Peer Mountain

Peer Mountain
Peer Mountain logo
Peer Mountain ICO Review
Peer Mountain ICO
Ticker: PMTN
ICO start: 2018-07-23 00:00:00
ICO end: 2018-08-23 00:00:00
Price: 1 ETH = 2,917 PMTN
Bonus: 1
Tokens: 333000000
Tokentype: ERC20
Hardcap: 39,500 ETH
Softcap: 2,000,000 PMTN
Raised: 0
Platform: Ethereum
Distributed: 40%
Accepting: ETH

Peer Mountain is a mobile-first distributed system of trust. It uses cryptographic protocols to allow people and institutions to create and own a trusted record that encompasses digital identity, trust relationships, and proof of activities. System members own and control their data; they decide who can access it, as their information remains inaccessible and unexposed to third parties at all times. Merchants get real time compliance and regulatory certainty. And trusted third parties get paid to facilitate trust. PMTN is the first enterprise commodity token that powers the Peer Mountain ecosystem, rewarding the most trustworthy and reliable peers.

Contents

Description

The recent string of high-profile data breaches highlights the dire shortcomings of current data protection and storage methods. In summer 2017, cybercriminals breached Equifax’s secure servers and stole the sensitive personal information of 146 million Americans1. That information – Social Security Numbers, credit card details, dates of birth – could potentially be sold the dark web, putting the identities and financial security of millions of hard-working people at risk. In response to this crisis, governments and regulators are passing legislation that requires businesses to collect and store sensitive data more securely and to test existing methods of storage and manipulation of data and documentation – see, for example, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.
Events like these demand that we make radical and fundamental changes to how we store and guard our identities. The problem is not only that data storage and protection procedures of enterprises like Equifax aren’t broad or rigorous enough. The issue lies in the overall method in which these companies store, guard, and transmit data.
Every time a person transacts with a bank, credit agency, government, or online retailer, that organization generates and stores a copy of that person’s information following a number of rules and regulations according to the specifics of the interaction. The result is a world of enormous digital fortresses, each holding a duplicate of the identity of anyone who has ever been a customer. These fortresses – the centralized servers that hold all our information – are rich, obvious targets for cybercriminals. No matter how many digital moats, archers, and catapults the defenders build and deploy, the attackers will keep coming. And a single breach of any one of these fortresses can result in the loss of millions of identities.
Developers can harness blockchain technology to give individuals further ownership of their personal information, and enable them to store that information in a distributed ledger, thus helping effectively mitigate the risk of identity theft. To achieve this goal, many organizations have launched blockchain-based platforms over the past year; several of them have also had successful coin offerings. Peer Mountain goes beyond providing users with further ownership and control over their cryptographically secure identities, offering an end-to-end application ecosystem designed to facilitate the commerce and exchange of digital and physical services. It facilitates trust and the secure sharing of information with multiple independent parties across broad networks while preserving traceability and compliance at every end of the transference of data.
Peer Mountain is the first decentralized peer-to-peer trust marketplace that connects self- sovereign identity owners with regulatory-compliant service providers, and opens a new paradigm for how and where individuals and organizations conduct business.

Review

2005: Research on distributed hash tables (Kademlia) with personal realm based security (Kerberos) sparks the idea to design a system of trust management that works for the human scale.
2006: Discovery of the NSA paper “How to Make a Mint”, which was first published in 1996.
2010: Blockchain technology makes the possibility of a human scale trust system feasible and the year in which Jed’s “identity” was stolen for the first time.
2014/06: Founding of KYC3 begins the journey into compliance and regulatory trust.
2015/05: Office of Personnel Management informs Jed that his security clearance file has been stolen from their systems.
2015/10: KYC3 inducted into Fintech Fusion.
2015/11: First Peer Mountain tech spec filed as iDepot 68499 at the Benelux Office of Intellectual Property.
2016/04: KYC3 selected for L’Atelier by BNP Paribas.
2016/10: KYC3 completes Fintech Fusion.
2016/12: KYC3 secures capital increase for March 2017.
2017/03: Peer Mountain project is born, KYC3 leads and will be a service provider to the platform.
2017/04: Major Swiss financial services provider agrees to co-build Peer Mountain for 3 million users and signs Letter of Intent to do so.
2017/05: KYC3 achieves 2016 revenue level
2017/06: Peer Mountain development begins.
2017/07: German Corporation expresses intent to deploy Peer Mountain when ready with 9 million users.
2017/08: Peer Mountain prototyping.
2017/10: German Corporation contracts Peer Mountain technology for early deployment.
2017/10: Peer Mountain exits stealth mode.
2017/12: Peer Mountain v1 deployment.
2018/05: Peer Mountain production deployment by Swiss financial services partner.
2018/09: Peer Mountain deployment to 3 million end users in Switzerland.
2018/12: Peer Mountain deployment by German corporation to 9 million end users.[1]

