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Why financial infrastructure needs to be open-source — Hyperledger

Governments and major financial institutions are actively building open-source blockchain solutions on the Linux Foundation’s Hyperledger tools.

Open-source governance and development tools remain prerequisites for governments, organizations and financial institutions that want to leverage blockchain technology.

Speaking exclusively to Cointelegraph at Paris Blockchain Week, Hyperledger executive director Daniela Barbosa discussed why open-source blockchain technology is a non-negotiable requirement for global institutions.

Barbosa, who also serves as the general manager of the Linux Foundation, said shifting critical financial infrastructure onto blockchain protocols hinges on the underlying network being open-source and open governance.

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India state refiner HPCL to use blockchain to verify purchase orders

Hindustan Petroleum, one of India’s largest oil and gas companies, is launching a blockchain system to enable automated verification of purchase orders.

India’s state-run refiner, Hindustan Petroleum (HPCL), one of India’s largest oil and gas companies, is launching a blockchain system to enable automated verification of purchase orders (POs).

HPCL has partnered with the blockchain software firm Zupple Labs to integrate its blockchain-based digital credentialing technology into the purchase order system, the firms said in a joint announcement.

Called LegitDoc, Zupple Labs’ verification tech enables HPCL to issue digital POs to its vendors without having to manually verify the PO requests. From a third-party verifier’s perspective, the project provides a facility to directly verify the validity of POs in an automated way on the HPCL website.

“The implementation helps to automate the verification of HPCL POs to external parties,” a spokesperson for HPCL told Cointelegraph. “This works by integrating the blockchain system with HPCL’s internal e-PO and generates tamper-evident verifiable POs,” the representative noted, adding:

“These POs will be dispatched to vendors which in turn can be shared with third parties. Any third-party verifier can directly verify these POs on the HPCL vendor portal verification application.”

According to the HPCL spokesperson, the company has been collaborating with Zupple Labs on the blockchain project over the past six months. “HPCL has completed building the blockchain PO system successfully and the same facility will be made official to the vendors within this month,” the representative stated.

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The spokesperson said that HPCL has implemented the blockchain-based PO system on both private blockchain and public blockchain.

According to Zupple Labs co-founder and business lead Neil Martis, the PO verification system has involved the implementation of “two parallel blockchains” used as settlement layers, including the public Near blockchain and the private Hyperledger Fabric blockchain. Martis noted that the latter was used as part of HPCL’s Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery strategy. According to Zupple Labs, HPCL issued 3,000 POs via the facility as of mid-October 2023.

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Hyperledger announced new members at commencement of global forum

The group said the addition of its newest members will introduce a diversity of innovations and accelerate the development of decentralized technologies.

Hyperledger Foundation, a global open source collaboration of enterprise blockchain technologies, has commenced its largest annual event, the Hyperledger Global Forum 2022. 

Ahead the event on Monday, the Foundation announced the addition of eight newest members to its international community, namely: CasperLabs, Realto Group, BCW Group, Banque de France, Central Bank of Nigeria, Digital Identity Laboratory of Canada, International Association For Trusted Blockchain Applications (INATBA) and DSR Corporation.

Daniel Barbosa, Executive Director at Hyperledger Foundation, and General Manager of Blockchain, Healthcare, and Identity at the Linux Foundation, shared that: “Hyperledger technologies are playing an outsized role in reshaping existing markets and creating new ones. Our newest members are bringing a diversity of innovation into the Hyperledger community, accelerating the development of open, decentralized technologies that will be the infrastructure for many generations of new services and applications.”

Hyperledger Foundation is a non-profit organization that seeks to bring together vital resources and infrastructure to create a thriving and stable ecosystem around open-source software blockchain projects. Hyperledger allows member organizations to tap into their open source distributed ledger frameworks, tools, and resources to create enterprise-grade, industry-specific applications, platforms, and hardware systems to support business transaction needs.

The Foundation’s enterprise-grade blockchain software projects are designed and built by a developer community for service providers, start-ups, vendors, end-user organizations, academics, and commercial solutions.

The newest members of Hyperledger’s Foundation such as Banque de France, and the Central Bank of Nigeria, seems to suggest that governments all over the world are slowly opening up to Blockchain technology and its innovations.

