IPv6 and blockchain are perfect together, IPv6 Forum’s Latif Ladid tells CoinGeek Backstage
Ladid believes that BSV is the only blockchain that is fit to support IPv6 as it scales unbounded and at very low fees, ushering a new era of the Internet.
Ladid believes that BSV is the only blockchain that is fit to support IPv6 as it scales unbounded and at very low fees, ushering a new era of the Internet.
Dr. Wright caught up with Sarah Higgs to discuss why he initially integrated IPv6 into Bitcoin and why only BSV can support IPv6 volume of transactions.
Dr. Craig Wright will speak about BSV and its role in the IoT, focusing on the impact of IPv6—the next iteration of the Internet that aims to make digital communications faster and more secure.
Dr. Craig Wright will open the summit in Dublin with a keynote presentation on June 20, alongside Latif Ladid, the founder and president of IPv6 Forum.
The event, held at the University of Dubai, was a great opportunity for experts from industry, government, and academia to educate each other on how blockchain can best be deployed in the modern world.
Bitcoin creator Dr. Craig S. Wright was recently at the University of Dubai, where he gave another explanation of how Bitcoin could work with IPv6 to create a more secure internet.
In a recent interview with CoinGeek Backstage, Jad Wahab discusses how he discovered Bitcoin SV and how it integrates into IPv6 and the future of the Internet.
In his speech, Dr. Craig Wright shared insights that help power the modern internet and connected devices by leveraging IPv6 and the latest blockchain developments offered by nChain.
On this special episode of The Bitcoin Bridge, Dr. Craig Wright shares for the very first time the presentation he gave before a panel of industry experts deciding on the future of the internet.
By employing IPv6 and integrating that with bitcoin addresses and transactions, we enable the securing of the Internet, and its vulnerabilities would no longer be a concern.
This little-known HTTP error code gives us a glimpse of what the internet may have been if bitcoin or some other form of electronic micropayment system was available a decade earlier.
Metanet and Bitcoin were roughly conceived “in the depths of the late 90s” from the concept of an economically incentivized Internet, according to nChain Chief Scientist Dr. Craig Wright.