Tradency Introduces API of Its F-PasS Solutions for Easy Integration
- The company has bundled its F-PaaS services with professional support to enhance its customers’ satisfaction.

Tradency, a fintech firm specializing in mirror trading and algorithmic trading platforms, has announced the expansion of its F-PaaS platform's support by introducing Application Programming Interfaces (APIs).
This will allow businesses to easily integrate Tradency’s F-PaaS solutions to a wide range of applications. Moreover, the firm has extended its professional services as a complementary addition to all its clients. With this, Tradency’s clients will get direct support from its engineering team on customization, integration, and even for providing a client specific solution.
Mentioning the expanding services, Tradeny’s CEO Lior Nabat said: “Tradency crowdsourcing and real-time distribution technology has been a core value to our product offering and services since its introduction in 2005. And, now we are adding its capabilities to our F-PaaS and demonstrating it in new applications in various market segments such as a USA based predictive cash-flow Robo-advisor or an Asian Cryptocurrency social trading.”
What is F-PaaS?
F-PaaS or Fintech-Platform as a service is s a cloud computing model in which a third-party provider delivers hardware and software tools needed by the financial institutions - usually those needed for application development - to offer their services to the end-clients.
To offer its F-PaaS services, Tradency is using a cloud-based architecture based on Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), including various other open source services to achieve a higher-level of scalability, resiliency, and infrastructure observability.
“We are committed to expanding the reach, use our rewarded technology, reinforcing our position as a leading provider of trading technology,” Nabat added.
Adopting crypto
Earlier this month, a Blockchain Blockchain Blockchain comprises a digital network of blocks with a comprehensive ledger of transactions made in a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin or other altcoins.One of the signature features of blockchain is that it is maintained across more than one computer. The ledger can be public or private (permissioned.) In this sense, blockchain is immune to the manipulation of data making it not only open but verifiable. Because a blockchain is stored across a network of computers, it is very difficult to tamper with. The Evolution of BlockchainBlockchain was originally invented by an individual or group of people under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. The purpose of blockchain was originally to serve as the public transaction ledger of Bitcoin, the world’s first cryptocurrency.In particular, bundles of transaction data, called “blocks”, are added to the ledger in a chronological fashion, forming a “chain.” These blocks include things like date, time, dollar amount, and (in some cases) the public addresses of the sender and the receiver.The computers responsible for upholding a blockchain network are called “nodes.” These nodes carry out the duties necessary to confirm the transactions and add them to the ledger. In exchange for their work, the nodes receive rewards in the form of crypto tokens.By storing data via a peer-to-peer network (P2P), blockchain controls for a wide range of risks that are traditionally inherent with data being held centrally.Of note, P2P blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability. Consequently, hackers cannot exploit these networks via normalized means nor does the network possess a central failure point.In order to hack or alter a blockchain’s ledger, more than half of the nodes must be compromised. Looking ahead, blockchain technology is an area of extensive research across multiple industries, including financial services and payments, among others. Blockchain comprises a digital network of blocks with a comprehensive ledger of transactions made in a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin or other altcoins.One of the signature features of blockchain is that it is maintained across more than one computer. The ledger can be public or private (permissioned.) In this sense, blockchain is immune to the manipulation of data making it not only open but verifiable. Because a blockchain is stored across a network of computers, it is very difficult to tamper with. The Evolution of BlockchainBlockchain was originally invented by an individual or group of people under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. The purpose of blockchain was originally to serve as the public transaction ledger of Bitcoin, the world’s first cryptocurrency.In particular, bundles of transaction data, called “blocks”, are added to the ledger in a chronological fashion, forming a “chain.” These blocks include things like date, time, dollar amount, and (in some cases) the public addresses of the sender and the receiver.The computers responsible for upholding a blockchain network are called “nodes.” These nodes carry out the duties necessary to confirm the transactions and add them to the ledger. In exchange for their work, the nodes receive rewards in the form of crypto tokens.By storing data via a peer-to-peer network (P2P), blockchain controls for a wide range of risks that are traditionally inherent with data being held centrally.Of note, P2P blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability. Consequently, hackers cannot exploit these networks via normalized means nor does the network possess a central failure point.In order to hack or alter a blockchain’s ledger, more than half of the nodes must be compromised. Looking ahead, blockchain technology is an area of extensive research across multiple industries, including financial services and payments, among others. Read this Term-based social investment platform, called CopyCash, integrated Tradency’s auto trade-by-knowledge technology on its platform.
