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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source:https:\/\/techcrunch.com\/2023\/03\/08\/ant-veteran-redeem-sxsw-verify-vip-dinner\/<\/a><\/br> As funding into web3 projects cools down during the crypto winter, startups in the space are increasingly focused on building bridges for mass adoption and exploring revenue opportunities to stay afloat. The key to driving mass adoption? Offer experiences that are so seamless that users don\u2019t realize blockchain is involved.<\/p>\n One company that is demonstrating how blockchain can come in handy in real life is Kansas-based Redeem<\/a>, which allows users to claim non-fungible tokens using phone numbers rather than having to set up crypto wallets. Off the back of its recent $2.5 million pre-seed funding round led by Kenetic Capital, the startup is deploying its NFT solution to manage a VIP dinner at the tech festival SXSW this week.<\/p>\n The co-founder and CEO Toby Rush is a third-time entrepreneur who, in 2016, sold his biometric company EyeVerify to Ant Group<\/a>, the fintech affiliate of Alibaba, for $100 million. Few other companies in the world are as adroit as Ant in building intuitive fintech products. Together with its nemesis Tencent, Ant popularized the use of scan-to-pay to over one billion people in China.<\/p>\n Rush subsequently got acqui-hired by Ant\u2019s corporate venture team, focusing on blockchain deals. It was an experience that paved the way to find practical use cases for blockchain.<\/p>\n \u201cAs you know, cryptocurrencies aren\u2019t allowed in China. NFTs that we have over here aren\u2019t really a thing in China. But hardcore business use cases are. How can blockchain make businesses better? That was my investment focus,\u201d Rush told TechCrunch in an interview.<\/p>\n \u201cSo as I started to learn about blockchain, it was very much practical, realistic. It\u2019s not that how do we go trade in NFTs, how do we create a new token, it was really much more what I would call hardcore business cases,\u201d he added.<\/p>\n Rush eventually identified a use case for NFTs and started Redeem early last year. He was fascinated by the technology \u201cnot as pictures, but as a digital asset that can live outside the walled gardens of Apple, or Google or Facebook, Ticketmaster, or Visa,\u201d he admitted.<\/p>\n \u201cWhen I can own a little piece of data outside of their walled gardens, lots of other people can engage and collaborate with me in an open ecosystem.\u201d<\/p>\n The challenge of utilizing NFTs, he reckoned, is that the onboarding process and even using them after onboarding is really hard. Instead of building an NFT infrastructure from scratch, Toby looked to an established, ubiquitous global directory system \u2014 phone numbers.<\/p>\n \u201cCarriers have spent billions of dollars making sure there\u2019s only one device in the world that can use my phone number right now. There are 6.8 billion smartphones already deployed, so leverage that \u2014 if you have your phone, you have a wallet,\u201d he explained.<\/p>\n This is how Redeem helps bring users into web3 by opening their first wallets, the gateway into all things crypto. Say they are attending an event that distributes NFTs as swag, they will first scan a QR code with their phones. Two links will pop up \u2014 onboard via SMS or WhatsApp. Say the users pick WhatsApp, Redeem will then automatically create wallets for them in the backend, put NFTs into their wallets and send them a message on WhatsApp linking to their newly created wallets.<\/p>\n Basically, Redeem is using users\u2019 phone numbers to authenticate who they are and create unique wallets. Rather than having them go through the process of signing up for a wallet and noting down the 16-word recovery phrase, it leverages the popular methods of QR code scanning and text messaging.<\/p>\n \u201cWhen you send a message, there\u2019s only one device in the world that can send a message from your phone, and that\u2019s you. When you get to choose your preferences, it\u2019s creating a message, so it\u2019s pre-populating who it\u2019s sending it to, and this is the NFT you want to claim. When you hit send, your phone number is claiming this NFT. So we create a wallet and send you a response back, and you are onboarded.\u201d<\/p>\n
\nAnt veteran turns to NFT verification for SXSW festival VIP feast<\/br>
\n2023-03-09 21:47:05<\/br><\/p>\n