Mit der Blockchain Bar versteht wirklich jeder die Blockchain!
Amazon, Facebook, Google – Blockchain offers businesses new chances against big platforms
- 12. December 2017
- Posted by: Collin Müller
- Category: Strategy
No CommentsBlockchain, the technology behind Bitcoin, renders middlemen obsolete. This can lead to decentralised, global markets in which success depends more on value for money and less on sheer size. Small and new players will regain better market opportunities.
How we see the hype around Bitcoin
- 12. December 2017
- Posted by: Collin Müller
- Category: Technology
Despite its current heyday, Bitcoin may be a temporary phenomenon. However, the basic principles invented with Bitcoin’s blockchain will remain.
Smart contracts with the blockchain
- 7. June 2017
- Posted by: Collin Müller
- Category: Strategy
Blockchains re-decentralising the Internet
- 7. February 2017
- Posted by: Collin Müller
- Category: Strategy
More and more monopolies are developing on the Internet, hindering innovation and equal opportunities. Blockchain technology can be used to organise many services on the network in a decentralised way, for the benefit of consumers, innovation and competition.
Bitcoin and the blockchain solving one of the biggest problems of the Internet
- 19. October 2016
- Posted by: Collin Müller
- Category: Strategy
In 2008, a man named Satoshi Nakamoto introduced the electronic currency Bitcoin and the associated global payment system. Bitcoin uses mathematical methods to handle secure financial transactions over the Internet without the need for a central clearing house such as a bank or a company like Paypal. In the past, if you wanted to pay for a book in a shop, it was very easy. You took the money out of your pocket, handed it over to the cashier, who took it, gave you a receipt and the transaction was done. The money went through no other hands, no one documented the exchange and yet both sides were sure that things were done properly. Nowadays, this can be much more complicated. When paying on the Web, it usually takes at least three middlemen to complete a simple process such as paying for a book.