Mastodon

MyEtherWallet Falls Victim to DNS Attack, Users’ Wallets Emptied

A DNS attack against popular online Ether storage solution MyEtherWallet (MEW) has seen the wallets of many users emptied. The security breach occurred at around 12PM UTC. The identity of the attacker or attackers is still unknown. Many MEW Wallet Users Affected by DNS Redirect According to an official statement from the MEW team on

The post MyEtherWallet Falls Victim to DNS Attack, Users’ Wallets Emptied appeared first on NewsBTC.

A DNS attack against popular online Ether storage solution MyEtherWallet (MEW) has seen the wallets of many users emptied. The security breach occurred at around 12PM UTC. The identity of the attacker or attackers is still unknown.

Many MEW Wallet Users Affected by DNS Redirect

According to an official statement from the MEW team on Reddit, the breach occurred because of a hijacking of their Domain Name System servers. This caused visitors to MEW to be redirected to phishing sites. Their statement read:

“It is our understanding that a couple of Domain Name System registration servers were hijacked at 12PM UTC to redirect myetherwallet[dot]com users to a phishing site.”

MEW were quick to highlight that the security issue was not down to themselves. They stated that DNS servers getting redirected can happen ‘to any organisation including large banks.’

Apparently, most of those who had been affected by the breach were using Google DNS servers. MEW recommended in their statement that users switch to Cloudflare DNS servers. According to a post on MyEtherWallet’s official Twitter, the issue has now been dealt with. This was accompanied by a guide to staying safe from online scammers.

Some users who were affected by the DNS hijacking traced the transaction that cleared their wallet. So far, it appears that at least two wallets were used to funnel money from phished wallets. One of these has received just over 308ETH today, and a second 215ETH. Both of these wallets have since been completely emptied into a third wallet. This contains almost 25,000ETH ($17,116,289 at the time of writing). However, all these transactions have not come from the same incident as the earliest are from over two months ago.

The wallet that the funds associated with today’s DNS redirect have been funnelled into receives a constant stream of transactions making it difficult to see exactly how much has been taken from victims of today’s DNS redirect attack.  There could be additional wallets that have been used as intermediaries that are yet to be reported.

Today’s breach highlights the perils of using a hot wallet such as MEW. Those wanting to secure their funds properly are much better advised to invest in a hardware wallet. Despite some high-level security issues that have been identified (and since fixed), hardware wallets are designed to protect against many threats to cryptocurrency users. Paper wallets are also much more secure than online wallets – such as those found at exchanges or services such as MyEtherWallet. However, experts recommend hardware wallets over paper wallets since creating paper wallets in a completely secure way is incredibly tough even for experienced computer users.

Image from Shutterstock.

The post MyEtherWallet Falls Victim to DNS Attack, Users’ Wallets Emptied appeared first on NewsBTC.

PR: Reinventing the ‘Like’: LikeCoin Shines at Creative Commons Summit Proudly Empowering Creators Worldwide

Bitcoin Press Release: In today’s digital-first age, individuals who work in the creative profession would have been approached at one point or another to work on creative content for free, now  LikeCoin, a blockchain protocol for independent content creators, which provides a mechanism for creators worldwide to be rewarded for their original or derivative works. …

The post PR: Reinventing the ‘Like’: LikeCoin Shines at Creative Commons Summit Proudly Empowering Creators Worldwide appeared first on BitcoinNews.com.

Bitcoin Press Release: In today’s digital-first age, individuals who work in the creative profession would have been approached at one point or another to work on creative content for free, now  LikeCoin, a blockchain protocol for independent content creators, which provides a mechanism for creators worldwide to be rewarded for their original or derivative works.

Hong Kong, 17 April, 2018:  LikeCoin, a blockchain protocol for independent content creators, which provides a mechanism for creators worldwide to be rewarded for their original or derivative works, spread the word about their mission to empower creative collaborations at the Creative Commons Global Summit 2018, an event where an international community of leading technologists, legal experts, academics, activists, and community members gathered together who work to promote the power of open worldwide.

In today’s digital-first age, individuals who work in the creative profession would have been approached at one point or another to work on creative content for free, or to have their content published on social media and merely “rewarded” by Likes. LikeCoin’s vision is to maximise creativity by coupling practical recognition and Creative Commons.

Kin Ko, Co-founder of LikeCoin Stated:

“Creators will be recognized with LikeCoin when their work is ‘liked’, ‘super-liked’ or re-created by the community,these creators also stand to gain exposure through LikeCoin events across markets in Asia, alongside established artists such as Kit Man, yan Square and mankenlive.”

LikeCoin creates unique fingerprints for all creative contents and traces footprints of all derivative works along with creators and distributors of the content. Powered by a global, decentralised and resilient IPFS-based technology, LikeCoin’s reinvented Like Button and LikeRank algorithm will enable attribution and collaboration of content across multiple platforms and applications, allowing content creators and adopters to curate contents and record the data on blockchain for other distributors to use.

