BREAKING: Harvard’s endowment invested $5M – $10M directly into Blockstack’s token sale. This means that one of the leading university endowments is comfortable holding tokens directly. THE VIRUS IS SPREADING 🔥 — Pomp 🌪 (@APompliano)Launched by computer scientists from Princeton University, BlockStack is developing a privacy-focused internet harnessing the underlying features of the blockchain technology. The startup already features 80 applications that do everything from managing work documents and offering subscription-based content services in a decentralized environment.
Blockchain Unfenced
Harvard’s alleged investment in a blockchain startup followed its capital injection into two cryptocurrency funds last year. The outlook proved the university was gradually increasing its stakes in the blockchain industry despite skepticism. First Round Capital, for instance, surveyed 529 startup founders last December. It found that 87 percent of the respondents did not believe blockchain will succeed. “Projects based on the elimination of trust have failed to capture customers’ interest because trust is [actually] so damn valuable,” Kai Stinchcombe, the co-founder, and chief executive of True Link.Nouriel Roubini, a US-based economist who rightly predicted the 2008 financial crisis, said the blockchain’s recordkeeping ledger was no better than an MS Excel sheets.
Why blockchain is the most useless and over-hyped technology ever. Not a single properly useful and working application after billions literally wasted on vaporware by a self-serving eco-system. The Big Blockchain Lie by Nouriel Roubini — Nouriel Roubini (@Nouriel)The criticism was not able to put fences around the blockchain, anyway. The world kept taking notice of the technology’s trend, leading tech companies like IBM and Intel launching new projects in the space. Even banks like JP Morgan, that were once critical of Bitcoin, an open-source, decentralized payment protocol system based on the blockchain, announced their services powered by a similar tech – albeit closed-source. Harvard’s alleged investment proved that investors were beginning to look beyond criticism and make the most out of the so-called blockchain frenzy.