Team

name: title: links: group: photo: iss:
Jed Grant MBA CEO, Lead Architec & Visionary https://www.linkedin.com/in/superhero/ Jed Grant photo 10.8
Markus Forster Data Scientist https://www.linkedin.com/in/markus-forster-3aa2992a/ Markus Forster photo 4.4
Federico Cardoso Blockchain Architect https://www.linkedin.com/in/cardosof/ Federico Cardoso photo 6.4
Ignacio Althabe Blockchain Developer https://www.linkedin.com/in/nachoalthabe/ Ignacio Althabe photo 4.4
Gabriel Pineda Backend Developer https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabriel-pineda-97a60171/ Gabriel Pineda photo 4.4
Luis Giunta Software Engineer https://www.linkedin.com/in/luisgiunta/ Luis Giunta photo 4.4
Florian Lagouche Blockchain DevOps Engineer https://www.linkedin.com/in/florian-lagouche-52b964b6/ Florian Lagouche photo 4.4
Mark Rogers Mobile Lead https://www.linkedin.com/in/markmrogers/ Mark Rogers photo 4.4
Stefan Vartolomeev Mobile Architect https://www.linkedin.com/in/stefan-vartolomeev-a4632640/ Stefan Vartolomeev photo 4.4
Pavel Pavlov Mobile Architect https://www.linkedin.com/in/pavel-pavlov-77655710/ Pavel Pavlov photo 4.4
Antonia Cherkrachieva Mobile Developer Antonia Cherkrachieva photo 4.4
Jaime Prieto Compliance Officer https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaime-prieto-cams-2a62794/ Jaime Prieto photo 4.4
Katie Olver Press & Communications https://www.linkedin.com/in/katie-olver-606291/ Katie Olver photo 6.4
Marc Garriga Digital Marketing https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcgc/ Marc Garriga photo 6.4
Patrick Seguin Content Manager https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickseguin/ Patrick Seguin photo 8.7
Sean Medcalf Content & Strategy https://www.linkedin.com/in/seanmedcalf/ Sean Medcalf photo 4.4
Ekaterina Semeshina UI/UX Design https://www.linkedin.com/in/uiuxdesignbykath/ Ekaterina Semeshina photo 4.4
Anna Krol Community Manager https://www.linkedin.com/in/annamkrol/ Anna Krol photo 4.4
Dominique Rademacher Web Developer Dominique Rademacher photo 4.4
Chi Nguyen Community Manager https://www.linkedin.com/in/chiitaly/ Chi Nguyen photo 4.4
Jorge Sanz Head of Finance Innovation, LIST Advisors Jorge Sanz photo 4.4
Jos van Bommel Assoc. Prof. of Finance, University of Luxembourg https://www.linkedin.com/in/jos-van-bommel-36b4738b/ Advisors Jos van Bommel photo 4.4
Thomas Engel Head of SECAN-LAB, Uni.lu https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-engel-5820986/ Advisors Thomas Engel photo 4.4
Jeremy Epstein CEO, Never Stop Marketing https://www.linkedin.com/in/jer979/ Advisors Jeremy Epstein photo 33.2
Marcelo Garcia Casil CEO, Maecenas.co https://www.linkedin.com/in/mcasil/ Advisors Marcelo Garcia Casil photo 6.4
Marco Houwen Project Lead, Infrachain.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcohouwen/ Advisors Marco Houwen photo 6.4
Laurent Leloup CEO, Chaineum Advisors Laurent Leloup photo 11.8
Javier Tamashiro APAC FCC CTA, Credit Suisse https://www.linkedin.com/in/javiertamashiro/ Advisors Javier Tamashiro photo 6.4
Jan Reinhart CEO, Reinhard Capital https://www.linkedin.com/in/janreinhart/ Advisors Jan Reinhart photo 4.4
Bertrand Manhe COO, GENII Capital https://www.linkedin.com/in/bertrandmanhe/ Advisors Bertrand Manhe photo 4.4
Guillaume Dubray Partner, Polytech Ventures https://www.linkedin.com/in/guillaume-dubray-81127b/ Advisors Guillaume Dubray photo 4.4
Max Wolter CEO, Alantor https://www.linkedin.com/in/max-wolter-60135871/ Advisors Max Wolter photo 4.4
Christophe Bach Mentor, Fintech Fusion https://www.linkedin.com/in/christophebach/ Advisors Christophe Bach photo 4.4
Tom Howard Founder, Block Republic https://www.linkedin.com/in/thowar2/ Advisors Tom Howard photo 4.4

External links


Peer Mountain on twitter
Peer Mountain on slack
Peer Mountain on telegram
Peer Mountain on facebook
Peer Mountain on medium
Peer Mountain on bitcointalk
Peer Mountain on github
Peer Mountain on reddit
Peer Mountain on discord
Peer Mountain on youtube
Peer Mountain official website
Peer Mountain whitepaper

Sources

  1. http://www.peermountain.com

See Also on BitcoinWiki