LikeCoin’s early supporters To Cheung, Founder and CEO of UDOMAIN.

“I believe in LikeCoin for what it’s about to bring to creators and creative organizations is nothing less than the Renaissance to people in and out of the circle.”

The LikeCoin ecosystem will support creative content in many formats including photos, illustrations, videos and articles. Original content may be distributed by content distributors directly or modified, forming derivative work which can be adopted for use by content adopters. At the same time, LikeCoin’s unique Proof of Creativity mechanism and blockchain Smart Contract are proven to incentivise creators and will help drive broad adoption by distribution platforms and service providers in the ecosystem.

Early adopters of LikeCoin include the prominent digital media outlets Famitsu, covering latest news and information in anime, comic and games. As well as Stand News, which is known for their editorial independence, integrity and high journalistic standards.

Kit Man, an established multimedia designer from Hong Kong.

“LikeCoin is a unique project that truly allows artists to come together to distribute, remix, tweak, and derive many more original creative content that a society needs, especially in order to create wider awareness and conversations of a particular issue or topic.”

To date, LikeCoin has successfully raised over 3 million dollars USD in private sale.  In the 12 months since the project’s inception, over 1,000 creators have already signed up with LikeCoin’s creative network in markets across Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan and others.

About LikeCoin

LikeCoin aims to reinvent the “Like” by realigning creativity and reward. LikeCoin enables attribution and cross-application collaboration on creative contents. With a reinvented Like button and its unique LikeRank algorithm, LikeCoin traces content footprint and reward creators by Proof of Creativity mechanism.

For more information on LikeCoin

Sign up on LikeCoin Store: like.co
Join LikeCoin Facebook group: fb.com/groups/likecoin
Join LikeCoin Telegram group: t.me/likecoin
Read LikeCoin Whitepaper: like.co/in/whitepaper
Follow LikeCoin Medium feeds: medium.com/likecoin
Follow LikeCoin Twitter account: twitter.com/likecoin_fdn

Media Contact:
LikeCoin PR Team
[email protected]

Rebecca Lo is the source of this content. Virtual currency is not legal tender, is not backed by the government, and accounts and value balances are not subject to consumer protections. Cryptocurrencies and tokens are extremely volatile. There is no guarantee of a stable value, or of any value at all. Token sales are only suitable for individuals with a high risk tolerance. Only participate in a token event with what you can afford to lose. This press release is for informational purposes only.

About Bitcoin PR Buzz -Bitcoin PR Buzz has been proudly serving the PR and marketing needs of Bitcoin and digital currency tech start-ups for over 5 years. Get your own professional Bitcoin Press Release. Click here for more information about Bitcoin PR

The post PR: Reinventing the ‘Like’: LikeCoin Shines at Creative Commons Summit Proudly Empowering Creators Worldwide appeared first on BitcoinNews.com.

Bitcoin Price Technical Analysis for 04/25/2018 – Long-Term Bullish Formation In Sight

Bitcoin Price Key Highlights Bitcoin price is forming a double bottom pattern on its daily time frame to signal that a climb is underway. Price has yet to test the neckline at $12,000 to confirm the longer-term rally. The chart pattern spans $6,000 to $12,000 so the resulting climb could be of the same size.

The post Bitcoin Price Technical Analysis for 04/25/2018 – Long-Term Bullish Formation In Sight appeared first on NewsBTC.

Bitcoin Price Key Highlights

  • Bitcoin price is forming a double bottom pattern on its daily time frame to signal that a climb is underway.
  • Price has yet to test the neckline at $12,000 to confirm the longer-term rally.
  • The chart pattern spans $6,000 to $12,000 so the resulting climb could be of the same size.

Bitcoin price has failed in its last two attempts to break below the $6,000 level to create a double bottom reversal formation.

Technical Indicators Signals

The 100 SMA has crossed below the longer-term 200 SMA to signal that the path of least resistance is to the downside. This suggests that the downtrend could still resume from here, especially as price tests the inflection points at the moving averages.

This also lines up with an area of interest at the $10,000 major psychological level. If selling resumes, bitcoin price could fall back to the lows around $6,500. On the other hand, a move past the neckline could lead to a climb to $18,000 or even the record highs at $20,000.

Stochastic is already indicating overbought conditions to show that buyers are already exhausted and could let sellers take over.

Market Factors

Sentiment in the industry continues to improve as traders are paying closer attention to developments, such as acquisitions and the pickup in volumes. Altcoins are seeing listings on more exchanges and hard forks have been completed without any major issues so far.

Then again, the dollar is somewhat supported by improving medium-tier data and rising US bond yields. Risk aversion could peek back in as geopolitical risks have been revived by Trump’s comments on the Iran deal.

Bitcoin price appears to be shrugging off negative reports, particularly comments from founding PayPal CEO Bill Harris who said that bitcoin is a “colossal pump-and-dump scheme, the likes of which the world has never seen.”

