Some people think that the only thing blockchain is any good for is cryptocurrency transactions, but in this article we’re going to prove them wrong. There are plenty of ways blockchain has been put to use, some more productive than others.
We’d like to take this opportunity to show you the wild side of blockchain, in the hope it might encourage more innovation and creativity.
1. Blockchain-based lottery
This is probably the newest blockchain utilization to emerge as of January 2019. This is certainly a leap forward in originality. Gambling is not something new to blockchain, but gambling in a lottery certainly is.
Especially a lottery that claims to be not entirely up to chance. The company behind this game called Fomo2Moon, actually claims they can provide you with a “predictable income”.
It gets a little freaky with the offer of commissions for each friend you persuade to sign up. Many anti-crypto activists are already accusing cryptocurrencies of being pyramid schemes, so commission based sign up programs for blockchain based systems probably won’t do much to reduce these accusations. Maybe especially when it’s a game connected to gambling.
Unlike a typical non-blockchain lottery, there is no mention of regulation anywhere on the website at the time of writing, or even which country the lottery is based out of.
Technically, since ether, the currency used in this lottery, is not legal tender, there may be a valid argument that gambling legislation doesn’t apply, because it’s not real money. Nobody goes to jail for betting with Monopoly money, so this shouldn’t be any different, right?
2. CryptoKitties
If you thought a lottery based on blockchain was pretty far out, what are you going to make of a service that uses Ethereum NFTs to provide virtual pets?
That’s freaky enough, but the most surprising thing about this particular use of Ethereum is that it caught on. People are even “breeding” these things. Crazy and crazier, some CryptoKitties have sold for more than the equivalent of $100,000. There are even celebrity CryptoKitty owners.
3. Streamium
If the YouTube universe just isn’t crazy enough for you, there’s always Streamium to turn to. A video streaming service where you pay for content in satoshi (a satoshi is 0.00000001 of a Bitcoin).
At the time of writing, that’s very cheap, but then again it’s a highly subjective matter as to whether the cost of streaming the data is worth it.
4. BitFury Lightbulb
Great ideas have frequently been depicted in cartoons as lightbulbs, so it’s kind of appropriate that BitFury’s great idea is an actual lightbulb. What makes this one different is that it mines Bitcoin while it’s running. Not very much Bitcoin, because it’s just a lightbulb, but it mines a lot more Bitcoin than an ordinary lightbulb does.
This is something you won’t find in stores, and it’s not really very practical. It is a unique blockchain innovation, however, so it deserves its place on this list.