Why governance matters: Blockchain Governance with Peter Zhou and Max Ren

Why governance matters: Blockchain Governance with Peter Zhou and Max Ren

All projects and organizations need a governance system to make and enforce decisions. This is true whenever multiple actors collaborate regardless on whether it’s a governmental state, business or family. According to Thomas Cox (Chief Governance Officer at StrongBlock), In the case of blockchain, governance helps to deal with emergent issues that “transcend what the settled code can handle”.  

Different blockchains use different governance structures and during VeChain’s 8th webinar, Dr. Peter Zhou and Dr. Max Ren analyzed some of these processes and how effective they have been.

 

Bitcoin

As the first decentralized digital currency, Bitcoin was designed with free governance structure to avoid entities gaining too much power and authority and, ultimately, giving control to the users. Not having a systematic way make decisions, however, has led to inefficiencies and community conflicts. As an example, Dr Max Ren referred to the disagreements that occurred when dealing with Bitcoin’s scalability limitations. While different solutions such as increasing of block size or the lighting network are available, opposition and conflict of interest between core developers and miners has slowed the deployment of Bitcoin Improvement Protocols (BIP) and resulted in forks such as Bitcoin XT or Bitcoin Cash.

 

Ethereum

Ethereum on the other hand has a more methodological decision making process. New features are submitted to the Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIP) repository, which are then discussed in the Fellowship of Ethereum Magicians forum and (with enough support) considered for development during All-Core-Devs Meetings. Core developers have the final say and decide whether a proposal is to be implemented or rejected by carrying a “rough consensus”. This gives developers significant power and, while not all of their identities are known, having a clear roadmap, the existence of the Ethereum Foundation and the presence of figureheads like Vitalik Buterin has helped guide the community and give direction to Ethereum’s growth. According to Hudson Jameson (Developer Liaison at the Ethereum Foundation), the community is also “taking up the torch to decentralize processes“.

Blockchain Governance

Ethereum Governance

 

EOS

EOS governance is influenced by its Proof-Of-Stake mechanism. In the network, 21 block producers are elected by token holders and given authority to confirm transactions.

Initially, EOS governance was set by rules in its Block Producer Agreement and Interim Constitution. According to the documents, block producers could only execute valid orders passed by the EOS Core Arbitration Forum (ECAF), which in turn was responsible for dispute arbitration and resolution. In June 2018, however, the constitution was breached when block producers decided to protect users from bad actors by freezing 7 accounts without prior ECAF consent. In the same month, a forged ECAF order requesting the freezing of 27 additional accounts was also discovered; creating internal conflict and causing the community to question the effectiveness of its governance processes. As a result, block producers eventually replaced the constitution with the EOS User Agreement (EUA) which, while it removes enables smoother decision making by removing the ECAF, does not include a “No Vote Buying” clause and gives block producers significant control voter the network. This has led to concerns about centralisation and collusion as reported in a recent Binance Research article.

Blockchain Governance

EOS Initial Governance

 

VeChain

VeChain’s governance model has been designed to balance decentralization with effective decision making. At its core, a stakeholder elected Board of Steering Committee is responsible for overseeing daily operations and resolving emergency situations.Token holders, however, have the final say on the implementation of fundamental changes.

New features can be proposed by both the Committee and the community (e.g. VIP-191 proposed by Totient) but need to be approved by a supermajority of Steering Committee members. Approved proposals are then presented to the community where Authority Masternodes and token holders with voting rights (i.e. node holders) can decide whether the to accept the new features. If the community does not agree, the changes are not integrated into the blockchain. To mitigate the influence from bad actors voting rights are only granted to long-term token holders that stake a minimum amount of VET for a minimum amount of time (allowing them to upgrade into a node). Depending on the amount of VET staked, users can upgrade to different nodes carrying varying voting power. This helps maintain voting integrity and ensures voters have the ecosystem’s best interest.

