PH CEZA and Japan Science and Tech Minister Meet to Discuss Crypto Laws and STO
Both Sec. Lambino and Minister Takemoto said they hope for the Philippines to finally catch up and formalize its laws regarding STOs.
Both Sec. Lambino and Minister Takemoto said they hope for the Philippines to finally catch up and formalize its laws regarding STOs.
Nelson Valero: “To continue and support NEM Philippines in terms of engaging the community about this new technology. I personally want to see actual blockchain-based applications being developed by our local talents. Who knows one could discover the next killer app for the blockchain technology.”
We have also seen another post that looks like a mere “photo op” with Mr. Villar but the caption indicated that he entered “the world of cryptocurrency”.
Eric Cristobal: OKEx is constantly striving for the best and thinking of ways to offer outstanding services and products for our users. We are looking forward to the launch of OKChain and OKDex.
“2020 will be the year for Non-Fungible Tokens (NFT), Decentralized ID systems (DID), Decentralized Finance and Security Exchange Offerings (STO). We believe that the NFT market will grow next year because of asset tokenization and gaming.”
Tina Gallano: Filipinos will start using more and more blockchain products and will soon realize that blockchain will bring freedom and full control of their data.
Nathan Smale: I think the Philippines over-indexes in its ability and desire to learn, yet is still largely undervalued in many regions. But I think that is going to change, I think the world is about to take notice.
IMF suggested that these data be aggregated and collected on a quarterly basis, on gross transactions, indicating the country of origin and destination of the funds transacted.
Alex Timbol: I see blockchain projects worldwide looking to the Philippines for dev talent. There’s already a dev grab among mainstream tech companies. Amazon has over ten thousand devs here. We’re not quite there yet in terms of numbers and recognition for blockchain talent. With Elastos outreach, community building, and training, we’re helping create a ready pool of talent and the means to access it.
Leah Callon-Butler: I believe we’ll see greater support from the private sector to build strength and resilience into the Philippines’ talent pipeline, as corporates realise that it is not the sole responsibility of the government to educate and equip young Filipinos for the jobs of the future.