Furthermore he went on to say:

The losers are ill-informed buyers caught up in the spiral of greed. The result is a massive transfer of wealth from ordinary families to internet promoters. And “massive” is a massive understatement — 1,500 different cryptocurrencies now register over $300 billion of “value.”

It helps to understand that a bitcoin has no value at all.

The post Bitcoin Price Technical Analysis for 04/25/2018 – Long-Term Bullish Formation In Sight appeared first on NewsBTC.

MIT Review Acclaims zk-SNARKs, but zk-STARKs May Steal the Show

TheMerkle Privacy zk-starksAs much as we love the convenience of the internet, our privacy is at great risk whenever we go on social media, check our credit reports, grab a ride, or simply log into a fitness app. Our need to protect our information encompasses much more than financial transactions with a few cryptocurrencies. In the United States alone, the staggering number of data breaches shows the need for a better privacy solution, and zk-SNARKs or zk-STARKs are poised to fill that need. This year, the Cambridge Analytica data mining scandal affected more than 87 million Facebook users, and the WSJ predicts its repercussions will be huge. Last

TheMerkle Privacy zk-starks

As much as we love the convenience of the internet, our privacy is at great risk whenever we go on social media, check our credit reports, grab a ride, or simply log into a fitness app. Our need to protect our information encompasses much more than financial transactions with a few cryptocurrencies.

In the United States alone, the staggering number of data breaches shows the need for a better privacy solution, and zk-SNARKs or zk-STARKs are poised to fill that need. This year, the Cambridge Analytica data mining scandal affected more than 87 million Facebook users, and the WSJ predicts its repercussions will be huge. Last year, the Equifax data breach shared the social security numbers and dates of birth for more than half the nation. Meanwhile, an Uber hack exposed data from 57 million customers and drivers, and the MyFitnessPal app leaked usernames and passwords of more than 150 million users.

zk-SNARKs and zk-STARKs are two cryptographic protocols that could help prevent personal information from being vulnerable to these types of database breaches in the first place.

The Promise of Privacy: zk-SNARKs

This month, zk-SNARKs were included on an MIT Tech Review list of the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2018 among AI developments, 3D metal printing, and a smart city that Alphabet is building from the ground up.

zk-SNARKs protect your privacy, allowing you to prove who you are without having to give away specific details relating to your identity. Some of the potential uses cited in MIT’s article were verifying you’re over 18 without having to share your date of birth, and proving you have enough money in your bank account as collateral without having to give away account details like your exact balance.

Implementation of zk-SNARKs

zk-SNARKs are already running on cryptocurrency Zcash and JP Morgan Chase’s blockchain-based payment system. Both protocols have also grabbed the attention of Vitalik Buterin and the Ethereum foundation, including this exploration of zk-STARKs last year by Buterin. zk-SNARKs have been in the works since the 1980s, but it wasn’t until these recent cryptocurrency applications that interest in them really peaked.

Adding zk-SNARKs brings a layer of privacy previously inaccessible with most cryptocurrencies, traditional passwords, and even two-factor authentication. zk-SNARKs stands for zero-knowledge succinct non-interactive argument of knowledge, while zk-STARKs represents zero-knowledge succinct transparent argument of knowledge.

Potential Problems with zk-SNARKs

If zk-SNARKs sounds too good to be true, you’re onto something. While the world needs a privacy measure to address hacks, privacy breaches, and identity theft, zk-SNARKs need to overcome major hurdles to be a practical privacy solution.

Setting up zk-SNARKs requires a trusted setup that creates a very uncomfortable situation. Take Zcash’s launch as an example: a team of six developers around the world followed a set of instructions on a DVD to add the zk-SNARKs protocol to its blockchain. Essentially, each member generated one shard, or section, of the password to control Zcash. Gaining this control over all six shards would allow a bad actor to create additional tokens or steal funds.

Once the developers had run the code to generate their respective pieces of the password, each supposedly destroyed their portion of the key, some going as far as to drill holes into their hard drives. In this setup, at least one member must destroy their shard, so no one can find the entire key. This means, in theory, that even if the other five developers colluded to share their shards, they still wouldn’t have access, and it would be difficult to figure out the missing piece.  

Later, Zcash performed a larger trusted setup ceremony called “Powers of Tau”, with somewhere between 100 and 1,000 people running the protocol and destroying their shards of the key, some ceremoniously destroying their hardware in the process.

Though this higher number of participants could make things safer, there’s no true way to know it worked, and there’s no way to ensure a fake Zcash isn’t valued as the real Zcash. If Ethereum were to implement zk-SNARKs, it could take thousands of participants to run this kind of scenario unless there were a way around it.

zk-SNARKs are also slow and fairly expensive to implement right now, but this may not always be the case. One implementation, Secure Remote Password protocol (SRP), uses zk-SNARKs so you can log into your account by answering some true or false questions rather than by providing your password. This go-around proves you have the information without ever putting it on a server where a third-party could use it to access your account.

