Archive for the ‘Free Software’ Category

Cryptomania: The good, the bad, and the ugly – Brookings Institution

Throughout financial history, many speculative manias have been characterized by a repeated mix of basic ingredients: from the enthusiasm of uninformed investors motivated by disruptive innovations, the inevitable illusion of easy profits to the infallible reference to the paradigm shift that will supposedly sustain the momentum over time, often conveniently seasoned with abundant global liquidity.

All manias end in the same way, with a sharp correction that collapses prices like a house of cards as the classic narrative of Kindleberger (1978) and the more recent one of Reinhart and Rogoff (2009) pointed out. In a nutshell, its another case of greed negating fear until it is too late for anything but panic.

The recent saga of the crypto ecosystem reproduces these elements, enhanced by a techno-anarcho-libertarian stick-it-to-the-man attitude against the established two-tiered monetary and financial system. The search for the benefits of anonymitymainly against taxes and, occasionally, the lawand for complete decentralization in transactionstrying to get rid of noncompetitive fees of the financial industry and the seignorage of exploitative central bankstended to generate many elements of financial fragility, and, occasionally, outright fraud.

Triggered by the Feds monetary tightening and over a few weeks, the crypto debacle comprised a succession of dramatic events, including:

All that against the backdrop of a sell-off that printed, at the time of this writing, a vertiginous correction of roughly 66 percent from its November 2021 $3-trillion peak, after growing explosively in the bubbling pandemic years, courtesy of the oversized monetary and fiscal impulses in core economies. The collapse surprised both mom-and-pop savers and large professional investors alike, and promptedan open letter toCongress, signed by more than 1,500 technologists, urging the body to take a critical, skeptical approach toward industry claims that crypto-assets are an innovative technology that is unreservedly good.

So how good (or bad) are crypto assets for healthy financial development?

Since the introduction of bitcoin at the beginning of 2009, the number of cryptocurrencies has soared to some 15,000, although in many cases they are mere replicas with very low trading volumes in search of unwary investors (the top 20 crypto assets account for 90 percent of market capitalization). Alongside this proliferationand inefficient inherent fragmentation opposed to the needs of a sound payment systemunregulated activities such as loans and leverage, and new varieties (stablecoins) have emerged to address some of the most ostensible weaknesses of the first crypto assets.

While they currently represent less than 1 percent of the global financial market, and their interconnections with it are stillluckilyquite limited, the recent trend of explosive growth, if undeterred, could pose potential risks to financial stability, just as the tiny subprime market did in 2008. And this is true not just in emerging economies where the lack of monetary credibility and limited financial access can foster currency substitution and credit disintermediation or cryptoizationthe digital version of dollarization. In advanced economies, competition from the large technological platforms in the provision of digital means of payment could limit national monetary autonomy, lead to concentrated market structures as a result of network economies, and add to financial fragility as the append-only, irreversible nature of blockchain transactions makes the unwinding of system errorsessential to any payment systemalmost impossible.

More than a decade after its launch, bitcoin has so far failed in its original objective of establishing itself as a suitable substitute that fully fulfills the functions of money. Paradoxically, bitcoins original call to replace central bankswhich ensure price stability by elastically matching money demandwith a decentralized scheme based on a rigid supply of a unique cryptocurrency that replicates the barbarous relic logic of the gold standard and its deflationary bias may end up in hyperinflation due to the uncontrolled spread of competing cryptocurrencies.

Lacking intrinsic economic value, crypto prices are inherently volatile, as they are tied exclusively to the fluctuations of their demandthe opposite of what one would expect of a good unit of account. Moreover, because of their decentralized nature, their application cannot be escalated without inefficiently high fees, congestion problems, or security risks (the so called Buterins Trilemma). Finally, if massively adopted, they could generate an environmental disaster due to the energy-intensive proof-of-work of most crypto systems. Unsurprisingly, then, cryptos have so far failed to play a significant role as a reliable means of paymentwith the exception of informal, illegal, or criminal transactionsleaving them as a vehicle for die-hard speculators, herd investors, and institutional asset managers belatedly lured by their alleged diversification advantages, if not just by FOMO-inducing hype.

A priori, stablecoins are in a different class altogether, their main purpose being precisely to overcome the intractable volatility of conventional cryptocurrencies. Stablecoins come in two types. Type 1, algorithmic, is based on smart contracts that defend the peg by buying or selling it against other crypto assets in a scheme worryingly reminiscent of a Ponzi game, as the Terra-Luna fiasco vividly illustrated. Type 2, custodial, follows the principle of a traditional currency board (like Hong Kongs long-standing exchange rate arrangement): The supply -of coins- is fully matched by a stock of liquid investment-grade assets denominated in the peg currency, so that holders can readily exchange them one to one on demand. In principle, only the custodial type might earn the stable moniker, but how stable are stablecoins in reality?

