25,433 research outputs found
A Systematic Review of Blockchain Literature in Logistics and Supply Chain Management: Identifying Research Questions and Future Directions
Potential blockchain applications in logistics and supply chain (LSCM) have gained increasing attention within both academia and industry. However, as a field in its infancy, blockchain research often lacks theoretical foundations, and it is not clear which and to what extent organizational theories are used to investigate blockchain technology in the field of LSCM. In response, based upon a systematic literature review, this paper: (a) identifies the most relevant organizational theories used in blockchain literature in the context of LSCM; and (b) examines the content of the identified organizational theories to formulate relevant research questions for investigating blockchain technology in LSCM. Our results show that blockchain literature in LSCM is based around six organizational theories, namely: agency theory, information theory, institutional theory, network theory, the resource-based view and transaction cost analysis. We also present how these theories can be used to examine specific blockchain problems by identifying blockchain-specific research questions that are worthy of investigation
The Evolution of Embedding Metadata in Blockchain Transactions
The use of blockchains is growing every day, and their utility has greatly
expanded from sending and receiving crypto-coins to smart-contracts and
decentralized autonomous organizations. Modern blockchains underpin a variety
of applications: from designing a global identity to improving satellite
connectivity. In our research we look at the ability of blockchains to store
metadata in an increasing volume of transactions and with evolving focus of
utilization. We further show that basic approaches to improving blockchain
privacy also rely on embedding metadata. This paper identifies and classifies
real-life blockchain transactions embedding metadata of a number of major
protocols running essentially over the bitcoin blockchain. The empirical
analysis here presents the evolution of metadata utilization in the recent
years, and the discussion suggests steps towards preventing criminal use.
Metadata are relevant to any blockchain, and our analysis considers primarily
bitcoin as a case study. The paper concludes that simultaneously with both
expanding legitimate utilization of embedded metadata and expanding blockchain
functionality, the applied research on improving anonymity and security must
also attempt to protect against blockchain abuse.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, 2018 International Joint Conference on
Neural Network
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