BSV Blockchain signs MOU with Saudi Digital Academy
KSA Saudi Digital Academy and the Ministry of telecom and IT in KSA has signed an MOU ( Memorandum of Understanding) with BSV Blockchain during the KSA LEAP22 event. The agreement will allow for the building of talent and job opportunities as well as skill set needed for Blockchain ecosystem in KSA.
During LEAP22 Jimmy Nguyen, Founding President of BSV Blockchain’s association, delivered a keynote speech at LEAP 2022 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on February 2, outlining how the BSV blockchain can build a better world and future for all.
‘Using time, blockchain organizes the world with a new way to record payments and data. For a long time, blockchain’s power has been restricted by those who believed it could not scale. It is time to create a more advanced Saudi Arabia and a better world with the BSV blockchain.’
His presentation at LEAP22 focused on the utility of the BSV blockchain, its important place in the evolution of timestamped records, and its potential to build a brighter and more accessible future for everybody across the world.
‘Time is something humans have always had a fascination with. We created in ancient times stone structures to measure equinoxes and solstices directed with the sun, and in ancient Egypt they created the sundial to measure sunrise to sunset in twelve equal parts,’ Nguyen said.
‘Time became much more mechanical in our ability to measure it, even getting to the point of creating an atomic clock in the 1960s, so accurate it could measure time down to the millisecond across hundreds and hundreds of years.’
‘Across all this measurement of time, one key thing is important: time allows us to provide order to events. It is that order that allows us to detect truth and prevent dishonesty and fraud by detecting changes in the order of events. And it is this power of time that actually underpins blockchain technology.’
Nguyen then introduced the concept of the BSV blockchain, a timestamped digital ledger of data and payment records that enables a better future through its many different applications and use cases. He spoke about the origin of blockchain technology, from its inception in a trio of research papers published by Stuart Haber and Scott Stornetta to its manifestation in the BSV blockchain, which offers unbounded scaling, low-cost transactions, a stable and reliable protocol and a public immutable ledger of timestamped records.
‘All a blockchain is a data system that is a distributed timestamp server, taking a ledger of records, whether it be payments or other forms of data transactions, and having that record date and timestamp when an event happened and then distributing it,’ Nguyen said.
Nguyen went on to explain the unique design of the BSV blockchain as a distributed timestamp server built to scale unbounded and to offer expansive utility through its support for complex and large data transactions.
Nguyen noted that the BSV blockchain understands the true utility of a blockchain as a data network protocol and is designed to offer low transaction fees at a massive scale. He compared the transaction fees of the Ethereum network, which vacillate wildly, with those offered by the BSV blockchain thanks to its massive scaling and big block sizes.
‘That means you can create a blockchain network for all sorts of data, not just a payment transaction, on the blockchain.’
The scale and efficiency of the BSV blockchain means that real blockchain applications can be deployed today, without waiting for the protocol to be further developed. Nguyen highlighted the wealth of services and applications companies within the BSV ecosystem are building on the blockchain.
He listed many projects that solve problems present across a vast number of industries. These included VXPASS, which offers a verified health record for Covid-19 vaccination tracking and verification while protecting patient identity and privacy; Domineum, which provides government-scale solutions, including a cargo tracking system that allows cargo to be tracked and published, so everyone can see the journey of the goods to their final destination; and WeatherSV, a company that allows users to open up payment channels and pay to record weather data to study environmental conditions.