Blockchain Explained V



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Blockchain-Explained-v2.09



©
201
6
IBM Corporation 
Making 
Blockchain 
Real for 
Business


Explained

V2.09 19 Jan 16 
https://ibm.box.com/BlockExp 


©
201
6
IBM Corporation 
2
Contents
What 
Why 
How 
. . are Blockchain technologies ? 
. . is it relevant for our business? 
. . can IBM help us apply Blockchain? 


©
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IBM Corporation 
3
Business Networks, Markets & Wealth

Business Networks 
benefit from connectivity

Connected customers, suppliers, banks, 
partners 

Cross geography & regulatory boundary

Wealth
is generated by the flow of goods & 
services across business network

Markets 
are central to this process:

Public 
(fruit market, car auction), or

Private 
(supply chain financing, bonds)
What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Transferring 
Assets
, building 
Value

Anything that is capable of being owned or 
controlled to produce 
value
,
is an
asset 

Two fundamental types of asset

Tangible, e.g. a house

Intangible e.g. a mortgage

Intangible assets subdivide

Financial, e.g. bond

Intellectual e.g. patents

Digital e.g. music

Cash is also an asset

Has property of anonymity 
What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Ledgers
 are Important

Ledger
[1]
is THE system of 
record for a business

records asset transfer between 
participants.

Business will have multiple 
ledgers for multiple business 
networks in which they 
participate.
[1] The principal book (or computer file) for recording and 
totaling financial transactions by account type, with debits and 
credits in separate columns and a beginning monetary 
balance and ending monetary balance for each account. 
What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Participants

Transactions
 & 
Contracts

Participants
- members of a business 
network

Customer, Supplier, Government, Regulator

Usually resides in an organization

Has specific identities and roles

Transaction
- an asset transfer

John gives a car to Anthony 
(simple)

Contract
- conditions for transaction to 
occur

If Anthony pays John money, then car passes 
from John to Anthony 
(simple)

If car won't start, funds do not pass to John 
(as decided by third party arbitrator) 
(more 
complex)
What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Introducing Blockchain

shared ledger technology
 allowing any participant in 
the business network to see THE system of record 
(ledger)

What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Problem -
Di

cult
to
monitor
asset
ownership
and
transfers
in
a
trusted
business
network
Counter-party
records
Bank records
Party C’s Records
Auditor records
Party B Records
Party A’s Records
API-integrations
Incident
 
What? 
Inefficient
,
expensive

vulnerable
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 


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IBM Corporation 
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Solution – 
a
 
permissioned

replicated

shared ledger
Counter-party
records
Bank records
Party C’s Records
Auditor records
Party B Records
Party A’s Records
What? 
Consensus, provenance, immutability, finality 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Ledger 
Participants have 
multiple shared 
ledgers 
NOTE : 
Participants 
same as before 


©
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IBM Corporation 
10
Blockchain underpins Bitcoin . . .
1.
is unregulated, censorship-resistant 
shadow currency
2.
Blockchain ensures “cash like” coin passing 

unique,

immutable,

final 
3.
Bitcoin is the first Blockchain application

Blockchain 
is not
4.
Digital currencies di

erent from cyptocurrency
What? 


©
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6
IBM Corporation 
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Blockchain for Business
Smart
Contract 
Privacy
Shared 
Ledger 
Validation
Ensuring appropriate 
visibility; transactions are 
secure, authenticated & 
verifiable 
Business terms embedded 
in transaction database & 
executed with transactions 
All parties agree to 
network verified 
transaction
Append-only distributed 
system of record
shared 
across business network 
Broader participation, lower cost, increased efficiency
What? 


©
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IBM Corporation 
12
Shared Ledger

Records all transactions across 
business network

Shared between participants

Participants have own copy through 
replication

Permissioned, so participants see 
only appropriate transactions

THE shared system of record
What? 


©
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6
IBM Corporation 
13
Smart Contract

Business rules implied by the 
contract . . 

. . embedded in the Blockchain & 

executed with the transaction

Verifiable, signed

Encoded in programming language

Example:

Defines contractual conditions under 
which corporate Bond transfer 
occurs
What? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Privacy

Ledger is 
shared
, but participants require 
privacy

Participants need:

Transactions
to be 
private

Identity
not linked to a 
transaction

Transactions need to be authenticated

Cryptography
central to these processes
What? 


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6
IBM Corporation 
15
Validation

Transaction verification & commitment

When participants are anonymous 

Commitment is expensive

Bitcoin cryptographic mining 
provides verification 
for anonymous participants but at significant 
compute cost (proof of work)

When participants are known & trusted 

Commitment possible at low cost

Multiple alternatives

proof of stake 
where
fraudulent transactions cost 
validators (e.g. transaction bond)

multi-signature 
(e.g. 3 out of 5 participants agree)

Industrial Blockchain needs “pluggable” 
consensus
What? 


©
201
6
IBM Corporation 
16
Contents
What 
Why 
How 
. . are Blockchain technologies ? 
. . is it relevant for our business? 
. . can IBM help us apply Blockchain? 


©
201
6
IBM Corporation 
17
Industrial Blockchain Benefits
Reduce costs and complexity
Improve discoverability
Why? 
Trusted recordkeeping
Shared trusted processes


Blockchain – not for all . . .
NEGATIVE
Indicators 
1.
Need high performance (millisecond) transactions
2.
Small organization (no business network) 
3.
Looking for a database replacement 
4.
Looking for a messaging solution 
5.
Looking for transaction processing replacement 
Why? 


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IBM Corporation 
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Patterns for Customer Adoption
(1) INTERNAL LEDGER

Ledger for internal reporting, audit and 
compliance, 

Consistent view of key business assets,

Provenance, immutability & finality more 
important than consensus.

Access to auditor and regulator
(2) CONSORTIUM SHARED LEDGER

Created by a small set of participants

share reference data between themselves 
and consumers. 

Consistent real-time view of key information
(3) INFORMATION HUB

A ledger set up in a single organization 

Sharing of information between participants 
(e.g. voting, dividend notification)

Assets have 
information
, not financial value

Require provenance, immutability & finality.
(4) HIGH VALUE MARKET

Ledger for the transfer of high financial value 
assets 

between many participants in a market. 

Requires all enterprise features of 
Blockchain 
How? 


©
201
6
IBM Corporation 
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