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The Benefits of Blockchain for E-Commerce

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The Benefits of Blockchain for E-CommerceElizabeth_Neus_pdwCThu, 10/31/2019 - 13:09

As e-commerce traffic grows, and as more people begin shopping with cryptocurrency, retailers are seeking out ways to secure transactions and better enable the use of the new currencies. Some see blockchain as a solution to both of these challenges — and more. 

Blockchain, defined as a chain of online transactions saved as a shared ledger across numerous computers on a peer-to-peer network, has its origins in cryptocurrency. 

But the technology also has applications for online retail, supply chain management, money transfers, digital IDs and virtually limitless other areas.

For instance, UPS announced last spring that it was partnering with the e-commerce company Inxeption to develop a blockchain-supported platform to facilitate business-to-business sales. 

MORE FROM BIZTECH: Blockchain is making inroads across all segments of business.

Blockchain Can Bring Better Security, Lower Costs

Among the benefits that blockchain can bring to ecommerce: lower transaction costs. The cost of blockchain transactions, notes Inviqa, is lower than the transaction cost of traditional e-commerce.

Public blockchains charge a fee of about 1 cent for every transaction; private blockchains offer even lower transaction costs. This makes blockchain a preferable facilitator of payment for obvious reasons, and Inviqa notes that such low costs are also opening the door to rapid micropayments. 

Blockchain can also provide improved data security. The decentralized nature of blockchain (as opposed to data stored on a central server) means that it’s extremely difficult for outsiders to hack into the data and carry out unauthorized actions, according to Inviqa.

Infiltrating the network would require an “extremely difficult and expensive” effort, Inviqa notes, as each node on the network would fight back against any attack carried out on the blockchain. 

The only way to bypass this defense is via a “51 percent attack” — where an attacker simultaneously infiltrates a majority of the nodes, which are located all over the world. 

This same decentralization also leads to increased reliability of data, since it protects companies from data loss due to server failures or natural disasters. 


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