On 2018-01-08 10:19 PM, John Levine wrote:
In article <0c45eee2-ffcb-2066-1456-eb2d38075...@alter3d.ca>,
Peter Kristolaitis <alte...@alter3d.ca> wrote:
We can build all of the above in other ways today, of course. But
there's certainly something to be said for a vendor-supported solution
that is inherent in the platform and requires no additional
infrastructure. ...
No additional infrastructure? Blockchains need multiple devices that
are online and have enough storage to keep a full copy of the chain.
There is absolutely no reason that the networking equipment itself can't
both operate the blockchain and keep a full copy. It's a pretty good
bet that your own routers will probably be online; if not, you have
bigger problems.
The storage requirements aren't particularly onerous. The entire
Bitcoin blockchain is around 150GB, with several orders of magnitude
more transactions (read: config changes) than you're likely to see even
on a very large network. SSDs are small enough and reliable enough now
that the physical space requirements are quite small.
They make sense in an environment with multiple sophisticated parties
that sort of but not entirely trust each other, but there aren't as
many of those as you might think.
You (presumably) trust your own routers. There is absolutely no reason
that your own little network can't run your own private blockchain. In
fact, for my use case of configuration management, you wouldn't WANT to
use a single global public blockchain.
- Peter