Telecommunications company Vodafone is taking steps to leverage SIM card technology to meet the expected increase in demand for crypto transactions on mobile phones.
In a interview with Yahoo Finance Future FocusDavid Palmer, Vodafone’s blockchain leader, revealed that the company is pushing to promote the use of blockchain technology on mobile devices to manage crypto transactions.
“Every mobile phone has a SIM card in it and we have focused on linking the mobile phone’s SIM card to digital wallets, identity cards, And blockchains, where we use the cryptography that we have in those SIM cards for that blockchain integration,” Palmer said.
Vodafone will use cryptographic capabilities built into SIM cards
Using the cryptographic capabilities embedded in the SIM cards, Vodafone aims to integrate them with blockchain technology, enabling seamless transactions.
Palmer said he envisions a future where there will be approximately 5.6 billion blockchain-based digital wallets by 2030, which will serve as a gateway to financial services.
He specifically emphasized the use of public blockchains such as Ethereum, citing their increasing speed and security.
However, he acknowledged that regulatory hurdles need to be addressed, especially in the context of mainstream financial services and the existing sanctions-related restrictions on the use of public blockchains.
Vodafone tries to turn your phone’s SIM card into a crypto wallet https://t.co/CTF2Q1hlWK
— Yahoo Finance UK (@YahooFinanceUK) May 3, 2024
A notable innovation from Vodafone in this area is the PairPoint Digital Asset Broker platform.
Palmer explained that PairPoint facilitates transactions between public blockchains, such as Ethereum, and private blockchains such as JPMorgan’s Onyx, which uses smart contracts to enable seamless integration.
The platform acts as an intermediary for large enterprises that want to write to a public blockchain, with transactions securely recorded on Vodafone’s blockchain.
Smart contracts, which use features such as account abstraction, enable interoperability between the chains.
Vodafone experiences with P2P micropayment transactions
Vodafone’s journey in this space started with early experiments with peer-to-peer micropayment transactions.
Later, the company integrated SIM card technology with blockchain, introducing interoperable ‘digital identity passports’.
These passports, anchored on the blockchain, securely store private keys for digital wallets in the SIM card’s hardware module.
These advances ultimately led to the development of Vodafone’s PairPoint platform, which provides decentralized digital identities internet by stuff (IoT) devices, allowing them to work in different organizations and systems.
Palmer illustrated the potential applications of this concept and envisioned scenarios in which devices equipped with hardware wallets could authenticate and execute transactions autonomously.
For example, an electric autonomous vehicle could independently pay for charging at a charging station.
However, Palmer stressed the critical importance of securing these wallets against cyber threats, acknowledging that they would be a prime target for hackers.
In October last year, Vodafone’s Digital Asset Broker (DAB) launched announced a joint proof of concept with Chainlink Labs, Sumitomo Corporation and InnoWave.
The goal of the initiative was to address existing obstacles in the $32 trillion global trade ecosystem.
The partners announced their efforts to improve the exchange of essential trade documents across multiple platforms and blockchains, with a focus on security and interoperability.