Zk-STARKs: A Better Privacy Breakthrough?

zk-STARKs, on the other hand, are being touted as a less costly and faster alternative to zk-SNARKs. Their biggest advantage is that no trusted setup is required.

Zcash’s founding scientist and zk-SNARKs researcher Professor Eli Ben-Sasson explains, “zk-STARKs use public key (asymmetric) cryptography to establish security. zk-STARKs instead requires a leaner symmetric cryptography, namely, collision resistant hash functions, and thus removes the need for a trusted setup. These same techniques also eliminate the number-theoretic assumptions of zk-SNARKs (and BulletProofs) that are computationally expensive and prone to attack by quantum computers. This makes zk-STARKs both faster to generate and post-quantum secure.” We’re about to jump into some of the technical reasons as to why zk-STARKs work differently from zk-SNARKs.

The zk-STARKs white paper states, “No ZK system realized thus far in code (including that used by cryptocurrencies like Zcash) has achieved both transparency and exponential verification speedup, simultaneously, for general computations.”

Ben-Sasson elaborates on this exponential verification method, saying, “If T represents the number of machine cycles of a computation, then the time to verify a zk-STARK for that computation, as a function of T, is log(T), which is exponentially smaller than T. In contrast, for a computation used only once, zk-SNARK verification … takes exponentially more time than a zk-STARK verification, [and] most of this added computation time is due to the trusted setup.”

When asked how zk-STARKs could help alleviate the number of privacy breaches over time, Ben-Sasson conjectures, “Permissionless blockchains will be the early adopters, followed by conventional businesses. Businesses will be pressured to adapt to the higher standards of transparency and accountability offered by zk-STARKs. As a result, citizens will enjoy a higher level of security and privacy from businesses and organizations who collect and store their personal data.”

To put it simply, zk-SNARKs are like building a top-secret blanket fort with your friends. You each have to assemble all the blankets in just the right way and celebratorily hide the evidence of your fort from your nosey older sister. You also have to put in a lot of effort to keep the sofa cushion walls up, and it will take you more time overall. zk-STARKs, on the other hand, are like a foldable tent you can pull right out of the box. It may not require all the effort and secrecy, but it means you’ll have more time to play flashlight games and tell ghost stories.

A Push for Privacy

Leaders in cryptographic research (i.e., the pioneers of many of the biggest existing and upcoming cryptocurrency projects) are looking into both zk-SNARKs and zk-STARKs. If one were added as an option to the Ethereum platform, you could choose a privacy option to keep your transactions hidden.

There’s a big misconception that transactions on blockchains like Bitcoin, Litecoin, and Ethereum are untrackable. While transactions may appear anonymous because they use long address codes, it is possible to piece together someone’s identity and account balances by tracking the addresses on their public ledgers and elsewhere, especially when someone always uses the same address.

Advances in Privacy Tech

As both zero-knowledge protocols undergo testing on blockchains, the cryptocurrency community is actively testing zk-SNARKs and is likely to test zk-STARKs soon as well. There are also other privacy coins like Monero tackling privacy, at least when it comes to spending.

Monero works by hiding a sender’s identity in a couple of ways, using stealth addresses with one-time destination public keys. It obscures a sender’s IP address and uses a ring signature, which combines a sender’s output address with a group of other possible sender addresses chosen randomly from the Monero blockchain, making it impossible to tell which transaction went where. Ring signatures make it look like a transaction could have been initiated by anyone in a group, kind of like someone with very illegible handwriting signing a check from a group checking account.

In contrast, zk-SNARKs and zk-STARKs fundamentally change how data is shared instead of creating a smoke trail around who sent what. Both are much-needed developments towards protecting our privacy. As Ethereum, banks, and others seek privacy measures in the wake of the increasing amount of data breaches of our sensitive information, zk-SNARKs and zk-STARKs will both be put to the test. Whether it’s either of these or something new, may the best proof win – it’s vitally needed.

Bitcoin Is One of the Few Things Surging in a Sea of Losses – Bloomberg

BloombergBitcoin Is One of the Few Things Surging in a Sea of LossesBloombergAmid a sea of red in financial markets, Bitcoin is still flashing green. The biggest cryptocurrency climbed as much as 5.4 percent Tuesday to $9,412, the highest since March 7…


Bloomberg

Bitcoin Is One of the Few Things Surging in a Sea of Losses
Bloomberg
Amid a sea of red in financial markets, Bitcoin is still flashing green. The biggest cryptocurrency climbed as much as 5.4 percent Tuesday to $9,412, the highest since March 7. Bitcoin has gained 20 percent in the past week and 37 percent in April, on ...

and more »

Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association Aims to Restore Public Confidence

Yesterday, the 16 cryptocurrency exchanges currently registered with Japan’s financial watchdog, the Financial Services Agency (FSA), announced the launch of the Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association (JCEA), according to a Japanese media outlet. The self-regulatory body, chaired by Taizen Okuyama, president and CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Money Partners, aims to restore confidence in the country’s digital

The post Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association Aims to Restore Public Confidence appeared first on NewsBTC.

