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Frequently Asked Questions

We use PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) to encrypt data that is stored in the cloud. The app uses AES256 from Smartphone to Internet for the encryption of data. Of course, if your phone is hacked, tampered with, if there are cameras watching your phone or there are keyloggers on your computers we cannot guarantee encryption.

Bowhead uses advanced Web3js and the most advanced encryption possible while limiting the amount of information that is stored. We also make ourselves available to answer any encryption, engineering and general questions directly at Bowhead Support.

Yes, unfortunately we do not store a copy of your backup or private key.

The safest and only way we recommend is to write down your private key or recovery seed on a piece of paper. Please watch this full video of our security advisor and bitaddress.org founder Peter Kroll on the best practices of securing your private key.

Many people have pointed out that if your printer has a virus, it could even relay an image of this to the hacker..

No, you should write down the 12 word recovery seeds. We do not recommend any other mechanisms for backup..

We currently do not offer custodian services. However, similar to how XAPO, provides custodian services for the finance industry we hope to one day work with partners to provide trusted custodian services.

Your data that has been selected to be shared with researchers is shared via smart contracts. This smart contract is available for review here: https://github.com/bowhead/smartcontracts

We do not associate or store your IP with your encrypted data. When you contribute your data to medical research, we take additional steps to ensure that your data is more anonymized. For example, we do not provide your birthday only birth month and year. Please note that anonymized data being transferred via smart contracts is non-reversible. All anonymized information you previously shared is made available forever.

This is a long term project and we understand that at the moment there are no masternodes and the architecture may be defined as centralized. However, our future development plan is to allow people and organizations to contribute their computer's processing power, storage and bandwidth to become nodes in exchange for AHT token rewards. Our current focus has been to develop the smart contracts for health data, develop the application and now the researchers dashboard. Our next step will be to further decentralize the system.

At the onset of the network, since the AHT tokens value may be difficult to calculate initially, we will first reward users with a defined consideration for example a 5, 10, 20 EURO Amazon.com card for their anonymized health data contributions.

Once the network fees and rewards model is proven we will look to automate additional functions such as sending and receiving of AHT, and allowing people to convert to other rewards. Of course, for this we will need to comply with local jurisdictions and follow proper protocol when compensating patients.

Bowhead's purpose is to provide a secure platform for storing health data and contributing to medical research through the sale of anonymized health data for those users that opt-in.

To verify that the system or company exists we welcome you to download our apps available for download today, as well as to see the frequency of app updates we have made since we launched version .01. We are building something difficult and arranged a dynamic team of engineers, doctors and researchers to get there.

Bowhead's tokensale in 2017 was not available to US or Canadian users. However, users in Canada and US may use the application to store their health data and at their option contribute their anonymized health data to research. Our health data system complies with HIPAA and Health Canada standards.

Technically, a blockchain is a distributed ledger database. The only difference is that distributed ledgers tend to be more OPEN, can be reviewed and audited more easily.

Using Ethereum's smart contracts protocol ensures that only the receiving party (in this case the researchers) see the anonymized data and it is done so without associating IP, email addresses. This is the reason an email address is NOT used to create an account!

Using a distributed ledger allows users to be sure that their information is actually getting encrypted and they are the only key holders. We believe that using a circular argument that the current technology on the market can accomplish the same is insufficient - then why do hacks and data leaks and privacy issues continue to happen? We need a new way forward that ensures that internal and external bad actors have no way of encrypting and decrypting the data.

Only your encryption and decryption key is stored on the blockchain. Most of the data storage happens on IPFS (interplanetary file system), which we hope to further decentralize in the future.

Yes it is overused, and blockchain for X has been used around the world. However, smart contracts and distributed ledgers and cryptography are very real and very relevant for health data.

We use Ethereum's smart contracts protocol, it is currently a private blockchain that we hope to further decentralize.