and his workers 1, to being able to own the equivalent of 829 – while his workers increasingly have little or no chance of own one. That last statistic – the ‘Generation Rent’ one – is the most crucial one of course! Condemning a generation to a lifetime of housing and financial insecurity, given that, due to this process of financialisaton, rents continue to level-up consuming all available income, making saving near impossible. The book explains not only why capitalism is out of balance but also will continue to accelerate inequality. Until we do something about it! You can find his book at https://runawayinequality.org/buy-the-book/ Watch the video interview at https://youtu.be/HyVUqi1sFwA See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
In this episode we will be talking to another big-thinker: Andy Wilkins, founder of Vision4Health about the future of health and health services post Covid. Working with leaders in the field his vision is of a revitalised service that, turned on its head, wraps itself around us as people (rather than patients) rather than, as now, the other way around. That becomes a part of our day to day environment rather than something we visit when unwell – and can detect the warning signs before that happens. The convergence of machine learning and AI, genomics, big data analytics and the internet of things are creating a new context enabling personalised medicine - as a service. Andy's research is looking forward 10 to 15 years and using systems thinking to create a new vision. “There're huge opportunities to sort of hack disease [with] the net result of a population able to spend more time living well... more active and productive, and creative at work. So this will feed through to the economy. And also it has the potential to reduce the demand on a current health and care service, which is inexorably moving higher in terms of costs than the economy can afford. Because at the moment, we're not very effective at looking after people. This really turns everything upside down... a really exciting vision for the future.” We also touch on what might happen if we do not grab the myriad opportunities – such as the disintermediation of public healthcare by silicon valley tech companies. We touch on ‘Valuism’ (a subject for a later interview with its founder, Paul Barnett) in a world where money dominates the Neo-liberal era, where maximising shareholder value has become “not only a culture but a fiduciary duty” and the economy and society is measured primarily by GDP – the economy comes first and everything comes second. Thus financialising almost every aspect of life. But that way of thinking creates externalities, whether it's polluting the environment damaging the ozone layer or global warming - things which historically been ‘off balance sheet’ - not accounted for in our economics... We are now seeing these ‘externalities’ coming back to haunt us because we live in a finite world with finite resources, which we can't exploit forever.... Watch the video interview at https://youtu.be/y1V1LgvGiRk See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
Professor Ronald MacDonald is a Research Professor in Macroeconomics and International Finance in the Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow. His previous positions at the University were Bonar Macfie Chair of Economics (2005-2006), and the Adam Smith Chair of Political Economy (2006-2015). He has consistently ranked in the top 1% of the IDEAS/RePec ranking of economists, and was awarded an OBE in 2015 for services to Economic Policy. We discuss his report: 'The Post Pandemic New Normal' and it's follow-up calling for a rethink about the UK economy post-covid and discuss his insights and prescription for the #CovidSpring that show some marked similarities to some of the conclusions of humane economics. Including the need to “move away from the shareholder capitalism model” based on “short-termism and value extraction” to a “stakeholder model based on value creation” and discover that while there are string signs that some business leaders are moving in this direction that this is not being reflected in university teaching. Other key points include: We need to reboot the banking sector so it helps industry and business create jobs Recalibrating the economy so it’s fairer for ordinary workers. GDP - why it's bad for us and what are the alternatives? The need for “a new form of social contract " as we move out of the pandemic. The government should “instigate a wellbeing fiscal stimulus… that has a major focus on greening the economy”. That also means “no return to austerity policies” Let's... spare the economy from mass unemployment and guide it on a path to a New Normal What might the #NewNormal look like? What are the alternatives / what happens if we carry on as we are? Prof. McDonald explains the asset management has made the economy very much focused on value extraction and rent seeking rather than value creation and that this has been hugely detrimental to the UK economy, having led to short-termism in investment and failure in the UK economy including in the banking sector and finance. Where policymakers have previously thought that the shift to finance, as the basis of the economy was a good thing. It's now clearly evident that this is a dead end and we're seeing a movement away from shareholder capitalism and towards stakeholder capitalism – but without this being reflected in university teaching. Meanwhile the pandemic is opening minds and allowing people to reprioritize and think about what kind of society we want. More on Prof. MacDonald's work is here: https://policyscotland.gla.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/PSPostPandemicNewNormalRonaldMacDonald.pdf & https://policyscotland.gla.ac.uk/this-time-it-has-to-be-different/ and a useful summary here: https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/18531122.revolutionary-new-vision-post-covid-scottish-economy/ Watch the video interview at https://youtu.be/QgHqZJLzqqE See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
Before we get fully into gear to explore the #CovidSpring and so the future let's take a glance at the past and the present Covid Winter with a look at the effects of predatory capitalism unleashed via the ongoing story of the Mortgage Prisoners. This is an extraordinary story of the toxic economics we have in action involving the FCA, the British government selling British citizens into a form of modern slavery, trapped with their abusers, who behave without balance or restraint threatening financial ruin and visiting ill heath, mental and physical, on their 'customers' via an as yet unclosed loophole in the law. Despite censure over years culminating in a recent report from the London School of Economics the government continues to evade its clear responsibility to the 250,000 plus mortgage holders (according to the FCA and LSE - more according to many other) - plus family members, with no sign of relief or redress in sight. You can read more about the experience of the Mortgage Prisoners at UKMortgagePrisoners.com Worse still the 'loophole' that allows mortgage holders to be effectively stripped of their rights for profit has, astonishingly, yet to be closed or even assurances forthcoming in the face of credible reports that the very same predators are on the prowl again with millions more British bank customers in their sights. Watch the video at https://youtu.be/8GXN7xvN1u0 See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
Welcome to the #CovidSpring series in which we look through the Covid winter, which we are now enduring, to the coming spring beyond the crisis and harness some of the world's finest minds to together think about what kind of world we want to create. What kind of world we want and need - in search of humane economics. We'll be asking the question: Why is how did our economy become so toxic? Why do we have a plague of crises ranging from climate change and diversity loss through runaway inequality and insecurity that has impoverished millions of people - adding millions more people year on year? To the pandemic itself, and why we failed to take the measures we knew were necessary? Looking to what all these crises have in common - the roots. The mechanisms that have brought this about - around the world. We'll be asking what we need to do to create a more Humane Economics. In the #CovidSpring. Before we dive into that, right at the start, we'll look be taking a look at the reality of international predatory capitalism right now. An aspect of the current emergency that threatens to throw hundreds of thousands of Brits into the arms of the most predatory of Wall Street capitalists. Watch the video at https://youtu.be/ZDUbQCwNf4Y See HumaneEconomics.co for more and to join the linear-conference and network .…
 
