scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Blockchains and Smart Contracts for the Internet of Things

TLDR
The conclusion is that the blockchain-IoT combination is powerful and can cause significant transformations across several industries, paving the way for new business models and novel, distributed applications.
Abstract
Motivated by the recent explosion of interest around blockchains, we examine whether they make a good fit for the Internet of Things (IoT) sector. Blockchains allow us to have a distributed peer-to-peer network where non-trusting members can interact with each other without a trusted intermediary, in a verifiable manner. We review how this mechanism works and also look into smart contracts—scripts that reside on the blockchain that allow for the automation of multi-step processes. We then move into the IoT domain, and describe how a blockchain-IoT combination: 1) facilitates the sharing of services and resources leading to the creation of a marketplace of services between devices and 2) allows us to automate in a cryptographically verifiable manner several existing, time-consuming workflows. We also point out certain issues that should be considered before the deployment of a blockchain network in an IoT setting: from transactional privacy to the expected value of the digitized assets traded on the network. Wherever applicable, we identify solutions and workarounds. Our conclusion is that the blockchain-IoT combination is powerful and can cause significant transformations across several industries, paving the way for new business models and novel, distributed applications.

read more

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Decentralized, BlockChain Based Access Control Framework for the Heterogeneous Internet of Things

TL;DR: A new method for access control in IoT based on the booming technology "Block Chain," which helps the user in accessing or controlling their data and validated with respect to the previous related work.
Journal ArticleDOI

MOF-BC: A memory optimized and flexible blockchain for large scale networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a Memory Optimized and Flexible Blockchains (MOF-BC) that enables the IoT users and service providers to remove or summarize their transactions and age their data and thus exercise their right to be forgotten.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blockchain-based ubiquitous manufacturing: a secure and reliable cyber-physical system

TL;DR: A blockchain-based platform as a trustable network to eradicate third-party problems, which can improve the scalability, security and big-data problems for SMEs is proposed.
Journal Article

Blockchain technology and BIM process: review and potential applications

TL;DR: A survey of blockchain technology and its applications in the Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) industry and the potential incorporation within the Building Information Modeling (BIM) process is depicted and how employing distributed ledger technology (DLT) could be advantageous in the BIM workflow is investigated.
Book ChapterDOI

Towards Blockchain-Based Collaborative Intrusion Detection Systems

TL;DR: It is argued that certain properties of blockchains can be of significant benefit for CIDSs; namely for the improvement of trust between monitors, and for providing accountability and consensus.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Byzantine Generals Problem

TL;DR: The Albanian Generals Problem as mentioned in this paper is a generalization of Dijkstra's dining philosophers problem, where two generals have to come to a common agreement on whether to attack or retreat, but can communicate only by sending messengers who might never arrive.
Book ChapterDOI

The Byzantine generals problem

TL;DR: In this article, a group of generals of the Byzantine army camped with their troops around an enemy city are shown to agree upon a common battle plan using only oral messages, if and only if more than two-thirds of the generals are loyal; so a single traitor can confound two loyal generals.
Book ChapterDOI

The Sybil Attack

TL;DR: It is shown that, without a logically centralized authority, Sybil attacks are always possible except under extreme and unrealistic assumptions of resource parity and coordination among entities.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Practical Byzantine fault tolerance

TL;DR: A new replication algorithm that is able to tolerate Byzantine faults that works in asynchronous environments like the Internet and incorporates several important optimizations that improve the response time of previous algorithms by more than an order of magnitude.
Proceedings Article

In search of an understandable consensus algorithm

TL;DR: Raft is a consensus algorithm for managing a replicated log that separates the key elements of consensus, such as leader election, log replication, and safety, and it enforces a stronger degree of coherency to reduce the number of states that must be considered.
Related Papers (5)