Menu

North Korea Unchained: Bitcoin, Blockchain, and the Hermit Kingdom—Futurum Tech Podcast episode 008

In this week’s Futurum Tech Podcast, our team of Fred McClimans, Daniel Newman, and Olivier Blanchard take a look at the worlds of Bitcoin, Blockchain, and North Korea, plus the Fast Five, Tech Bites, and weekly Crystal Ball Prediction.

The Main Event

The hottest cyber currency event of the year may well be the Korean International Blockchain Conference. That is if it actually takes place and enough tech-savvy individuals are interested and/or allowed to attend. Not to be confused with the Korea Blockchain Summit or Blockchain Korea Conferences (held in Seoul earlier this year), the KIBC is slated for October 3-4, 2018 and features a unique opportunity to tour Pyongyang, North Korea. Good luck with that.

Bottom Line: Oddly, this isn’t as far-fetched as it might seem. Put aside the ability to get into North Korea (or the desire), Kim Jong-un’s nation has been diving deep into cyber currencies and blockchain for a few years (note that South Korea is the third-most active nation in cybercurrencies, behind only the US and Japan, with over 30 percent of its working population actively investing/owning cybercurrencies).

  • It has created bogus job advertisements seeking cryptocurrency talent (allegedly part of a spear-phishing campaign);
  • It has allegedly been behind the theft of over US $200m plus in cybercurrencies;
  • It has tested its own bitcoin mining operation; and
  • It is under massive sanctions that restrict trade and the flow of cash.

If ever there was a nation-state in need of blockchain and cybercurrency, and skilled enough to pull it off, it’s North Korea. While we have doubts as to how effective the KIBC event will be (if it takes place), make no mistake that blockchain and cybercurrencies are here to stay, and nations like North Korea will continue to inject a great deal of risk.

The Fast Five

We dig into this week’s interesting and noteworthy news:

  • Salesforce released its Q2 2018 earnings, and it fared well. Key here was its performance after acquiring Mulesoft (for over $6b) to help unleash the power of Salesforce’s Einstein offering. The results were good, but guidance was a bit soft.
  • Microsoft has taken a big step in the world of pseudo policy with a goal of improving the world through better parental leave. Specifically, it is requiring staffing and subcontracting partners to match Microsoft’s own 12 weeks of parental leave for employees. Currently, only 13 percent of US private sector employees enjoy parental leave as a job perk—we rate this a good move.
  • While Amazon is focused on correcting Alexa’s software to prevent conversations from being accidentally recorded and shared with unexpecting contacts, Google has upped its Assistant to include concurrent bilingual support. This is a strong move that should play well in the significant number of bilingual households around the world.
  • Apple continues to tease its development in the Augmented Reality (AR) market, this time through the acquisition of tech firm Akonia, a developer of AR lenses.
  • Garmin has added wellness features to its performance wearables with the introduction of the Vivosmart 4, which measures blood oxygen saturation, sleep patterns, stress levels, and heart rate patterns. The product also has a holistic feature called “body battery energy” that informs users when they have the energy to handle more (like workouts) or less (again, like workouts).

Tech Bites

Our winner of this weeks “tech that bites” award is every company out there that focused on technology over people and process. This past week, Snapchat, The Weather Channel, CitiBike, and a slew of other companies that rely on Mapbox to power the maps in their apps were impacted by a hack that changed the name of NYC to an anti-semitic slur, “Jewtropolis.”

What gets us here is that the company had an AI-based filter that alerted to the change, but that the change was approved by a human. Once again, technology isn’t an excuse for good process and oversight.

Crystal Ball: Future-um Predictions and Guesses

This week we are gazing directly at Google and the wave of less-than-accurate accusations it has suffered this past week regarding alleged suppression of certain political voices. Will the current US administration actually attempt to force Google to bend to its wishes? And what would it take for them to be successful if they did? We’re pretty unanimous in our prediction – the chances of regulation for this particular accusation is hovering right around zero. That said, Google (+Facebook & Twitter) are all looking at increased oversight and potential regulation as they testify before Congress on political influence campaigns on social media.

And there you have it, this week’s Futurum Tech Podcast.


###

Disclaimer: This newsletter and associated podcast are for informational purposes only. We hope you find it educational and entertaining, but no investment advice is offered or implied.

Author Information

Fred studied engineering and music at Syracuse University. A frequent author and speaker, Fred has served as a guest lecturer at the George Mason University School of Business (Porter: Information Systems and Operations Management), keynoted the Colombian Associación Nacional De Empressarios Sourcing Summit, served as an executive committee member of the Intellifest International Conference on Reasoning (AI) Technologies, and has spoken at #SxSW on trust in the digital economy.

His analysis and commentary have appeared through venues such as Cheddar TV, Adotas, CNN, Social Media Today, Seeking Alpha, Talk Markets, and Network World (IDG).

Related Insights
CIO Take Smartsheet's Intelligent Work Management as a Strategic Execution Platform
December 22, 2025

CIO Take: Smartsheet’s Intelligent Work Management as a Strategic Execution Platform

Dion Hinchcliffe analyzes Smartsheet’s Intelligent Work Management announcements from a CIO lens—what’s real about agentic AI for execution at scale, what’s risky, and what to validate before standardizing....
Will Zoho’s Embedded AI Enterprise Spend and Billing Solutions Drive Growth
December 22, 2025

Will Zoho’s Embedded AI Enterprise Spend and Billing Solutions Drive Growth?

Keith Kirkpatrick, Research Director with Futurum, shares his insights on Zoho’s latest finance-focused releases, Zoho Spend and Zoho Billing Enterprise Edition, further underscoring Zoho’s drive to illustrate its enterprise-focused capabilities....
Will IFS’ Acquisition of Softeon Help Attract New Supply Chain Customers
December 19, 2025

Will IFS’ Acquisition of Softeon Help Attract New Supply Chain Customers?

Keith Kirkpatrick, Research Director at Futurum, shares his insights into IFS’ acquisition of WMS provider Softeon, and provides his assessment on the impact to IFS’s market position and the overall...
Micron Technology Q1 FY 2026 Sets Records; Strong Q2 Outlook
December 18, 2025

Micron Technology Q1 FY 2026 Sets Records; Strong Q2 Outlook

Futurum Research analyzes Micron’s Q1 FY 2026, focusing on AI-led demand, HBM commitments, and a pulled-forward capacity roadmap, with guidance signaling continued strength into FY 2026 amid persistent industry supply...
Will a Digital Adoption Platform Become a Must-Have App in 2026?
December 15, 2025

Will a DAP Become the Must-Have Software App in 2026?

Keith Kirkpatrick, Research Director with Futurum, covers WalkMe’s 2025 Analyst Day, and discusses the company’s key pillars for driving success with enterprise software in an AI- and agentic-dominated world heading...
Broadcom Q4 FY 2025 Earnings AI And Software Drive Beat
December 15, 2025

Broadcom Q4 FY 2025 Earnings: AI And Software Drive Beat

Futurum Research analyzes Broadcom’s Q4 FY 2025 results, highlighting accelerating AI semiconductor momentum, Ethernet AI switching backlog, and VMware Cloud Foundation gains, alongside system-level deliveries....

Book a Demo

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.