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Dynamic object roles and corresponding contexts can model complex applications with higher-level abstraction. These abstracted applications can be used in wider areas such as financial institutions, health care, and supply chain network. Role management which consists of the creation of role objects, and binding role object between core objects still suffers from non-intrusive logging-monitoring, auditing, and resilient data source for role-based applications. Moreover, immutable smart contracts cause problems concerning bug fixing and maintenance without dynamic binding to new smart contract objects. An object that is created from a smart contract (contract class) can be transparently attached to a role object utilizing the Role Object Pattern (ROP). However, ROP itself does not contain a context definition and context-specific role assignment grouping the definition of smart contract relationships in abstracted data types. In this study, we would like to implement an extended version of the role object pattern called Context-based Role Object Pattern (ContextROP) with an onchain smart contract language called Solidity to solve fundamental problems. To evaluate the proposal, we will implement a use case with the design pattern proceeding with qualitative and quantitative analysis.
Humans started using the principles of insurance thousands of years ago when they lived in tribes in smaller villages. If one of the tribe members were injured, the others would take care of him and his family. The basic principle of insurance is several people covering each other against a particular risk. Today, most people in regions like Europe have access to insurance, while many people worldwide still have no access at all. The cost and accessibility may be improved with a blockchain-based parametric approach. The insurance process in a parametric approach is exclusively based on data, and decisions are made objectively. Blockchain is a necessary and integral part of the approach to create transparency and connect the customer’s and investor’s risk capital. The paper offers an overview of the opportunities and challenges of blockchain-based parametric insurance, a catalog of criteria for such insurance, a description of all components and their interaction for implementation on Ethereum, and a reference implementation of a train delay insurance in Germany.
The topic of soulbound, non-transferable tokens is getting lots of interest within the blockchain space lately as decentralized societies become more tangible with Web3 social media applications and DAOs. In this article, I want to outline how such tokens function, their problems for adoption and standardization, and how they differ from verifiable credentials in the SSI field. As such soulbound assets will likely rely on extended recovery and asset management schemes to become viable identities that safely gain reputation and trust, features like social recovery and contract-based accounting are incorporated. By combining those new technologies and the theoretical crypto-native identity construct, the paper will give an impression of the future user-centric data economy.
As part of the research project Trusted Blockchains for the Open, Smart Energy Grid of the Future (tbiEnergy), one of the objectives is to investigate how a holistic blockchain approach for the realization of a local energy market could be accomplished and how corresponding hardware security mechanisms can be integrated. This paper provides an overview of the implemented prototype and describes the system and its processes.
Over the last two decades, the rapid advances in digitization methods put us on the fourth industrial era’s cusp. It is an era of connectivity and interactivity between various industrial processes that need a new, trusted environment to exchange and share information and data without relying on third parties. Blockchain technologies can provide such a trusted environment. This paper focuses on utilizing the blockchain with its characteristics to build machine-to-machine (M2M) communication and digital twin solutions. We propose a conceptual design for a system that uses smart contracts to construct digital twins for machines and products and executes manufacturing processes inside the blockchain. Our solution also employs the decentralized identifiers standard (DIDs) to provide self-sovereign digital identities for machines and products. To validate the approach and demonstrate its applicability, the paper presents an actual implementation of the proposed design to a simulated case study done with the help of Fischertechnik factory model.
Abstract: Blockchain Technology has become an innovative, mature tool for digital transformation, disrupting more and more application areas in their business processes, values, or even economic models. This paper leverages more than 30 academic publications on prototypes and their Blockchain-based use cases to transact certificates in the context of public education. The conceptual design and guiding ideas are reflected in the practical application development for the Federal Ministry of Education and Research ECHT! project within the showcase region WIR! in Mittweida and are used for the research design. During this approach we applied agile methods and the current certificate process to propose a comprehensive disclosure of a new software prototype including a three-layered architecture with multi-stakeholder components. The artefact instantiation contributes to the practical knowledge base within Information System Research and specifically in digital certificate processes starting from creation, searching, and proofing up to revoking by consideration of an existing IT landscape as well as organizational hierarchy.
With the advancement in cryptography and emerging internet technology, electronic voting is gaining popularity since it ensures ballot secrecy, voter security, and integrity. Many commercial startups and e-Voting systems have been proposed, but due to lack of trust, privacy, transparency, and hacking issues, many solutions have been suspended. Blockchain, along with cryptographic primitives, has emerged as a promising solution due to its transparent, immutable, and decentralized nature. In this paper, we summarized the properties that existing solutions should satisfy and explained some cryptographic primitives like ZKP, Ring signatures along with their security limitations. We gave a comprehensive review of some blockchain-based e-Voting systems and discussed their strengths and weaknesses based on the given properties with table of comparison.
Cryptocurrencies are characterized by high volatility, both in the short and long term. Experienced traders exploit this to make profits from price fluctuations by swing trading. However, this requires closely observing and analyzing the prices and trading positions at the right time. Only a few specialists, who spend time focusing on this, or optimized trading bots are able to actually make continuously profits. The autradix protocol is a selfoptimizing and self-learning parametric trading algorithm that analyzes price actions in real-time and adaptively optimizes the algorithm’s parameters to realize the user’s investment objective. Embedded in an adaptive genetic algorithm, possible parameterizations are simulated and the optimal for the investigated trading pairs are calculated. The generic trading protocol API enables coupling with various crypto exchanges and decentralized protocols. A smart contract based decentralized, trustless, and tokenized fund, controlled by a DAO, enables users to invest, operate trading agents, and to participate in the profits generated according to their share.
While blockchain technology is still in an early stage of its development, it is already of surging economic importance.
In the literature, blockchain is referred to as either being a disruptive, institutional, foundational, or general purpose technology. There is still no consensus about the economic theory that should apply for analyzing its economic effects. This article draws on use cases from the coffee supply chain to explore, which theories could potentially apply to an emerging blockchain economy.
The wind energy sector is undergoing digitalization processes that span multi-tier supply chains of turbine components and wind farm maintenance, amongst others. In an industrial use case that includes Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, Vestas and APQP4Wind, the processes of producing, fastening, and servicing bolts in turbines are mapped to a digital model. The model follows the lifetime of turbine bolts from the manufacturing phase, to fastening in turbines and maintenance, until their replacement and recycling. The development of the digital model is iteratively addressed in a design science research approach, as the authors actively contribute to the project. Distributed ledgers (DLs) support the notary documentation of the bolts and turbines, from their registration phase to the assembly-, technical service verification- and recycling phases. The immutable and decentralized nature of DLs secures the data against tampering and prevents any changes taken unilaterally by engaging the service stakeholders and component providers in a blockchain consortium.