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Journal ArticleDOI

Implications of blockchain‐powered marketplace of preowned virtual goods

TLDR
In this paper , the authors investigate the economic impact of trading pre-owned virtual items and show that the introduction of a blockchain-based preowned virtual item transaction can actually benefit both developer and consumer.
Abstract
The first-sale doctrine, which protects consumers’ rights to resell purchased products, has been recognized by the US Supreme Court since 1908. In recent years, consumers have begun to purchase an increasing amount of virtual goods, which renders the first-sale doctrine unclear. There are two main challenges leading to the uncertainty of the first-sale doctrine in the digital age: lack of proper technology, and economic implications for developers and consumers. The advent of the blockchain solves the technology challenge, as it can track provenance and establish the chain of custody. In this study, we construct an analytical model to investigate the economic impact of trading preowned virtual items. Specifically, our model captures the decentralized nature of blockchain technology by allowing consumer-to-consumer trading, and considers the possibility that consumers prefer preowned virtual items over new ones because preowned items may be upgraded between purchase and resale. Lawmakers seek to strike a balance between the interests of virtual item developers and individual consumers. We show that, surprisingly, the introduction of a blockchain-based preowned virtual item transaction can actually benefit both developer and consumer. The main intuition is that the developer can adjust the price when forward-looking consumers incorporate the expected future transaction into their purchase decision. Our analysis also reveals that developers are more willing to embrace the secondary market when they can take a cut during the transaction. Our results provide important policy implications to the burgeoning debate of the first-sale doctrine in the new digital world.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Blockchain-Enabled Supply Chains: An Application in Fresh-Cut Flowers

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors proposed a framework to optimize the adoption of blockchain jointly with the design of the supply chain network, where blockchain-certified products are sold at a premium price to a growing segment of customers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancing supply chain flows through blockchain: a comprehensive literature review

TL;DR: In this article , the authors comprehensively reviewed 251 academic papers to capture the precise impacts of blockchain on the material, information, and money flows in supply chain management (SCM).
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Partial centralization in a durable‐good supply chain

TL;DR: In this paper , a two-period model is proposed for a durable-good supply chain where a durablegood manufacturer owns a portion of its downstream retailer, and the authors derive analytical equilibrium outcomes of the supply chain and its members under complete centralization, complete decentralization and partial centralization.
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What do institutional investors bring to initial coin offerings (ICOs)?

TL;DR: In this paper , the effect of institutional investors' participation in the pre-ICO stage of offerings made by cash-strapped entrepreneurs is studied, and it is shown that introducing institutional investors significantly increases the equilibrium price of tokens during the public offering stage as well as the price fluctuation of tokens over time.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of signaling blockchain‐based track and trace on consumer purchases: Insights from a quasi‐natural experiment

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate the effect of blockchain-based track and trace (BCT) on consumer purchases and find that BCT can serve as a reliable signal of the product quality and trustworthiness of the retailer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bundling Information Goods: Pricing, Profits, and Efficiency

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the optimal bundling strategies for a multiproduct monopolist, and find that bundling very large numbers of unrelated information goods can be surprisingly profitable.
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Agency Selling or Reselling? Channel Structures in Electronic Retailing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use a stylized theoretical model to answer a key question that e-tailers are facing: When should they use an agency selling format instead of using the more conventional reselling format?
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Blockchain technology in supply chain operations: Applications, challenges and research opportunities

TL;DR: Several industrial sectors such as shipping, manufacturing, automotive, aviation, finance, technology, energy, healthcare, agriculture and food, e-commerce, and education among others are examined that can be successfully revamped with blockchain based technologies through enhanced visibility and business process management.
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Blockchain for Supply Chain Traceability: Business Requirements and Critical Success Factors

TL;DR: In this article, business requirements for traceability systems are curbing illegal practices; improving sustainability performance; increasing operational efficiency; enhancing supply-chain coordination; and sensing market trends, and critical success factors for implementation are companies capabilities; collaboration; technology maturity; supply chain practices; leadership; and governance of the traceability efforts.
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Marketplace, Reseller, or Hybrid: Strategic Analysis of an Emerging E‐Commerce Model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors find that the interaction of order-fulfillment costs and upstream competition intensity moderates the selection of an optimal mode for the intermediary, and that the hybrid mode is preferred when order fulfillment costs are moderate and suppliers' products are somewhat similar.