Blockchain Governance - Vechain's Governance System

VeChain Governance

VeChain’s governance structure allows fast action to be taken during emergency situations while keeping ultimate control with its users. The system proved to be effective when 1.1 billion VET were lost in December 2019. In response to the theft, the Steering Committee was able to immediately mobilize, contact the relevant stake holders and jointly release an emergency patch to freeze the stolen tokens. This helped mitigate the issue and by letting the community vote whether to permanently implement the temporary solution, token holders were able to decide the networks future, maintaining the blockchain’s integrity and decentralization.

To protect community voters from harassment  or being influenced to make certain decisions, VeChain is also developing an e-voting solution that will protect their privacy.

It is important to note though that network upgrades are still carried by VeChain core developers and therefore, for VeChain’s governance to succeed, the Foundation, Authority Masternodes and the Steering Committee’s actions need to remain transparent, ethical and accountable towards the community which so far appears to have been the case.

There is no perfect or “one size fits all” governance structure, however, VeChain’s system appears to be ideal for its enterprise-centric applications. Having an unstructured governance like Bitcoin could lead to slow upgrade implementations and inefficient decision making (turning businesses away). By balancing the role of the Board of Steering Committee and all stakeholders, VeChain gives users control over the network while being able to also take fast and effective actions to respond to sudden issues.

A recording of the video can be found below:

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What to expect from PoA 2.0-Surface and VeChain’s current technical advantages

What to expect from PoA 2.0-Surface and VeChain’s current technical advantages

As more companies join the ecosystem, it is increasingly important to ensure that the network can cope with high activity growth. With this in mind, VeChain is consistently improving the technology behind VeChainThor; currently developing a new consensus algorithm and having at least 42 patents around the world.

In VeChain’s 6th Bootcamp, Peter Zhou – VeChain Chief Scientist – and Zhijie (aka Max) Ren – VeChain Senior Research Scientist – addressed some of the most common questions and shared what to expect from the new PoA 2.0 – SURFACE.

 

What is PoA?

VeChainThor uses a Proof-of-Authority (PoA) consensus; where one of the 101 pre-approved validators (Authority Masternodes) are randomly selected to generate the next block. The model avoids computational competition and enables a faster and more efficient block production. The limited number of “miners”, however, creates centralisation concerns which, according to Peter, is a misconception. As demonstrated by him in the chart below, depending on the perspective, the presence of mining pools in other blockchains actually makes them more centralised than VeChain.

VeChainThor’s scaling solution: It’s all about quality not quantity

There are many ways to scale a blockchain network such as increasing the bandwidth, increasing the block size and/or block frequency, sharding, etc.

VeChain, however, opted to optimise bandwidth with its PoA 2.0 SURFACE (Secure Use-case-adaptive Relatively Fork-free Approach of Chain Extension) consensus.

When a new block is created, time is used in communication overheads, transmission and validation of data, and reaching a consensus to elect the next node to generate a block though. By maximising the percentage of time spent in transmitting data (blue part), more transactions can be included into the block, raising the number transactions per second (TPS) and improving bandwidth efficiency.

Consensus under PoA 1.0:

Consensus under PoA 2.0:

To reduce achieve this, PoA 2.0 proposes the following changes:

Delayed validation: instead of validating the block in the consensus round it is generated, validation is delayed to the next round. This allows the network to transmit and validate blocks simultaneously and in parallel; essentially saving time.

Epoch based random beacon scheduling: instead of deciding on “real-time” which node will generate the next block, a schedule is randomly created in advance (for example one day beforehand) to decide which, and in which order, Authority Masternodes will produce new blocks. This eliminates the time wasted in reaching a consensus every time a block is created.

Relatively fork-free approach: when a new block is generated, it takes time for the block data to reach the Authority Masternodes. Since Masternodes are kept in different locations, they receive the information at different times. By removing block validation and the consensus process from the “round”, the new data doesn’t have enough time to fully propagate, leading to asynchrony problems between nodes and giving the chance for a malicious player to fork the chain and double spend. To avoid this, PoA 2.0 introduces a verifiable random function (VRF) mechanism whereby blocks need to be endorsed by a randomly selected smaller pool of Authority Masternodes to be confirmed. This helps dilute the power of the singular Authority Masternode creating the new block and can potentially reduce the probability of malicious forks to 1%.