Just recently, Nigeria announced it was in early-stage talks with Binance to create a crypto-friendly economic zone within the country.

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ETH Merge will change the way enterprises view Ethereum for business

Industry experts explain how the Ethereum Merge will impact enterprise adoption for business use cases.

A recent report from the Ethereum Enterprise Alliance (EEA) highlights how the Ethereum ecosystem has matured to a point where the network can be used by businesses to solve real-world problems. From supply chain management use cases to payment solutions utilized by companies like Visa and PayPal, the report demonstrates how the Ethereum network has grown to become one of the most valued public blockchains. 

Although notable, the EEA report also points out that the rapid growth of the Ethereum ecosystem has created a number of challenges for companies, specifically regarding energy consumption, scalability and privacy. For example, the document states that “sustainability was cited as one of the main concerns, along with transaction fees, in relation to using the Ethereum Mainnet.” The report further explains that the transparency associated with a public blockchain like Ethereum has been a hurdle for enterprises seeking data security and trust.

As such, upgrades such as sharding and layer-2 (L2) scalability solutions remain critical for businesses using the Ethereum network. Yet, the complex nature behind such implementations continues to be difficult for companies to navigate. For instance, the EEA report states that “Many layer 2 solutions and sidechains are relatively new projects, with relatively new technology. They do not necessarily have the track record or proven security and stability of the Mainnet.”

The Merge will change how enterprises view Ethereum

However, industry experts predict that the Ethereum Merge, which is scheduled to take place on Sept. 14, will likely improve enterprise adoption. Paul Brody, global blockchain leader at EY, told Cointelegraph that while the Merge will not affect most enterprise use cases that are presently in use, it will change how businesses perceive Ethereum. He said: 

“For years, competing layer-1 networks have talked about how Ethereum can’t get the Merge done. The incredible organizational maturity of Ethereum has been working nicely in the background to do it in a careful and professional manner. As an enterprise, that’s the kind of institutional maturity I want to see.”

Although the Merge has been in development for several years, Brody explained that upgrades on mission-critical infrastructure should never be rushed. As such, he believes that this will remain a key point for businesses using the Ethereum network. “I think future efforts to dismiss Ethereum won’t get much airtime in the post-Merge era,” he said. 

While it’s too early to detect how enterprises will react to the Merge, Robert Crozier, chief architect and head of global blockchain at Allianz Technology, told Cointelegraph that his firm will monitor the progress of the Ethereum Merge to see how it stabilizes certain use cases.

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This is noteworthy, as Crozier shared that Allianz has only considered Ether (ETH) and Ethereum-based use cases for experimentation purposes on a small scale. The insurance giant currently uses Hyperledger Fabric and the decentralized ledger platform Corda to streamline cross-border auto insurance claims throughout Europe. Crozier added:

“At Allianz, our International Motor Claims Settlement product utilizes Hyperledger Fabric at its core. We would need to understand and be confident that other protocols like Ethereum would deliver the similar benefits in terms of ease of use, scalability and finality.”

With benefits in mind, Brody explained that the Merge will eventually result in better scalability and privacy for enterprises. “I think we’re heading into a new era of enterprise applications. With both scalability and privacy maturing, it will be possible to address enterprise process needs quite comprehensively in the future,” he said. 

Shedding light on this, Ivan Brakrac, senior decentralized finance market strategist at ConsenSys, told Cointelegraph that although the Merge does not directly increase scalability, a number of planned upgrades to Ethereum will address scalability over the next few years.

For example, Brakrac explained that transitioning the Ethereum network from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS) was the first step to enable “shard chains.” As Cointelegraph previously reported, sharding is the act of dividing up a database, or in this case, the blockchain, into various smaller chains known as shards.

“This will reduce network congestion and increase transaction throughput,” Brakrac remarked. This is key for adoption, as Brody shared that EY’s enterprise clients looking at supply chain applications are going to need support for 2–20 million transactions per day. “Pre-Merge Ethereum could not have accommodated this,” he said.

Regarding privacy, a report entitled “The Merge for institutions,” published by ConsenSys on Sept. 5 mentions that L2 solutions also address privacy concerns for enterprises. An increase in L2s will unlock greater privacy mechanisms for business use cases. 

