The HTC Exodus 1 is getting more blockchain-powered features

HTC’s blockchain phone is getting several new apps today, which start to show us what the phone can really be good for. HTC is adding about 20 new apps, including a personal tracker that can sell your data for cryptocurrency, and it’s also partnering with Opera to allow users to make micropayments to sites. Previously, this phone’s major blockchain feature was the ability to trade and store CryptoKitties.
The HTC Exodus phone now has access to a number of new decentralized apps (known as “Dapps”), which live in an app store that isn’t managed by any specific company, that specifically take advantage of the phone’s hardware. The most interesting addition is an app called Numbers, which tracks user data on walking, sleeping, driving, and more, then allows you to sell your own data to third parties. The app, which is made by a startup based in Taiwan, displays what type of data your phone can track, as well as a list of companies interested in that data.
The Numbers app is aimed at bringing more transparency around data collection and allowing users to make money — in cryptocurrency — off their own data. “Now not only can users own their data, but it forces companies to be more transparent about how that data is used,” says HTC’s chief decentralized officer Phil Chen. Besides giving users control over their data collection, the Numbers Dapp is also supposed to potentially benefit users by lowering their car or health insurance if positive data is recorded about their driving or walking habits, says Chen. For now, it’s not clear that Numbers has deals in place to make that happen.
The Exodus 1 phone has been available since December, after opening up for preorders last October. Until now, the phone’s main blockchain-related features were its cryptocurrency wallet and a key recovery mechanism that let you store recovery details with a few friends in case your phone is lost or stolen. With these new apps, the Exodus 1 starts to gain features that actually take advantage of its focus on the blockchain.
Starting in March, people will also finally be able to buy the Exodus phone with cash and not just cryptocurrency. The Exodus 1 will sell for $699 in the US. The next move is to make each phone a node (“partial node,” Chen now says) on the blockchain, allowing owners to facilitate bitcoin trading among each other. That might come later this year. “It’s clear that it’s not ready yet,” says Chen.
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