Top 145 Blockchain Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Blockchain quotes.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
The right way to think about the blockchain is that it's going to replace the entire Internet.
The old question 'Is it in the database?' will be replaced by 'Is it on the blockchain?'
Blockchain software companies may end up being amalgamated into existing software giants, at which point blockchain patents will just become part of the existing patent war.
For the foreseeable future, I'm all about building blockchain-based decentralized services. — © Fred Ehrsam
For the foreseeable future, I'm all about building blockchain-based decentralized services.
I do think the blockchain infrastructure is here to stay.
In Seoul, there are plans to create a blockchain ecosystem to make it a city that will be recognized as the center of blockchain in the world.
I love this stuff - bitcoin, ethereum, blockchain technology - and what the future holds.
There will be many types of assets codified into the blockchain, and they are all not just going to be on the bitcoin blockchain - it's going to be a number of different assets here. And the best way to invest in that is a diversified portfolio.
Bitcoin is a way to have programmable scarcity. The blockchain is the data structure that records the transfer of scarce objects.
Make no mistake, blockchain will be a game changer, but it is not the answer to every business opportunity or problem.
Before I went to prison, there were not really many blockchain products. It was only bitcoin.
I think that governments are going to get disrupted by the blockchain. I think in the same way that the Internet forced everyone to evolve, the Blockchain is going to change the game again.
Some of the uses being implemented for blockchain could actually work better with a database.
Turning cash flows from contracts of professional athletes into securities is now possible through the power of blockchain. — © Spencer Dinwiddie
Turning cash flows from contracts of professional athletes into securities is now possible through the power of blockchain.
The blockchain does one thing: It replaces third-party trust with mathematical proof that something happened.
Giving users easy access to many different kinds of digital assets on the blockchain and, particularly, tokens that are linked to assets in the real world, is crucial to seeing blockchain adoption reach the next level, and I applaud Digix Global's initiative in being the first of many such projects to successfully launch.
The main event isn't bitcoin. It's using the blockchain to disrupt other industries and Wall Street.
We don't think the blockchain can do most of what's been ascribed to it. But we're entering the Internet of value - and that is very much underhyped.
The world is preoccupied with dissecting, analyzing and prognosticating on the blockchain's future; technologists, entrepreneurs, and enterprises are wondering if it is to be considered vitamin or poison.
We'd love to see a world where Venmo added support on the blockchain, then a Circle customer could pay a Venmo customer using their QR code or their blockchain address - and go between those instantly and for free.
Blockchain infiltration will be met with resistance because it is an extreme change.
I'm not in the business of bayoneting the wounded. I feel the blockchain revolution is kind of my victory. I don't care whether I win it, someone else wins it.
Blockchain startups are suffering from a crippling, archaic, and antiquated state regulatory system - and it's driving innovation abroad. Many blockchain start-ups trigger or may trigger money transmitter laws and regulations.
Although the Ethereum blockchain is a public blockchain, it is great to see private and consortium blockchains using the Ethereum code base actively under development.
If blockchain technologies ignore the eventuality of standards, we are going to see less adoption. Maybe we should think of the blockchain as a public-good utility and encourage an evolution that is not unlike the Internet's in terms of openness and neutrality of access.
t0 is blockchain-agnostic so, ultimately, we can use anybody's blockchain.
As I was looking around, to me, what was happening in the blockchain and crypto world was a movement.
Everyone, it's okay to say the word 'bitcoin' and acknowledge that it is the actual platform that is driving this innovation that we're all building on. It's also okay to say 'the bitcoin blockchain,' or 'the blockchain,' if you're afraid that people will think you're weird.
After two years working with bitcoin and blockchain companies and corporate leaders, we identified that a significant issue hindering the widespread, global adoption of blockchain is the inability to quickly connect with the right combination of partners for testing and deployment of the technology to address real-world business challenges.
I've been in a room in Silicon Valley where on the wall they have 160 industries they think blockchain can disrupt. We picked six of them to focus on.
You can write anything that you would be able to write on a server and put it onto the blockchain. Instead of Javascript making calls to the server, you would be making calls to the blockchain.
Bitcoin is just one example of something that uses a blockchain.
I think the whole narrative of blockchain without bitcoin will amount to very little.
Blockchain technologies will change transactions in a broad way.
With the Internet and blockchain, everything is changed. It's the future of content.
I am pro-technology that improves the lives of many people in any way possible, and I think the blockchain has the potential to do that.
Blockchain should be used to address opportunities and problems that lack easier answers.
Transparency and liquidity make sense in my head, so that's why I have an affinity for blockchain as a whole.
Belarus will become the first government in the world that opens wide opportunities for the use of blockchain technology. — © Alexander Lukashenko
Belarus will become the first government in the world that opens wide opportunities for the use of blockchain technology.
The blockchain allows our smart devices to speak to each other better and faster.
That's a term that I really like - 'permissionless innovation' - because anybody who has an idea and has a solution can tap into or can leverage the Bitcoin blockchain.
The bitcoin/blockchain protocol has never been compromised. Businesses building applications on top of it run the risk of making mistakes.
With private chains, you can have a completely known universe of transaction processors. That appeals to financial institutions that are wary of the bitcoin blockchain.
I'm not wed to bitcoin's blockchain. I'm blockchain-agnostic.
Blockchain is moving beyond cryptocurrency, and it's worth paying attention - especially since successful prototypes show that blockchain, also known as distributed ledger technology, will be transformative.
Blockchain is like the new big data or AI - too many people are using it as a buzzword and not focused solving a real problem. We like to call them Blockchain tourists!
The blockchain is going to change everything more than the Internet has.
Just because you call something a blockchain or an ICO, that doesn't mean you aren't subject to normal laws.
What proplets do is they look to the blockchain to see who owns them; they are kind of like SIM cards today - they know where they are at. — © Nick Szabo
What proplets do is they look to the blockchain to see who owns them; they are kind of like SIM cards today - they know where they are at.
The blockchain concept was pioneered within the context of crypto-currency Bitcoin, but engineers have imagined many other ways for distributed ledger technology to streamline the world. Stock exchanges and big banks, for example, are looking at blockchain-type systems as trading settlement platforms.
Government leaders should get up to speed on the blockchain by understanding it first and committing to exploring its potential.
This whole blockchain thing is so compelling to me - I don't know where it's going, but it's such an interesting ride.
Before Blockchain Capital, I was cranking out startups like an incubator.
The blockchain symbolizes a shift in power from the centers to the edges of the networks.
The blockchain is a distributed network that solves all the problems that we have of finance, but more broadly, it's like a philosophy. It's a way of life.
Blockchain Capital was the first dedicated venture fund to invest in crypto and blockchain.
Study how to write smart contracts, which is the basic unit of programming a blockchain for business purposes. It is the equivalent of being taught HTML and Java during the early Internet days. And master how to create assets or tokenize existing ones on a blockchain.
While it may seem scarier in the earlier days, I think ultimately the blockchain creates a safer world.
Everything will be tokenized and connected by a blockchain one day.
We all want a non-fragmented solution, but the utopian version of a single blockchain to rule them all is undesirable and impractical.
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