Yesterday, the 16 cryptocurrency exchanges currently registered with Japan’s financial watchdog, the Financial Services Agency (FSA), announced the launch of the Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association (JCEA), according to a Japanese media outlet.

The self-regulatory body, chaired by Taizen Okuyama, president and CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Money Partners, aims to restore confidence in the country’s digital currency, reports The Asahi Shimbun.

Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association

During its first meeting, the group said that it would seek to develop comprehensive rules regarding customer protection and internal regulatory controls. Members of the association will be required to comply with these rules, as the group also intends to introduce penalties in order to punish activities that undermine the integrity of the industry.

“I will make sure that security measures and internal controls are in place,” Okuyama said. “We want to eliminate customers’ concerns and work to restore public confidence in order to develop a healthy market.”

The initial plans for the launch of the organization were revealed in early-March, when the the Japan Blockchain Association and the Japan Cryptocurrency Business Association came together to launch a new, collective body to work with the FSA on establishing investor safety standards. This was a reassuring move in a country where cryptocurrencies are rapidly increasing in popularity and adoption.

Moving Forward

One challenge is that the majority of the problems in the current market have involved exchanges which have yet to be registered with the FSA but are still permitted to operate. A hallmark example of this is Coincheck Inc., which lost the equivalent of 58 billion yen (about $533 million) in digital currency NEM through a hack in late January.

Since then, the FSA has conducted thorough probes into crypto businesses operating in the country and issued a wave of punitive measures against exchanges whose performance was deemed unsatisfactory.

Fortunately, at yesterday’s gathering Okuyama said that the JCEA would aim to offer help and advice on the development of the crypto exchanges that still operate without a full license from the FSA. The association also plans to ask these un-registered exchanges to join the JCEA to help foster cross-industry development:

“I would like to create a situation where I can give advice to (unlicensed exchanges), the development of the industry as a whole is important,” Okuyama said. 

Yuzo Kano, president of bitFlyer Inc., and a vice chairman of the JCEA, described the group’s intentions as follows:

“As financial service operators, we will increase our awareness. We will aim to take security measures that are stricter than before.”

The Coincheck hack revealed a number of flaws in Japan’s crypto ecosystem, but instead of the government taking a heavy handed approach, as has happened in neighboring China, the creation of the JCEA reflects a more proactive and constructive approach to developing the industry as things move forward.

Image from Shutterstock.

The post Japanese Cryptocurrency Exchange Association Aims to Restore Public Confidence appeared first on NewsBTC.

The Genesis Files: How David Chaum’s eCash Spawned a Cypherpunk Dream

“You can pay for access to a database, buy software or a newsletter by email, play a computer game over the net, receive $5 owed you by a friend, or just order a pizza. The possibilities are truly unlimited.”This…

The Genesis Files: How David Chaum’s eCash Spawned a Cypherpunk Dream

“You can pay for access to a database, buy software or a newsletter by email, play a computer game over the net, receive $5 owed you by a friend, or just order a pizza. The possibilities are truly unlimited.”

This quote is not from a 2011 Bitcoin introduction video. In fact, the quote is not about Bitcoin at all. It is not even from this millennium. The quote is from cryptographer Dr. David Chaum, speaking at the first ever CERN conference in Geneva in 1994. What he’s talking about is eCash.

If the cypherpunk movement has a godfather, the bearded, ponytailed Chaum is it. To say that the cryptographer — now 62 or 63 years old (he won’t reveal his exact age) — was ahead of the curve is an understatement. Before most people had heard of the internet, before most homes had personal computers, before Edward Snowden, Jacob Appelbaum or Pavel Durov were even born, Chaum concerned himself with the future of online privacy.

“You have to let your readers know how important this is,” Chaum once told a Wired journalist. “Cyberspace doesn’t have all the physical constraints. […] There are no walls … it’s a different, scary, weird place, and with identification it’s a panopticon nightmare. Right? Everything you do could be known to anyone else, could be recorded forever. It’s antithetical to the basic principle underlying the mechanisms of democracy.”

Chaum, who started his career as a computer science professor at Berkeley University, was not just a digital privacy advocate. He designed the tools to realize it. First published in 1981, Chaum’s paper “Untraceable Electronic Mail, Return Addresses, and Digital Pseudonyms” laid the groundwork for research into encrypted communication over the internet, which would eventually lead to privacy-preserving technologies like Tor.

But privacy of regular communication was not at the top of Chaum’s priority list. He arguably had an even bigger idea. The Berkeley professor wanted to design a privacy-preserving digital money.

“The choice between keeping information in the hands of individuals or of organizations is being made each time any government or business decides to automate another set of transactions,” Chaum would explain in the Scientific American in 1992. “The shape of society in the next century may depend on which approach predominates.”