Tradency, a fintech firm specializing in mirror trading and algorithmic trading platforms, has announced the expansion of its F-PaaS platform's support by introducing Application Programming Interfaces (APIs).
This will allow businesses to easily integrate Tradency’s F-PaaS solutions to a wide range of applications. Moreover, the firm has extended its professional services as a complementary addition to all its clients. With this, Tradency’s clients will get direct support from its engineering team on customization, integration, and even for providing a client specific solution.
Mentioning the expanding services, Tradeny’s CEO Lior Nabat said: “Tradency crowdsourcing and real-time distribution technology has been a core value to our product offering and services since its introduction in 2005. And, now we are adding its capabilities to our F-PaaS and demonstrating it in new applications in various market segments such as a USA based predictive cash-flow Robo-advisor or an Asian Cryptocurrency social trading.”
What is F-PaaS?
F-PaaS or Fintech-Platform as a service is s a cloud computing model in which a third-party provider delivers hardware and software tools needed by the financial institutions - usually those needed for application development - to offer their services to the end-clients.
To offer its F-PaaS services, Tradency is using a cloud-based architecture based on Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), including various other open source services to achieve a higher-level of scalability, resiliency, and infrastructure observability.
“We are committed to expanding the reach, use our rewarded technology, reinforcing our position as a leading provider of trading technology,” Nabat added.
Adopting crypto
Earlier this month, a Blockchain Blockchain Blockchain comprises a digital network of blocks with a comprehensive ledger of transactions made in a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin or other altcoins.One of the signature features of blockchain is that it is maintained across more than one computer. The ledger can be public or private (permissioned.) In this sense, blockchain is immune to the manipulation of data making it not only open but verifiable. Because a blockchain is stored across a network of computers, it is very difficult to tamper with. The Evolution of BlockchainBlockchain was originally invented by an individual or group of people under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. The purpose of blockchain was originally to serve as the public transaction ledger of Bitcoin, the world’s first cryptocurrency.In particular, bundles of transaction data, called “blocks”, are added to the ledger in a chronological fashion, forming a “chain.” These blocks include things like date, time, dollar amount, and (in some cases) the public addresses of the sender and the receiver.The computers responsible for upholding a blockchain network are called “nodes.” These nodes carry out the duties necessary to confirm the transactions and add them to the ledger. In exchange for their work, the nodes receive rewards in the form of crypto tokens.By storing data via a peer-to-peer network (P2P), blockchain controls for a wide range of risks that are traditionally inherent with data being held centrally.Of note, P2P blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability. Consequently, hackers cannot exploit these networks via normalized means nor does the network possess a central failure point.In order to hack or alter a blockchain’s ledger, more than half of the nodes must be compromised. Looking ahead, blockchain technology is an area of extensive research across multiple industries, including financial services and payments, among others. Blockchain comprises a digital network of blocks with a comprehensive ledger of transactions made in a cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin or other altcoins.One of the signature features of blockchain is that it is maintained across more than one computer. The ledger can be public or private (permissioned.) In this sense, blockchain is immune to the manipulation of data making it not only open but verifiable. Because a blockchain is stored across a network of computers, it is very difficult to tamper with. The Evolution of BlockchainBlockchain was originally invented by an individual or group of people under the name of Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. The purpose of blockchain was originally to serve as the public transaction ledger of Bitcoin, the world’s first cryptocurrency.In particular, bundles of transaction data, called “blocks”, are added to the ledger in a chronological fashion, forming a “chain.” These blocks include things like date, time, dollar amount, and (in some cases) the public addresses of the sender and the receiver.The computers responsible for upholding a blockchain network are called “nodes.” These nodes carry out the duties necessary to confirm the transactions and add them to the ledger. In exchange for their work, the nodes receive rewards in the form of crypto tokens.By storing data via a peer-to-peer network (P2P), blockchain controls for a wide range of risks that are traditionally inherent with data being held centrally.Of note, P2P blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability. Consequently, hackers cannot exploit these networks via normalized means nor does the network possess a central failure point.In order to hack or alter a blockchain’s ledger, more than half of the nodes must be compromised. Looking ahead, blockchain technology is an area of extensive research across multiple industries, including financial services and payments, among others. Read this Term-based social investment platform, called CopyCash, integrated Tradency’s auto trade-by-knowledge technology on its platform.