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Bitcoin Businesses Technology

Beyond Bitcoin: How Business Can Capitalize On Blockchains 68

snydeq writes: Bitcoin's widely trusted ledger offers intriguing possibilities for business use beyond cryptocurrency, writes InfoWorld's Peter Wayner. "From the beginning, bitcoin has assumed a shadowy, almost outlaw mystique," Wayner writes. "Even the mathematics of the technology are inscrutable enough to believe the worst. The irony is that the mathematical foundations of bitcoin create a solid record of legitimate ownership that may be more ironclad against fraud than many of the systems employed by businesses today. Plus, the open, collaborative way in which bitcoin processes transactions ensures the kind of network of trust that is essential to any business agreement."
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Beyond Bitcoin: How Business Can Capitalize On Blockchains

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  • If you embed a document into the blockchain, once it's in there there is no way to delete it. This could be a great tool against censure, to certify a public document or to publish a proof of your work. Another use is to build a decentralized name system. Blockchain can be turned into a tool for doing business without banks and state, and it could also empower voting and democracy. It takes the power of certifying what is real and what is not from the state and its monopolies and places it back in the publ
  • Sorry, you lost me at "InfoWorld". The title's premise was bad enough, but then you got to InfoWorld ...
  • The irony is that the mathematical foundations of bitcoin create a solid record of legitimate ownership that may be more ironclad against fraud than many of the systems employed by businesses today.

    Tell that to the members of the Mt. Gox exchange.

    • The irony is that the mathematical foundations of bitcoin create a solid record of legitimate ownership that may be more ironclad against fraud than many of the systems employed by businesses today.

      Tell that to the members of the Mt. Gox exchange.

      Mt Gox had nothing to do with the blockchain... The reason that Mt Gox couldn't "go get the money back" *is* that the blockchain says its not their money any more. Which it isn't because someone went and spent it!

  • mathematics can prove the measures & relations of a mirage... this does not prove that the railroad tracks do meet there, however.
  • It's called Cryptography.

    There's nothing really new here.

    Cryptography.

  • "Bitcoin's widely trusted ledger " and "InfoWorld". That gave me a good giggle, but not sure why anyone would read further than that.
    • Re:wtf! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by steveb3210 ( 962811 ) on Tuesday September 01, 2015 @08:06AM (#50434985)

      Perhaps you giggled because you don't understand it? There hasn't been any flaws with bitcoin itself and the block chain that caused coins to be spent by someone who didn't know the ECC private key... Loss-of-currency has occurred with poor third party implementations, e.g. using ECDSA and selecting the same value of k for multiple signatures (similiar to the mistake made by sony and the ps3) or Mt Gox which was either just outright fraud by the company or a severe implementation error.

      The block chain is fairly effective at deciding "what came first" and after several confirmations becomes fairly infeasible for a bad actor to change - I don't know of any weaknesses provided your computing pool is large enough that no person controlls 50%. Well, or a quantum computer solving the discrete logarithm...

  • Outside of the currency use-case, I don't see any problem that a blockchain solves that could not also be solved with a chain of simple digital signatures, and a central repository for contracts. The whole sorta-collaborative "mining" process at the core of the blockchain just isn't applicable to most of the examples listed.

    An analog version of a signature chain can be found at your local government office that handles land records. Any problems with said records usually aren't with the records themselves

    • I've been tossing the idea around lately that something like a blockchain could be used as part of a larg-scale PKI - once you announce your public key and it gets several confirmations, then it would be hard for someone to announce that your key is something else after the fact and your not necessarily trusting a company or the government to do so.

      But how do you prevent someone else from announcing foo.com before you.. or what incentive would their be for miners to mine... still plenty of issues not solved

  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Tuesday September 01, 2015 @08:12AM (#50435003)
    You want to track digital media? Attach it to a blockchain. Crazy strong DRM, but managed correctly could also allow for gifting and resale.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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