Ten years prior, by 1982, Chaum had already solved the puzzle, which he had published in his second major paper: “Blind signatures for untraceable payments.” At a point in time when today’s Bitcoin veterans like Dr. Pieter Wuille, Erik Voorhees or Peter Todd had yet to take their first breath, the cryptographer had designed a solution to realize an anonymous payment system for the internet.

Blind Signatures

At the heart of Chaum’s digital money system lies his innovation of “blind signatures.”

To understand blind signatures, it’s important to first remember how public key cryptography works and, in particular, what (regular) cryptographic signatures are.

Public key cryptography uses key pairs. Such a pair consists of a public key, which is a seemingly random string of numbers that is mathematically derived from the other, truly random string of numbers: the private key. With the private key, it’s trivial to generate the public key. But with only the public key, it’s practically impossible to generate the private key: it’s a one way street.

Public key cryptography can be used to establish private communication between two people — in academic circles usually referred to as “Alice” and “Bob” — who only share their public keys with one another. Their private keys remain private.

But private communication is not all Alice and Bob can do. Alice can also cryptographically “sign” any piece of data (and so can Bob). To do so, Alice must mathematically combine her private key with this data. The result will be another seemingly random string of numbers known as the “signature.” Once again, it’s impossible to recreate Alice’s private key from the signature (with or without the piece of data). It’s all still a one-way street.

The interesting thing about this signature is that Bob (or anyone else) can check it against Alice’s public key. This tells Bob that it was indeed Alice that created the signature with her private key (and the added piece of data). This can, in turn, mean whatever Alice and Bob want. For example, it can mean that Alice agrees with the content of the data (just like a handwritten signature).

A blind signature then takes all this one step further. This time, Bob first generates a random number, called a “nonce,” and mathematically combines this with the piece of data. This “scrambles” the piece of data to make it seem like yet another random string of numbers. Bob can then give the scrambled data to Alice for her to sign. Alice cannot tell what the original data looks like, so she is “blind signing” it. The result is a “blind signature.”

Now, the interesting thing about this blind signature is that it’s not just linked to Alice’s keys (like any signature would be) and the scrambled data. The same blind signature is also linked to the original, unscrambled data. Using only Alice’s public key, anyone can check that Alice signed a scrambled version of the original data — including, of course, Alice herself, if she does get to see the original data later on.

eCash

This blind signature scheme is the trick that Chaum used to create a digital money system.

To realize this, Alice from the above example would actually be a bank: Alice Bank. This is a regular bank, like banks exist today, where customers have bank accounts with (in this example) U.S. dollar deposits.

Let’s say Alice Bank has four customers: Bob, Carol, Dan and Erin. And let’s say that Bob wants to buy something from Carol.

First, Bob requests a “withdrawal” from Alice Bank. (Ideally, he had already made this withdrawal earlier — but never mind that for now.) To make this withdrawal, Bob actually creates “digital banknotes” himself, in the form of unique numbers: “serial numbers.” On top of that, he scrambles these banknotes, as shown above. These scrambled banknotes are sent to Alice Bank.

Having received the scrambled banknotes from Bob, Alice Bank then blind signs each scrambled banknote and sends them back to Bob. For each signed, scrambled banknote that she sends back, Alice Bank subtracts one dollar from Bob’s bank account.

Now, because Alice Bank blind signed the scrambled banknotes, her signature is also linked to the original, unscrambled banknotes. So, Bob can now use the original, unscrambled banknotes to pay Carol by simply sending them to her.

As Carol receives the banknotes, she should forward them to Alice Bank. Alice Bank then checks that she indeed blind signed each of the banknotes, which her blind signatures allow her to do: they are linked to her own keys. Alice Bank also checks that the same banknotes (serial numbers) haven’t already been deposited by someone else in order to ensure that they haven’t been double-spent.

As the banknotes check out, Alice Bank adds the equivalent number of dollars to Carol’s bank balance, and lets Carol know. Upon this confirmation, Carol knows she’s been paid valid banknotes by Bob and can safely send him whatever he was buying from her.

ecash chart

The basic idea behind eCash. Source: faculty.bus.olemiss.edu/

Of key importance, Alice Bank will see the unscrambled banknotes for the first time only when Carol deposits them! As such, Alice Bank has no way of knowing that the banknotes were Bob’s. They could just as well have come from Dan or Erin.

As such, Chaum’s solution offers privacy in payments. This was not new in itself, of course: private payments were the norm in those days. But it was new in digital form. Hence, Chaum’s analogy: cash. Electronic cash. eCash.

DigiCash

By 1990, a little under 10 years after finishing his first papers (younger cryptocurrency developers like Matt Corallo, Vitalik Buterin and Olaoluwa Osuntokun still hadn’t been born), David Chaum founded DigiCash. The company was based in Amsterdam, where Chaum had been living for a couple of years, and specialized in — indeed — digital money and payment systems. These included a government project to replace toll booths (which was eventually cancelled) and smart cards (akin to what we call hardware wallets today). But DigiCash’s flagship project was its digital cash system, eCash. (The system was called eCash, while the money in the system was dubbed “CyberBucks,” comparable to using capital-letter Bitcoin for the protocol and lower case bitcoin for the currency.)

