Index
ISBN: 978-1-78973-868-1, eISBN: 978-1-78973-865-0
Publication date: 30 September 2020
This content is currently only available as a PDF
Citation
Dutta, S.K. (2020), "Index", The Definitive Guide to Blockchain for Accounting and Business: Understanding the Revolutionary Technology, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 291-297. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78973-865-020201016
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2020 Emerald Publishing Limited
INDEX
Index
Note: Page numbers followed by “n” indicate notes.
Accounting. (see also Financial auditing)
, 28
profession
, 98
Agreement
, 46
Alternative trading systems (ATS)
, 187
Anti-money-laundering (AML)
, 109, 133
Application programing interfaces (APIs)
, 199, 250
Applications (APPS)
, 257
Artificial intelligence (AI)
, 267
Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM)
, 151
Artisanal Miners (ASM)
, 169
Asset-backed securities (ABS)
, 98, 184–185
Asset-backed security tokens (ABSTs)
, 183
Asset(s)
, 29
drawback
, 100–102
improper valuation of
, 94–95
securitization
, 98–102
works
, 99–100
Asymmetric cryptography
, 178
Atari: Fistful of Quarters (movie)
, 87
Auditability
, 3
Auditing blockchains/distributed networks
, 244
addressing BC/DLT ecosystem
, 250–251
distributed audit for distributed ledger
, 251–252
netting of transactions and control implications
, 248–249
risks and limitations
, 247
securing blockchain
, 246–247
Auditing fees
, 230
Australian Modern Slavery Act (2018)
, 156
Automobile industry, application in
, 218–220
Autonomous machines
, 114
Availability
, 269
Bartering
, 8–9
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
, 96
Bit Gold
, 61
Bitcoin (BTC)
, 1, 7, 15, 35, 37, 53, 141
activity statistics
, 18
blockchain beyond
, 21–22
transaction
, 17–21
value compared to other economic metrics
, 19
Blackcoin
, 57
Block time
, 31
Blockchain
, 1–3, 7, 14–17, 23–24, 43
adoption
, 7
application in automobile industry
, 218–220
beyond bitcoin
, 21–22
bitcoin transaction
, 17–21
collateralized lending in cryptoworld
, 213–218
cryptocurrency
, 13–15
cryptotax business model
, 210–213
ecosystem
, 260–261
facilitating smart contracts
, 74–75
financial transformation sparked by
, 178–179
fungible tokens
, 161–163
greenwashing
, 167–168
insurance to protect against flight delays and cancellation
, 221–223
key characteristics
, 3
key event dates in
, 4
mass processing of minerals
, 166
microrental of parking spaces
, 220–221
for mineral supply chain
, 89
non-fungible tokens
, 163–164
operationalizing tokenization
, 164–165
option contracts traded through
, 85–86
projected worldwide investment in
, 2
provenance
, 224–227
recording history of supply chain
, 161
solution
, 160
supported business innovations
, 209
threats to development of
, 281–282
trade–barter system to cryptocurrency
, 8–10
trust
, 10–13
Blockchain and distributed ledger technology (BC/DLT)
, 229
Blockmatrix
, 284
Blocks
, 16, 30–33
Bonus Newsletter Subscription
, 136
Bottom-up approach. (see also “Top-down” approach)
, 117–118
Bribery attacks
, 278
Business(es)
ecosystem
, 200
functions or processes
, 3
Byzantine Generals Problem
, 44, 46–51
California Transparency in Supply Chains Act
, 155–156
Car Dossier
, 218
Cash flow method
, 84
Censorship attacks
, 279
Central counterparty clearing house (CCP)
, 143
Central securities depository (CSD)
, 144
Certificates of origin
, 271
Chain forks
, 54–55
Chinese Due Diligence Guidelines for Responsible Mineral Supply Chains (2015)
, 154
Chinese GSRM (2014)
, 154