For example, Brody explained that EY developed a zero-knowledge proof L2 scaling solution known as Nightfall to handle Ethereum gas constraints and keep fees low. According to Brody, multiple powerful L2 networks will enable different options for enterprises that may require more gas and bigger transactions. He elaborated:

“Privacy starts to unlock a much bigger set of use cases for enterprise users. For example, instead of minting one token that represents a batch of product and gives origin information, I can mint one token for each piece of inventory, and then I can manage specific supply chain inventory levels across a multi-company network on Ethereum.” 

In addition to scalability and privacy, sustainability concerns will be addressed once the Merge is implemented. According to Brakrac, Ethereum currently uses an inordinate amount of electricity, noting that the Merge will reduce energy usage by 99%. “This will make Ethereum very sustainable in the long run. By design, this further secures the network and resolves an environmental concern which is net positive from the institutional adoption standpoint,” he said. 

Indeed, industry experts believe that sustainability efforts addressed by the Merge will be critical for enterprise adoption. Dan Burnett, executive director of the EEA, told Cointelegraph that while L2s and sidechains have served as bandages on sustainability concerns, large organizations with environmental, social and governance goals tended to shy away from building solutions on Ethereum because of its reputation for being environmentally unsustainable. Yet, he noted that with these concerns being addressed, the Merge may enable the Ethereum business ecosystem to leap ahead.

Yorke Rhodes III, co-founder of blockchain at Microsoft and board member and treasurer of the EEA, further told Cointelegraph that the Merge will put to rest one of the main concerns for enterprises that have a big focus on environmental impact, such as Microsoft.

“This removes one of the key arguments enterprises raise when evaluating whether to build solutions on Ethereum mainnet,” he said. To Rhodes’ point, Crozier mentioned that moving to a more environmentally friendly proof-of-stake mechanism will mean that some enterprises, like Allianz, will take a second look at Ethereum.

Benefits not immediate 

All things considered, the Merge will likely increase enterprise interest in Ethereum due to the advancement of the network. Moreover, Rhodes believes that removing the key critique of sustainability will encourage additional movement to the Ethereum Mainnet, even if this is just as a base layer for security. “As a key step in realizing the vision of Ethereum, the ETH merge sets things up for a closer enterprise review sooner rather than later,” he said.

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However, it’s important to point out that the benefits promised by the Merge won’t be seen immediately. According to Brody, it will take at least 12–24 months until privacy-enabled use cases are established following the Merge. He said:

“I hope to see pilots by the end of this year, but feedback loops and infrastructure maturity takes time. Unlike consumer applications, there’s little patience among enterprise buyers for products that don’t work on the first go-round and little willingness to experiment. Enterprise buyers are generally quite conservative, and so the cycle will take longer than consumer users.”

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Blockchain-based solutions aim to address US disaster relief

Various blockchain solutions are being used by organizations and enterprises to create efficiencies for U.S. disaster relief efforts.

Natural disasters in the United States are becoming more prevalent, resulting in increasing costs, a lack of transparency between state and government organizations and a slew of other issues impacting relief systems. 

The Pew Research Center found that the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) public assistance program spent 23% more on natural disasters between 2010–2019 than it did during 2000–2009. Data from Climate.gov further shows that 2021 was the third costliest year in history for natural disasters in the U.S., totaling over $145 billion in damages from 20 weather-related incidents.

But as disasters become more common and costs continue to increase, relief organizations are looking toward digital solutions to help solve certain challenges. For instance, a number of cloud-based solutions from vendors like Dell and Amazon are gaining popularity, falling under the category of Disaster Recovery as a Service, or DRaaS.

A recent report from global technology research company Technavio found that the DRaaS market is expected to grow by $40 billion between 2022–2025. However, Technavio’s findings also suggest that open-source disaster recovery tools will challenge the growth of DRaaS moving forward.

Blockchain to automate disaster relief efforts

This may very well be the case, as a number of blockchain-based solutions are being applied for disaster relief efforts. In particular, many of these solutions can automate manual processes in order to ensure cost-efficiencies, automated workflows and data sharing across organizations. 

