Ex-Google engineer launches blockchain-based system for banks

in #investments8 years ago

LONDON, July 13 (Reuters) - A former Google  engineer, whose speech  recognition software is used in more than a billion Android smartphones,  has launched a company that uses blockchain technology to build a new  operating system for banks.

Paul Taylor, a Cambridge University  academic with an expertise in artificial intelligence, speech synthesis  and machine learning, started working on the system, called Vault OS,  two years ago in a basement in London's district, known for being a tech  start-up hub.

               Blockchain technology has captured the imagination of the financial  industry, with advocates saying it has the potential to shake up how  markets operate. The technology, which underpins the digital currency  bitcoin  , creates a shared database in which participants can trace  every transaction ever made.

The ledger is tamper-proof and  transparent, meaning that transactions can be processed without the need  for third-party verification.

                             "Most of the banks are using systems that were written in the 80s  and 90s, and they just are not ready for the security-conscious internet  app age at all," Taylor told Reuters. "What the blockchain does is  provide a very secure way of storing transactions."

The system  also negates the need for costly in-house data centres, as it uses  cloud-based systems, which banks can use on a "pay-as-you-go" basis,  which means that there is no single point of failure.

Taylor  said major high-street banks were spending around a billion pounds ($1.3  billion) a year on computer technology, much of which he said was being  used for propping up the current "legacy" systems rather than on any  innovative technology.

Blockchain is still a nascent technology  and is reckoned to still be five to ten years away from widespread  adoption. Its reputation has suffered somewhat from its association with  bitcoin, which has seen several company failures, including Tokyo-based  exchange Mt. Gox filing for bankruptcy and leaving investors  approximately $500 million in the red.

The start-up has been  working with about ten banks, Taylor said, at least one of which would  be starting a trial using the new system in August. He expects the  system to be up-and-running within about a year. ($1 = 0.7531 British  Pounds)

(Reporting by Jemima Kelly, editing by Louise Heavens)  (([email protected])(+44)(0)(20 7542 7508)(Reuters  Messaging: [email protected]))

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How does this compare to Ripple? It has the same philosophy.