Humans of Blockchain: Peter Zhou

Humans of Blockchain: Peter Zhou

Humans of Blockchain is our initiative to highlight the human side of the industry and showcase blockchain professionals around the world. The goal is to get to know the people pushing blockchain forward better and understand them at a personal level. Our previous post in the series was on Dimitris Neocleous and can be read here.


If there is a person that pops into mind when talking about VeChainThor’s technicalities, that is Dr. Peter Zhou.

With a PhD in Computer Vision and Gait Recognition from the University of Southampton, Peter has 10 years of experience in computer science research and development. As VeChain’s Chief Scientist and member of the Foundation steering committee, amongst other things, he is responsible for VeChain’s R&D efforts, university partnerships and IP protection.

Passionate about technology, he often shares his thoughts and knowledge on Medium, hosted a PoA2.0 – SURFACE webinar with Dr. Zhijie (Max) Ren and will be holding a third webinar on “Blockchain Governance” this coming Wednesday 22nd July 2020.

News and announcements usually cover VeChain’s business development achievements and we rarely hear about the people improving VeChain’s infrastructure and driving blockchain innovation behind the scenes. In this episode, Peter shares with us what it means to work with VeChain’s core developer team and why he is excited about blockchain technology.

Tell us about yourself and how you got into blockchain

I was first aware of Bitcoin in late 2016. Because of my curiosity of new technology, from time to time, I started to do my own research on bitcoin and later on shifted my attention to the more general subject of blockchain. 

It was until I met Sunny and Jay and had some inspiring conversations with them that I realized blockchain’s true potential to change our lives. When given the chance to join VeChain, it didn’t take me long to decide to join the team to start a new chapter in my life. 

Another important reason I got into blockchain is due to my long-time wish to be involved in developing technology that can be truly mass adopted and have significant business and social impacts. Blockchain is definitely going to help me achieve my goal.

You were previously a research scientist at the University of Oulu and University of Kent. Can you tell us more about it?

After I finished my PhD, I moved to the University Kent to join the European project called “3D Face” in 2007. It was a pioneering project that tried to use 3D facial information to enhance face recognition performance 10 years ago, despite the fact that 3D info has been regularly used for face recognition nowadays. 

After the project, I joined the machine vision research group at the University of Oulu, Finland. My research was part of the project “Affective human-robot interaction” and was focused on a specific research topic called visual speech recognition. Simply speaking, it is about recognizing what we speak by looking at the motion of our lips and tongues.

How did you find the transition into the business world? Were there any particular challenges?

Overall, the transition is challenging and still ongoing. Personally, I quite enjoy the process because it constantly pushes me to learn, innovate, reflect, and be a better person.

In academia, my sole aim, as a research scientist, is to advance the existing knowledge and technology in a certain research area. However, it is no longer the case. The biggest challenge for me has been to figure out how to fit in the role of the chief scientist with the goal of maximizing business and ecosystem values for VeChain. 

Compared with other CXO jobs, the chief scientist is a role that is less defined and more versatile. I’ve been doing things such as identifying and conducting crucial research work with a limited budget, communicating with/educating the community and general public, bridging our business and technical/research team at both directions, strategic thinking/planning, etc.

What are you most proud of about VeChain and why?

I am most proud of the determination of the VeChain team for our goal of mass adoption of blockchain technology.

We all know that things are changing extremely fast in the blockchain world. I’ve seen teams starting with a very ambitious goal, but distracted and eventually lost during the market pumps and dumps later on. 

We have been through the same kind of craziness, however, we have never forgotten the goal set at the very beginning. Of course, there have been many setbacks, but the team has been determined and kept going forward.

What has been the biggest challenge your team has had to face and how did you overcome it?

The biggest challenge is to convert research outcomes into real products. The difficulty is often caused by the knowledge gap between researchers and software developers.

On one hand, researchers are good at prototyping systems, but lack experience of real product development. On the other hand, it’s difficult for software developers to fully understand the theoretical significance and delicacy of certain solutions researchers come up with.

The way to overcome it is to have someone on the research side (very often it’s me) to go deeply into the technical details of the existing software system and then to bridge two sides through many constructive communications and discussions before and during the actual development.

What is VeChainThor’s current technical priority and how is the foundation approaching it?

The current technical priority is to make VeChainThor more secure and scalable, capable of supporting future growth of the VeChain ecosystem.

The team is currently working on upgrading the consensus from PoA1.0 to PoA2.0 that is theoretically more secure and scalable. We are also investigating solutions to the interoperability between blockchains using PoA2.0 to further increase throughput and expand the use-case scenarios.

Peter Zhou at a Google campus

The general public is becoming more aware of the benefits of blockchain. When do you think the technology will become mainstream and why?

I think that blockchain technology will become mainstream in the next five years. 

