Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Infrastructure
Instructor: Cam Harvey
Beginner Level • 6 hours to complete • Flexible Schedule
What You'll Learn
- Articulate the history and origins of decentralized finance
- Define the key components of decentralized finance's infrastructure
- Explain which problems decentralized finance is designed to solve and how
- Identify myths or common misconceptions about decentralized finance
Skills You'll Gain
Derivatives
Interoperability
Digital Assets
Financial Services
FinTech
Blockchain
Market Liquidity
Governance
Banking
Emerging Technologies
Payment Systems
Payment Processing
Financial Regulations
Cryptography
Finance
Transaction Processing
Financial Systems
Shareable Certificate
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Outcomes
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Learn new concepts from industry experts
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Gain a foundational understanding of a subject or tool
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Develop job-relevant skills with hands-on projects
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Earn a shareable career certificate
There are 4 modules in this course
This module provides a historical perspective of exchange beginning with early barter, specie currency (backed by, e.g., gold), fiat currency and electronic transfers. The module introduces some of the key problems that have arisen with the current system. It closes with the introduction to Satoshi Nakamoto’s famous 2008 paper which introduced cryptocurrency.
This module introduces the key foundations for DeFi, starting with the mechanics of blockchain including cryptographic hashing. The module then explores the innovation of smart contracting - a key ingredient for DeFi. There is also a discussion of the differences between the first cryptos and stablecoins.
This module explores the key problems with today’s legacy financial system which include: inefficiency (costly, slow, and insecure transactions); limited access (many cannot access banks and many that have bank accounts find it difficult to get loans); opacity (it is unclear how healthy our commercial financial institutions are); centralized control (current system is dominated by oligopolies that push prices higher than competitive prices) and interoperability (difficulty in moving funds across different legacy financial institutions).
The final module explores various different myths including: all cryptocurrencies are anonymous; blockchains are routinely hacked; quantum computing will destroy all blockchain based currencies; and the crypto ecosystem is so small that it is unlikely to compete with legacy financial institutions.