Amidst a bearish price cycle and a wave of negative press, itâs safe to say that 2015 may be yet another year filled with growing pains for bitcoin. In the face of these obstacles, however, many of its veteran supporters are standing strong and banding together.
Given its longstanding support for the digital currency ecosystem, itâs perhaps no surprise that Union Square Ventures (USV) participated in Coinbaseâs recent $75m funding round alongside Andreessen Horowitz and Draper Fisher Jurvetson.
USV has so far participated in three of Coinbaseâs four public funding rounds, while appearing at marquee events in the industryâs history.
Notably, principal Fred Wilson has also been outspoken about bitcoinâs regulatory environment and its long-term potential as a technology, often in the face of criticism for his views. Today, USV remains as bullish on the technology as ever.
Speaking to CoinDesk about its participation in this weekâs funding, Fred Wilson echoed many of his previous positions regarding bitcoin as an investor, while shedding new insights as to what he believes are the most compelling parts of the ecosystem today.
Perhaps most intriguingly, Wilson emphasized that USV is no longer as interested in the financial applications of the blockchain, stating:
âWeâre not interested in investing in a company thatâs the same as Coinbase. I think Coinbase has a big opportunity in front of itself and so weâre careful not to investment anywhere close to what theyâre doing.â
Wilson went on to explain that he views Coinbase as a foundational layer for a new suite of applications to be built on top of the bitcoin protocol and with alternative blockchains.
For example, Wilson cited USVâs investment in decentralised identity protocol provider OneName, which is built on namecoin, as an example of the kinds of projects he most looks forward to seeing developed in the coming years.
Further, Wilson sought to frame the immediate future as crucial to shaping how the bitcoin ecosystem will develop in the long term.
âIt is still very early days for all those projects,â he continued. âWeâll see whether users value the types of things that can be built on top of the blockchain.â
Wilson went on to describe the kinds of projects that he is most excited about seeing developed in the coming years.
For example, he cited decentralized Dropbox-like storage solutions and next-generation databases, as well as new types of marketplaces and ticketing solutions, as potential innovations that could be built on bitcoinâs underlying blockchain ledger.
âThere are a whole bunch of things that donât have anything to do with bitcoin itself, or sending, receiving and storing bitcoin,â Wilson continued.
Still, he stressed that these types of projects are still conceptual, and that a new generation of bitcoin innovators will have to prove that such solutions can reach everyday users.
The examples mentioned may be noteworthy given that Wilson spoke openly about blockchain-based identity solutions at TechCrunch Disrupt last year, comments that might have hinted at his firmâs later involvement with OneName.
As for whether other participants in the round shared his views, Wilson was less sure, noting that he has only had conversations with Fortune 500 financial services giant USAA, who he described as quite knowledgeable about the technology.
However, he voiced his belief that the participating firms all likely understand bitcoin far better than the community might expect, and that they may be aware of crypto 2.0-type applications.
He said:
âWe have this impression that these are big dumb companies, but theyâre not. They read the research and they read the blog posts and they get it.â
Wilson argued that the participation of big-brand investors, however, is likely to send positive signals to the wider financial world while benefitting the team at Coinbase.
âWhatever the reaction was, BBVA is a very innovative bank, USAA is also very innovative, and they have a tradition of embracing new things,â he added. âTheyâre good partners.â
Throughout the conversation, Wilson also expressed his desire that Coinbase will use the funding in ways that could help expand the entire bitcoin ecosystem, becoming more global, mobile, open and secure, all goals echoed by CEO Brian Armstrong.
In particular, Wilson indicated that he wants Coinbase to focus on its APIs and software development kits (SDKs) so that developers can build on its growing platform.
âLetâs just say that Coinbase has 10 million wallets all over the world, then developers could build applications for ticketing or lending,â he said. â[Becoming more] open is another very important piece of it.â
Wilson also sought to frame Coinbaseâs success as integral to the world, speaking positively about the future he believes the company can help unlock.
He concluded:
âIt would be a very different world than the one we live in today.â
Fred Wilson image via Wikipedia