What I imagined the future would look like revolved around technology serving humanity and helping solve societal problems. We’ve seen examples of technology, like blockchain, being used to enable digital commerce while also fighting corruption, fraud and, mostly importantly to me, solve problems with today’s identity landscape.
Identity-related digital fraud is one of the direst challenges with today’s digital economy. Whether it’s trouble with credit card fraud, data breaches of varying sizes, the advent and rise of SIM swapping fraud or identity theft, bad actors are becoming increasingly sophisticated at stealing our data through innumerable channels. Just last year, over five billion records were exposed through at least 6,515 publicly reported data breaches. In Canada, CPA Canada’s 2019 Annual Fraud Study[1] found that 70 per cent of Canadians are more concerned about fraud today than they were five years ago, 86 per cent are familiar with identity theft and credit card fraud and almost 80 per cent have experienced email and telemarketing fraud.
Think this doesn’t have an impact on your personal life? Take a quick visit to Troy Hunt’s haveibeenpwned.com to see where your email address has been publicly leaked in reported breaches, the vast majority of which were in the latter half of this decade.
These concerning stats serve to both scare and encourage us to continue to develop solutions that protect people’s data. From conversations around FaceApp’s face-aging filter opening the door to hackers to stories about how people still write their passwords on a piece of paper, we believe that taking care of personal data should be a combined effort between users and technology providers – and we look forward to doing our part at SecureKey.
My vision for 2020 is seeing blockchain reach its full potential in helping participants in the world’s digital economy arm themselves against bad actors. My vision is to see our Verified.Me network expand to every industry, sector and use-case possible. My vision is to solve the problems of today’s identity landscape and help consumers – and their data – move forward into the next decade with greater privacy, security and consent-driven tools at their fingertips.
My personal goal is to move beyond society’s justified milieu of fear and frustration toward online services, instead making online service delivery trust-worthy and cost-effective. I want to grow online transactions for business while also making it simpler, more convenient and privacy-respecting for all of us who want to do more online.
Among the many important milestones and amazing advancements this year represented for new use-cases of blockchain technology, I’m proudest of Verified.Me. After so many years of dedication and diligence from all of our collaborators in bringing this first-of-its-kind solution to market, the launch of Verified.Me was a roaring success. We end the year with our browser-based, iOS and Android platforms, 11 network participants and so much more to come.
The solution to today’s identity problem is complicated, but we’ve made great strides in 2019 with blockchain and can’t wait to see what 2020 has in store.
What did you imagine 2020 would look like? Tell us at our first event of the new decade, IdentityNORTH’s Western Workshop. Held in Vancouver on January 22nd and 23rd, our SVP of Public Sector Delivery, Eric Swedersky, will be there to share our experiences in building Verified.Me.
Looking for tickets? Readers can take advantage of a special promotional offer and receive 15 per cent off your general ticket. Visit IdentityNORTH’s ticketing website and entire the code SECUREKEY_VAN15.
We look forward to seeing you there – and seeing what the future of digital identity, blockchain and tech holds for all of us.
2019’s milestones in blockchain[2]
January
- Blockchain-based Bitcoin turned 10 years old
- Coinstar machines begin selling cryptocurrency at grocery stores across the US
February
- Ethereum’s Constantinople hard fork is released, part two of Metropolis
- Parliament of Canada Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics holds hearings on what can be done to better protect Canadians online with emerging technologies like AI and blockchain
April
- Bitcoin surpasses 400 million total transactions
May:
- SecureKey and Canada’s major financial institutions launched blockchain-based network Verified.Me in Canada
June
- Daily Ethereum transactions surpass one million
June
- Facebook announces Libra
July
- United States senate holds hearings titled ‘Examining Regulatory Frameworks for Digital Currencies and Blockchain”
August
- Ethereum developer dominance reaches 4x that of any other blockchain
September
- Santander bank settles both sides of a $20 million bond on Ethereum
October
- One fined $24 million by the SEC for its unregulated $4 billion EOS ICO
- Over 80 million distinct Ethereum addresses created
November
- Over 3000 Dapps created. Of them, 2700 are built on Ethereum
- Amount of Ether locked in Decentralized Finance apps reaches all time high of 2.7 million ETH
[1] CPA Canada 2019 Annual Fraud Study: https://www.cpacanada.ca/en/the-cpa-profession/about-cpa-canada/media-centre/2019/february/canadians-express-strong-concerns-about-fraud-cpa-canada-survey
[2] Taken from Consensys’ “The Decade in Blockchain – 2010 to 2020 in Review”