As the masterclass moved online... Dan Green and Sarah Beaumont from Baker Botts explore cryptoassets and stablecoins. Maria Graza Vigliotti talking about her recently launched book - “Executive Guide to Blockchain”- using Smart Contracts and Digital Currencies in your Business. Taweh Beysolow II, Aludra Capital’s chief data scientist, joining us from San Francisco to discuss: How Artificial Intelligence can enhance Digital Asset Investment Strategies.…
 
What if Libra Was LiveToday? The world was in a different kind of uproar for months after Facebook and their alliance announced Libra. Then it was that senators were foaming at the mouth and it was the central banks that came close to rioting. Amid similar Trump-inspired scenes of protest on the streets of some of the cities of America today what if Libra now existed after all, quietly in some lab somewhere? Well it does – not in a lab but ‘out in the wild’, on thousands of mobile phones downloaded from the app stores. The Strange, but true, story of Moneybrain BiPS This is the strange, but true, story of Moneybrain BiPS. Conceived in England’s, Alderley Edge well before Libra had been heard of by a company regulated by the FCA, but with precisely the same structure and legal underpinnings as Libra itself – including a foundation: the BiPS Foundation.…
 
Today, mid covid-crisis and with banks under increasing criticism I interview Lee Birkett, founder and CEO of P2P platform JustUs who today wrote to the UK Prime Minister, the Chancellor and the Business Secretary, asking they open the doors to #Fintech so that business can be helped now, when it's most needed, rather than in a month or two's time - and too late for many businesses. Banks don't want competition but in a crisis it's all hands to the pumps and fintech has come together and can deliver at scale and in time to keep business is alive. It's time for the banks lobbyists to stand aside and allow fintech to do the job that they cannot. Please: 1. Sign the Petition 2. Join the LinkedIn Group 3. Read, like and share Lee Birkett's open letter to the PM…
 
