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Masters of Blockchain and Initial Coin Offerings
Masters of Blockchain and Initial Coin Offerings: The Rise of Bitcoin, Ethereum, ICOs, Cryptocurrencies, Token Economies and What That Means for Startups, Corporations and Investors | Andrew Romans
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How can I raise funding for my startup via an ICO? What are winning strategies to invest into ICOs, blockchain startups and trade liquid cryptocurrencies? How can large corporations benefit or be disrupted from blockchain? What is Bitcoin and how does the blockchain work? What is Ethereum and how can smart contracts transform my industry? How will blockchain change my business, government and society? How can I tokenize my business? What do lawyers say about regulations and legality of ICOs in specific countries? Romans tapped into the collective wisdom of over 200 top practitioners to answer these questions and help you become a master of blockchain and initial coin offerings (ICOs). Blockchain presents a huge opportunity for every large corporation and government in the world. In 2016 startups raised $240m via ICOs, 2017 over $5.6bn. In Q4 2017 ICO funding outpaced traditional VC funding for blockchain related startups. We are just at the beginning of a massive transformation of business, government and society. "What the internet did for communications, blockchain will do for trusted transactions." - Ginni Rometty, chair, president, and CEO of IBM "The biggest opportunity set we can think of over the next decade." - Bob Greifeld, CEO NASDAQ "The consequences of this breakthrough are hard to overstate." - Marc Andreessen, inventor of the web browser & Andreessen Horowitz "Blockchain is a technological tour de force." - Bill Gates "This is bigger than the iron age, bigger than the Internet, bigger than anything. This is global and will affect everyone." - Tim Draper, VC investor in Tesla, Skype, SpaceX
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Smart contracts will negate need for middle-men - how is smart contract policed, need wrap around behind this. Lawyers who are coders!

Smart contracts are perfectly trustworthy - assuming you trust the coder who wrote them. Do we need a society for smart contract coders, akin to law society i.e. what recourse is there against rogue coders