If the future is to bring an endless variety of cryptocurrencies and tokens, the world will need a wallet that can hold them all.
Now, two of the most prominent startups in the sector are teaming up to entice developers to build just that. Announced Wednesday, decentralized internet startup Blockstack (through its venture capital fund, the Blockstack Signature Fund) and exchange platform ShapeShift are jointly offering a $50,000 bounty to the team or developer that makes the best open-source âuniversalâ crypto wallet.
Contestants need to use Blockstackâs authentication, storage and encryption technology combined with ShapeShiftâs API for token exchange. The goal is to build a wallet that supports almost any native token, even tokens that havenât been created yet, before the deadline on June 29.
Xan Ditkoff, a growth partner at Blockstack and producer at Blockstackâs Signature Fund, explained:
âWeâre super early in this space. There are undoubtedly winners that have yet to even appear yet. Itâs important that a wallet can support digital assets that have yet to be created.â
Most cryptocurrency wallets only support at most a handful of tokens, forcing enthusiasts to juggle multiple wallets and sometimes keep their tokens on custodial platforms like exchanges.
The Jaxx wallet added ShapeShift support in 2016, although that wallet provider is known to have some security vulnerabilities. Plus, it canât support all tokens the way this upcoming wallet aims to.
Notably, the partnership says much about the changing demands of crypto consumers, as it grew out of Blockstackâs concern that not supporting certain coins could cost developer interest.
âYou shouldnât be deterred from building on Blockstack just because your communityâs atomic unit of use, or wealth, or whatever, your token, isnât represented on our platform,â Ditkoff told CoinDesk.
âAs soon as we came up with that idea, ShapeShift was an obvious partner. Theyâve probably done the most of any project ⦠for users to hold, exchange and add new tokens,â he continue.
The partnership also is good for ShapeShiftâs bottom line, since the platform will earn revenue whenever wallet users convert their tokens through the API.
âMuch like you donât have a website that serves all of the needs of an individual, you wonât have a single wallet or decentralized application that serves all of the needs of an individual as well,â a ShapeShift spokesperson said.
More broadly, in Ditkoffâs view, sometimes cryptocurrency tribalism can create familiar silos centered around specific tokens. But cooperation between teams often produces more innovative results than niche experiments, he said.
Submissions wonât only be judged based on the quality of the code. Judges will also consider how easy the walletâs code is to audit and use.
âWeâd love to see other developers use this going forward,â Ditkoff said, concluding:
âThis space, in general, is going to succeed, or itâs not. Itâs not going to be a winner take-all-type thing.â
Crypto wallet image via Shutterstock