On the Suitability of Blockchain Platforms for IoT Applications: Architectures, Security, Privacy, and Performance
Sotirios Brotsis, Konstantinos Limniotis, Gueltoum Bendiab, Nicholas, Kolokotronis, Stavros Shiaeles

TL;DR
This paper reviews blockchain solutions for IoT, focusing on architectures, security, privacy, and performance, highlighting current limitations and identifying platforms that meet IoT requirements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of blockchain platforms' suitability for IoT, emphasizing security, privacy, and performance challenges in a smart home context.
Findings
Most blockchain platforms are vulnerable to common attacks.
Privacy features vary across platforms and address specific aspects.
Few platforms meet IoT performance and fault tolerance requirements.
Abstract
Blockchain and distributed ledger technologies have received significant interest in various areas beyond the financial sector, with profound applications in the Internet of Things (IoT), providing the means for creating truly trustless and secure solutions for IoT applications. Taking into account the weak security defences that the majority of IoT devices have, it is critical that a blockchain-based solution targeting the IoT is not only capable of addressing the many challenges IoT is facing, but also does not introduce other defects, in terms of performance, making its adoption hard to achieve. This paper aims at addressing the above needs by providing a comprehensive and coherent review of the available blockchain solutions to determine their ability to meet the requirements and tackle the challenges of the IoT, using the smart home as the reference domain. Key architectural…
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