CommBank provides ID verification for gig economy marketplace users

 

 

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Now, in an effort designed to provide an extra layer of trust, a pilot will see members who bank with CBA able to add a ‘CommBank Identified’ badge to their Airtasker profile if the two firms have the same name and date of birth on file.

From CommBank provides ID verification for gig economy marketplace users

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Tim Fung, CEO, Airtasker, says:

“We’re creating a reputation passport, which will help people know exactly who they are dealing with and what they are qualified for.”

From CommBank provides ID verification for gig economy marketplace users

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Why bother with the blockchain for identity?

As my former colleague Salome Parulava rather succinctly described last year, we must distinguish between two different areas of overlap between 

First, “Identity for Blockchain”, assumes that if blockchain platforms… gain adoption that is at least 10% as widespread as the industry’s attention to them today, there will be a need for a robust and reliable identity layer to manage KYC, AML, authentication and authorisation processes for shared ledger applications.

From “Identity for Blockchain” vs “Blockchain for identity”. What’s in it for Airbnb? | Consult Hyperion

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Second approach could be called “Blockchain for Identity” and it formulates a separate self-sustained class of use cases. It assumes that blockchain technology can enable solutions to known identity problems

From “Identity for Blockchain” vs “Blockchain for identity”. What’s in it for Airbnb? | Consult Hyperion

It’s this latter category that interests me at the moment. As Sally pointed out last year, there are some specific problems to do with interoperability and discoverability that might be approached in a different way. Let’s to pause to clarify a couple of definitions. First, I want to distinguish between attributes (such as IS_OVER_18) and credentials (such as dave.birch!Barclays#IS_OVER_18).

Oh wait. As you can see here, I’ve invented a new shorthand. So the attributes are facts about me (the first party) that you (the second party) want to know. Credentials are attributes about me that are not useful to you unless they are attested to by a third party and they can be presented by the first party for verification by the second party. So you, the pub, want to see an IS_OVER_18 credential and I present you with an identity dave.birch!Barclays (that’s a public key of mine signed by Barclays private key) and you can check that identity, see that it includes the IS_OVER_18 attribute and then (assuming that the identity hasn’t expired ) you can serve me a drink. In the case of some other credentials (IS_A_UK_RESIDENT) you might want to ping Barclays to make sure that the identity has been cancelled (because I’ve moved out of the UK). So you get the general idea.

Note one particularly interesting aspect of this architecture. In the example I used, my identity was dave.birch!Barclays but it could just as easily have been mr.x!Barclays and that wouldn’t make any different whether you serve me a drink or not. As I have written here approximately monthly for a decade or so, we need to make our transactional space one where attributes, not identities, are transaction enablers.

My good friends at Meeco along with a group of people I take very seriously in this space have just published their report “The Rise of the Attribute Economy 2.0” that explores and examines this kind of thinking.

Now, suppose all of the banks issue these credentials to their customers. This would be immensely useful for several reasons. 

 

I could store the CRUD on my phone or on my laptop. But then I might lose it. So instead, let’s assume that the banks get together a create a shared ledger to hold all of their CRUD in one place. Now, when I want to open a new bank account or start internet dating or put a monkey on Man City half way through a game courtesy of noted actor Ray Winstone, all I have to do is point to a relevant piece of CRUD. Now the pointers to the CRUD will easily fit on my phone so no problem – I can download them from my bank whenever I get a new phone, it’s no big deal –

Let’s try a worked example. I want to start internet dating. I go to Ashley Match and click to open an account. Ashley Match Asks for a virtual identity. I choose Mr X at Barclays, an identity that contains only two facts about me: that I’m over 18 and I am resident in the UK. The fact that the credentials are attested to by Barclays also tells Ashley match that Barclays know who I am, which as I have mentioned before, means that I cannot misbehave behind my pseudonym. Ashley match now go to the chain and look for this identity. They find the Mr X creation records and look along the ledger to see if that identity has been updated or deleted (they don’t care if it’s been read by someone else). It hasn’t. But now they need to know that I am the actual owner of Mr X so to speak

UK card payments continued upward trend in 2016

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210000UK card payments continued upward trend in 201602 March 2017  |  1961 views  |  0Source: UK Cards AssociationConsumers spent £647 billion using payment cards in 2016, new figures show. There were 14.8 billion card transactions in 2016, equivalent to 40.5 million transactions a day or 469 a second, data from The UK Cards Association shows.

Three-quarters of retail spending (76.4 per cent) was on payment cards. Retail spending on cards in 2016 was £298 billion, compared to £290 billion in 2015.

