Digital Asset Holdings has announced that it has acquired the assets and senior leadership of a Zurich-based technology startup.
Elevence CEO Vincent Peikert will lead Digital Assetâs Switzerland office, and serve as head of product for Europe. Further, James Litsios, Elevenceâs CTO, will serve as head of development in Switzerland. The terms of the acqui-hire were not disclosed.
In the statement posted to Digital Assetâs website, CEO Blythe Masters described how she sees Elevenceâs eight-person team fitting into the company.
Masters said:
âThe resulting Digital Asset platform is specifically designed to address financial services applications requiring automation, privacy and immutability.â
The acquisition represents the fourth blockchain startup purchased by the New York-based Digital Asset. In the past year, Digital Asset has moved to acquire startups Hyperledger, Bits of Proof, and Blockstack.io.
Founded in 2015, Zürich-based Elevence has been working to write a coding language specifically designed to model and execute financial agreements using a distributed ledger, while at the same time giving parties involved more control over who can see the information provided.
According to the announcement, Elevence has developed a modeling language to express âany right or obligationâ, including cash, securities and derivatives. The companyâs code defines the considerations between parties to determine how contractual relations might change over time.
âThis provides relevant parties with a unified view of current and future rights and obligations on a need-to-know basis, rather than revealing confidential information as in smart contract systems,â Digital Asset explained.
Todayâs announcement also provided more evidence of what increasingly looks like an industry-wide shift away from the term âblockchainâ to the term âdistributed ledgerâ.
Earlier this month, banking consortium R3CEV announced its own distributed ledger platform, dubbed âCordaâ, which the company described as being built from the ground up with user privacy in mind. At the time, R3 sought to distinguish its new platform from blockchain, the distributed database that underlies bitcoin and other digital currencies.
Similarly, todayâs formal announcement continued the companyâs tendency to make no mention of the word âblockchain,â but described the technology as a âdistributed ledgerâ on five separate occasions.
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