With the general public understanding more about the benefits and importance of blockchain tech, they are going to more likely accept and purchase products that use the technology. It will certainly push more and more enterprises to adopt blockchain tech. Being mainstream does not mean that most of us would start to use digital wallets and use dapps all day long. It means that our daily activities would somehow depend on blockchain although we might not directly feel or see the existence of blockchain. Products such as the VeChan ToolChain will certainly act as a catalyst to speed up the adoption.

Where do you see VeChainThor in 5 years? What is your long term vision and how is the team planning to achieve this?

I can see in the next five years VeChainThor emerging as one of the major public value-chains associated with real-world business activities worth billions of dollars. My long-term vision is that VeChainThor is to become a global infrastructure-level decentralized data engine to facilitate business activities everywhere. 

Our blockchain will be constantly absorbing fine-grained business data labelled with confidence levels issued by assurance companies such as DNV-GL. These data will not only support the daily business that relies on the immutability and quality of the data, but also enables a highly efficient data market that incorporates AI and big data technologies. 

The team is currently building the foundation for the future. For instance, we are upgrading the mainnet consensus for better security and scalability; we are building ToolChain for engaging more businesses; and we are working with DNV-GL to start data verification (labelling).

What other blockchain projects excite you?

VeChain is always the best to me in terms of mass adoption of blockchain technology. From a purely technical perspective, I am also excited about Ethereum and Libra.

How would you describe yourself in 3 words?

Curious, adaptive and determined

What would be your superpower?

Teleportation

What is your guilty pleasure?

Playing with my daughter’s legos to build stuff

What are your hobbies?

Playing violin (learning together with my two daughters), reading and soccer

If you could go back to any moment in history where would you go?

I’d like to go back to witness the very beginning/birth of the mighty Bitcoin.

Who is your biggest inspiration and why?

My grandma. I lived with her for a couple of years at my very young age and we had been very close since then until she passed away. 

Grandma was an ordinary woman. She didn’t have a chance to attend schools, lived on a tiny pension, and didn’t have any impressive skill. However, her love for the family, optimism about the future and determination to overcome difficulties had constantly inspired me and shaped my personality somehow.

A fun fact about you?

I persuaded my daughter (by ice creams) to be my weight disc when the local gym was closed due to the pandemic.

What is the most adventurous thing you’ve ever done?

At age 6, I left my home alone without telling my parents, walked about half an hour from home to a bus stop and took the bus to my grandparents’ home which was a dozen stops away.

What was your first computer?

The Intel 486

Thanks to Peter Zhou for taking part in this article. We hope you enjoyed it.

If you would like us to profile someone in particular who is helping drive blockchain forward, let us know on Twitter and we’ll do our best to make it happen.

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Humans of Blockchain: Dimitris Neocleous

Humans of Blockchain: Dimitris Neocleous

Humans of Blockchain is our initiative to highlight the human side of the industry and showcase blockchain professionals around the world. The goal is to get to know the people pushing blockchain forward better and understand them at a personal level. Our previous post in the series was on Sarah Nabaa, and can be read here.

Dimitris Neocleous, VeChain Ecosystem Manager


This time around, we had the pleasure to talk to Dimitris Neocleous, VeChain Ecosystem Manager.

With a background in legal consulting, Dimitris works closely with DNV GL to facilitate the adoption of VeChain solutions in Europe. He played a key role in VeChain’s Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Cyprus and currently supports the development of the E-NewHealthLife and E-HCert Apps. As of writing, his VeChain BootCamp webinar is the most viewed episode of the series on YouTube.

In this edition, Dimitris gives us a glimpse into his life and what it means to work for VeChain.

Tell us about yourself and how you got into blockchain

Everything started in 2014 when I bought my first Bitcoins and Dogecoins. Yes, I bought Dogecoins because it was a fun token and full of positivity. In 2017 (it was my senior year in University), during the last lecture of Trusts and Equity in the Spring Semester, my good friend Harry asked the professor what he thought is the industry that will be the next big thing. The response was blockchain so I started reading again about blockchain, but from the perspective of business, and fell in love with Ethereum and the concept of smart contracts.

I never had the chance to attend my class graduation ceremony along with my friends the following summer because I spent all the money my family gave me for tuition fees for buying different crypto. I guess every great love story starts with a weird beginning. 

After a year working with my father in his law firm in Limassol, I decided that I wanted to become a solicitor in London. Having a good portfolio in cryptocurrencies and a law degree gave me the chance to get a good training contract with a big firm in London; taking care of the tuition fees for the Legal Practice Course and working part-time in their office. 

In November 2018, Sunny gave me a call: “man we are expanding, would you like to join our Global Team?”. I knew Sunny from before (MoU between Cyprus and VeChain). I dropped my training contract without a second thought. 

At that time my father felt a bit betrayed and didn’t talk to me for a month. Everything though changed afterwards, because every parent wants to see his child happy. 

What do you consider are your three strongest attributes? How have they helped you in your career?

