An Empirical Analysis of Implementing Enterprise Blockchain Protocols in Supply Chain Anti-Counterfeiting and Traceability
Neo C.K. Yiu

TL;DR
This paper empirically analyzes the implementation of decentralized blockchain-based solutions, like dNAS, for supply chain anti-counterfeiting, highlighting their effectiveness, limitations, and future potential in enhancing security and traceability.
Contribution
It provides an empirical evaluation of decentralized enterprise blockchain protocols applied to supply chain anti-counterfeiting, revealing their benefits and challenges.
Findings
Decentralized solutions improve data integrity and trust in supply chains.
Security and privacy concerns remain significant challenges.
Future opportunities include enhancing scalability and confidentiality.
Abstract
A variety of innovative software solutions, addressing product anti-counterfeiting and record provenance of the wider supply chain industry, have been implemented. However, these solutions have been developed with centralized system architecture which could be susceptible to malicious modifications on states of product records and various potential security attacks leading to system failure and downtime. Blockchain technology has been enabling decentralized trust with a network of distributed peer nodes to maintain consistent shared states via a decentralized consensus reached, with which an idea of developing decentralized and reliable solutions has been basing on. A Decentralized NFC-Enabled Anti-Counterfeiting System (dNAS) was therefore proposed and developed, decentralizing a legacy anti-counterfeiting system of supply chain industry utilizing enterprise blockchain protocols and…
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