EOS Global Hackathon Hits London Science Museum, Turns Blockchain Minds to Data Security Challenge eosio Follow Sep 23, 2018 · 3 min read

Top prize awarded to EOShield — a blockchain malware protection project

Winning teams take home US$144,000 in prizes awarded by EOS VC

Block.one’s largest ever event sees 468 participants in 90 teams from 44 countries

Social impact prize awarded to biology project GeneOS

LONDON, September 23, 2018 — Block.one, publisher of the ground-breaking EOSIO blockchain protocol, brought its EOS Global Hackathon series to Europe, as London’s Science Museum played host to one of the UK’s biggest-ever blockchain hackathon events and the company’s EOS VC business unit awarded US$144,000 to projects focused on solving real-world problems related to data security and privacy.

Participants were challenged to: Create an application on the EOSIO platform that improves the relationship between technology and a user’s privacy or security.

The top prize of US$100,000 was won by EOShield, a team formed by UK-based duo James Pavur and Casey Knerr, who developed an application that can protect consumers from malware through a blockchain-based verification and blacklisting process.

A panel of international judges, including Block.one’s co-founders, CEO Brendan Blumer and CTO Dan Larimer, as well as other global technology and blockchain leaders, selected the winners from a pool of 90 teams, formed by 468 participants from a total of 44 countries. The teams spent 26 consecutive hours programming before pitching their ideas.

“Hacking and data leaks cost organizations and individuals billions of dollars every year,” said Block.one CTO Dan Larimer. “Fortunately, blockchain technology offers a way of securing our connected world, and has enormous potential for user privacy and data security. With the innovation we’re seeing in the industry, now is the time to explore workable solutions that make mass adoption of blockchain an easy step. It’s clear from our London hackathon that the global EOS community is very much focused on that goal.”

“We were very new to some elements of developing on blockchain, and the EOS hackathon provided a great format for us to learn new things,” said EOShield’s Casey Knerr. “We really believe in the idea of smart contracts, which are at the heart of our project. We’re incredibly excited to have won.”

A second prize of US$25,000 was awarded to Chestnut, a smart bank account project designed to help protect funds from cyber criminals.

The team behind On The Block, an app that simplifies credit-checks by removing third-parties, picked up US$10,000 for the third-place prize.

The Best Social Impact Prize was awarded to GeneOS for its work on an application that aims to incentivize individuals to donate genomics data in a secure, anonymized way to further research into Alzheimer’s disease.

“London is a renowned business center and financial hub. In recent years, it’s become a global fintech destination and now it’s emerging as a blockchain industry hotspot,” said Serg Metelin, Block.one’s Head of Developer Relations. “There’s no better place for us to look at solving privacy and security problems than here. The creativity and ingenuity we’ve witnessed over the weekend demonstrates how blockchain offers real-world solutions to these challenges.”

Full winners list

Top prizes

● First Prize, US$100,000 — EOShield

● Second Prize, US$25,000 — Chestnut

● Third Prize, US$10,000 — On the Block

Secondary prizes

● Best Social Impact, US$3,000 — GeneOS

● Best User Experience, US$3,000 — Chestnut

● Best Social Media Post, US$3,000 — @CyberCode Twins

London judges

Brendan Blumer Block.one, CEO

Dan Larimer Block.one, CTO

Christian Angermayer Apeiron Investment, Group Founder

Sharon Henley British Blockchain Association, Director of Marketing and Communications

Nicholas Oliver people.io, CEO and founder

Michael Alexander EOS VC, CEO

Lee Schneider Block.one, General Counsel

Shane Kehoe SVK Crypto, Co-founder

The London event was the third in a series of five events taking place around the world this year, with EOS VC awarding a total of US$1.5 million over the course of the series. It follows events in Hong Kong in June, and Sydney in August. The fourth installment will take place in San Francisco in November.

Each hackathon event features a unique challenge for developers to “hack” by designing blockchain applications with real-world utility using EOSIO code.

The top three prize-winners from each of the four hackathons will compete in a Grand Finale Pitch Competition event in December.

Contact

media@block.one