For example, the Disaster Services Corporation Society of St. Vincent de Paul (DSC) — a 175-year-old organization that helps people in situational poverty brought on by natural disasters — is partnering with the Algorand Foundation to assist disaster survivors across the United States.

Elizabeth Disco-Shearer, CEO of the DSC, told Cointelegraph that the organization is specifically working with the foundation — the organization behind Algorand’s monetary supply economics, governance and ecosystem — to use digital wallets to reimagine their House in a Box program, which provides household furniture for families without insurance that have been impacted by a disaster.

According to Disco-Shearer, these digital wallets will be equipped with vouchers worth certain amounts of money that disaster survivors will be able to use at specific vendors to purchase new furniture. Disco-Shearer explained that currently DSC’s “House in a Box” program does all of its work on the ground in rented warehouses, where a variety of furniture is purchased and shipped beforehand and then categorized by volunteers based on family size.

“We started this program in 2014, after Hurricane Katrina. Since then, we have served over 100,000 households across America, but it has become more and more labor intensive due to the intensity and frequency of disasters,” Disco-Shearer said.

Using a blockchain wallet will soon make this process entirely digital. “For instance, we may issue a family of four a digital voucher of $3,200 that will immediately appear in their digital wallet. This will be restricted for use at specific vendors that we partner with, where we have already bought furniture in bulk for these types of situations,” Disco-Shearer commented.

Matthew Keller, impact and inclusion lead at the Algorand Foundation, told Cointelegraph that its digital wallet solution for disaster relief efforts will most likely launch in September of this year. He added that Algorand is supplying the resources to build a volunteer’s wallet that will ensure disaster relief volunteers are properly compensated for their time. He said:

“Volunteer wallets will accumulate and track hours, allowing for disaster relief organizations to show state disaster relief agencies funded by FEMA the amount of time volunteers spend helping. This is a huge deal because it allows organizations like St. Vincent de Paul to attract more resources through federal and state levels. This solution will also be used by the National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster.”

While blockchain-based digital wallets are proving to be helpful for facilitating fast payments, open-source networks also ensure data sharing between organizations. This feature can be useful when a number of different organizations are involved in the same initiative. For example, openIDL is a Linux Foundation project that uses Hyperledger Fabric to enable insurance carriers, regulators and intermediate agencies to obtain a harmonized, permissioned data model for more efficient reporting following natural disasters

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To put this in perspective, Jeff Braswell, executive director of openIDL, told Cointelegraph that every state in the U.S. has its own insurance regulator or commissioner, noting that every insurance carrier that writes policies in a state must report information to each such state regulator.

Braswell explained that the requirement for each insurance company to report to a state regulator individually is time-consuming and costly. In addition, when commercial agencies are contracted to help perform this reporting on behalf of insurance companies, the data is not accessible and cannot be utilized by the industry after submission.

Flooded I-10/I-610/West End Boulevard interchange northwest New Orleans and Metairie, Louisiana

One objective of openIDL, per Braswell, is to ensure that information segregated by carriers or state regulators can be made available in an aggregated and anonymized manner to the industry with appropriate consent and permission. This would allow insurance regulators and carriers to have a better understanding of disasters across different territories and regions. He said:

“This model would enable more efficient insurance reporting by carriers that is, or may be, requested by different state regulators. In turn, this will create a tremendous efficiency in cost-savings, while enabling a better collection of information across different sectors. For insurance regulators, this is also highly desirable and more timely than waiting for an annual report. There are lots of benefits to this model.” 

For instance, Braswell shared that openIDL did a case study with a southern state to better understand how providers might anticipate the adequacy of insurance coverage for regions that were projected to be impacted by hurricanes or incidents occurring in the Gulf Coast. 

“This is about helping providers understand where that coverage may be sufficient and where it may not be, along with how things can be improved based on more timely information,” he said.

Using the Hyperledger Fabric network, Braswell said that a number of insurance providers and state regulators can share information in an open and controlled environment. “No individual policy details need to be revealed, as information can be reported in aggregate, and anonymized using a private, and secure, Hyperledger Fabric permissioned blockchain.”

