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Blockchain with Hyperledger Fabric

You're reading from   Blockchain with Hyperledger Fabric Build decentralized applications using Hyperledger Fabric 2

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839218750
Length 756 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (7):
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Salman A. Baset Salman A. Baset
Author Profile Icon Salman A. Baset
Salman A. Baset
Venkatraman Ramakrishna Venkatraman Ramakrishna
Author Profile Icon Venkatraman Ramakrishna
Venkatraman Ramakrishna
Salman Baset Salman Baset
Author Profile Icon Salman Baset
Salman Baset
Anthony O'Dowd Anthony O'Dowd
Author Profile Icon Anthony O'Dowd
Anthony O'Dowd
Petr Novotny Petr Novotny
Author Profile Icon Petr Novotny
Petr Novotny
Nitin Gaur Nitin Gaur
Author Profile Icon Nitin Gaur
Nitin Gaur
Luc Desrosiers Luc Desrosiers
Author Profile Icon Luc Desrosiers
Luc Desrosiers
+3 more Show less
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Blockchain – An Enterprise and Industry Perspective 2. Exploring Hyperledger Fabric FREE CHAPTER 3. Business Networks 4. Setting the Stage with a Business Scenario 5. Designing Smart Contract Transactions and Ledger Data Structures 6. Developing Smart Contracts 7. Developing Applications 8. Advanced Topics for Developing Smart Contracts and Applications 9. Network Operation and Distributed Application Building 10. Enterprise Design Patterns and Considerations 11. Agility in a Blockchain Network 12. Governance – A Necessary Evil of Regulated Industries 13. Life in a Blockchain Network 14. Hyperledger Fabric Security 15. Blockchain's Future, Protocol Commercialization, and Challenges Ahead 16. Another Book You May Enjoy
17. Index

Business considerations for choosing a blockchain framework

Numerous criteria come into play when organizations are evaluating whether to adopt blockchain to address their pain points. Here are some considerations from a business perspective:

  • Open platform and open governance: The technology standards a business chooses will set the stage for enterprise blockchain adoption, compliance, governance, and the overall cost of the solution.
  • Economic viability of the solution: Whichever blockchain framework an organization chooses should provide cost alignment to its existing business models, charge backs, compute equity, and account management. This flows into ROI.
  • Longevity of the solution: As organizations aspire to build a trusted network, they'll want to ensure that they can sustain the cost and operation of the network so it can grow and scale to accommodate additional participants and transactions.
  • Regulatory compliance: Compliance issues are closely tied to transaction processing and can include events like industry-specific reporting and analysis for business workflow and tasks, both automated and human-centric.
  • Coexistence with adjacent systems: A blockchain network needs to be able to coexist with the rest of the enterprise, network participants, and adjacent systems, which may have overlapping and complementary functions.
  • Predictable costs of business growth: Business growth depends upon predictable metrics. Historically, a lot of industries have focused on transactions per second, but that measurement differs from system to system based on system design, compute costs, and business processes.
  • Access to skills and talent: The availability of talent affects costs, as well as maintenance and the longevity of a blockchain solution as the industry and technology evolve with continued innovation.
  • Financial viability of technology vendors: When choosing vendors, it's vital to think about their viability when it comes to long-term support and the longevity of your blockchain solution. You should examine the long-term vision and the sustainability of the vendor or business partner's business model.
  • Global footprint and support: Blockchain solutions tend to involve business networks with a global reach and the related skills to support the network's expansion with minimal disruption.
  • Reliance on technology and industry-specific standards: Standards are critical not only in helping to standardize a shared technology stack and deployment, but also in establishing an effective communication platform for industry experts to use for problem solving. Standards make low-cost, easy-to-consume technology possible.

Blockchain vendors offer various specializations, including:

  • Variant trust systems, such as consensus, mining, PoW, and so on
  • Lock-in to a single trust system
  • Infrastructure components that are purpose-built for particular use cases
  • Field-tested design through proofs of concept

The technological risk of a vendor not adhering to a reference architecture based on a standardized technology set is a fragmented blockchain model for the enterprise.

From a business point of view, an open standards-based approach to blockchain offers flexibility, along with a pluggable and modular trust system, and therefore is the ideal option. This approach keeps an enterprise open to specialized blockchains like Ripple, provides a provisioning layer for the trust system, and offers a separate business domain with the technology to support it.

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