Cognitive costs
, 67
Cold storage
, 216–217
Collateralized lending in cryptoworld
, 213–218
Colored coins
, 177
Coming to America (movie)
, 87
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO)
, 236–237
COSO Cube
, 236–237
Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (CAHRAs)
, 154
Consensus mechanism
, 36, 43–44, 250, 255
Byzantine general’s problem
, 46–51
economics of validity and verifiability
, 51–52
importance
, 44–46
proof of stake
, 57–58
proof of work
, 52–56
Contracts. (see also Smart contracts)
, 75–76
Contractual capability
, 76
Corda open-source blockchain provider
, 38
Cost per transaction
, 114
Credit(s)
, 10, 28–29
default swaps
, 71
Cross-border cooperation
, 97
Cross-border trades
, 273
Cross-border transactions, risks associated with
, 96–98
Crowd funding of movies
, 87–89
Cryptoassets
, 212
Cryptocurrency
, 1, 8
basic features and challenges
, 13–15
trade–barter system to
, 8–10
Cryptography
, 3, 178
hashing algorithms
, 178
technical primer on
, 112–113
Cryptokitties
, 121
Cryptotax business model
, 210–213
Curzio Equity Owners (CEO)
, 127
tokens
, 141–142, 144
Curzio Research
, 89, 127–128, 135
CurzioEquityOwners. com
, 138
Danish Maritime Authority
, 273–274
Data
data-ledger
, 28
provenance
, 269
self-sovereignty
, 170
transparency
, 197–201
Daywalker Movie Fund
, 87
Debits
, 28–29
Decentralized applications (dApp)
, 38
Decentralized management
, 269
Decentralized network
, 25
Delegate proof of stake
, 57
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
, 110
Desynchronization attack
, 277
Deterministic property of hash function
, 32
Digital assets
, 97, 180
Digital securities (DS)
, 130–131, 181–183, 197
ecosystem
, 187–188
services
, 187
Digital tokens
, 80
Digitized assets
, 217
Direct participation program market (DPP)
, 143
Distributed audit for distributed ledger
, 251–252
Distributed control
, 125
Distributed ledger technology (DLT)
, 177–178
“Divide and conquer” strategy
, 33
Dodd-Frank Act (2012)
, 154
Double-spending
, 13, 276–277
Due diligence, reduction in
, 95–96
E-commerce
, 7
E-identity system
, 121–122
E-notary system
, 121–122
E-verification platforms
, 121–122
Eclipse Attacks
, 278
Economics
of microtransactions
, 66–67
of validity and verifiability
, 51–52
Encryption
technical primer on
, 112–113
Energy sector
, 270–272
Enterprise Risk Management process (ERM process)
, 232–234
Entity level controls
, 240
EOS software
, 38
Equity method
, 84
Ernst and Young (EY)
, 218
Ether (ETH)
, 141
Ethereum platform
, 37–38
Ethereum Request for Comments (ERC)
, 179
ERC20 tokens
, 179–180
EU Conflict Minerals Regulation (2017)
, 154–155
EU Directive on Non-Financial Disclosures (2014)
, 156
EU Non-binding Guidelines for identifying CAHRAs
, 155
“4-Eyes” based control environment
, 231
Fifty-one Percent Attacks
, 278
Filecoin
, 139
Financing corporate expansion through tokenization
Curzio Research
, 127–128
financing in mineral industry
, 145–146
private offering
, 128–130
security token offerings vs. traditional private placements
, 130–132
STO process
, 133–144
Finney attack
, 277–278
Fizzy business process
, 222–223
Flight delays and cancellation, insurance to protect against
, 221–223
Foreign investors
, 193
Fork
, 45
French Corporate Duty of Vigilance Law (2017)
, 156
Fungible tokens
, 161–163
Game theory
, 59n2
Gas
, 36, 53
cost
, 36
Genesis block
, 30
Genetic algorithms (GAs)
, 121
Global Financial Crisis (GFC)
, 98
Global Real Estate Transparency Index (GRETI)
, 199–200
Global trade
, 96
Globalization
, 186
GodoKaisha-TokumeiKumiai (GK-TK)