Digicash team

The technical team in the early days of DigiCash. (Chaum not pictured.) Source: chaum.com/ecash

At a time that Netscape and Yahoo! were leading the tech industry to new heights, and where some thought micropayments, not advertisements, would be the revenue model for the web, DigiCash was considered a rising star by tech entrepreneurs of the day. Of course, Chaum and his team had much faith in their technology as well.

“As payments on the network mature, you’re going to be paying for all kinds of small things, more payments than one makes today,” Chaum told the New York Times in 1994, of course, emphasizing the importance of privacy in such a world. “Every article you read, every question you have, you’re going to have to pay for it.”

That year, after four years of development, the first successful payments were tested, and later that same year eCash trials began: Banks could acquire a license from DigiCash to use the technology.

Interest was significant. By late 1995, eCash was licensed to its first bank: the Mark Twain Bank in St. Louis. Moreover, by early 1996, one of the biggest banks in the entire world got on board: Deutsche Bank. Credit Suisse, a second major player joined later, and several other banks across different countries — including the Australian Advance Bank, Norway’s Norske Bank and Bank Austria — would follow suit.

Yet, what’s perhaps more interesting than the deals DigiCash struck are the deals it did not. Two of the three major Dutch banks — ING and ABN Amro — are said to have made DigiCash partnership deals worth tens of millions of dollars. Similarly, Visa reportedly offered a $40 million investment, while Netscape had interest as well: eCash could have been included in the most popular web browser of that era.

Still, the biggest offer of all probably came from none other than Microsoft. Bill Gates wanted to integrate eCash into Windows 95 and is said to have offered DigiCash some $100 million to do so. Chaum, so the story goes, asked for two dollars for each version of Windows 95 sold. The deal was off.

While a rising star in the minds of technologists of the day, DigiCash seemed to have trouble making a financial deal that would help it to realize its full potential.

By 1996, DigiCash employees had seen one failed deal too many and wanted a change in policy. This change came in the form of a new CEO: Visa veteran Michael Nash. The startup also got a fund injection, while MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte was made chairman of the board. (Through its Digital Currency Initiative, the MIT Media Lab employs several Bitcoin Core contributors today.) The DigiCash headquarters were moved from Amsterdam to Silicon Valley. Chaum remained part of DigiCash, but now as CTO.

It wouldn’t make much difference. After several years of trials, eCash wasn’t catching on with the general public. The banks that got on board were experimenting but did not really push the technology; by 1998, Mark Twain Bank had only enrolled 300 merchants and 5,000 users. While a final deal with Citibank came close — it could have given the project a good push — this bank ended up walking out for unrelated reasons.

“It was hard to get enough merchants to accept it, so that you could get enough consumers to use it, or vice versa,” Chaum told Forbes in 1999, after DigiCash had finally filed for bankruptcy. “As the Web grew, the average level of sophistication of users dropped. It was hard to explain the importance of privacy to them.”

The Spawning of a Cypherpunk Dream

DigiCash failed, and eCash failed with it. But even though the technology did not succeed as a business, Chaum’s work would inspire a group of cryptographers, hackers and activists, connected through a mailing list. It was this group — which included DigiCash contributors like Nick Szabo and Zooko Wilcox-O’Hearn — that would come to be known as the cypherpunks.

Perhaps a bit more radical than Chaum himself ever was, the cypherpunks kept the dream of an electronic cash alive, proposing alternative digital currency systems throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. In 2008, about 10 years after DigiCash’s demise, Satoshi Nakamoto sent his proposal for an electronic cash to the de-facto successor of the then-defunct cypherpunk mailing list: Bitcoin.

Bitcoin and eCash have little in common from a design perspective. Crucially, eCash was centralized around DigiCash and could not really be its own currency. Even if every single person in the world would only use eCash for all their transactions, banks would still be necessary to offer account balances and confirm transactions. This also means that eCash — while providing privacy — was not as censorship resistant. Where Bitcoin was able to keep WikiLeaks funded even through a banking blockade, for example, eCash could not have done the same thing; banks could still have blocked WikiLeaks’ accounts.

Still, Chaum’s work on digital currency, dating back to the early 1980s, remains relevant. While Bitcoin itself does not employ blind signatures, scaling and privacy layers on top of the Bitcoin protocol could. Bitcointalk forum and r/bitcoin subreddit moderator Theymos, for example, has been a champion of an eCash-like scaling sidechain for Bitcoin for some time. Adam Fiscor, a leader in the domain of Bitcoin transaction privacy today, is realizing coin-mixing services utilizing blind signatures, as once proposed by Bitcoin Core contributor Greg Maxwell. And yet-to-be-announced Lightning Network technology could utilize blind signatures to improve security.

