Decentralized[1] structured data startup Dirt Protocol has secured investments from major crypto venture players to build a blockchain[2] platform for reliable data, the company announced[3] July 11.
Contributors to the funding round included well-known crypto industry names such as Pantera Capital[4] and Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group[5], along with Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam. A total of 15 venture partners and 11 angel investors participated, the startup reports.
Dirt, which will use the $3 mln it raised to create its eponymous platform, seeks to deploy blockchain technology and a system of token staking to certify the trustworthiness of data and penalize lies.
This, the company says, will come in a form “similar to Wikipedia[6]” but fully decentralized and without curators.
“[I]n this new decentralized world we still rely on centralized sources of truth — Twitter determines who is real and CoinMarketCap determines the price of a cryptocurrency,” CEO Yin Wu said in a statement quoted by Venturebeat[7], continuing:
“There needs to be a way to determine what is true and build trust without a centralized arbiter [...] Dirt is doing to data what Wikipedia did to the encyclopedia.”
Blockchain’s role in data verification has long been touted, with most schemes nonetheless centering on storage and tamper-proofing. Last week, decentralized cloud platform DADI launched its mainnet implementation[8] with an eye to increasing the security of hosting services for websites, APIs and apps.
References
- ^ Decentralized (cointelegraph.com)
- ^ blockchain (cointelegraph.com)
- ^ announced (medium.com)
- ^ Pantera Capital (cointelegraph.com)
- ^