Two conditions are needed for the scheme to work. The first one is fairly obvious: There are no substitutes for actual reserve assets, the backing should be real and easily verifiable. In practice this has not always been the case: For example, doubts about the backing of Tether last year led to the companys belated revelation that, indeed, less than half of the stock was actually backed by high quality and liquid assets (HQLA) like U.S. Treasurys, with the rest comprised of assets that could rapidly lose value under financial stress.

The second condition is more subtle and technical: Stablecoin deposits cannot be on-lent. If they are, part of these loans would go into new deposits, which could also be on-lent, multiplying the stock of crypto-denominated assets in excess of the original, fully backed supply of stablecoins, and exposing the whole scheme to a run that exceeds the stock of reserves (as in the collapse of Argentinas currency board in 2001).

Now, if a stable stablecoin cannot be on-lenta condition that we have elsewhere called the stablecoin paradoxand merely represents a digital avatar of a stock of liquid reserves denominated in the peg currencyand leaving aside the less than virtuous role of facilitating illegal activities: What explains their popularity and their relatively large turnover? Stablecoins are mainly used as a vehicle currency to support a wide range of endogamic DeFi products and services, posting collateral for other crypto operations or as insurance against hackers, lost keys, smart contract failures, and other cyber mishaps, without much contact with the real economy.

Add to that the absurd valuations, the endogamic trading prone to contagion and domino effects, the need of protection of small investors unfamiliar with the risks of opaque assets, the information gaps and the unclear legal status of crypto assets, and the lack of a liquidity backstop, and one starts to see why central banks around the globe have started to take the crypto revolution as a challenge to financial stability. While this has led some observers to argue that stablecoins should be banned altogether, central banks have so far adopted a more nuanced two-way response, requiring that they be properly regulatedand throwing their own central bank digital currency (CBDC) into the mix.

Unlike cryptocurrencies, a CBDC is a digital token that represents a legal claim on the central bankin other words, digital cash. As of this writing, out of the growing number of central banks exploring the feasibility of their own CBDC, 28 have already launched pilots (including one in China with roughly 260 million users), and at least three retail CBDC projects (in the Bahamas, Nigeria, and the Eastern Caribbean) are already in place.

Is this a new crypto-related fad, or the future of digital payments?

For starters, there is an issue that never ceases to be relevant to emerging economies: financial inclusion at reasonable costs. Private payment service providers (PSPs) such as PayPal, like banks and credit cards, tend to be concentrated and to charge high feeswhich in less developed economies tends to favor cash transactions and informalitywith several wholesale CBDCs focused on reducing cross-border transaction costsmost notably, of remittances. Moreover, in line with their inclusion mandate, retail CBDCs could allow for instant and final payments on a 24/7 basis at a negligible or zero charge for retail users, including those deemed unprofitable by private providers.

One could argue that many of those features are already covered by existing or forthcoming fast retail payment systems (FPRS). Based on a public data architecture and on the interoperability of different payment platforms, FPRS already allow for greater competition between banks and PSPs offering transactional accounts, while avoiding the pitfalls of monopolistic fees. Since their first launch in Korea in 2001, more than 60 jurisdictions have introduced FPRS, and many others are planning to do so. In Brazil, for example, after only 18 months of implementation, more than 70% of adults have used Pix, with 50 million first digital payment users. Indias successful Unified Payments Interface exhibits a comparable success, and Mexicos Codi and Argentinas Transferencias 3.0 are also making progress.

This notwithstanding, the continued research on CBDCs reflects additional concerns. In a context of ongoing digital innovation, many central banks fear a continuous decline in the demand for cash that risk losing the grip on monetary autonomy. On the upside (and more speculatively), a remunerated CBDC could potentially enlarge the monetary policy space, giving central banks new instruments to elude deflationary traps (a topical concern not so long ago).

The CBDC versus crypto debate is only starting and no doubt exceeds its more technical, monetary aspects. The crypto zeitgeist, like the hacker ethics of the 60s or the free software movements of the 80s, is often imbued with a cultural narrative that permeates lifestyles and ideologiesfrom tattooed billionaires to kamikaze politicians.

But ultimately it remains a financial issue that highlights the risks of mistaking technological ingenuity for monetary wisdom, jumping into the future without giving the future enough time to introduce itself.

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Cryptomania: The good, the bad, and the ugly - Brookings Institution

Chinese city of Shenzhen offers free money to boost chip industry – The Register

The Chinese city of Shenzhen has proposed a plan to lure semiconductor makers, offering subsidies to the tune of 20 percent of a qualifying applicant's annual investment, up to a maximum of $1.4 million a year.