To find out more about PoA2.0 SURFACE visit VeChain’s Medium announcement and the preprint paper

A business perspective of VeChainThor

 

Many businesses have moved away from Ethereum onto VeChainThor, including Deloitte, Fresh Supply Co and Real Items.

During VeChain’s 7th webinar, Ken Woodruff -co-founder and CTO of Real Items- shared the main advantages VeChainThor brings to his firm.

 

What is Real Items

Real Items aims to bridge the gap between blockchain and consumers, focusing on easy user onboarding and usability. To this goal, they have created VeChainThor integrations for some of the most popular online platforms, such as Shopify and HubSpot, and are currently developing new WeChat, WooCommerce (WordPress) and DeFi enabled supply chain management solutions.

 

VeChainThor’s competitive advantage for enterprises

For Ken, some of the main benefits of building in VeChainThor are:

  • Two-token VET/VTHO model – helps to keep stable and predictable fees (essential to forecast and manage business risks)
  • Multi-Task Transaction (MTT) – allows the ordering and bundling of item creation into one transaction. Simplifying the process and reducing transaction costs
  • Fee delegation – enables sponsors to pay for transfers fees on behalf of users, avoiding customers having to manage cryptocurrencies (vital for enterprise adoption). Currently, fee delation is used in more than 90% of clauses
  • Fixed 101 Authority Masternodes – leads to consistent and predictable block time (10s), allows faster sync between nodes and allows quicker core feature development cycles and hardware and software network updates
  • Solid APIs – ability to work with easier Connect and JAVA API
  • Easy access to VeChain core dev team – allows developers to readily receive technical support when needed
  • VeChain Foundation backing – financial support from the foundation in the form of VTHO donations when milestones are achieved

Percentage of fee delegation clauses in the last 10 days. Credit to VeChainStats.com

VeChain prides itself for being the leading enterprise blockchain platform and businesses are at the core of its innovations. With an ambitious goal to drive mass adoption, it’s great to see that them back their words with actions and have enterprises validate its business friendly ecosystem.

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All you need to know about VeChain’s Bootcamp series

All you need to know about VeChain’s Bootcamp series

Whenever there are challenges, there are opportunities.

COVID-19 is forcing companies to rethink their daily operations and fast-track digital transformation. This puts pressure on businesses but accelerates the adoption of new technologies like blockchain. With increasing interest, VeChain has introduced VeChain BootCamp; an initiative to educate, grow and engage with potential clients, developers and the community via live stream webinars. The idea is to offer online courses on how to build business applications with VechainThor and ToolChain as well as to share key learning lessons from their partnerships. One thing to keep in mind during these webinars: They aren’t designed for the cryptocurrency community to learn about new partnerships and announcements. They are designed to help people not familiar with VeChain’s core service offering learn more about what digitalization can bring to a business, and why they should select VeChain as the platform to build on. The first one, with CEO Sunny Lu, was designed as an overall intro to the series, with the later ones focusing more on the actual implementation, use cases, and value to businesses.

Episode One: “The Missing Part of Mass adoption”

The BootCamp kicked off with an overview of the blockchain industry that included the value role played by businesses at each stage, and a rundown of VeChain; which included a quick mention of the ToolChain functionalities to be released in the coming months. The session probably didn’t cover new topics to most veterans but would have been particularly relevant for newcomers as it gave a comprehensive introduction to VeChain’s value proposition, its core values, sample partnerships and milestones achieved.  Something I hadn’t previously considered is the concept of data weighting. AI treats all data equally however, by adjusting the data based on their source and trustworthiness, more reliable decisions can potentially be made in the future.

