Mijin Combines Permissioned Blockchains With Bitcoin Ninjas
Promoting a Bitcoin business is key to reaching a mainstream audience. Gone are the days in which a simple standard press release was enough to sway droves of customers to sign up for a new service. Marketing has evolved over time, but permissioned blockchain platform Mijin is taking things to the next level. Bitcoin and ninja’s make for excellent public....
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Sakura Internet, one of the top cloud providers in Japan and Tech Bureau, have recently signed up to take part in Mijin’s CloudChain open beta test. Mijin is a platform that was created so individuals and organizations can quickly deploy permissioned blockchains and use them in a “production environment.” The company is now offering a first-come, first-serve free distributed ledger for six months. CEO Takao Asayama told Bitcoinist: “We are pleased to roll out this Mijin CloudChain service, which lets you know the power of the blockchain. Now any institution or individual can build a real....
A couple of weeks ago, Bitcoin.com broke a story about Mijin and its unique Ninja advertising at the Breakthrough Summit 2015 in Japan. Tech Bureau’s CEO Takao Asayama has officially announced its low-cost project for creating permissioned blockchains. The startup wants to engage other finance institutions with their own individual blockchains seeking to....
In many recent articles, Bitcoin Magazine reported the trend toward private, "permissioned" non-Bitcoin blockchains, supported by Accenture and Digital Asset Holdings CEO Blythe Masters, among others. Permissioned blockchain developments for banks and financial operators have been started by giant Swiss bank UBS, Bitcoin exchange itBit and more. Permissioned blockchains would offer the advantages of digital currencies powered by public blockchains - fast and cheap transactions permanently recorded in a shared ledger - without the troublesome openness of the Bitcoin network where anyone can....
CEO of Tech Bureau Takao Asayama has unveiled Mijin, which is a low-cost solution for creating permissioned blockchain. The news to this effect came via a press release issued to the media which also made a lucrative claim; that the main aim is to "reduce infrastructure costs by up to 1000% by 2018." The press release further stated that Mijin is the platform that will allow anyone to set up a blockchain on a peer-to-peer network easily. It also said that it has the capability to easily replace traditional databases to create point systems, payment services, online games, airline mile....
Major banks and mainstream financial institutions are warming up to the blockchain technology that powers Bitcoin, and launching internal experiments and pilot projects to find out how they can use the blockchain. However, most banks frown at the chaotic anarchy of public "permissionless ledgers" like the Bitcoin blockchain, where any individual anonymous user can join and contribute hashpower to verify transactions without having to ask anyone's permission. Instead, they would prefer "permissioned ledgers" owned and by the banks, which can be operated only by vetted players. Think of....