A HiveMind Explores the #NewNormal #BeyondCovid2020 On the 20th of March 2020 life in the UK changed forever when the government, a conservative government to boot, created a safety net for the population as well as for businesses and began to pay the wages of a significant proportion of the population for the duration of the crisis. Around the world the coronavirus is disrupting at least this deeply in many places. The way forward looks difficult, challenging. But what is also clear is that there is no way back. The definition of normal is suspended. For how many months - we do not know? Initially 3 but it could be 6, 9, 12 or 18. No one really knows. All we can say for certain right now is the definition of normal will never be the same again. Whenever that day comes we will still be grappling with climate change and many of the other forces we were grappling with before. But there will be a new normal. Earlier in the week on a day when I had had a stream of phone calls from people asking me for, or offering me, ideas about all this, some of the best minds in the country and across the world, I had just decided it was probably time for the next in the series of #GreatDebates when my friends from Fifth9 rang (have you noticed how many more phone calls rather than emails were all now getting) to suggest much the same thing. So it was that's on on the afternoon of March 20th as the prime minister and Chancellor we're preparing to lay out their ground shifting plan to support the nation, it's businesses and people, through the next year that I gathered, electronically of course, together a team of expert thinkers who have already proven an ability to explore the future. Kate Baucherel is a writer and acclaimed novelist, an experienced finance professional and thought leader in the blockchain space. Her books include the recently published "Blockchain Hurricane.” Johnny Fry is a denizen of the city and money markets and knows more about what's happening in crypto and blockchain then almost anyone - partly because for the last 2 years he has been producing a weekly report called digital bytes analysing what's happening around the world. Yakeen Prabdial is a partner at Fifth9, that is helping lead the mobile telecoms world, on which we all now all rely, increasingly so in these times, into the 5G future and beyond. And Lee Birkett, who is CEO and founder of MoneyBrain (who have created BiPS) and the JustUs P2P lending platform is one of the UK's leading exponents of fintech for the people - including the revolutionary #PeopleMortgage, and champion of #FairerFinance Jonny Fry launched us off by painting a chilling picture of the present and recent past, with us all - governments and people - in denial of the fact that the world is awash with debt and close to drowning, the levers of the economy no longer working, with interest rates now negative in many places and close to that in others and money being printed at an alarming rate so as to raise the spectre of hyperinflation ala the Weimar Republic, and more recently Mugabe's Zimbabwe. Followed by this hammer blow - raising the question as to whether it might survive. So I started by asking Lee and the panel "is it really that bad? And what comes next? The answers were revealing! The barriers to 'digital' are already falling all around us - including adoption by the elderly, and soon. of digital identity. People are already 'working from home' in unprecedented numbers and this is about to mushroom - as those who did not think they could, discover otherwise. Nor are many of them going back - so creating a potentially massive slump in demand for transport and especially office space and nowhere more so than in London. It's long been said that London is another country with different mores and that too has been apparent with cafes, pubs and High Street's more generally all but deserted around the country for the last few days while they continue to heave in Central London - necessitating the imposition of laws to close them. Digital medicine is taking off like a rocket with online consultations now the norm. And connectivity, broadband and beyond, has become the fourth utility. Before long we may all have an official government provided digital wallet into which may be deposited food tokens, on a use it or lose It basis, as a better delivery mechanism than money into bank accounts. TA precursor to the introduction of the digital pound perhaps? Meanwhile necessity being the mother of invention, as in the second world war and the aircraft industry, innovation will be accelerated rather than the reverse. The meaning and nature of social media will also change. Now that "We're All In This Together" perhaps they will be room to challenge the idea and attitude that's for four decades has brought us to this point... That "Greed is good". I certainly hope so.…
 
Surrey University have launched an exciting new crowdfunding initiative in concert with the local council and local charities. Surrey's crowdfunding platform Gaggle Connect is hosting a raft of campaigns including one to expand the 'Library of Things' service - which brings a new dimension to the sharing economy. Barry talks to Jim Sears who is programme Director MSc in Entrepreneurship & Innovation & Senior Teaching Fellow in Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Together with Helen Leech from Surrey library service - who run one of the growing number of LoT services and Benz Thanida a student running their campaign. Could this be a pattern for the future of Crowdfunding and the Sharing Economy?…
 
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