Daniel Doll-Steinberg’s Keynote at the AIBC Summit Malta

November 2019

The Sky is the Limit: Forging Industries for Innovation and Disruption

How de we deliver AI and blockchain adoption through funds, tech services and collaboration working with asymmetrical systems?

Daniel Doll-Steinberg, at the AIBC Summit Malta, gave a keynote speech on the model behind the EdenBase ecosystem, fund and knowledge base.

AIBC Summit Malta Nov 2019 Daniel Doll-Steinberg.png

In this talk, Daniel talks about his work on the future work and his thesis on how to create very good blockchain and AI companies, the project he created which then became the Atari Token. In this model, he took standard innovative technology, converted it into AI and blockchain, and created a brand new industry that is the future of work.

 

Snippets from Daniel’s keynote:

What’s happening in the world?

As people are talking about the fourth, fifth, sixth industrial revolution, I think it’s the second.

The first industrial revolution, that mirrored our physical skills and had an enormous impact on the world.

This AI, blockchain, IoT is actually mimicking and mirroring, and then bettering our mental skills. This is actually something much bigger. I think blockchain is the final piece in this, where AI is “thinking” and IoT is “information”, the blockchain is the “fact” the computers can make, to make decisions.

We have to realize that this is actually quite scary for the world. You know the industrial revolution changed 90% employment in farms to 2%. What we are doing is impacting the way people work, their jobs, where they work, how they work, real estate, business models, and absolutely everything.

We have to consider what people are going to do as this happen and how we are going to take them through this process.

I see this as a three-pronged process:

  • Variation > Taking existing business models, modifying them, making them more efficient and varying them (e.g. Amazon, taking books online)

  • Transformation > Taking businesses and we are radically changing what they do. (e.g. Google, searching online and eventually created the data industry)

  • Disruption > New business models, new way of practicing (e.g. Uber, AirBnB, Facebook)

We got to consider where we look for this. The world doesn’t have an AI, blockchain problem, but what it does have is a data and a trust problem.

There is enormous resistance to disruption

Previous
Previous

SiGMA: EdenBase has just launched its first investment competition

Next
Next

Climate FinTech Report by New Energy Nexus