Bitcoin smart contracts are getting their own cooperative.
Announced today, a group of international bitcoin companies have signed a letter of intent to form a federation that would find them supporting and contributing to the development of a smart contracts platform that would utilize the bitcoin blockchain.
Unveiled today, the RSK Federation is built around the RSK smart contract network created by Buenos Aires-based startup Rootstock.
Rootstock co-founder and CEO Diego Gutiérrez Zaldívar described the federation to CoinDesk as "a huge signal from the bitcoin ecosystem" and a validation of how companies can leverage sidechains, a technology developed by bitcoin startup Blockstream to add functionality to the bitcoin network.
He told CoinDesk:
Described by the company as the first Turing-complete platform to run smart contracts secured by the bitcoin network, RSK uses a "hybrid" security model that combines elements of both proof-of-work (popular among fans of bitcoin’s public blockchain) and a private network.
"The federation is going to provide several key elements and services to develop real use cases of smart contracts," Rootstock co-founder Gabriel Kurman told CoinDesk.
Some of the larger companies who signed the agreement will also operate oracles that would validate contracts and provide data to the network.
RSK launched its initial testnet, called Lotus, in May 2016, but is still almost a year away from having an enterprise ready solution available, according to their own timeline.
Member support
To bridge that gap some of the federation partners are getting involved beyond just signing the letter of interest.
The founder of bitcoin wallet provider Xapo, Wences Casares, told CoinDesk he believes that once RSK’s enterprise version is ready it will surpass the abilities of ethereum by providing the same smart contract functionality on top of the more robust bitcoin blockchain.
To help make that happen Casares said Xapo is "doing as much as Rootstock is letting us do". So far, that means signing the letter of interest, offering to provide wallets for the RSK tokens and making available the assistance of multiple employees.
Casares told CoinDesk:
While all the companies involved can accurately be described as bitcoin companies, not all of them work only with bitcoin. JAXX, for example, makes a wallet designed to work with any cryptocurrency, and BitGo provides security services across blockchains.
More than cryptocurrency
With the timing of the launch following ethereum's struggle to execute a hard fork, the announcement could easily be seen as an opportunistic play to strike at an ostensible competitor.
But Kurman said the timing is coincidental, pointing to multiple companies who plan to join the federation and also offer ethereum services.
"Our target is to enable financial services for the poorest people in the world," he said. "Going out in a rush or profiting from someone else's nightmare is not our way to do things."
In interview with CoinDesk, JAXX CEO and ethereum co-founder Anthony Di Iorio said that building smart contracts on bitcoin would allow for a "more robust" blockchain ecosystem to flourish.
BitGo co-founder and CTO Ben Davenport also confirmed that his company is participating in the federation. "Our decisions for what blockchains to support are largely customer-driven," Davenport said. "But we like the Rootstock team, and the general idea of what they're trying to do."
Kurman concluded:
Tumeric is the next version of the testnet, which the company expects to release by the end of September 2016. This will be followed by the launch of its ginger production network during the first quarter of next year.
While the initial letters of interest in the RSK federation have already been signed, Rootstock said the final documentation to recognize the group is expected to be completed by the end of this year.
Disclaimer: CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which has an ownership stake in Rootstock.
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