Such a use case also demonstrates how open-source networks are challenging the notion of DRaaS. Braswell shared that openIDL was initially created based on an idea from the American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS) noting that the organization was seeking digital transformation to provide better services for its clients and state regulators.

After settling on the benefits of a distributed ledger platform, AAIS engaged IBM to develop a proof-of-concept built on top of Hyperledger Fabric. Yet, Braswell noted that AAIS subsequently chose to switch from IBM cloud services to AWS but continued to work with the open-source Hyperledger Fabric project. AAIS then partnered with the Linux Foundation to create the openIDL Foundation project, transitioning the ongoing management and development of the initiative to openIDL. He added:

“Moving this project to the Linux Foundation is helpful because it ensures that organization members are not locked in by a single service vendor or proprietary technology. The oversight of network services and work to grow the collaborative community of the private and public sector participants has now transitioned from AAIS to openIDL, which is tightly coupled with support from the Linux Foundation and Hyperledger.” 

Open and public blockchain networks are also being used by enterprises to improve disaster efforts. For example, Equideum health uses the Ethereum blockchain to transform healthcare and life sciences. Heather Flannery, founder and CEO of Equideum, told Cointelegraph that the company is a spin-off from ConsenSys Health and combines zero-knowledge cryptography with off-chain hybrid blockchain infrastructures. She said:

“My thesis about the needs of the healthcare and life sciences industry has long been that blockchain is necessary, but not sufficient. Our approach has been a convergence of three different emerging technologies, one of which is blockchain. The other two are advanced privacy technologies, both hardware and software dependent modalities to ensure off-chain confidential compute in cloud enclaves. Finally, data decentralization will figure prominently in terms of disaster relief and recovery.”

Flannery mentioned that all of the use cases Equideum enables involve enterprise data to power what she refers to as a Web3 data economy. “The financial exchange of data is a new market architecture to provide ethically sourced data monetization,” she said. 

To put this in perspective, Flannery explained that Equideum is working with U.S. veterans, their families and caregivers to enable privacy-preserving clinical trial matching. Although this differs from emergency disaster situations, Flannery noted this use case is timely given the COVID-19 pandemic. “Right now, pharmaceutical companies need to get new medicines and vaccines into the market, meaning they require research subjects for clinical trials. However, most subjects do not represent the general population,” she pointed out. 

With this challenge in mind, Flannery noted that Equideum’s privacy-preserving clinical trial matching will eventually allow pharmaceutical companies the option to view structured data procurements across the Ethereum network.

Fire cloud from the Dixie Fire, the largest in the history of California wildfires. Source: Frank Schulenburg

“This will be sourced from our enterprise partners and consumer users. The very first thing to happen though will be for big pharma companies to do data procurements from U.S. veterans through the apparatus that we’re creating. This will also give that population access to clinical research as a care option, the ability to monetize their information and so on.” 

Moreover, Flannery remarked that having patient data on a blockchain network can help in various ways when natural disasters occur. “Let’s say a terrible flood brings down a community's health infrastructure — IT systems go down, along with the ability to identify patients. Web3 means that a person’s basic existence will live in a digital-first society,” she said. According to Flannery, this means that health systems of the future will include an individual’s personal data, along with their ability to control its sharing.

Will businesses actually want to use blockchain solutions?

While different blockchains can provide innovative solutions for disaster relief efforts, it remains questionable if businesses will want to use these networks. For instance, new findings from ReasearchAndMarkets.com suggest that the global blockchain market is expected to reach $117.77 billion by 2028 (currently valued at $4.56 billion), but concerns around uncertain regulations and compliance is one of the major factors that may hinder market growth. 

Yet, Keller noted that regulatory challenges are not an issue as of now for Algorand’s digital wallet solution. Disco-Shearer mentioned that getting disaster survivors and volunteers to use a digital wallet involves a higher degree of learning, which could also create complexities.

In terms of data sharing among enterprises, Braswell explained that one of the intended benefits of openIDL for insurance carriers and analytical services is the ability to mine aggregated and anonymized industry data to inform coverage needs and policy. He added that no raw data from insurance carriers can be extracted or compromised.

