Bitcoin Creates Digital Ownership For The First Time

Bitcoin Sovereignty: Part One

So, you have taken the orange pill and are now going down the Bitcoin rabbit hole. You may be wondering what’s at the bottom? What is the core innovation of Bitcoin, from which all of wonderland is created? The answer may surprise you.

Along your Bitcoin adventure, you will meet many fascinating characters. They will tell you Bitcoin is many things: digital gold, a store of value, digital scarcity, peer-to-peer cash, proof of work. But at the bottom of the rabbit hole, we find something even deeper, an entirely new type of property rights — an entirely new type of ownership.

What we can own, and how we protect those property rights, lies at the very core of the type of society we live in, and the sovereignty we have to lead the lives we choose. If we can’t own the things that are important to us, we can’t own our own destiny, our choices are constrained, and we’re impoverished. Freedom is a very abstract term, but it is made concrete when you recognize that it means ownership. Freedom is ownership of yourself, your choices and your property.

The way we operationalize freedom is through property rights. Every single human right is effectively a form of property rights. Your ability to make sure nobody attacks you, that’s ownership of your body. Your ability to decide whether or not to get a vaccination, that’s ownership of your health. Your ability to travel, to speak your mind, to create things, these are all forms of ownership of your body and mind.

At the end of the Bitcoin rabbit hole is a new kind of ownership, more subtle and powerful than any we have had before. A new type of property with more powerful rights protection than any we have had before that provides us all with an unprecedented path to self-sovereignty and freedom.

Bitcoin Is Digital Property Rights

Until Bitcoin came around, there was no such thing as digital ownership.

Sure, you could be on the internet, but you couldn’t own anything on it. Music? Copied. Your search history? Owned by Google. Your connections with friends? Owned by Facebook. Your opinions? Owned by Twitter and censored by Twitter. Even PayPal, which was supposedly designed to provide you with a free market in which you could buy, sell and own things, saw them reserve the right for themselves to kick you off their platform, confiscate all your funds or censor your transactions.

A world without ownership is a public toilet.

Nobody cares about public toilets, and they are very frequently disgusting. Everyone uses them, no one wants to keep them clean. A lack of property rights on the micro level gives you a public toilet.

A lack of property rights on the societal level gives you the Berlin Wall.

Berlin was split into two, almost as a natural experiment in what happens when you provide one group of people with secure ownership and leave another group without it. What happened in Germany was what happened everywhere this same experiment has been tried: People in the place with property rights became more prosperous, while those in the place that didn’t provide those rights had to build a wall to keep people in because the people didn’t own property, the people became property.

The Mystery Of Missing Productivity Growth

This helps us to understand a mystery. For over 25 years now we’ve had the world wide web and people were predicting that by connecting the world the internet would create phenomenal prosperity and greatly increase economic growth but instead we’ve seen economic stagnation. Wages have stagnated, economic growth has slowed and become completely reliant on money printing, just to stay above zero. The mystery is how could this be?

Well, part of the answer is we married this 21st century technology, the internet, to a system of economic sophistication straight from the bronze age. Therefore, the internet owners, like Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos, are the only sovereigns — modern day pharaohs — who instead of controlling the Nile and the water streams control the servers and the data streams. This leaves you, we, us, as the serfs. The pharaohs have thrived while we have stagnated.

But then there is Bitcoin, a democratic revolution for the digital sphere in the same way that Athens and Rome were democratic revolutions for the ancient world. Democratic in the original sense: Demos meaning the common political unit of the people. Bitcoin is the invention that provides a way of protecting the rights of individuals. Bitcoin is a global jurisdiction of a new kind: Providing borderless, permissionless property rights to all its censorship-resistant citizens. Permissionless because it relies on no pharaoh. Censorship resistant because no pharaoh can stop it.

Bitcoin Is A New Flourishing

Societies flourish when people are provided with such secure property rights and know that what they create and exchange voluntarily with others will remain theirs.

Until Bitcoin, the power to protect and secure ownership rights was based on the logic of violence: Either you needed to protect yourself from violence or had to rely on governments or other powerful groups to protect those rights for you.

Bitcoin created a conception of rights based not on the power of violence but on power of a different kind: the logic of cryptography, math and shared truth. It replaced violence with cooperation.

That is why it’s important to take the Bitcoin rabbit hole all the way to the end so we understand what’s at stake here. Digital rights which can be enforced for all people, globally, across borders, without violence. Bitcoin, this new power, finally puts us — the individual — in the driving seat, with sovereignty over our own lives.