And Chaum himself? He returned to Berkeley, where he is responsible for a long list of publications, many in the field of digital elections and reputation systems. Perhaps, some 20 years from now, an entirely new generation of developers, entrepreneurs and activists will look back at these as the groundwork for a technology that is about to change the world.

This article is partly based on two articles published in the 1990s: “E-Money (That’s What I Want)” by Steven Levy for Wired, and “Hoe DigiCash alles verknalde” (Translated: “How DigiCash Blew Everything”) by an unknown author for Next! Magazine. There is also a wealth of information on chaum.com/ecash.

This article originally appeared on Bitcoin Magazine.

Facebook Faces Defamation Lawsuit in Connection with Cryptocurrency-Related Advertisements

TheMerkle Mark lewis Facebook LawsuitThings are quickly going from bad to worse for Facebook. The world’s leading social media platform is under fire from many angles. Despite their outspoken attitude toward cryptocurrencies, it has become evident they approved fake ICO advertisements using the name and image of Martin Lewis. More Legal Trouble for Facebook Over the past few months, things have unraveled at an alarming rate for Facebook. This social media platform is facing so much backlash, it is difficult to imagine how the company will come out of this. Cryptocurrency users are not too happy about how the social media giant banned all cryptocurrency-related advertisements earlier this year.

TheMerkle Mark lewis Facebook Lawsuit

Things are quickly going from bad to worse for Facebook. The world’s leading social media platform is under fire from many angles. Despite their outspoken attitude toward cryptocurrencies, it has become evident they approved fake ICO advertisements using the name and image of Martin Lewis.

More Legal Trouble for Facebook

Over the past few months, things have unraveled at an alarming rate for Facebook. This social media platform is facing so much backlash, it is difficult to imagine how the company will come out of this. Cryptocurrency users are not too happy about how the social media giant banned all cryptocurrency-related advertisements earlier this year.

Prior to banning cryptocurrency advertisements, it seems Facebook approved multiple ICO advertising campaigns. While that in itself is not entirely uncommon, these ICOs claimed Martin Lewis as one of their major backers. For those unaware of who Lewis is, he founded the MoneySavingExpert website, and he also hosts The Martin Lewis Money Show on ITV in the United Kingdom.

For some reason, several projects decided to use images of Martin Lewis, as well as his name, to promote the get-rich-quick schemes. While having one fake advertisement slip through is always a distinct possibility, a total of over 50 fake Martin Lewis adverts have been published on the Facebook platform to date. That is not acceptable by any stretch of the imagination.

Martin Lewis issued the following comment on the matter:

I don’t do adverts. I’ve told Facebook that. Any ad with my picture or name in is without my permission. I’ve asked it not to publish them, or at least to check their legitimacy with me before publishing. This shouldn’t be difficult – after all, it’s a leader in face and text recognition. Yet it simply continues to repeatedly publish these adverts and then relies on me to report them, once the damage has been done. Even when they are reported, many have been left up for days or weeks. And finally, when they are taken down the scammers just launch a new, nearly identical campaign very soon afterwards and the whole rigmarole starts again.

Because there has been no resolution from Facebook regarding these incidents, Martin Lewis has filed an official lawsuit against the social media giant. Solicitor Mark Lewis from Seddons law firm will be leading the case. Some people may recall that name from the Jack Monroe libel case involving defamation on Twitter. All of this does not bode well for Facebook whatsoever.

It will be interesting to see how all of this pans out for the social media giant. It is evident these advertisements should never have slipped through Facebook’s manual review and approval process. Its failure to take action after these issues were reported is also very worrisome.

Snoop Dogg To Promote Ripple At Invite-Only Event In NYC

Snoop Dogg will perform at Ripple’s “invite-only” event in New York city on May 15, ten tickets can be won in two Twitter contests in coming weeks. #NEWS

Snoop Dogg will perform at Ripple’s “invite-only” event in New York city on May 15, ten tickets can be won in two Twitter contests in coming weeks. #NEWS

Founding PayPal CEO Bill Harris Says Bitcoin Is A Scam, Here’s Why He’s Wrong – Forbes


Forbes

Founding PayPal CEO Bill Harris Says Bitcoin Is A Scam, Here’s Why He’s Wrong
Forbes
First of all, Bitcoin is undoubtedly useful as a means of payment in specific scenarios where there are no other options available to the user. For example, Amazon Mechanical Turk workers who find it difficult to transfer value out of the system often
Bitcoin is greatest scam ever – Bill HarrisSeeking Alpha

all 2 news articles »


Forbes

Founding PayPal CEO Bill Harris Says Bitcoin Is A Scam, Here's Why He's Wrong
Forbes
First of all, Bitcoin is undoubtedly useful as a means of payment in specific scenarios where there are no other options available to the user. For example, Amazon Mechanical Turk workers who find it difficult to transfer value out of the system often ...
Bitcoin is greatest scam ever - Bill HarrisSeeking Alpha

all 2 news articles »