, 194
Gold supply chain
, 150–152
Governmental agencies
, 274–276
Greenwashing
, 167–168
Grinding attacks
, 280
Gross domestic product (GDP)
, 191
Gross Risks
, 232
Hash function
, 3, 30–33
Health services
, 268–270
Herd mentality
, 96
Hollywood accounting
, 87–88
Hyperledger
, 38
Hyperledger-Fabric
, 38
Idiosyncrasies of blockchain
, 111–112
“If-then-else” rules
, 283
“If-then” rules
, 62, 67, 71
Illiquid-Liquid Spectrum
, 189–190
Illiquidity discount
, 81–82
Immutability
, 3, 15
of data
, 171
immutable audit trails
, 269
Incentivized machines
, 114
Incentivizing participation in blockchain
, 168
data self-sovereignty
, 170
ensuring credible information
, 171–172
immutability of data
, 171
incentives for companies
, 168–170
incentivizing incident reporting
, 172–174
Information technology controls (IT controls)
, 243–244
Ingots
, 165
Initial Coin Offerings (ICO)
, 80, 180
Institutional real estate firms
, 201
Insurance
, 124–125
industry
, 71–72
Internal controls
auditing blockchains/distributed networks
, 244–252
for entire ecosystem
, 260–263
risk management and internal controls framework
, 231–240
system audit for blockchain
, 252–259
types and assessments of
, 240–244
Internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR)
, 234
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
, 35, 210–211
Internet of Things (IoT)
, 38, 64, 72
IOTA (open-source distributed ledger)
, 38
IPFS (peer-to-peer hypermedia protocol)
, 38
IPOs
, 127
J-Curve effect
, 204–205
Japanese real estate investment trusts (J-REITs)
, 191
Japanese Real Estate Market
, 89–90, 177, 190
digital securities
, 181–183
digital securities ecosystem
, 187–188
financial transformation sparked by blockchain
, 178–179
harmonizing financial regulation across jurisdictions
, 180–181
inefficiencies in real estate market
, 188–190
market size and investment environment
, 191–194
pain points in
, 194–197
projected growth of security tokens
, 183–186
smart contract standards expediting digital asset functions
, 179
tokenization of
, 197–205
Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL)
, 191
Know-your-customer regulations (KYC regulations)
, 109, 133
Large-Scale Mining operations (LSM)
, 151, 169
Ledger
, 26–27
Legal jurisdictions
, 76
Licensed STEs
, 142
Liquidity
, 203–205
Loan to value ratio
, 215
Lock-up period
, 57, 148n1
Long-range attacks
, 279
Lukka’s approach
, 250
Management assertions
, 239–240
Maritime industry
, 272–274
Market optimization
, 272
Mass processing of minerals
, 166
Mass–balance traceability
, 166–167
Member
, 27
Merkle trees
, 3, 30–33
Metal streaming financing
, 145
Microrental of parking spaces
, 220–221
Microtransactions, economics of
, 66–67
Mineral industry, financing in
, 145–146
Mineral supply chain
, 149
blockchain solution
, 160–168
complexity of
, 150–152
evolving regulation on traceability of minerals
, 153–158
incentivizing participation in blockchain
, 168–174
lack of transparency in
, 153
money laundering through mineral sourcing
, 158–159
traceability requirements
, 159–160
Mining
, 145
royalty financing
, 145
Modern money
, 9
Money laundering through mineral sourcing
, 158–159
Mongo DB database
, 38
“Monopoly Classic”
, 40
Monopoly on blockchain
, 39–40
Mortgage securitization
, 98–99
Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
, 99–100
Mosi-oa-Tunya Declaration
, 155
Multiparty settlement
, 272
Napster (music sharing application)
, 14
NEM (platform)
, 38
NEO (blockchain project)
, 38
Net Risks
, 232
Network
, 27
Non-fungible tokens
, 163–164
Nothing at stake attacks
, 280