“Hyperledger Fabric supports the operation of private and secure ‘channels’ between two parties — in this case a carrier node and an analysis node. If there are 10 carriers, there are 10 private channels created. Data is not shared amongst contributors, but submitted for analysis and reporting purposes to trusted advisory firms who are accredited to join openIDL and perform such services,” he explained.

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And although openIDL is still functioning essentially as a startup, Braswell pointed out that the organization is currently working with five major carriers and several state regulators.

Flannery also stated in a recent “Enterprise Ethereum Alliance Business Readiness Report” that a number of major companies are using Ethereum as a business platform. “There are few if any other layer-1 blockchains out there that have anything like this kind of community. There is no doubt that Ethereum needs upgrading before it is really ready for business on a large scale. But, as we know, this is happening,” she said. 

Finally, it’s notable that cryptocurrency solutions tied to blockchain platforms are being implemented across the world to deliver aid for humanitarian efforts. According to the findings previously mentioned from ResearchAndMarkets.com, the legalization and utilization of cryptocurrencies will push market participants to put in the effort to improve their services in order to acquire a competitive advantage. In turn, more enterprises will likely use blockchain solutions that prove to be beneficial.

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‘CBDCs are the natural evolution,’ says HyperLedger director Barbosa

In an interview filmed during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Daniela Barbosa gives the floor to enterprise blockchains and the future of currencies.

For Daniela Barbosa — general manager of blockchain, healthcare and identity at the Linux Foundation and executive director of Hyperledger — digital currencies and cryptocurrencies have made it among the big banks at the World Economic Forum in Davos. 

In an interview with Cointelegraph shot against the backdrop of the Swiss Alps, Barbosa explained that in the few years she has attended the WEF, the presence of cryptocurrency companies has steadily grown. What's more, we should not be afraid of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

“CBDCs are [a]natural evolution of digital dollars and digital currencies.”

While the WEF saw calls from some bankers for a CBDC rollout to slow down, Barbosa explained that a CBDC could be with us in this decade.

Hyperledger’s work overlaps that of CBDCs, particularly in light of a partnership with the Digital Dollar Project. The nonprofit organization seeks to further the research into a U.S. CBDC. The key to CBDC implementation, however, is in succeeding with “privacy-preserving methods.”

An advocate for digital identity, privacy and “having control of your data,” Barbosa also shared the story of how she got into Bitcoin while living in San Francisco and working for Dow Jones in the mid-2010s.

“I did go to a [Bitcoin] meetup once and I was older than everybody else and also female—and I thought, maybe this is not for me?”

Fortunately, Barbosa kept abreast of Bitcoin and the market when time allowed before joining HyperLedger, an enterprise blockchain solutions-based company, in 2016.

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While blockchains can sometimes be touted as a catch-all solution, Barbosa explained that sometimes blockchains are not the ideal situation and “should not be used.” Many blockchain use cases in 2016 and 2017, for example, wanted the “media to pay attention.” In 2022, a blockchain works when:

“You want to use a distributed ledger when you have multi parties that are working together—you don’t want to have to create another middle layer than helps disintermediate all the assets going around.”

HyperLedger now covers everything from pharmaceuticals to finance while its blockchain solutions tackle climate change

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Hyperledger Foundation deploy new versions of three blockchain tools to enhance ecosystem

Two of the releases are in their primary iteration, while the latter titled Iroha is a preview version of its second release.

Enterprise blockchain firm Hyperledger Foundation has announced the development and release of three roadmap projects: Cactus 1.0, FireFly 1.0 and a preview version of Iroha 2.0's long-term support (LTS).

Operating under the umbrella of the Linux Foundation, Hyperledger supports an ecosystem of fourteen distributed ledgers. The deployment of the three technological tools is expected to assist consumers and businesses across areas of blockchain, Web3 and decentralized applications (DApps).

Executive director of the Hyperledger Foundation Daniela Barbosa stated that these accomplishments reflect the “high level of development momentum across the Hyperledger community as well as the increasing level of maturity of the enterprise blockchain market,” before stating:

“The core value of enterprise blockchain has been well proven across industries, and our global and growing community is now building a rich ecosystem that will drive the next wave of interconnected, interoperable solutions.” 

The Hyperledger Global Forum (HGF) annual conference will commence on Sept. 12 and go through to Sept. 14 in Dublin, Ireland and welcome some of the leading developers and participants within the Hyperledger community.

