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by proofofanalysis
3088 days ago
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The blockchain's (current) prime use case: triple entry accounting. In double entry accounting, a ledger only contains debits and credits. With the blockchain, the blockchain's attestation of the validity of the debit and credits is the third entry. This removes the need to trust whether the credits and debits were correct in the first place. Were financial systems to be based on blockchain design, an Enron situation would not be able to occur. It might even prevent the likes of Madoff. This technology is only getting started. While there is hype, this hype is necessary for the market to test out many ideas and applications, until those that make sense remain standing. |
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Accounting, surprisingly to folks who've never studied it and think it's simple arithmetic, requires judgment, based on rules that are sometimes grey and subjective. When you add in legal complexities, it becomes... well, more complex and therefore open to manipulation.
For instance, Enron was able to hide many liabilities by marking it (in hindsight) below market, since... there was no market for said liabilities. So it was impossible to value them. Furthermore, it hid other debt in obscure subsidiaries that were only tangentially, legally and fiscally speaking, connected to Enron.
The blockchain confirms, with better accuracy than existing systems, "X transaction occurred between Y and Z partners." It does not confirm "X's assets were appropriately valued and marked as such to a non-existent market, and X is most definitely a legal subsidiary and is overseen by the fiduciary duty of A Holdings, Corp."
The blockchain has the potential to be a far more efficient settlement system. But saying it prevents Enron or Madoff is simply not true at all.