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Skip to main content Official websites use. Who should attend Federal employees or anyone who wants to learn more about how public services can benefit from the practical application of blockchain-based solutions. Resources Have questions? Email emergingtech gsa. In this talk. Brian Behlendorf. Blockchain Emerging Tech.
Return to top. Read more TTS Solutions is a portfolio of products and services that help agencies improve delivery of information and services to the public. Hyperledger The TSC members agreed that Fabric had made significant progress towards that diversity goal, and given the trajectory, agreed that the criteria was satisfied. In my experience, few open source projects achieve that level of diversity in so little time. Hyperledger Fabric has published two releases, the latest of which was their v0.
The team is working on finalizing the development of the v1. This is a huge step for the Hyperledger community. As always, we encourage developers to join our efforts on Fabric, as well as other projects, via github , Rocket.
Chat the wiki or the mailing lists. You can also follow Hyperledger on Twitter or email us with any questions: info hyperledger. The Hyperledger Project was initially seeded with various blockchain-supporting commercial members, some of whom had interesting internal or nascent open source efforts that needed the kind of home that the Linux Foundation could provide.
It emerged at a time when it was clear that three points needed to be made to the market:. These two projects differ significantly in many ways, and thus could perhaps provide different, yet also sometimes overlapping purposes. In the spirit of putting all the wood behind the tip of the arrow, attention and efforts began to focus on those two. While still in a pre-alpha state, Fabric is attracting growing developer attention and significant mindshare around its unique approach.
We are seeing additional interest in new projects that build directly upon Fabric, but exist separately and may have different release schedules and priorities. For example, the chaincode management tools, or the Hyperledger Explorer initially. We would expect to see further exploration of work that has already been demonstrated in concept, such as hooking up the Ethereum virtual machine to Fabric.
Both Fabric and STL just cut another developer preview release. As both Fabric and Sawtooth Lake have picked up new contributions and developer momentum, and the commercial interest has continued to grow, we are now seeing interest in applying this model to additional technology efforts, potentially leading to new projects at Hyperledger. In some cases those will be a useful spin-out of an existing project and community; other times they will bring in a new community of developers, both on the new project and spilling over onto existing projects.
Blockchain and smart contracts are still in the early stages of a year, if not a year, adoption and maturation cycle. There are clear examples of efforts that have seen widespread adoption and scale: Bitcoin and Ethereum. There are clear examples of commercial blockchain stacks, running in production. There is clear momentum around Fabric and Sawtooth Lake. Yet by no means is this a mature industry — we are still seeking better consensus mechanisms for both permissioned and permissionless chains, a better range of choices for smart contract platforms, and still exploring the right identity models.
We have no idea if one specific package of software can serve all these needs at the same time, or if the approaches are as divergent as, say, ACID-compliant SQL databases and eventually-consistent NoSQL databases.
Furthermore, some needs may span multiple existing efforts — a graphical user interface, for example, that could just as easily span Fabric and Sawtooth Lake. What we do know is that there are no software development resources to spare. There is a global talent shortage for developers who understand not only cryptocurrency and blockchain engineering challenges, but who also understand distributed systems. The guts of these platforms are not unlike the complex balancing acts that operating system kernels or hardcore database efforts can reflect.
Debugging multi-threaded applications was a challenge when all we knew were single-threaded applications; now debugging distributed applications is that much harder. Given the amount of duplication of effort we see today on the same core functions, we need to constantly be looking for opportunities for developers to be working on common code and roadmaps whenever possible. In this environment, the most valuable role the Hyperledger Project can play is to serve as a trusted source of innovative, quality-driven open source software development community, creating modular, open source components and platforms.
The optimal focus of Hyperledger is to advance industry goals of distributed ledger and smart contracts. This has tremendous challenges, and not all of them are technical, as the debates over the Bitcoin blocksize or the DAO demonstrate. What may appear to be technical debates at first glance often are really about different visions for the roles these platforms should play in society and who should govern them.
The Domain Name System was fortunate enough to rise to ubiquity long before anyone outside the early Internet architects realized how important it was — how important having a widespread network of root nameservers all consistently serving up the same answers for domain names would be.
Mapping this to today, there is no reason why a particular cryptocurrency needs an entirely novel technology stack. The configuration settings, mining community management, trademark questions, and regulatory agency and law enforcement relationships will likely differ, and are really a matter for the global governance of ETC and ETH as cryptocurrencies. Perhaps most importantly, we can directly address what many have observed as a major challenge with the existing open source blockchain efforts — tremendous levels of tribalism amongst developers.
While invigorating, it can also make sharing code between efforts, or talking about common challenges and how to meet them, notoriously difficult. This is true even when the payoff would be less duplicated code and more eyes looking for security holes and other issues.
Multiply that rivalry with the effects of holding fungible currency whose value can be tied directly to the software in question, or open source project brands tightly associated with commercial brands in which developers own equity, and incompatible copyright license paradigms, and working together can be nearly impossible.
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