Once the companies have arrived, the proposal would see the Chinese city assisting in things like obtaining finance and making use of government service and boards.

But the Chinese coastal metropolis, which sits between Hong Kong and the rest of the mainland, doesn't only want to bring home the making of the product itself, it's looking to bring in talent as well. A cool $700,000 was promised to companies looking to bring in "eligible talents" alongside other measures to bring overseas expertise back to China.

The city has a laundry list of achievements it hopes to make through the program: 21 to be exact.

That list includes finding breakthroughs in core products, improving manufacturing capabilities, catching up with high-end packaging and testing, accelerating compound semiconductor and electronic design automation technology, growing import and export trade, and more.

The proposal from the Shenzhen Municipal Development and Reform Commission specifies, through another lengthy list, which technologies qualify for the free cold hard cash:

Open-sourced RISC-V architecture was also namechecked as a core chip product the commission would like to see breakthrough and is eligible for that 20 percent annual funding or 10 million CNY ($1.4 million).

Its inclusion provides a hint that China may see the immature tech as a way forward during a time of restrictive US sanctions.

Last week, the US Commerce Department added 31 Chinese firms to a list that effectively bars them from importing American chip and manufacturing tools. The US Bureau of Industry also recently revised rules on exporting semiconductor electronic design software and test equipment.

Last month, the US Commerce Department passed a requirement for US companies that make chip equipment to receive explicit licensing before exporting to China.

The Shenzhen Municipal Development and Reform Commission encourages "relevant units and people from all walks of life" to give feedback on the proposal before November 8, 2022.

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Chinese city of Shenzhen offers free money to boost chip industry - The Register

Tech companies want Alta. premier to wade into battle over ‘software engineer’ title – Winnipeg Free Press

Canadian tech companies are calling on the new premier of Alberta to intervene after a regulatory group tooklegal action over job titles such as software engineer.

More than 30 signatories of a letter sent to Danielle Smith on Friday say the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta (APEGA) has taken the aggressive position that software engineers must be regulated, and subject to onerous, restrictive, and unnecessary certification requirements.

The signatories, which include executives from Helcim, Aimso and Neo Financial, see software engineer as a standard job title for anyone building technical programs and argue APEGA shouldnt be treating it as a role in need of certification and regulation like professional engineers.

APEGA is actively targeting companies in Alberta with legal action to restrict us from using globally competitive job titles and descriptions, reads the letter orchestrated by the Council of Canadian Innovators (CCI), a national tech advocacy organization.

The signatories cite APEGA lawsuits against tech companies that use variations on the engineer title. Theywant Smith to act and remove the regulatory red tape they say hampers their ability to compete for global tech talent, which has long been lured to the U.S. instead with promises of big job titles and even bigger salaries.

Some companies have considered relocating because they find this red tape extremely challenging to deal with and will need to hire more engineers, says CCI President Benjamin Bergen.

Youll see companies open offices in other jurisdictions where they actually use the correct terminology.

He argues this is a case of a regulator which has overstepped on an issue that hasnt seen this level of action anywhere else in the world.

The premiers office referred a request for comment to the minister of labour and immigrations press secretary, Roy Dallmann.

Dallmann said his office encourages CCI and APEGA to find a mutually agreeable solution and promised to work with both groups to resolve the issue because it is concerned by any regulations that impede our competitiveness.

APEGA said in a release that the term engineer comes with a licensed and ethical set of responsibilities and accountabilities. It said this is the same for other regulated professions, such as the health and legal professions.

You would not want someone to operate on you in the province if they are not licensed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta, said Jay Nagendran, APEGA registrar and chief executive officer.

By that same token, you do not want someone designing your pacemaker or self-driving car if they are not a licensed engineer. That puts peoples lives at risk something APEGA takes very seriously.

Nagendran also noted that software engineering is a nationally and internationally recognized discipline of engineering.

APEGAs website says it has the legal right and requirement to restrict the practice and use of titles linked to engineering and geoscience to licensed individuals and companies.

On top of traditional titles like professional engineer, professional geologist and professional geophysicist, it says those who are unlicensed cannot use the word engineer combined with any name, title, description, letter, symbol or abbreviation that implies they are licensed with APEGA in job titles, on resumes or on social media.

APEGA maintains this is because the public may believe that you have the right to practice engineering or geoscience and this can endanger public safety.

An open letter signed by the leaders of each provincial and territorial engineering regulator in Canada in July said use of software engineer, computer engineer and other information technology titles with the engineer suffix is prohibited everywhere in Canada unless the person using it is licensed by one of their regulatory groups.

Engineers Canada, the national body for the provincial and territorial associations, also points out on its website that there is legal precedent on the matter. An Alberta judge ordered an injunction against someone not registered with APEGA who was using software engineer online in 2019.