Bitcoin also has created a newly powerful Demos, a wealthy community of Bitcoiners who together control a global jurisdiction. This gives us the opportunity and responsibility to create a new civilization, based on the free cooperation of sovereign people.

Now we have that power, the one remaining question at the bottom of the rabbit hole is this: How will we use it?

This is a guest post by Edan Yago. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC, Inc. or Bitcoin Magazine.

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Bitcoin’s Private Property Rights

For the first time in history, bitcoin offers us a property option that does not rely on a local authority or legal system to protect it.

The below is from a recent edition of the Deep Dive, Bitcoin Magazine’s premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, subscribe now.

Berlin Votes To Seize Real Estate

In Berlin, Germany, a growing shortage of affordable housing coupled with increased demand to live in the city has reached a boiling point. Yesterday, voters took part in a referendum on whether to force large real estate companies to sell off most of their housing units, turning them into socialized public housing.

The “yes” vote garnered 56.4% while the “no” vote received 39% in the non-binding referendum. The passing of the referendum will require incoming Berlin city-state government officials to debate the proposal. 

For the first time in history, bitcoin offers us a property option that does not rely on a local authority or legal system to protect it.

Source: DW.com 



With social unrest like this gaining momentum that may destabilize real estate private property rights in one of the world’s most popular cities, it points to yet another reason why bitcoin’s private property rights are so important and superior to any asset ever known. The invention of bitcoin has offered us many innovations with the evolution of private property rights at the top of the list.

Bitcoin’s Superior Private Property Rights 

For the first time in history, bitcoin offers us a property option that does not rely on a local authority or legal system to enforce or protect it. It’s protected by the natural incentives of those participating in the network.

It provides us with a store of value and savings technology where no government, central institution or voting bloc can seize, freeze or access it through violence or force when properly secured. Anyone in the world with an internet connection can secure this property without permission, and no other person or institution may take it away or erode its value. Whether it’s real estate, cash, equities, bonds, or gold, no other asset on the market provides this level of assurance and security.

What we know of strong, well-defined property rights is that they are the basis of human cooperation and economic activity. When private property rights flourish, so do the people. When we look at the nations of the world with the lowest ranking of property rights, we also find some of the key regions where bitcoin is making its mark.

For the first time in history, bitcoin offers us a property option that does not rely on a local authority or legal system to protect it.

Source: International Property Rights Index



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More Crypto Firm Tenants Settle in Hong Kong Central CBD Offices

Hong Kong Land Holdings Ltd (SGX: H78) announced Wednesday that the real estate firm has signed a lease contract with a crypto firm, embracing the first crypto company to use their offices in the city’s central business district (CBD).

Hong Kong-based HashKey Group, a blockchain solution and an end-to-end digital asset management firm, will move to one entire floor in Three Exchange Square owned by the Hong Kong Land. According to the press release, the new office occupies over 10,000 square feet, which is “the first digital asset financial service group move to Hong Kong Land’s central portfolio,” the real estate said in the statement.

The statement added that the leasing agreement will commence on Thursday, 16th Sep., which “brings traditional financial institutions with blockchain and virtual assets firm in one ecosystem,” the statement added.

Prior to the relocation, HashKey locates at Cyberport. Michel Lee, Executive President at HaskKey, said the company is glad to move to the centre of the business community.

“We are excited to be the first digital assets firm in Exchange Square and look forward to expanding our footprint to Central, the heart of Hong Kong.”

Hong Kong Land, meanwhile, also welcomes HashKey’s latest move as well:

“HashKey’s decision to move to Central and the Hongkong Land portfolio exemplifies a growing ‘flight to quality’ as financial markets participants, in particular, see the benefits of being part of a core Central ecosystem that supports their business and talent development goals.”

Central is considered the traditional CBD in Hong Kong, mainly dominated by conventional financial institutions and other business corporations. In 2018, crypto trading platform BitMex leased one of the floors of the Cheung Kong Center, according to Bloomberg.

Yet, the rent has significantly dropped amid the pandemic of Covid-19. The rent has fallen by 26.4 per cent from their peak in the second quarter of 2019, which provides an incentive for some firms to return to the core region, according to local media South China Morning Post, citing experts said.

With the trending development on cryptocurrency, Hong Kong Financial regulator, The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), continues to strengthen its supervision over the crypto sectors. Last month, SFC warned of a high risk against Initial Decentralized Offerings (IDOs) or Initial Exchange Offerings (IEOs) as Unauthorized Investment Schemes. Earlier this month, a senior official of SFC stated that the authority is obligated to crack down on unauthorised crypto transactions while properly developing crypto. The administration said it should protect investors’ interests from being deceived or facing fraud by illegal crypto activities. 