The majority of card spending in 2016 was made via debit cards, which accounted for £461 billion of spending. Total card spending in 2015 was £620 billion.

Contactless payments accounted for £25 billion of spending

[From

UK card payments continued upward trend in 2016

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Pensioners incomes exceeds working families | Government Business

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Research has revealed that pensioners in the UK are now an average of £20 a week better off than working households.

[From Pensioners incomes exceeds working families | Government Business]

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Median income among pensioners is projected to rise twice as quickly as that for the rest of the population

[From Historically weak growth in living standards set to continue; low-income households with children to fare worst – Institute For Fiscal Studies – IFS]

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New Blockchain Partnership Proposes Solution for Remote Voting – CryptoCoinsNews

The news that somewhere in South Korea some sort of local government had some sort of election and recorded the votes on some sort of blockchain restarted some discussions about whether electronic voting might be just around the corner. As I have often suggested, the idea of using smartphones instead of ballot papers seems rather obvious.

With a sample ballot on their smartphone a voter will only need to bring their phone with them when the polls open;

[From New Blockchain Partnership Proposes Solution for Remote Voting – CryptoCoinsNews]

Great. But hold on…

it’s projected that through an app built on the blockchain voters won’t have to make the trip to polls in the future.

[From New Blockchain Partnership Proposes Solution for Remote Voting – CryptoCoinsNews]

Oh dear. This sort of system might be acceptable for shareholder voting and that sort of thing, but it certainly isn’t acceptable for either local or national government elections for a variety of reasons all of which have been reiterated endlessly on this very blog (principal among them the issue of voter intimidation). I am firmly of the opinion that voting should be a public act.

That doesn’t mean, however, that new technology cannot make a very big difference to the electoral process. Just to illustrate on sensible use of blockchain technology in this context, imagine a voting system whereby the elector authenticates access to a private key and is returned a cryptographically-blinded permission to vote. They go down to the polling both a tap their phone or bluetooth or QR or whatever to communicate their vote. Then they choose their candidate. Let’s say they vote for President Camacho. When they get home they can log in to traverse the election block chain and they can see if their vote has indeed ended up in the right bucket. In fact, they can see every vote in every vote (although they don’t know who those votes came from).

Orange places 1,700 ID card readers at prepaid sales points – Telecompaper

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Orange is forecasting 1,700 outlets with a Famoco terminal, which can verify the identify of a prepaid customer. This has become a requirement since December for all prepaid providers in Belgium…The system can within seconds make an identification using the government’s CheckDoc database.From Orange places 1,700 ID card readers at prepaid sales points – Telecompaper

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Orange Digital Ventures recently made an investment of EUR 11 million into Famoco, a maker of scanners…. Orange started using the terminals in its own shops. Now, supermarket gas stations and other sales points will use the technology.

From Orange places 1,700 ID card readers at prepaid sales points – Telecompaper

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Money and intelligent design

The good people at BBVA Research recently published a paper on central bank digital currencies (Central Bank Digital Currencies, Gouveia et al, March 2017) in which, amongst other conclusions, the authors say that “we also consider it likely that a scenario in which CBDC is anonymous, universal and non-yield bearing will be implemented”. But why is this “likely”? Why would any central bank bother setting up the form of distributed ledger that the authors envisage in order to implement something of such obvious utility to criminals, terrorists, money-launderers, tax-evaders and corrupt politicians? I’m not sure about this as a trajectory for money in the always-on robo-economy.

While this report talks in general about central bank digital currency (or “digital fiat” as I prefer to label it), it refers repeatedly to distributed ledger technology (i.e., shared ledgers) as the mechanism for managing this currency. It also refers to “blockchain technology” in the Executive Summary, although I would have thought this least-likely form of shared ledger architecture to implement such a system. Bitcoin uses a blockchain is that it is resistant to attacks from untrusted actors who are part of the consensus-forming network while rewarding participation in that network with currency. But a central bank will want to regulate the supply of digital fiat itself. If it doesn’t, then what’s the point of digital fiat? And if the central bank is going to, for example, use commercial banks as the nodes in the consensus-forming network then surely these must be trusted actors? If a rogue bank starts introducing bogus transactions, the central bank has a lot more to worry about than maintaining retail balances.

To put it more succinctly: why would we use 21st-century technology to emulate 17-th century money? Are we going to use new technology merely as a band-aid to cover up the flaws in the existing system or are we going to do something different? J.P. Koning came up with a lovely way of thinking about this, with the added bonus of evocative imagery and a core analogy that holds true: money is indeed imaginary.

Like Inception, our monetary system is a layer upon a layer upon a layer… Monetary history a story of how these layers have evolved over time.

