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How Keeta processes 11M financial transactions per second with Spanner (cloud.google.com)
30 points by xescure 310 days ago
6 comments

How is it a distributed block chain if it runs on their Google cloud account exclusively?
Distributed between the data center walls I guess
distributed != decentralized
Seems to be neither.
Technically, NUMA is distributed. Shrugs. TigerBeetle hello!
Hello! :)
KYC compliance is not a feature. It is a liability. Identity data is both leaked and abused all the time. Google had a data breach just two weeks ago.
Could you provide a source for Google’s “KYC data” breach?
KYC data is PII data. I'm referring to Google's Salesforce breach, which most certainly included substantial PII data.

Moreover, other companies like Coinbase that do KYC have had their KYC data stolen this year as well, putting the lives of asset holders at risk.

KYC data is by definition PII data, but the opposite is definitely not true. You can have PII data without it being relevant to nor mandated by KYC regulations.

Please understand that the muddying of terms only harms your argument, instead of strengthening it.

That difference matters only to the institution. To the user, however, the risk and damage from the leak of any type of serious PII is one and the same in that it is a risk to be avoided.

In other words, the technicality you state is the difference between the user getting punched in the guts versus in the gonads. Both are to be avoided.

Sorry, but this is objectively not true. Like everything, nuance is crucial and our societal-legal system relies on it for a reason.

Leaking PII like names and phone numbers, versus KYC specific PII like ID proofs is a completely different ball game.

This argument is not about levels of harm, just your lack of understanding of nuance tbh.

Oh cool a blockchain crypto thing that will actually be compliant and do KYC and such and not take forever to settle things.

If crypto destroys the fx money changer companies that charge egregious fees and makes it such that I can send money to friends and family without delay and fees I’d be all for that.

Maybe sane officials will let the US Federal Reserve launch a digital dollar and finally fix all the middle men sucking no-value-added rents out of the financial system

The problem with a good "blockchain crypto thing" is that if they were going to be good anyway, there are much better/cheaper technologies for doing banking.

Blockchain technology is not just a scam industry by happenstance. The technology is so bad at what it usefully does that it necessitates being a scam industry. If it was to compete with mainline banking, it would lose 10 times out of 10.

While Visa and MasterCard want 3%, using USDT lets me send an amount for a penny or two. Nick checks out.
Exactly. But is USDT doing KYC?
No, and the user never asked for KYC. It is an encumbrance to everyone, and the self-custody crypto world does away with it.
> If your money replacement involves dismanteling the little protection we have against money laundering and banking AlQueda (amonst others). I'm going to put you in the "Bad Blockchain" bucket. I am sure you can make a more efficient banking system if you don't do any checks at all. That's not an interesting observation.

Yup. Most crypto maximalists are unknowingly (knowingly?) aligned with terrorists and other criminals looking for anonymity online skirting existing banking rules.

If your money replacement involves dismanteling the little protection we have against money laundering and banking AlQueda (amonst others). I'm going to put you in the "Bad Blockchain" bucket.

I am sure you can make a more efficient banking system if you don't do any checks at all. That's not an interesting observation.

Visa and Mastercard will give me my money back when the vendor turns out to be shit, though.
It is true, but with major caveats.

Firstly, one has to submit strong evidence, call them repeatedly, and wait for many months. It is not a pleasant experience.

Secondly, in the real world, any vendor like Amazon or Ebay or Uber or Lyft will immediately freeze the user's account if a dispute is initiated, barring the user from using the service. This is a substantially worse outcome for the user.

> Firstly, one has to submit strong evidence, call them repeatedly, and wait for many months.

You should get an Amex. (I've had little issue with various Visa/MC issuing banks, though. Quick and easy.)

> Secondly, in the real world, any vendor like Amazon or Ebay or Uber or Lyft will immediately freeze the user's account if a dispute is initiated, barring the user from using the service.

In most cases, shady vendors are a one-off concern. If I'm charging back, I'm probably not buying from them again.

This is provably untrue. I’ve disputed charges on Visa/Mastercard numerous times and had refunds and fraud claims honored every single time with minimal effort.
There must be a reason why those fees exist, otherwise there would be a business opportunity for another greedy company to demand lower fees and take all the profit.

I strongly suspect the reason is the regulations themselves. KYC implementations cost money, and so do fraud disputes. Traditional crypto provides neither, so the fees ther are much lower.

Fraud disputes are literally the only reason the fees were historically justified. These days however, various large companies strictly prohibit a user from engaging in any dispute, causing the user's account to be frozen if a dispute is initiated. This means there rarely any fraud dispute anymore, so paying a premium for it is typically a waste.
I mean, this whole Forex fee horse has been beaten to death by crypto evangelists for the past decade, and yet, it seems “unsolvable”?

Wise used to be almost completely free (excl spread), but they also introduced small % based fees over 1-2 yrs ago. They have had and continue to have many competitors, all of whom are experimenting with pricing models all the time.

If crypto could solve this, or if a trad-fi competitor could disrupt this, they would have. But that is not a very satisfying story, so here we are…

Your comment shows how little you know about stablecoins, the legislation that passed this year, and what's coming with the planned introduction of stablecoins by major retailers. Your extreme ignorance does not give you the right to preach nonsense.
Your response would be well served with a link to an article/blog that explains why I am so obviously wrong about forex fee disruption? Maybe even a short summary of how exactly the hand waving you’re doing correlates to the opinion I posted?
The simplest way in which crypto solves forex, at least in a narrow sense, is by the vendor accepting payment in a stablecoin, such as in one that matches the price of USD or EUR 1:1. Examples are USDT and DEUR. The transaction fees are very low, and there are no pumps and dumps. Swap fees between different stablecoins also are a lot lower than what a bank would charge as a forex fee.

One is of course always free to use real cryptocurrency too, e.g. BTC and XMR, although they are subject to pumps and dumps, although the price rises over time.

Ah yes. A "blockchain" that checks notes isn't a blockchain (uses their own implementation of a DAG) and checks notes is running on a single product by a single company.

The actual disruptor here is Google Spanner which actually handles all the ACID required.

> If crypto destroys the fx money changer companies that charge egregious fees and makes it such that I can send money to friends and family without delay and fees I’d be all for that

Strange how this amazing ripe-for-the-taking idea has been said about crypto for 20 years now. And somehow it's always "too early, it's coming in the future"

Because most of crypto is run by grifters and charlatans pumping and dumping.
I cannot believe i missed this
I quote Google Cloud literally, today August 14:

"Tens of trillions of dollars worth of value are transferred across outdated financial systems daily — and Keeta Network has proven it has the speed, scale, and security to be the foundation for a new, interconnected ecosystem."

"Google Cloud was also instrumental in helping to prepare and execute Keeta’s stress test, providing world-class infrastructure and technical guidance that helped validate the network’s real-world performance"

Interesting article from Google. Keeta seems to have a legitimate differentiator in their architecture.

I've been DYOR and I suspect that once a few companies start using their network, Keeta will quickly become indispensable because of their speed and low usage cost.

Also wonder if those companies who sell over Keeta will pass the savings on to consumers. hmmm :)

Thanks xescure

Plank possible shill any harder? What is this crap?
Some really ham-handed astroturfing going on here.
The shilling is so blatantly transparent that I could almost believe that it's a false flag operation from a competitor.