Aptos Labs awards $50,000 grant for Blockchain in Higher Education

Aptos Labs awards ,000 grant for Blockchain in Higher Education

Despite a harsh crypto winter that has seen several industry names go bust, blockchain technology continues to thrive in education. Aptos Labs, the company behind the blockchain of the same name, announced an award of $50,000 on Wednesday to Professor Lorenzo Alvisi from Cornell University in New York.

Alvisi, who received his Ph.D. from Cornell in 1996, teaches computer science and does research on distributed computing and game theory.

“We are excited to support the work of Professor Alvisi’s students as they not only research new blockchain systems, but also develop real-world, scalable use cases and applications to benefit the future of the industry,” Avery Ching, CTO and co-founder of Aptos Labs. said in a statement.

According to the announcement, the grant will fund student research into scaling blockchain performance using a “client-centric architecture,” which goes on to declare that this will involve “building the abstraction of a secure, fault-tolerant, decentralized append-only log on top of a Byzantine- tolerant database.”

A Byzantine-tolerant computer system can continue to function even if some nodes fail or behave maliciously.

According to Ching, blockchain education remains “a core value” of Aptos’ mission.

Aptos is a layer one blockchain launched in October 2022 by Aptos Labs, the company founded by Avery Ching and Mo Shaikh, who previously worked on Meta’s (then Facebook) Diem’s ​​Novi wallet. Aptos uses parallel execution, which the company claims makes transactions fast while keeping them cheap.

Last summer, Aptos raised $150 million in funding led by FTX and investors including Parafi in late July, after raising another $200 million in March through a strategic round that included Andreessen Horowitz, Multicoin Capital and Haun Ventures .

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Blockchain companies have a long history of donating funds to educational institutions. In 2018, Ripple committed $50 million to universities, including Princeton and the University of Texas, through its University Blockchain Research Initiative. In 2020, IOHK, the cryptocurrency company behind Cardano, donated $500,000 worth of Cardano (ADA) to the University of Wyoming to fund blockchain research.

“This collaboration with Aptos will help our team understand how to allow existing blockchain-based applications to take full advantage of our new architecture,” Alvisi said in a statement posted on the school’s website. “At the forefront of today’s scalable blockchain execution engines, Aptos’ Block-STM is a beautiful example of bringing to blockchains the concurrent benefits offered by databases.”

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