PHASE III – PRIVATE
PERMISSIONED DLT
A private permissioned Blockchain is often termed as a “Distributed
ledger technology”, or DLT, rather than Blockchain. As the name
indicates, such an ecosystem is built with a private network where
only limited and trusted parties can build their nodes and share the
data with the privacy and security factors intact. But, why was there
a need of such an ecosystem, as we already have public
Blockchains like Ethereum running in the production? Before
jumping to different private permissioned DLTs, let’s first understand
why we need such networks, and also, what are the similarities and
differences with public Blockchains. Please refer to Table Phase III
for a comparison of the limitations of public blockchains and the
advantages of private permissioned DLT over them for the enterprise
use cases, as follows:
Limitations of Public
Blockchains
Advantages of Private
Permissioned DLTs
Privacy
of
Data
Public Blockchains would be
ideal for certain use cases
such as crypto trading, e-
Auction, ICOs etc., where the
data shared on such networks
are visible to all and, at the
same time, the identity of the
participants does not matter.
However, many use cases in
banking, FinTech, Insurance,
Healthcare,
Aviation,
e-
Governance etc., would opt for
more privacy where they can
share
the
data
only
with
selected nodes not opting to
make it global.
Unlike public Blockchains, a
private
permissioned
DLT
allows only selected parties to
participate in the sharing of
data with each other.
Security Zones: Many private
permissioned DLTs also use
security zones (i.e., a mini DLT
within a DLT) or private peer-
to-peer
data
sharing
with
messaging techniques, so that
the parties can share the data
with a few among them with
even additional privacy and
security.