National Law Review January 6, 2020
Sunny J. Kumar, Georgina Rigg

Blockchain technology is considered by many to be one of the most important technologies developed in recent years. It is often misunderstood and its potential has yet to be fully realised and harnessed. Blockchain has been the subject of a large amount of negative press due to volatile price fluctuations of its biggest user, the cryptocurrency, and this has generated a public mistrust.

However, blockchain could hold the answer to two of technology’s greatest challenges: data reliability and security. These two things are particularly important in the healthcare and life sciences sector where veracity of data is a life or death question and the safety of our most intimate data is paramount.

What is blockchain?

Blockchain is a digital ledger...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Blockchain, Technology
Ethics of Blockchain by Design: Guiding a Responsible Future for Healthcare Innovation
The Blockchain Doesn’t Have To Fix Everything
Quantum-Secure Blockchain: Preparing For The Era Of Quantum Computing
A Pro-Crypto President: What Trump 2.0 Holds for Blockchain’s Future
Blockchain in Healthcare: A Necessary Innovation or a Misguided Panacea?

Share This Article