Business First May-June 2017 Business First May 2017 | Page 51

Blockchain – the next great disrupter We went behind the scenes with PwC Belfast, one of the world’s brightest blockchain hubs. An article produced by TechWatch from Cata- lyst, Inc Connect by Emily McDaid ll too often, blockchain is regarded as a technology for financial services. Bitcoin’s peer­to­peer payments were the first popular application of blockchain. But blockchain has the potential to shake­up so many other industries. I discussed this with Seamus Cushley, director of blockchain and digital at PwC (pictured) , who leads a team of 25 experts. Seamus is proud that Belfast has a higher concentration of blockchain experts than almost anywhere else in the world. “Blockchain is regarded by many as the second generation of the internet – and it can be just as disruptive as the invention of the internet was,” said Seamus. A Why should we care about the blockchain? Seamus says, “It’s about trust. Blockchain technology establishes trust between two entities to exchange value. Before blockchain, transactions had to use a trusted intermediary ­ typically a bank, lawyer or government.” “If you consider that a new ‘transaction’ is created every time you use the internet to do anything, you can see how wide its impact can be.” “Any value system – not just money – can be replaced by it.” How does it creates a record? Cushley emphasises, “A key security feature of blockchain is that the infrastructure and data are not held on one server – they’re decentralised and distributed. The data is held on all the network servers of all the players involved in a transaction.” That means, in order to hack a blockchain, hackers would need simultaneous access to all the servers in the chain. That seems so unlikely that a blockchain is, by its nature, considerably more secure. To add a new record to the chain, all the parties need to verify it, protecting against fraud. Who is PwC creating blockchain solutions for? “We’ve worked on a major project with the Bank of England, and we also created a working blockchain prototype for the London Market Target Operating Model (TOM) Innovation Exchange. It demonstrated that blockchain can reduce costs and speed up the payment process in the specialist insurance market.” What industries do you see the blockchain disrupting? Seamus said, “From land and property transactions to cross­border freight shipping and personal identity documents ­ any situation where high­value or sensitive information needs to be