Image source: Wiki

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More Crypto Firm Tenants Settle in Hong Kong Central CBD Offices

Hong Kong Land Holdings Ltd (SGX: H78) announced Wednesday that the real estate firm has signed a lease contract with a crypto firm, embracing the first crypto company to use their offices in the city’s central business district (CBD).

Hong Kong-based HashKey Group, a blockchain solution and an end-to-end digital asset management firm, will move to one entire floor in Three Exchange Square owned by the Hong Kong Land. According to the press release, the new office occupies over 10,000 square feet, which is “the first digital asset financial service group move to Hong Kong Land’s central portfolio,” the real estate said in the statement.

The statement added that the leasing agreement will commence on Thursday, 16th Sep., which “brings traditional financial institutions with blockchain and virtual assets firm in one ecosystem,” the statement added.

Prior to the relocation, HashKey locates at Cyberport. Michel Lee, Executive President at HaskKey, said the company is glad to move to the centre of the business community.

“We are excited to be the first digital assets firm in Exchange Square and look forward to expanding our footprint to Central, the heart of Hong Kong.”

Hong Kong Land, meanwhile, also welcomes HashKey’s latest move as well:

“HashKey’s decision to move to Central and the Hongkong Land portfolio exemplifies a growing ‘flight to quality’ as financial markets participants, in particular, see the benefits of being part of a core Central ecosystem that supports their business and talent development goals.”

Central is considered the traditional CBD in Hong Kong, mainly dominated by conventional financial institutions and other business corporations. In 2018, crypto trading platform BitMex leased one of the floors of the Cheung Kong Center, according to Bloomberg.

Yet, the rent has significantly dropped amid the pandemic of Covid-19. The rent has fallen by 26.4 per cent from their peak in the second quarter of 2019, which provides an incentive for some firms to return to the core region, according to local media South China Morning Post, citing experts said.

With the trending development on cryptocurrency, Hong Kong Financial regulator, The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), continues to strengthen its supervision over the crypto sectors. Last month, SFC warned of a high risk against Initial Decentralized Offerings (IDOs) or Initial Exchange Offerings (IEOs) as Unauthorized Investment Schemes. Earlier this month, a senior official of SFC stated that the authority is obligated to crack down on unauthorised crypto transactions while properly developing crypto. The administration said it should protect investors’ interests from being deceived or facing fraud by illegal crypto activities. 

Image source: Wiki

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Benefits and Use cases of Blockchain in Real Estate Sector

Without a doubt, technological innovations and advancements are reshaping the dimensions of the globe in which we are currently living. In the last few decades, great strides were made from physical payments to digital payments, from cash to cards, and from desktop to mobile.

Cryptocurrency and blockchain technology appears to be the next major leap in that evolution.  

The enormous asset class of the world is real estate. Real estate professionals and commercial enterprises recognise the revolutionary impact of blockchain technology to streamline payments and optimise commercial and retail property sales. Not only this, blockchain technology plays a pivotal role in increasing access to real estate funds and investment opportunities. From the rental market to general real estate transactions, cryptocurrency and blockchain technology can transform the way landlords and tenants do their business.   

Let’s dig into the benefits, use cases, and implementation of blockchain technology in real estate.  

How Blockchain Technology proves to be beneficial for the Real Estate Industry? 

Commercial real property consists of a notable portion of transaction pursuit and international economic assets. According to a Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) report, the overall size of the professionally managed global real estate investment market evolved from $7.4 trillion to $8.5 trillion from 2016 to 2017, respectively.  The real property market of the current era consists of several independent and isolated networks with blurriness and transactional resistance between current systems.  

Blockchain technology provides the following  benefits to the real estate industry: 

  • Blockchain technology provides effortless access to secondary market opportunities. 
  • It brings forth access to broad investor pools because of ownership fractionalisation.
  • Blockchain technology gives accessibility to global asset distribution.
  • Automated processes help in reducing costs.
  • Blockchain technology provides process efficiency for underlying industry operations.
  • It permits the securitisation and tokenisation of real property assets. 

Blockchain technology allows data accessibility which is crucial to make better investment decisions, enhance transparency and portfolio management.

Apart from this, digital securitisation of real estate properties is one of the most existing ways blockchain technology benefits the real estate industry. Ideally, as a landlord or tenant,  that may necessarily want a groundbreaking solution to send and receive cryptocurrency payments in real-time privately, conveniently, securely while streamlining market verticals across the board. 

