Technology

Jonathan JohnsonContributorShare on TwitterJonathan Johnson is president of Medici Ventures and CEO of Overstock.com.More posts by this contributorThree challenges facing blockchain technologyThe road to the blockchain revolution has not always been smooth.
Most tech experts agree that the potential for new businesses and applications built on distributed ledgers is sky-high, but we are still waiting for that breakthrough year when blockchain transitions from a tech-oriented focus to widespread adoption.2020 is a new year and the start of a new decade.I believe we are on the cusp of a blockbuster year for blockchain development and that 2020 will see this technology begin to take its biggest, most world-changing steps yet.
As innovators continue to shape the competitive landscape, we will see more products in production and we will begin to see true blockchain-based solutions.I&ve reached out to some creative and influential thought-leaders in the blockchain space for their predictions for the upcoming year.
Their predictions & along with a few of my own — are below.Products in production&Those who have been quietly building during the crypto winter will begin to deliver beta and production versions of their platforms.
There are many companies that are on the verge of launching their products for the mass market.
Those who deliver products that are better than their centralized counterparts will see real adoption.
Those that are more complicated for traditional users to implement will arrive, but not see the adoption their communities are hoping for.& — Ben Golub, executive chairman and interim CEO, Storj Labs&2020 will be the year when software tools (think Stripe, Plaid, Twilio) that exist in the traditional software development stack will be created and adopted in the decentralized software development stack.& — Ben Lambert, principal, Pelion Venture Partners&Open source projects that use Hyperledger fabric will stay in the lead, not because of resources being injected into it, but because of the volume of overall users and new integrations solving use cases as a proof of concept.
In the commercial blockchain environment that does not rely on open source, companies will explore ways to introduce it into their product line while balancing permissions and privacy in a truly decentralized manner.& — Luis Macias, CEO and founder, GrainChainRegulation&Between Xi Jinping recently declaring China needs to ‘seize the opportunity of blockchain technology,& and the continued regulatory uncertainty in the U.S., China will broaden its lead in blockchain relative to the U.S.
Until the SEC rolls out more clear guidelines related to cryptocurrencies and blockchain, the U.S.
market will continue to stagnate.& — Ben Golub&SEC enforcement on scammy ICOs from 2017/2018 will continue in 2020 causing further chilling on altcoin trading and increased compliance with existing securities laws.
The result: legitimate securities tokens will be a good way to raise capital for unique assets as the regulatory landscape catches up with the technology and a more liquid market for security tokens results.& — Jonathan JohnsonPrivacy and security&Privacy and security will become a key differentiator for incumbents in the cloud.
Since its data breach last year, and its Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook has become more sensitive to the privacy and security concerns of its users.
Privacy and security are now becoming a key differentiator for businesses and it will cause companies in the cloud to start taking a serious look at their security strategies in 2020.
It will take much longer than a year for them to solidify and fully deploy their strategies, but 2020 will be the year the conversation begins to shift.& — Ben GolubVoting





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