From Moneyness: Money as layers

Great movie, with the wonderful line “yes, but how did you get here”. Physiology recapitulates phylogeny, as they (used) to say. In other words, the structure of the monetary system shows its evolution, just like our knees do. It did not arise by intelligent design. In fact, quite the contrary: it demonstrates some pretty unintelligent design on a daily basis (like have people instruct instant payment transfers by typing in account numbers and sort codes).

So: do we revolutionise money (whether using a blockchain or not) by adding layers or replacing them? It’s really hard to replace a layer without disturbing the layers above so you end up having to replace the whole stack and that is hard to co-ordinate, so conservatism wins, and we end up hacking money to make it work in the modern world. Yet, as I will point out in my forthcoming book “Before Babylon, Beyond Bitcoin”, the future of money actually began back in the 1970s when it went virtual. So the money of the future, money that is nothing more than bits, is already here. Yet the institutions we use to create and control it (central banks and the IMF, monetary policy and capital ratios) date back generations, indeed centuries. No wonder it doesn’t work properly.

Things, however, are about to change. Suppose that we apply intelligent design to create forms of money that are grounded in a world of mobile phones and shared ledgers and such like to operate in a fundamentally more efficient way.? Then what would that money look like? And who should take part in the consensus-forming process (but that’s for another day!).

In intelligent design, we ought to start out by deciding what is best for society as whole rather than what is best for (say) banks. We want to have regulations that are good for society but we do not want regulations that are expensive, beyond cost-benefit analysis and a burden on stakeholders. Nor do we want regulations, as we have now, that have spiralling costs with no end in sight. We might ask, for example, in the case of America whether it makes sense to have one virtual currency regulator or 50:

It is a fair question to ask whether there should be state regulation of virtual currency.

From Virtual currency needs one regulator, not 50 | American Banker

In this case it is, I would imagine, a byproduct of state regulation of banks and it perpetuates because regulators at the state level mistakenly imagine money to be something to do with banking. And, I suppose, they are currently underemployed, what with everything being so stable and efficient in the financial services world. Our first step to a better system, then, is not based on fintech but on regtech:

Regulation — ‘aligning financial regulation with the Global Goals … to make sustainable asset classes more investible at lower cost.’

From Getting into the Flows – Project Breakthrough – Medium

If we look at the patten of the co-evolution of money and technology what we see (yes I know this is a gross simplification) is that sustainable asset classes as a mechanism for deferred payment that becomes a store of value and then a means of exchange. The means of exchange then becomes a currency that denominates other transactions. OK, so what would these assets be? Richard Roberts goes on to identify candidate currencies based on “flows”, which is a useful way of thinking. 

We’ve identified four key flows — you could also think of them as currencies — that we believe will define tomorrow’s economy: money, data, carbon and genes.

From Getting into the Flows – Project Breakthrough – Medium

This accords with another perspective that I have written about before, the Long Finance perspective. In Gill Ringland’s examination of plausible financial services scenarios for 2050, she talks about the key assets being a person’s identity, credit rating and parking space (alluding to a new demographic asset class of residence). I think that there will be many more currencies, because I see currencies linked to communities, but I agree with the general thrust, so let’s imagine that there is a framework in place for creating the currencies (a privacy-enhancing framework with all sorts of goodies such a homomorphic encryption and zero-knowledge proofs baked in to it) and that it has been intelligently design to meet the goals of society.

Now this is where fintech comes into things, helping people to manage these currencies in a more sophisticated and efficient way within that regtech framework (e.g., shared ledgers). Fintech helps me to track whether I’m buying too much coffee, make loans to people in the developing world and to crowdfunding a new board game. I love it. And it works within a regtech framework that allows it to do all of things cost-effectively. This seems to me to be a much more realistic vision of the future than the “Star Trek” alternative, even though I do enjoy that version:

One of my favorite moments from Star Trek is in ST IV: The Voyage Home, when Kirk and the gang are stranded in 1980s San Francisco. They try to board a Muni bus and are promptly turned away.

Spock: What does it mean, “exact change”?

Kirk: They’re still using money. We need to find some.

Not only is money a foreign concept to the crew, it’s so foreign they didn’t even remember it was used in the Twentieth Century.

From Why Star Trek’s Future Without Money Is Bogus — Brain Knows Better

It’s tempting to imagine a post-scarcity future where money (as a system for allocating scarce resources) has vanished and the vast communist galactic super state takes care of everyone’s needs. But like the writer here, I don’t buy it. Some things will always remain scarce and desirable, like my attention span, and money will remain necessary. But it won’t be the same money that we have today.

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