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Bloedcoins | 1 year ago
You still need the centralized classical PoS system to make sure that these assets are actually lawfully owned by the right people.
Also for plenty of big companies, a decentralized system is dimetral to their standing. I 'trust' visa.
"For example, a bank could automate processes like administering complex lines of credit using smart contracts and use fiat-backed tokens to release payments when payment terms are met." this even reads like a weird joke. Imagine some expert being needed by a smart contract to evaluate if a flat has the estimated value. The expert needs to verify themselve against a system to even be able to add this trusted expertise onto the blockchain. This requires an additional trust anker because again blockchain doesn't add any trust at all and than nothing is left of the original blockchain besides a standardized way of publishing some information decentral.
You could have done this 20 years ago with public/private keys, certificate authority and ah yeah i think you know how our ca system works right? :P
Edit: "There is a growing ecosystem where tokenized real-world assets are being issued across multiple permissioned and public blockchain networks. " thats even a better joke. Cross blockchain transactions are not a solved problem. Peple lost billions due to this... Apparently who ever does this project in Visa has 0 idea what they are doing. Dead on birth
yieldcrv|1 year ago
using standardized public smart contract platforms sufficiently abstracts the level of development needed to maintain these clients and accounts, since the platform and other nodes handle that. the alternative is some other cloud platform, where you have to write everything from scratch and do all the typical dev ops and system design and pay for it all, in smart contract platforms you deploy once and there is unlimited free reading bandwidth and your users pay to write to your application. until that is seen anywhere else, the blockchains will continue attracting developers and their audiences forever
interfacing with liquidity pools and the rest of the infrastructure on smart contract platforms is also part of the benefit
it doesn't matter that you could do this 20 years ago, the frictions towards doing it were too high
not having an ethos of decentralization aside, the reduced friction does rely on the permissionless, transparent, and at least distributed aspect of the public blockchain
they can interact with blockchains that way, you can choose not to use it while still using blockchains your way. who cares if they are using blockchains for a centralized product, organizations have been doing that for 10 years which means the fact you're only triggered now means the permissionless aspect of blockchains is working
Bloedcoins|1 year ago
And cross chain transaaction is not a solved problem.
Also for financial transactions and things, i do not want them public. Now i need some magic zero knowledge system and a trust anker. Who verifies the trust anker? again a company.
Its not getting easier or frictionless at all just because blockchain and smart contracts.
I also don't see any advantage for a company to let random people run my transactions and paying others instead of just doing it myself.
Also user don't run blockchains. A normal company will just go to another company to do that the same thing as we do today. Do you think a company will just deploy a smart contract and then out of thin air someone else calls it? No another computer system would call it which also needs to run somewhere.
acejam|1 year ago
This comment made me chuckle a little bit because blockchain has been around since at least 2009, which was ~15 years ago.