Blockstream: $21 Million Funding Will Drive Bitcoin Development

Sidechains

While VC firms have demonstrated an overwhelming interest in funding the wider bitcoin industry, its core developers have long argued that contributions to the advancement of its protocol have lagged dangerously behind.

To the team behind Blockstream, however, its $21m funding round announced yesterday represents the first concerted execution of capital toward correcting this imbalance.

The funding will be used principally by the company to realize its sidechains proposal on the bitcoin network, which would allow assets to be exchanged across multiple blockchains via a two-way pegging system. Blockstream contends this would allow developers new freedoms of experimentation and provide the network with a way to trial potential alterations.

Speaking to CoinDesk, CEO Austin Hill sought to frame the funding as an investment that is as revolutionary as those contributed to space transportation pioneer SpaceX and electronic car giant Tesla Motors.

He said:

"These things didn’t happen overnight, they took a concentrated effort to actually move science and technology forward, and bitcoin requires that. But we’re only millimeters in a potential marathon of digitizing assets, and it's very, very important that we take that long view."

In turn, both Hill and co-founder Adam Back asserted that the experienced tech veterans affiliated the round – which included LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang and Google chairman Eric Schmidt – recognize that bitcoin's core technology requires massive funding to reach its full potential, and that Blockstream's investors share its long-term vision for bitcoin.

"We showed them our vision for how bitcoin and the blockchain could evolve, and they saw the same potential we did," Hill added. "They saw that it was going to be an entire revolution in computing, distributed trust, security and they bought into it and gave us their support."

A technology problem

Hill sought to portray the sizeable funding as one that would enable Blockstream to focus on long-term architecture decisions that would later support a whole ecosystem of potential business opportunities.

The serial entrepreneur and co-founder of privacy technology startup Zero-Knowledge Systems compared the launch of Blockstream to that of Google, arguing that, at the time of its launch, many market observers questioned the need for a search engine given that AltaVista and Yahoo had been developed.

"Google focused on a technology problem of how do you actually make all the world’s information accessible at the click of a button and that was a hard engineering problem, and you’ve seen entire industries be changed because of that," Hill said.

Hill framed Blockstream's technology problem as being more largely about how how society manages all manner of financial instruments and documents, deeds to money, can solve inefficiencies. He suggested that Blockstream will seek to pioneer some of these lines of business, while allowing the open-source bitcoin community to handle others.

"There are so many businesses that will be borne out of this and many of these will be businesses that we don’t chose to be in, frankly," Hill said.

Above all, however, Hill contended that what is needed first is for the technology to begin developing at a more rapid pace.

Open-source approach

Though Blockstream has come under fire from community members who feel the company represents a turn toward centralizing key aspects of bitcoin's development process, Hill and Back sought to frame the company as one that would demonstrate a commitment to open-source principles.

"The entire project was born out of the open-source community, so the idea that we would do anything that isn’t open-source or isn’t decentralized or open permission-less innovation is anti-bitcoin," Hill said.

Hill drew comparisons to open-source software product giant Red Hat and e-commerce software solution Magento as companies that have fostered entire communities of businesses in the manner that Blockstream is seeking to achieve.

He suggested that he sees Blockstream as a continuation of the overall innovation in the bitcoin space, one that is seeking to empower the elements that have already contributed to making bitcoin the global transaction system it is today.

Collaborating with bitcoin core

Blockstream also sought to frame its organization as interoperable with the bitcoin core development team, noting that some of its developers such as Greg Maxwell, Pieter Wuille and Matt Corallo have been long-time contributors to the bitcoin network.

Because of these relationships, Blockstream said it believes it can operate as a company, even as core development lies outside of its direct influence. In part, Hill framed Blockstream as a solution to this common developer dilemma, as he said sidechains will allow for experimentation on bitcoin, without large-scale changes.

"You’ve seen instances where people want to make changes to bitcoin or they want to make changes to bitcoin in certain ways," Hill said. "Bitcoin has to be cautious because it’s protecting $5bn in value and you don’t want to tinker with it ... It’s hard to justify making changes to something that is so mission critical."

Back put sidechains into more concrete terms, posing them as a solution to bitcoin's scalability and security issues and suggesting that they will bring more off-blockchain activity back to bitcoin's main ledger.

"With sidechains you can move forward with a kind of beta version of bitcoin with real value in it and add some of those features that the projects that need access to those features can start to use them, add validation to it and eventually that implementation could become a major upgrade," Back added.

This new capability, Blockstream argues, will benefit both the technology as a whole and entreprenuers.

Enticing developers

Of course, Blockstream must also entice strong developers to its platform, something that the company acknowledged is complicated by the increasing number of more advanced blockchain applications in the crypto 2.0 segment of the industry.

"There’s a lot of education that needs to occur, there’s a lot of communication and we look forward to the coming months where we’re going to be publishing more details, more technical details, sample code on GitHub, allow people to start experimenting with various parts of the technology stack," Hill said.

The CEO said that Blockstream will strive to illustrate how sidechains can be used to empower entrepreneurial development, and that for now, this means educating developers through workshops and co-development.

Back suggested that developers should keep in mind that competing systems will need to replicate bitcoin's network effect, something he said would be a challenge to any project seeking to replicate aspects of what bitcoin's technology can provide.

"Once something takes hold and gets going, it makes more sense to focus on and build around and on top of that and we feel that sidechains are the best way to do that," he said.

Sidechains today

As for what that means in the short term, Back and Hill were less clear. Back indicated that sidechains are up and running on an internal test network and that Blocksteam is currently in talks with an undisclosed number of potential pilot customers.

"Right now, we’re selecting co-development partners who we’re giving early access to some development to collaborate on making sure that the use cases and what the technology needs it to do to accomplish their goals," Hill said.

As for deliverables, Hill acknowledged that Blockstream has a responsibility to its investors to show progress, but he did not share any specific goals.

"Right now that progress is deploying and interacting with the community, showcasing how sidechains and bitcoin and this ecosystem can evolve," he said. "We have some strategic objectives that we think are important that are not being done about the ecosystem."

Hill added that Blockstream hopes to publicize use cases of its technology, but that this would likely take time. He went on to estimate that the sidechains project would likely be open to the general public during the first half of 2015.

Images via Blockstream; Shutterstock

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Original author: Pete Rizzo