The licensing of workers is common in many professions, including the legal and medical fields, because its seen as crucial to keeping workers ethical and competent when public safety is at risk. However, it is seldom, if ever, used to regulate those in the tech sector, including workers who build apps and other software and hardware.

Talent is absolutely the most important input to our future success and our ability to attract and retain talent is critical so if were going to have regulators creating a hostile environment for companies we cant be competitive, says Sam Pillar, chief executive of Jobber.

When his Edmonton-based home services platform first heard from APEGA about its use of engineering titles, he says it put disclaimers on its website to differentiate its workers from the positions APEGA regulates. Later, Jobber was sued by APEGA in December 2021.

The matter is still winding through court, Pillar said, adding that its time for the government to step in because its dragging on and affecting companies as big as Google and Apple along with small firms in greater need of talent.

A 2019 report from the Information and Communications Technology Council, a not-for-profit organization offering labour policy advice, predicted demand for digitally-skilled talent in Canada would reach 193,000 by 2022 and more than 305,000 by 2023.

A 2020 addendum accounting for COVID-19 forecast that demand would be reduced by nearly 24 per cent and said under new baseline scenarios, the digital economy is expected to experience demand for 147,000 workers by 2022, with total employment reaching nearly two million.

The 2019 government-funded report listed software developers, data scientists and analysts, cybersecurity workers and information technology support specialists among the most in-demand positions.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 14, 2022.

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Tech companies want Alta. premier to wade into battle over 'software engineer' title - Winnipeg Free Press

Mumbai: Security and surveillance to be tightened on Bandra Worli Sea Link – Free Press Journal

Mumbai: The deadly double accident that occurred earlier this month on the Bandra Worli Sea Link has prompted authorities to adapt additional safety measures to ensure fatalities are reduced on the iconic bridge.

New incident management system, a software, will be put into place that will send outalertsto multiple agencies as well as to the vehicular traffic driving on the sea link within half a minute of any incident occurring.

This system will alert the toll operators, quick response team, put up messages on visual digital signposts, traffic authorities, etc. said an official who was part of the meeting on Tuesday to enhance safety on the sea link.

Additional set of Standard Operating Procedures will also be introduced in ensuring better response measures.

Currently there are sixspeedcamerasinstalled on the bridge connecting Bandra and Worli.Moresuchcameraswill be installed. There is a possibility that the location of thesecameraswill be regularly changed to record the traffic rule violators.

Enforcement of traffic rules and bringing traffic violators to book also needs to be increased. Drunken driving tests will be carried out randomly on the sea link to disallow them from putting lives at risk, shared a source.

Moreover, a new Quick Response Team vehicle that is equipped with metal cutters will be brought in in a few days. A crash barrier vehicle will also be kept at the accident spot in case there is a breakdown of any vehicle.

Among other things, safety messages will be screened on the public visual system and some glow signs will also be installed.

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Mumbai: Security and surveillance to be tightened on Bandra Worli Sea Link - Free Press Journal

Idexo Launches Free Soulbound Tokens and NFT Creation Software With Unlimited Smart Contracts and NFT Min – Benzinga

LONDON, Oct. 3, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- idexo is pleased to announce the launch of free Soulbound Token, NFT and Royalty NFT creation software, enabling anyone to draft and deploy an unlimited number of smart contracts and mint an unlimited number of NFTs using a simple no code SaaS tool.

How the system works:

"We're very pleased to be able offer these free tools to help users and companies unlock their NFT and SBT innovations," says Greg Marlin, CEO/CTO, "We can confidently say that there is no easier or quicker way to get up and running building key SBT and NFT use cases. Especially for traditional companies, not having to procure and manage blockchain gas tokens to get started means much less friction in a corporate environment and over the long haul, having something that feels familiar like email credits you get from an email provider breeds comfort and predictability."

The types of smart contracts a user can launch with this tool are capped and uncapped Soulbound Tokens, NFTs and Royalty NFTs. Soulbound Tokens are NFTs that are non-transferable and unlock key use cases such as A, B and C. Royalty NFTs have a set and updateable commission rate that is paid to a specified wallet address whenever a secondary sale transaction is made. This is particularly appealing to artists and event holders, among others.

ABOUT IDEXO

idexo envisions a world where decentralized applications pervade every industry in the $88Trillion/year world economy the way the Internet does.

idexo's mission is to empower innovators to create these industry-disrupting applications.

MEDIA CONTACTCompany: idexoName: Greg MarlinEmail: 345886@email4pr.comCity: LondonCountry: United KingdomWebsite: https://idexo.comPhone: +44 20 8089 1372

SOURCE idexo

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Idexo Launches Free Soulbound Tokens and NFT Creation Software With Unlimited Smart Contracts and NFT Min - Benzinga