check this chart https://coinmarketcap.com/charts/
Total Market Capitalization all cryptos
und jetzt die Lektüre
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You’ve never heard of Yuji Ijiri. But back in 1989 he created something incredible.
It’s more revolutionary than the Internet, the cotton gin, the steam engine, the PC and the smart phone combined.
When
people look back hundreds of years from now, only the printing press
and the Internet will have it beat for sheer mind boggling impact on
society. Both the net and the printing press enabled the democratization
of information and single-handedly uplifted the collective knowledge of
people all over the world.
So what am I talking about? What did Ijiri create that’s so amazing?
Triple entry accounting.
Uh, what?
Yeah. I’m serious.
But
don’t feel bad if you slept through the revolution. It wasn’t televised
or posted on Reddit. When professor Ijiri died in 2017, most people
didn’t catch his obituary. His most famous book, Momentum Accounting
& Triple Entry Bookkeeping, has a grand total of zero reviews on
Good Reads. So you’re not alone if you missed it.
https://hackernoon.com/...nvention-in-the-last-500-years-c90b0151c169
.
weiter lesen hier
http://www.warrenhenke.com/writing/essays/triple-e...
dann hier
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Triple Entry Accounting
Double Entry accounting
Modern financial accounting is based on a double-entry bookkeeping system.
Described simply, double-entry bookkeeping allows firms to maintain records that reflect what the firm owns and owes and also what the firm has earned and spent over any given period of time. Double-entry bookkeeping revolutionized the field of financial accounting during the Renaissance period. Whereas simple ledgers had long been the standard for record keeping for merchants, the church and state treasuries, the growth of long distance trade and creation of the first joint stock companies resulted in firms whose records were too voluminous and complicated to provide any assurance of accuracy to their users.
Triple Entry Accounting (Double-entry + Cryptography)
Triple entry accounting is an enhancement to the traditional double-entry system in which all accounting entries involving outside parties are cryptographically sealed by a third entry. These include purchases of inventory and supplies, sales, tax and utility payments and other expenses. Placed side by side, the bookkeeping entries of both parties to a given transaction are congruent. A seller books a debit to account for cash received, while a buyer books a credit for cash spent in the same transaction, but in separate sets of accounting records. This is where the blockchain comes in: rather than these entries occurring separately in independent sets of books, they occur in the form of a transfer between wallet addresses in the same distributed, public ledger, creating an interlocking system of enduring accounting records. Since the entries are distributed and cryptographically sealed, falsifying them in a credible way or destroying them to conceal activity is practically impossible.
Source and further reading: Triple-Entry Bookkeeping, Bitcoin Magazine
Triple-Entry Accounting Features:
- Tamper-Proof Record
- Permissioned Distributed Ledger - blockchain
- Double-Entry+Cryptography
- Validated, Secure & Private
- Digital Signed Receipts
In practice, for a UK solution, it is envisaged that two or more of the UK's Big Four accounting & audit practice firms would be the validators on a permissioned distributed ledger used to process and record triple entry accounting records and provide trusted real-time auditing and "Proof of Transaction."
See also:
Deloitte, Libra, Accenture: The work of auditors in the age of Bitcoin 2.0 technology
Origins:
The term "Triple Entry Accounting," was first used by Ian Grigg,
financial cryptographer, and described in his paper published in 2005,
three years before the emergence of Bitcoin and its underlying
Blockchain protocol.
An extract from an excellent article on Triple Entry Accounting by Dug Campbell:
"Whilst double-entry bookkeeping has been the foundation of corporate accounting for centuries, Bitcoin – or more accurately the blockchain itself – now provides a way to introduce an even more powerful method that has been discussed for a number of years – triple-entry bookkeeping. The simplest explanation here is (inevitably!) found on another of Richard Gendall Brown’s excellent recent posts. However, for those of you who want my summary rather than his (far clearer) explanation, here goes:-
Let’s imagine Company A buys goods from Company B. In today’s world, that means:- Company A will change its accounts accordingly – by recording the cash going out/goods going in. Company B will change its accounts accordingly – by recording the goods going out/cash going in. But what if the record of that transaction also gets recorded by a third party? Third party = the blockchain, which verifies (cryptographically seals) each transaction and issues a receipt.
Result: every transaction would have a corresponding entry on the books of the other that would have to be verified by the blockchain. Now every transaction is effectively recorded in three places."
http://blockchainabc.blogspot.de/p/blog-page.html
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dann hier nochmal
https://www.quora.com/What-is-Triple-Ledger-Accoun...
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und jetzt das
22.06.2017 11:18 Uhr
block.one EOS Blockchain-Betriebssystem gibt einjährige Tokenverteilung bekannt
George Town, Kaimaninseln (ots/PRNewswire) - EOS (http://eos.io/),
das erste Blockchain-Betriebssystem, das zur Unterstützung
kommerzieller dezentraler Anwendungen entworfen wurde, kündigte heute
weitere Details für seine digitale Tokenverteilung an, die am Montag,
den 26. Juni, beginnt. EOS' Tokenverteilung folgt einem bahnbrechenden
Teilnahmemodell, das über den Zeitraum eines Jahres laufen und das
fairste Tokenverteilungsprojekt schaffen wird, das bislang auf Ethereum
eingeführt wurde.
EOS wurde gestaltet, um verteilte Anwendungen
zu unterstützen, die das gleiche Look-and-Feel wie ihre zentralisierten
Gegenstücke haben, einschließlich der Aufhebung einer für jede
Transaktion notwendigen Zahlung. So können sich neue Blockchain-Anwender
beteiligen, ohne sich durch den komplexen Prozess des Kaufs einer
Kryptowährung zu navigieren, was die Branche anspornen sollte. Dies
bedeutet auch, dass jede Art von Anwendung durch EOS' Betriebssystem
gebaut, ausgeführt und reguliert werden kann, was ein neues Maß an
Geschäftstransparenz schafft.
Das ausgedehnte EOS-Team wird von Blockchain-Veteranen geleitet:
-
Brendan Blumer, CEO: Brendan, der sich seit 2014 mit der
Blockchain-Branche befasst, ist ein Multiunternehmer, der verschiedene
Geschäfte aufgebaut hat, einschließlich des Handels mit virtuellen
Währungen in MMORPGs in den USA, okay.com (http://okay.com/)
in Hongkong und 1Group in Indien. - Daniel Larimer, CTO: Ein
Multiunternehmer, der sich auf innovative Technologien konzentriert, die
von Virtual-Reality-Simulatoren bis zu Kryptowährungen der zweiten
Generation reichen, allen voran BitShares. Dan ist ein Spezialist für
Software-Entwicklung und der Erfinder der weit verbreiteten Konzepte
"Proof of Stake" und "Decentralized Autonomous Corporations". - Brock
Pierce, Partner: Ein Wagniskapitalgeber und Unternehmer, der auf dem
Markt den Weg für digitale Währung in Spielen ebnete und über 200
Millionen USD für von ihm geförderte Unternehmen aufgebracht hat. Brock
ist u.a. der Vorsitzende der Bitcoin Foundation und Mitgründer von
Blockchain Capital. - Ian Grigg, Partner: Ian ist Finanzkryptograph, der
seit über 20 Jahren kryptographische Geschäftsbuch-Plattformen baut,
sowie der Erfinder des Ricardo-Vertrags und Miterfinder von Triple-Entry
Accounting.
http://www.tagesspiegel.de/advertorials/ots/...-bekannt/19966500.html