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Report: Nigeria to Start Piloting Digital Currency in October

Report: Nigeria to Start Piloting Digital Currency in OctoberThe Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has reportedly set October 1 as the commencement date for the trial phase of its digital currency project. Dubbed project Giant, this digital currency project, or the “e-naira,” is expected to use the Hyperledger Fabric blockchain. CBDC Comes to Life The revelation of the launch date for Nigeria’s central […]

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Nigeria to pilot central bank digital currency in October

The Central Bank of Nigeria will start the pilot of its central bank digital currency, which runs on the Hyperledger Fabric blockchain, on October 1.

For much of 2021, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has been in the headlines for its anti-cryptocurrency measures. Yet, the institution has this week redoubled its investment and research into crypto’s underlying technology, blockchain, and has set a clear date for the pilot scheme of its blockchain-powered central bank digital currency (CBDC).

On October 1, CBN will reportedly launch a pilot scheme for “GIANT” – a CBDC project in development since 2017, which runs on the open-source blockchain Hyperledger Fabric.

Rakiya Mohammed, CBN’s information technology director, said the bank might conduct a proof-of-concept before the end of 2021. In a webinar this week with stakeholders, CBN representatives reportedly emphasized that the institution could not afford to be left behind while the vast majority of central banks worldwide make headway with their own CBDC research and development.

Among the motivations cited for the project, CBN has noted that a CBDC would be beneficial for macro and growth management, cross-border trade support, and financial inclusion.

Potential benefits could still extend further, in CBN’s view, ranging from higher efficiency for payments and remittances, better monetary policy transmission, improved tax revenue collection, and the facilitation of targeted social policies.

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Alongside CBN, the Bank of Ghana has this summer been moving rapidly towards the pilot stage for its own central bank digital currency. The country has positioned itself as a pioneer in CBDC development on the continent and considers central bank-issued digital currencies to be superior to and less risky than decentralized cryptocurrencies.

However, Ghana’s wariness of crypto is overshadowed by Nigeria’s more aggressive measures, which include a ban on commercial banks and other financial institutions from servicing crypto exchanges. Despite this, Bitcoin adoption and BTC peer-to-peer trades have remained high in the country.

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IBM opens Hyperledger Fabric source code to drive enterprise blockchain adoption

IBM shows its commitment to Hyperledger and enterprise blockchain development with its largest-ever contribution of open-source code.

The global blockchain technology market size is projected to reach $72 billion in the next five years. In order to ensure this growth, however, blockchain solution providers must continue to advance and innovate. 

For example, public enterprise blockchain use has become an ongoing trend this year as companies like ConsenSys aim to drive adoption for open, permissionless networks. On the flip side, it’s important to point out that private blockchains are still being leveraged by enterprises and will continue to be utilized as innovation continues.

Advancing open, permissioned blockchain networks

Most recently, computing giant IBM announced that it has open-sourced a large portion of its Hyperledger Fabric code to help drive up adoption rates for enterprise blockchain use cases.

Kareem Yusuf, general manager of AI and blockchain applications at IBM, told Cointelegraph that this is one of IBM’s largest contributions to open-source code. He further noted that the company is unveiling a new Hyperledger Fabric support offering, along with donating the code that supports token exchanges on Hyperledger Fabric, known as Fabric Token SDK. Yusuf said:

“Our intent is to make sure we have a vibrant and active Hyperledger community. To support this, we have announced two key moves. One is the donation of our management console code capabilities, which was in our IBM Blockchain Platform, into the Hyperledger Labs world. Another is making available a support offering for those wishing to use Hyperledger Fabric with full-product support from IBM.”

According to Yusuf, IBM’s significant code contribution will make it easier for Hyperledger users to utilize Fabric, which is an enterprise-grade distributed ledger platform that caters to a variety of enterprise use cases. IBM’s blockchain platform is powered by Hyperledger Fabric.

It’s also worth mentioning that Hyperledger was launched in 2015 by the Linux Foundation as an open-source collaborative effort to advance cross-industry blockchain technologies. Hyperledger hosts a number of enterprise blockchain projects such as Fabric.

