The World Economic Forum's annual conference wrapped up Thursday in Davos, Switzerland. (Nikhilesh De/CoinDesk)
DAVOS, Switzerland â The crypto worldâs efforts to showcase a stable industry in front of the worldâs elite wrapped up Thursday outside the World Economic Forumâs (WEF) annual conference in Davos.
And in a reversal from the rest of the week, the biggest event in Davosâ Thursday crypto calendar was without a doubt the main stage panel on crypto regulation featuring Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, Mairead McGuinness, architect of the EUâs recent crypto law MiCA, Omar bin Sultan Al Olama, minister of state for artificial intelligence and the digital economy of the United Arab Emirates, and Klaas Knot, chair of the Financial Stability Board currently developing a global rulebook for the sector.
It was the only panel exclusively on crypto inside the main venue of the conference, and things got a little tense when Dutch central banker and chair of the Financial Stability BoardKlaas Knot saidmany crypto assets were "offered from places that I would call sunny places for shady people."
Check out our more detailed coverageof what went down at that panel, and our exclusive interview with Mairead McGuinness on the prospects for international crypto laws.
The main venue of the conference also hosted a panel on the metaverseâs applications in industries â from port operations to bathroom refurbishment â just one day after some very different conceptions of the virtual online world werelaid bare.
âOnce my team put this [headset] on, they just didn't want to have to take it off,â said Ă sa Tamsons, senior vice-president at telecoms company Ericsson, citing an unnamed executive who uses metaverse tech in construction.
Metaverse transformation of medicine means there may not even be hospitals in five yearsâ time, said Bernd Montag, CEO of Siemens Healthineers. If theyâre not bullish on the tech, who will be?
Outside of the main venue, the industry continued bringing high-profile speakers to discuss their apparent interest in crypto. BlackRock Chief Operating Officer Rob Goldstein, speaking at a Circle event, pointed out that his company â one of the worldâs largest asset managers â expanded its role in the crypto industry last year.
âWe have been carefully watching, learning, trying to understand everything that's been going on for five years, 10 years, whatever the amount of time has been, but we've been consciously choosing to have a strategy, [though] not yet to implement the strategy,â Goldstein said. âWhat's interesting about the year 2022, which was a remarkable year in so many ways, and through so many lenses ⊠interestingly, it was the year that we chose at BlackRock to actually start implementing our digital assets strategy, the strategy that we had written over the past couple of years.â
BlackRockinvested in Circlelast year, andlaunched a fund for USDC reserves.
Another panel, hosted by the Filecoin Foundation, focused on the concept of âopen science,â referring to the open-sourcing of vast amounts of data. The panelists, who represented the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Conseil EuropĂ©en pour la Recherche NuclĂ©aire (CERN), barely mentioned blockchain, focusing instead on the need to be able to easily share data collected through scientific research.
https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2023/01/19/world-economic-forum-wraps-up-davos-2023-with-sparks/