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Finance 4.0 - Towards a Socio-Ecological Finance System [electronic resource] : A Participatory Framework to Promote Sustainability / edited by Marcus M. Dapp, Dirk Helbing, Stefan Klauser.

Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries SpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and TechnologyEditor: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021Edición: 1st ed. 2021Descripción: IX, 109 páginas28 ilustraciones in color. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de soporte:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9783030714000
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin título; Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 005.824 23
  • 005.74 23
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
From the contents: Introduction: A Historical Perspective and Look into the Future -- Qualified Money - A Better Financial System for the Future -- Finance 4.0: Socio-Ecological Financial System -- Motivation -- The Finance 4.0 Ambition -- The Finance 4.0 Framework -- Cryptoeconomics and Simulation -- Architecture and Infrastructure -- Identity, Governance, and Proof-Mechanisms -- Early Use Cases -- Research Outlook -- Summary.
En: Springer Nature eBookResumen: This Open Access book outlines ideas for a novel, scalable and, above all, sustainable financial system. We all know that today's global markets are unsustainable and global governance is not effective enough. Given this situation, could one boost smart human coordination, sustainability and resilience by tweaking society at its core: the monetary system? A Computational Social Science team at ETH Zürich has indeed worked on a concept and little demonstrator for a new financial system, called "Finance 4.0" or just "FIN4", which combines blockchain technology with the Internet of Things ("IoT"). What if communities could reward sustainable actions by issuing their own money ("tokens")? Would people behave differently, when various externalities became visible and were actionable through cryptographic tokens? Could a novel, participatory, multi-dimensional financial system be created? Could it be run by the people for the people and lead to more societal resilience than today's financial system (which is effectively one-dimensional due to its almost frictionless exchange)? How could one manage such a system in an ethical and democratic way? This book presents some early attempts in a nascent field, but provides a fresh view on what cryptoeconomic systems could do for us, for a circular economy, and for scalable, sustainable action.
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From the contents: Introduction: A Historical Perspective and Look into the Future -- Qualified Money - A Better Financial System for the Future -- Finance 4.0: Socio-Ecological Financial System -- Motivation -- The Finance 4.0 Ambition -- The Finance 4.0 Framework -- Cryptoeconomics and Simulation -- Architecture and Infrastructure -- Identity, Governance, and Proof-Mechanisms -- Early Use Cases -- Research Outlook -- Summary.

Open Access

This Open Access book outlines ideas for a novel, scalable and, above all, sustainable financial system. We all know that today's global markets are unsustainable and global governance is not effective enough. Given this situation, could one boost smart human coordination, sustainability and resilience by tweaking society at its core: the monetary system? A Computational Social Science team at ETH Zürich has indeed worked on a concept and little demonstrator for a new financial system, called "Finance 4.0" or just "FIN4", which combines blockchain technology with the Internet of Things ("IoT"). What if communities could reward sustainable actions by issuing their own money ("tokens")? Would people behave differently, when various externalities became visible and were actionable through cryptographic tokens? Could a novel, participatory, multi-dimensional financial system be created? Could it be run by the people for the people and lead to more societal resilience than today's financial system (which is effectively one-dimensional due to its almost frictionless exchange)? How could one manage such a system in an ethical and democratic way? This book presents some early attempts in a nascent field, but provides a fresh view on what cryptoeconomic systems could do for us, for a circular economy, and for scalable, sustainable action.

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