1st Edition

Blockchain and Web 3.0 Social, Economic, and Technological Challenges

Edited By Massimo Ragnedda, Giuseppe Destefanis Copyright 2019
    334 Pages
    by Routledge

    334 Pages
    by Routledge

    Blockchain is no longer just about bitcoin or cryptocurrencies in general. Instead, it can be seen as a disruptive, revolutionary technology which will have major impacts on multiple aspects of our lives. The revolutionary power of such technology compares with the revolution sparked by the World Wide Web and the Internet in general. Just as the Internet is a means of sharing information, so blockchain technologies can be seen as a way to introduce the next level: sharing value.





    Blockchain and Web 3.0 fills the gap in our understanding of blockchain technologies by hosting a discussion of the new technologies in a variety of disciplinary settings. Indeed, this volume explains how such technologies are disruptive and comparatively examines the social, economic, technological and legal consequences of these disruptions. Such a comparative perspective has previously been underemphasized in the debate about blockchain, which has subsequently led to weaknesses in our understanding of decentralized technologies.





    Underlining the risks and opportunities offered by the advent of blockchain technologies and the rise of Web 3.0, Blockchain and Web 3.0 will appeal to researchers and academics interested in fields such as sociology and social policy, cyberculture, new media and privacy and data protection.

    Chapter 1. Blockchain: a disruptive technology. Massimo Ragnedda and Giuseppe Destefanis





    PART I. Socio-economic aspects and consequences of decentralized technologies





    Chapter 2. The block is hot: A commons-based approach to the development and deployment of blockchains, Sune Sandbeck, A.T. Kingsmith, Julian von Bargen,





    Chapter 3. Can permissionless blockchains be regulated and resolve some of the problems of copyright law? Guido Noto La Diega and James Stacey





    Chapter 4. Meetups: making space for women on the blockchain, Philippa R. Adams, Julie Frizzo-Barker, Betty B. Ackah, Peter A. Chow-White





    Chapter 5. Drivers of Digital Trust in the Crypto Industry, Scott Freeman, Ivana Beveridge, Jannis Angelis





    Chapter 6. Lightbulb Concrete. Bronwin Patrickson





    PART II. Blockchain and Digital Media





    Chapter 7. Could blockchain save journalism? An explorative study of blockchain’s potential to make journalism a more sustainable business. Walid Al-Saqaf and Malin Picha Edwardsson





    Chapter 8. The logics of technology decentralization - the case of Distributed Ledger Technologies. Balazs Bodo and Alexandra Giannopoulou





    Chapter 9. Disruptive Blockworks: blockchains and networks / acceleration and collision



    Matthew Lovett





    Chapter 10. Blockchained to What (End)? A Socio-material provocation to check distributed futures, Luke Heemsbergen, Alexia Maddox Robbie Fordyce





    Chapter 11. Blockchain and data market. The case of Wibson from a critical perspective, Guillermina Yansen





     



    PART III. Technological aspects and consequences of decentralized technologies





    Chapter 12. Applying Smart Contracts in Online Dispute Resolutions on a Large Scale and its Regulatory Implications. Janet Hui Xue and Ralph Holz





    Chapter 13. SmartAnvil: Open-Source. Tool Suite for Smart Contract Analysis. Stéphane Ducasse, Henrique Rocha, Santiago Bragagnolo and Marcus Denker





    Chapter 14. Managing CRM with Fabric Hyperledger blockchain technology. Dario Puligheddu, Roberto Tonelli and Michele Marchesi





    Chapter 15. Privacy with Ethereum Smart Contracts. Duarte Teles and Isabel Azevedo





    Chapter 16. A Hierarchical Structure Model of Success Factors for (Blockchain-based) Crowdfunding, Felix Hartmann, Xiaofeng Wang and Maria Ilaria Lunesu

    Biography

    Massimo Ragnedda is a senior lecturer in mass communication at Northumbria University, Newcastle, UK.





    Giuseppe Destefanis is a lecturer in the Department of Computer Science at Brunel University, UK.