Nxt
, 57
OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains
, 154
Off-chain
transactions
, 248, 250
volume
, 248
On-chain
transactions
, 248
volume
, 248
On–Off Ratio
, 248–249
Open Chain distributed ledger system
, 38
OpenFinance Network (OFN)
, 142, 144, 187
Operationalization
, 83–85
Option contracts traded through blockchain
, 85–86
Over the counter desks (OTC desks)
, 250
Paper money
, 9–10
Participants
, 25–27
Past majority attacks
, 281
PayPal
, 8
Peer-to-peer
blockchain
, 114
model
, 14
network
, 23, 25
Perception of monitoring
, 231
Physical risks
, 272
Portfolio lenders
, 99
Pre-offering
, 133–140
Primer on blockchain terminology
blockchain platforms
, 37–38
blocks, hashes and Merkle trees
, 30–33
essential features of blockchain
, 36–37
formation
, 33
misconceptions
, 28–30
monopoly on blockchain
, 39–40
participants and transactions
, 25–27
types of blockchain
, 34–35
Privacy
, 269
Private and non-permissioned networks
, 34
Private and permissioned network
, 35
Private keys
, 20, 178
Private offering
, 128–130
Private placement
, 128
Private placement memorandum (PPM)
, 135
Process mining
, 242
Profits, improper valuation of
, 94–95
Programing languages
, 119–120
Proof of elapsed time
, 57
Proof of stake
, 44, 57–58
Proof-of-work (PoW)
, 3, 15–16, 44, 52–56
Proprietary trading systems
, 187
Protocol
accreditation
, 250
code
, 254
protocol-based financial engineering
, 188
Provenance
, 224–227
Pseudocode analytic
, 257
Public and non-permissioned network
, 34
Public and permissioned networks
, 34–35
Public key
, 20
systems
, 112–113
Public key cryptography (PKC)
, 178
Public knowledge
, 11
Public ledger
, 114
“Pump-and-dump” schemes
, 96
Quorum open-source blockchain platform
, 38
Race conditions
, 259
Real estate investment trust (REIT)
, 190
Red flags
, 155
Reentrancy
, 259
“RegTech”
, 275
Regulatory arbitrage
, 97
Regulatory Sandbox Model
, 132
Reinsurance
, 125
“Research Blast”
, 248
Responsible sourcing
, 149
Restricted securities
, 143
Return of the Jedi (film)
, 87
Risk(s)
management
, 231–240
in smart contracts
, 257–259
Robustness
, 269
Secure Hashing Algorithm (SHA)
, 33
SHA-256 algorithm
, 33
Securities transaction lifecycle (STL)
, 143–144
Securitization
, 99, 102–103
Security. (see also Digital securities (DS))
, 269
Security Token Exchanges (STE)
, 130, 187
Security Token Offerings (STOs)
, 80, 91–93, 127, 130–133, 183
issuance phase
, 140–141
lifecycle management
, 141–144
pre-offering
, 133–140
Security tokens
, 139–140
projected growth of
, 183–186
“Segregation of duties” principles of auditing
, 231
Selfish mining
, 279–280
Settling trades
, 123
Shor’s algorithm
, 114
Simple Agreement for Future Equity (SAFE)
, 135
Smart contracts
, 3, 36, 61–66, 110–111, 114, 118–120, 283
advantages
, 73–74
applications
, 71–73
blockchain facilitating
, 74–75
economics of microtransactions
, 66–67
features
, 67–69
functioning
, 70
legal complexities
, 75–77
standards expediting digital asset functions
, 179
supply chain transaction in traditional setting
, 64
supply chain transaction with
, 65
tokenization with
, 120–121
works
, 69–71
Smelters
, 152
Spider-Man (film)
, 87
Stale blocks
, 54
Start-up financing
, 93, 184
STOC tokens
, 85
Stocchain
, 85
Stock trading back office
, 123–124
Sudoku puzzles
, 55–56
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Research Institute (SMTRI)
, 191
Supply chain responsibility. (see Responsible sourcing)
Symmetric encryption
algorithms
, 178
systems
, 112
Syndicated underwriting
, 125
System and Organization Controls (SOC)
