At the Mit Bitcoin exhibition earlier this month, I had the opportunity to sit and talk to Neha Narula, director of the digital currency initiative under MIT Media Lab.
Neha previously studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and she completed a PhD in 2015. Its research and work tend to focus on distributed systems and databases, with many contributions that involve analysis of potential shortcomings and the dangers of the Central Bank of Central Bank (CBDCS).
She previously worked to re -launch the Digg news assembly platform, and worked in Google as a large software engineer, designed by Blobstore, a scheme for excessive repetition and delivery of huge amounts of data.
We discussed the history of the Massachusetts Institute of DCI and its role in the history of bitcoin development in research, as well as the role of academic research in general in terms of its connection with bitcoin and encryption systems or Blockchain.
You can watch the interview here:
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