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Blockchain for Business 2019

Blockchain for Business 2019

By : Peter Lipovyanov
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Blockchain for Business 2019

Blockchain for Business 2019

By: Peter Lipovyanov

Overview of this book

Blockchain for Business 2019 is a comprehensive guide that enables you to bring in various blockchain functionalities to extend your existing business models and make correct fully-informed decisions. You will learn how decentralized applications are transforming numerous business sectors that are expected to play a huge role in the future. You will see how large corporations are already implementing blockchain technology now. You will then learn about the various blockchain services, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Hyperledger, and others to understand their use cases in a variety of business domains. You will develop a solid fundamental understanding of blockchain architecture. Moving ahead, you will get to grips with the inner workings of blockchain, with detailed explanations of mining, decentralized consensus, cryptography, smart contracts, and many other important concepts. You will delve into a realistic view of the current state of blockchain technology, along with its issues, limitations, and potential solutions that can take it to the next level. By the end of this book, you will all be well versed in the latest innovations and developments in the emerging blockchain space.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Solutions for scalability issues

First and foremost, blockchains need to address the scalability issue.

What do we mean exactly by scaling in the context of blockchains? A core security feature, but also a capacity limitation, of public blockchains such as Bitcoin and Ethereum is that their protocols require every transaction to be processed by every single full node in the network. Every operation that takes place on the blockchain, such as a payment or a deployment of a smart contract, must be replicated by all full nodes. This is what makes public blockchains secure, autonomous, and decentralized at the same time. Participants don't have to rely on someone else to tell them what the current state of the blockchain is; they figure it out for themselves.

This puts a constraint on a blockchain's transaction throughput. It cannot be higher than the processing capacity...

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