, 243–244
System audit for blockchain
, 252
new risks
, 253–257
risks in smart contracts
, 257–259
traditional system audit controls applied to blockchain
, 252–253
“System of record” approach
, 251, 261–262
Termination
, 46
Test of design (TOD)
, 241–242
Test of effectiveness (TOE)
, 241–242
Third edition OECD Due Diligence Guidance (2016)
, 154
Token. (see also Security tokens)
discounts
, 135–136
format
, 137
holder obligations
, 137
holder rights
, 136
proceeds
, 137
transfer restrictions
, 137
Tokenization
, 36–37, 79–80, 111, 114
of art
, 86–87
asset securitization
, 98–102
data transparency
, 197–201
enhanced liquidity
, 203–205
growth in tokenization market
, 91–93
illustration of appeal of
, 82–83
of Japanese Real Estate Market
, 197
Open Access
, 201–203
operationalization
, 83–85, 164–165
prevailing risks
, 93–98
process
, 89–91
and securitization
, 102–103
with smart contracts
, 120–121
untapped potential
, 80–82
use-cases
, 85–89
TokuteiMokutekiKaisha (TMK)
, 194
“Top-down” approach
, 116–117
financial controls identification
, 237–238
Traceability
, 224
conflict minerals regulations
, 154–155
evolving regulation on
, 153
of minerals
, 153
modern slavery and human rights regulations
, 155–157
ramifications of changing political dynamics
, 157–158
requirements
, 159–160
Trade–barter system to cryptocurrency
, 8–10
Traditional private placements
, 130–132
Traditional security tokens
, 183
Traditional sourcing methods
, 159
Traditional system audit controls applied to blockchain
, 252–253
Tranches,–100
Transaction(s)
, 25–27, 219–220
fee
, 51
or business process level controls
, 240
and smart contracts
, 250
Triple-entry bookkeeping system
, 29–30
Trust
, 10–13, 103
Trust Service
, 143
Trusted broker
, 80
Trusted third parties
, 7, 11, 13–14, 83
Tylenol tablets
, 268–269
U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
, 76, 91
Ujo (online music sharing/purchase company)
, 72
UK Modern Slavery Act (2015)
, 156
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
, 272
United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs)
, 156
United Parcel Services
, 273
Unregistered offering
, 128, 133
US dollars (USD)
, 136
Use-cases of blockchain
, 107–108
applying framework
, 116–118
caveats and risks
, 125–126
framework to evaluating
, 113–115
idiosyncrasies of blockchain
, 111–112
key attributes of blockchain
, 110–111, 114
sample use-cases
, 120–125
score card
, 115
smart contracts
, 118–120
technical primer on cryptography and encryption
, 112–113
Utility
billing
, 271
token
, 139
Validity
, 46
economics of
, 51–52
Verifiability
, 3
economics of
, 51–52
Vulnerabilities
, 276
bribery attacks
, 278
censorship attacks
, 279
desynchronization attack
, 277
double spending
, 276–277
eclipse attacks
, 278
fifty-one percent attacks
, 278
Finney attack
, 277–278
grinding attacks
, 280
long-range attacks
, 279
nothing at stake attacks
, 280
past majority attacks
, 281
selfish mining
, 279–280
Web 3.0
, 181–183, 201
Witnesses
, 58
Yap
, 11–12
- Prelims
- 1: Introduction
- 2: The Infrastructure Supporting Bitcoin: Blockchain
- 3: Basic Primer on Blockchain Terminology
- 4: The Consensus Mechanism
- 5: Smart Contracts
- 6: Tokenization
- 7: A Framework to Evaluate Blockchain Use-Cases
- 8: Financing Corporate Expansion through Tokenization
- 9: A Transparent New World: Ethically Sourced Mineral Supply Chain
- 10: Tokenization of the Japanese Real Estate Market
- 11: Blockchain-Supported Business Innovations
- 12: Internal Controls
- 13: Future Opportunities and Challenges
- Bibliography
- Index