Brian Behlendorf, executive director of Hyperledger, told Cointelegraph that IBM’s new contributions will specifically make it easier for every developer to build on top of and manage a Fabric blockchain network. He further noted that these new efforts are organized as “Labs,” which are separate projects from Fabric but are used to build upon the Fabric framework.

For example, Behlendorf pointed out that Fabric’s “Token SDK” will help formalize the approach for managing tokens on top of Fabric. Building tokens on top of Hyperledger has always been possible, as Metacoin (MTC) was the first cryptocurrency built on Hyperledger to achieve mainnet status in 2018. Although this is a feature offered to developers, Behlendorf noted that it had previously required a lot of “do-it-yourself” effort. “Now that gets a better-supported approach,” he remarked.

Behlendorf added that another Lab, the “Fabric Smart Console,” makes managing a cluster of Fabric nodes across a network even easier to monitor and manage. Both of these Labs should become more accessible for developers to leverage once IBM’s full-support offering is available in the Red Hat Marketplace sometime this fall. The offering will include access to IBM-certified images, code security scans and around-the-clock customer support. Yusuf added:

“Being able to manage Hyperledger Fabric has been challenging. A major thing to consider here is support. If all costs of support are embedded in a single project, this can’t be monetized across other projects, and it becomes more expensive. A standardized support offering, however, can be very well structured to fit across multiple use cases.”

Specifically speaking, Arun S.M. — Hyperledger contributor, leader in the Hyperledger India chapter and member of the Hyperledger Technical Steering Committee — told Cointelegraph that the announcement of Fabric Smart Console, the crux of operations part of IBM Blockchain Platform, came as a surprise, noting that the secret sauce has now been revealed:

“There are projects within Hyperledger (including Labs) that can deploy a network, help to visualize and monitor deployed networks, including performing operations to varying degrees. What brings in excitement around the latest announcement is that IBM Blockchain Platform is used in many production applications. It is mature and seasoned. Having a self-hosted management portal with an intuitive UI that can hide complexities and reduce the network administration is a blessing in disguise for many.”

Ultimately, Yusuf explained that these new offerings will help increase adoption for enterprise blockchain use cases looking to leverage permissioned networks. Moreover, Yusuf noted that open-sourcing the Fabric code will help bring down costs, which has been a primary challenge for small-to-medium-sized companies looking to use permissioned networks.

This is important for a number of reasons. For instance, even though one industry report shows that public blockchain adoption has emerged as the leading market segment, Yusuf mentioned that enterprise use cases that leverage a shared, permissioned blockchain are still critical — especially for use cases like supply chain management:

“By definition, a supply chain is a network that involves sharing information between suppliers and different parties, so you need a blockchain infrastructure to tackle inventory visibility, provenance, responsible sourcing and more.”

By allowing Hyperledger Fabric’s base foundation to be open, Yusuf believes this will encourage more people to engage and collaborate using permissioned networks.

Hyperledger community is expected to grow

In addition to advancing enterprise blockchain adoption using open, permissioned networks, IBM’s contributions may draw more developers to the Hyperledger community.

According to Behlendorf, the impact of IBM’s open-source offerings will bring more developers to Hyperledger Fabric and the community as a whole. “This will hopefully inspire more to cross over into becoming contributors and core maintainers as well,” he remarked.

Related: As Microsoft Azure closes shop, ConsenSys Quorum opens up to new users

As such, enterprises leveraging Hyperledger Fabric are likely to grow. For example, the Filecoin Foundation recently announced that it has become a member of the Hyperledger community. Marta Belcher, board chair of the Filecoin Foundation, commented that Filecoin’s (FIL) decentralized storage capabilities have tremendous potential in the enterprise space. “We’re thrilled to join Hyperledger, a leader in enterprise blockchain technology, to explore these possibilities,” she said.

It’s also noteworthy that IBM’s contributions to Hyperledger Fabric demonstrate the company’s commitment to advancing enterprise blockchain. This is key to recognize, as it was previously rumored that IBM Blockchain’s team was “dissolving.”

Yusuf remarked that he’s particularly focused on scale and adoption moving forward. “From IBM’s perspective, you can expect to see use cases that leverage blockchain to bring actual end value to our customers.”

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