Well, I am curious, persistent and an underdog. The combination of the three really helps my personal development and career. Being the curious, persistent underdog means I never consider myself good or the best at what I am doing. That leads me to question myself, judge what can make me better and what can make a project I am working on better. I think this is important when you are working in a tech company. There is no perfect product, tech, society or requirement on product. User experiences and expectations evolve therefore the offering should evolve in the same geometric sequence.

Dimitris (far left) with some other familiar faces in China

Can you tell us about your current projects and what excites you the most about them?

The pandemic of COVID-19 forced me to leave London and repatriate in Cyprus in early March 2020. During this period I’ve had the opportunity to work closer with I-DANTE about the delivery of two solutions: the E-NewHealthLife and the E-HCert for the Mediterranean Hospital of Cyprus. 

The details about the two projects have been well covered by your article guys, but I would like to express my excitement about these two solutions. The reason is that for the first time a public blockchain is used for the management of medical records in the most secure and GDPR compliant way. I am not going to share how we achieved that with I-DANTE but just to give you one of the ingredients: zero knowledge protocol. 

What are you most proud of about VeChain and why?

“In this team we fight together, we fight for each other, we are there for each other at any time; not just for work but also for casual talk.”

I talk daily with my colleagues, the current success of the healthcare projects in Cyprus is a team success. 

Photo of the VeChain community meet up in Paris

Sunny, Kevin and Flora, supporting me from day one with these two projects, trusting me and advising me. Gu and the rest of the technical team had some long conversations providing their intel and suggestions even during weekends. I got great support from the central team to support on PR work for such complicated solutions. I also got some tutoring about ToolChain and how to become a better Product Manager. Jason and Sarah… I love to hear these guys, the most positive people I know in my life and very resourceful on how to approach and sell. And lastly, I left my Yoda, Jerome. Being almost everyday on a call with him is like studying an MBA at Harvard University. The knowledge and guidance that he shares with me, I couldn’t ask for a better mentor.

What tips would you give to people looking to start a career in blockchain?

Well, I think these apply everywhere:

  1. Follow your gut and trust your brain
  2. Audentes Fortuna iuvatFortune favours the bold
  3. You can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards” – as Steve Jobs suggested

This is the trinity mantra I follow everywhere. 

Who is your biggest inspiration and why?

Well, I have 3. 

My dad. I think almost every son has as a model example his father. My father has been challenging and inspiring me since forever. Great husband, great father, great businessman. Whatever I do in life, I am asking myself what Christos (my father) would have done in the same situation and would he have been proud of me for my actions. 

Dimitris pictured with his father

Another person that really inspires me is Steve Jobs. The way that he cares about the product not to be only powerful but also beautiful, the way he magnetized the audience with the proximity and simplicity in his speech. Steve managed to find the balance between computing power and user experience. He made people want it before they even thought about it. 

And Sunny Lu, the CEO of VeChain, my mentor and friend. Sunny talks about blockchain not the complicated way, but the “love” way; making it understandable in a very beautiful, inspiring way. He reminds me a lot of Steve Jobs but in the blockchain industry. He also has the father figure in the company, I want to make him proud. Whatever I do, I send it to Sunny and the “ Good job man” coming from him is very important to me. 

What are your hobbies?

I love reading books, especially the ones written by John Grisham. I love writing, even though I haven’t written for a while. Golfing with my father, even though I don’t really have the time to do so anymore. But what I keep doing is meditation “à la Dim” – I take my car, put on music and drive for 30-40 mins on the coastal road of Limassol. It’s only me, the music and the road.

What is your guilty pleasure?

Well I love food. Any kind of food. Sometimes I feel like a trash bin. I eat anything (that I am not allergic to) but my weakness is McDonalds. “I’m lovin’ it” 😜

Double cheeseburger – double up, which means 4 patties- only available in Cyprus, and then strawberry pie. Yes my metabolism is good, I should have much more weight.

A fun fact about you?

In Summer of 2008, my family and I were in New York for holidays. During our excursion with the hop-on-hop-off buses, I felt a bit hungry and saw a hot dog station close to Central Park. I got down of the bus by myself for that hot dog station, the best hot dog of my life. My parents literally freaked out… 

What would be your superpower?

I would like to be The Flash because being the fastest man alive means you can do everything on time and have extra time for anything else. You can go back and forth in time and you can say you got hit and survived by a lighting strike.

If your life were a movie or TV show, which one would it be?

Something between:

Suits – because of law
Bing Bang Theory – because I am too Sheldon when I choose where to sit
Good Will Hunting – because I had to go to see about VeChain (in the movie it’s a girl) and dropping out traditional job
Inside Bill Gates Brain – because I am a technophile.

Before you go… Do you have a favourite quote or meme?

Those who were seen dancing , were thought to be insane by those who couldn’t hear the music.” – Friedrich Nietzsche

For those wishing to learn more about Dimitris and his projects, check out this webinar. With already over 14K views, it’s clear there has been a lot of interest in his decentralized health applications in Cyprus. 

We thank Dimitris for his participation.

Let us know if you have any other suggestions for future editions of Humans of Blockchain at our new Twitter address.

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