Use Cases of Blockchain Technology in Real Property

Enterprise blockchain technology modifies the real estate industry with the following ten use cases: 

  • Urban planning 
  • Project financing
  • instantaneous accounting
  • Management of property
  • Leasing and payments
  • Identity verification and KYC of Inventor and tenant
  • Loan and mortgage tokenisation or securitisation
  • Construction and development of property
  • Real property investments and asset management
  • Sales, registries, and reassignment of properties and lands

Influence of Blockchain Technology on Estate Management

Large-scale estate management organisations go through incompetent oversights of their universal profiles and holdings. Thanks to blockchain technology as it streamlines rental payments and collections. It facilitates data sharing and makes the life of landlords easy. Blockchain technology also provides premium due diligence across the portfolio. This allows cost and time savings. Moreover, it enhances operational efficiency and generates sustainably richer data. That data facilitates making critical strategic decisions. 

Influence of Blockchain Technology on Leasing and Payments

Distributed ledger technology allows leases to be signed as well as paid on-chain in real-time. This automates dividend and rental payments to property owners and eliminates the need for manual reconciliations. Also, smart contracts help in the automatisation of different types of remittances and fees. This stimulates the appropriate behaviour of tenants, landlords, and service providers. 

Influence of Blockchain Technology on Real-Time Accounting 

Asset owners and investors benefit from near-intermediate and automated accounting as cash flows and property ownership is recorded on-chain. The preparation of annual financial statements, including statements of cash flows, income statement, or balance sheet, will be conducted in the upcoming years with the potential for real-time audits. It enables several breakthroughs in investor relations, regulatory oversight, and compliance. 

Influence of Blockchain on Urban Planning  

Property development usually encounters the absence of valuable input from the community. The public feels disenfranchised because the local communities don’t express their preferences during the planning process. Blockchain-based planning platforms include feedback loops between stakeholders, educational resources, and token-based participation incentives. This integrates local communities in the property development value chain, encourages community engagement, and improves developer services for sustainable success. 

Conclusion

Obviously, blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies are still in the early stages of development. Several industries and investors are curious about what this revolutionary technology has more to serve this world in approaching years. The real estate market is already facing a significant impact of blockchain and cryptocurrencies in the form of smart contracts, tokenisation, and verification. Moreover, it has provided new opportunities for the sale of property and acquisition for real estate investors. 

Knowledge, expertise, skills, and advice of real estate professionals are important to commercial buyers in the real property market. However, accounting, document processing, liability management, and processing of securities will inevitably transform. Hence, it’s only time to tell us which improvements and advancements of blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies are the lasting ones. 

Image source: Shutterstock

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Microsoft wants to use Ethereum blockchain to fight piracy

Windows operating system and Office productivity suite have always been top performers on any software piracy platforms. So, it’s no wonder that Microsoft, the developer of both products, works hard to establish anti-piracy measures. 

In a new paper released by Microsoft’s research department, with the participation of researchers from Alibaba and Carnegie Mellon University, the Redmond-based software giant studied a blockchain-based incentive system to bolster anti-piracy campaigns.

As the title of the research, Argus: A Fully Transparent Incentive System for Anti-Piracy Campaigns, suggests, Microsoft’s new system relies on the transparency aspect of blockchain technology. Built on the Ethereum blockchain, Argus aims to provide a trustless incentive mechanism while protecting data collected from the open anonymous population of piracy reporters.

“We see this as a distributed system problem,” the paper stated, “In the implementation, we overcome a set of unavoidable obstacles to ensure security despite full transparency.”

Argus enables backtracing of pirated content to the source with a corresponding watermark algorithm detailed in the paper. Also named “proof of leakage,” each report of leaked content involves an information-hiding procedure. This way, no one but the informer can report the same watermarked copy without actually owning it.

The system also has incentive-reducing safeguards to prevent an informer from reporting the same leaked content over and over under different aliases. “With the security and practicality of Argus, we hope real-world antipiracy campaigns will be truly effective by shifting to a fully transparent incentive mechanism,” the report stated.

Detailing the issue of Ethereum network fees, the paper explained that the team optimized several cryptographic operations “so that the cost for piracy reporting is reduced to an equivalent cost of sending about 14 ETH-transfer transactions to run on the public Ethereum network, which would otherwise correspond to thousands of transactions.”

Related: Privacy-preserving computation on blockchains could prevent breaches

Tech companies worldwide have become increasingly concerned with protecting intellectual property and fighting digital piracy. As Cointelegraph previously reported, Tech Mahindra, the IT subsidiary of Indian conglomerate Mahindra Group, recently launched a new blockchain-based digital contracts and rights platform on IBM’s Hyperledger Fabric protocol for the media and entertainment industry.