Save & Exit

While Sunny confirmed that some projects have been postponed due to the coronavirus, it was good to hear that deals continue to be signed and that new products are expected from DNV GL. It would have been interesting to know what industries have shown a change in demand and by how much does VeChain expect its adoption forecast to be impacted (positively or negatively) in the coming years.

A video showcasing COS using MyStory to display the product’s sustainability certification was also shared. The landing page is a great opportunity to deliver the item’s unique selling point, suggest complementary goods and maintenance advice or gamify the purchase/shopping experience.

At one point Sunny made an analogy between the early internet days and the current blockchain industry. As he continued to explain ToolChain, I couldn’t avoid drawing similarities between ToolChain and WordPress, the popular CMS that helped take website development to the masses. Like WordPress, ToolChain provides a standardised and user friendly building service where no prior coding knowledge is required. Both simplify an otherwise complicated process and offer:

  • Core features such as ready-to-use templates tailored to your industry
  • Modularised functionality (e.g. plugins)
  • Technical customisation for more complex features (e.g SDKs & APIs for ToolChain)
  • Integration with 3rd party services
  • Minimal development cost and lead time
  • Value to business of all sizes

A quick roadmap showing the dynamic improvements coming to ToolChain

At the same time, while useful in many scenarios, neither is necessarily the best solution for every use case. WordPress however, benefits from a larger community that helps create user guides, tutorials, troubleshooting materials and a support forum; which helped it become the success that it is today. Hence, it was exciting to hear Sunny recognising that VeChain’s technical delivery has outpaced its knowledge base and that more resources will be released down the line. I’m curious to see how VeChain will approach this as companies like Google invest significantly on their educational programs (e.g. Grow with Google), professional certifications (e.g. Google Ads Certification or Google Cloud Certification) and help center catalogs in order to drive demand and onboard new customers.

Up next:

May 12th – Jérôme Grillères (VeChain) and Gabriele Manno (DNV GL)

A New Era of Sustainable Fashion: My Story Enabled Sustainability Practice

Not to heap the pressure on, but this is an event I’m looking forward to for one main reason: Gabriele Manno. As one of the core architects of MyStory, this speaker has a tremendous understanding of what businesses actually need from a technical solution. And unlike the VeChain speakers who have a natural bias to speak highly of their own blockchain, Manno is a third party who isn’t tied down to the platform. For people who have never heard him speak before, he is one of the most technical and business-savvy minds in the blockchain space.

Jérôme Grillères, VeChain’s GM of Europe, is another figure who doesn’t get the exposure some of the other GMs do. He is relatively reserved on social media so there should be a lot of interest in what his projects have been working on. As someone who has been working on ToolChain from the beginning, we are sure his presentation will take a deeper dive than what we saw in the first episode.

May 13th – Sarah Nabaa and David Inderias

Blockchain In Food Provenance: A New Ecosystem Play in Post-Covid World

Like Manno, Inderias is a third-party with a lot of wisdom to bring. His straightforward and blunt approach is great for an industry plagued by overhype and fixations on unrealized potential. Inderias has always been about practical business applications first, exactly the kind of person VeChain needs as a channel partner. His recently announced position as the head of the APAC Provenance Council is another step towards convincing the average goods producer that technology and innovation isn’t just a plaything for Fortune 500 companies to experiment with. On May 13th, David should explain how he plans to use ToolChain, and how it saves his company development effort.

Finally, Sarah Nabaa completes the first group of speakers by bringing the experience she has gained as the leader of VeChain’s Southeast Asia and Australia team. We asked Sarah what to expect, and she explained how excited she was to be working with the APAC Provenance council and suggested viewers tune in to learn more. She’s confident that a number of solid companies will be onboarded thanks to the work her and Inderias are doing in Australia and New Zealand.

Future Episodes

Further sessions are yet to be confirmed but Sunny hinted about a PoA 2.0-SURFACE presentation. The new consensus algorithm was announced earlier this February so it will be interesting to hear directly from Dr Peter Zhou, VeChain’s Chief Scientist. Stay tuned.

Note: VeChain released their own recap, available here.

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