https://opensource.com/life/15/11/open-cryptocurrency-brings-blockchain-people
Marc Andreesen calls it an invention as profound as "computers in 1975" and "the Internet in 1993." Fred Wilson thinks it's the future of social media. Kim Dotcom wants to build a new global network on it.

And the team behind Qora wants to bring it directly to you—the open source way, of course.

Qora is one of many so-called "second generation" cryptocurrencies emerging in the wake of Bitcoin's unignorable popularity. But Qora is more than a currency. Simply put, it's a peer-to-peer transaction technology; it allows people to exchange digital assets without an intermediary (and in relative privacy).

To do this, it leverages the blockchain. Sure, the blockchain is the beating heart of Bitcoin, the world's most popular cryptocurrency. But Qora developers believe it can power so much more.

Financial transactions, experts suggest, are but one application of blockchain technology. A blockchain is a kind of "public ledger," a transparent record of transactions between parties. No central authority owns or controls this record; it's distributed across entire networks of computers that monitor and maintain it. It allows parties to exchange digital goods without having to trust anyone, including one another. (Blockchain is actually a practical solution to a computer science problem called the "Two Generals" or "Byzantine Generals" problem, which addresses ways multiple parties can achieve consensus in a distributed fashion.) And every one of those transactions occurs with radical transparency—even as the identities of the transacting parties remain private.

Some prognosticators claim the technology will transform not only financial transactions but also any transaction involving a contract. Qora's developers consider their project a critical component in next-generation voting systems, encrypted messaging, automated transactions—and, yes, social networking.

In this interview, one of Qora's core developers—identified simply by the handle "Vrontis"—explains Qora's promise for a truly decentralized Web.