2023.11.15
Blockchain developers gather in Seoul for annual Upbit D Conference
BY JIN MIN-JI, The
Korea Herald - Dunamu, which operates Upbit, Korea’s largest cryptocurrency
exchange, hosted its annual Upbit D Conference (UDC) in Seoul on Monday.
The conference,
which carried the slogan “All That Blockchain,” brought blockchain developers
together to discuss their industry's potential and examine the changes their
technology has brought to daily life.
The D in UDC stands
for the words developer, digital asset and decentralized.
"The UDC has
has grown popular, as the core topics shared and participating companies have
expanded from technologies [into other sectors], along with the event's
continued growth and changes in the social situations," said Dunamu
Chairman Song Chi-hyung in the opening speech.
Song added that the
UDC has grown into a comprehensive event alongside the expanded influence of
blockchain across economy, culture and society.
“UDC, hosted by
Dunamu every year since 2018, is an event we hold with a sense of duty in a bid
to activate and contribute to commercialize Korea’s blockchain ecosystem."
At the one-day
event, which is in its sixth year, 39 blockchain experts shared their insights
into blockchain’s applications across finance and entertainment as well as
policy and regulations at the Grand Walkerhill Seoul in Gwangjin District,
eastern Seoul.
Speakers included
CoinDesk Executive Director Emily Parker and SK Telecom Executive Vice
President Oh Se-hyeon. Some 3,700 individuals signed up to attend this year's
UDC, an increase from the 3,000 people who attended last year's two-day event,
which took place in the southern port city of Busan.
Three keynote
speakers — Matt Sorg, head of technology at Solana Foundation, Jide Fashola,
head of technical integrations at Cardano Foundation and Bitcoin.com founder
Roger Ver — discussed various aspects of blockchain technology, including its
sustainability, its integrations with AI and its applications in finance.
“The future of
finance is leaving the past in the dust,” said Ver in his UDC keynote speech
titled “Breaking Chains with Blockchains: Cryptocurrencies and the Pursuit of
Freedom.”
“What might take a
bank a whole week to perform, blockchains settle in minutes,” Ver said, adding
that cryptocurrency makes global finance more effective by allowing any
individuals, regardless of qualifications, to make transactions without an
intermediary.
Sorg touched on the
ways in which blockchain technology can strengthen AI, while Fashola discussed
the industry’s environmentally friendly advancements.
This year’s event
included both online and offline sessions. Speakers in the online session
included The Sandbox co-founder Sebastien Borget, EOS Network Foundation
founder and CEO Yves La Rose and Jun Song, Dunamu's synergy team project lead.
The blockchain
industry went through a cryptocurrency winter last year, when the value of
popular cryptocurrencies declined precipitously amid a series of dramatic
events such as the bankruptcy of Bahamas-based cryptocurrency exchange FTX and
the crash of Luna, which was once among the top 10 largest cryptocurrencies in
the world by total market capitalization.
The market has
improved since, data from Korea have shown. The country’s virtual asset market
capitalization increased 46 percent in the first half of the year compared to
the previous half-year term, driven by the rebound in cryptocurrency prices and
investor sentiment, according to the financial regulator.
“Dunamu will play a
key role in putting a spotlight on and expanding the blockchain ecosystem on
diverse levels through the UDC,” said the company.