Bitcoin News

Using smart contracts to manage real-world contracts

Utilizing smart contracts on blockchains to manage aspects like the status, renewal, or amendment of traditional contracts offers significant business potential. However, it’s crucial to understand that smart contracts are not meant to completely replace traditional business contracts. The latter, often complex and requiring human oversight, cannot be fully automated by smart contracts, which, despite their name, lack the sophistication of real-world contracts.

Smart contracts on blockchain, though, can greatly enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of managing these traditional contracts compared to current methods. For example, maintaining a clear, undisputed status of a contract currently involves significant human intervention and uncertainty. Blockchain can partially address this through tokenization, but its rigidity limits its application for renewing or modifying contracts without disrupting their continuity.

An innovative solution by nChain uses on-chain UTXOs to represent the state of an off-chain contract, allowing for seamless renewal or modification within the same framework. This approach ensures control and privacy without forcing businesses to alter their practices, instead enhancing them with blockchain technology.

Many businesses have been hesitant to adopt blockchain, often perceiving it as a disruptive force rather than a complementary tool. Companies like Tokenized.com have excelled in bridging the gap between smart contracts and real-world contracts, focusing on both on-chain and off-chain activities. nChain’s European patent on this topic, while not covering all aspects of blockchain-enforced contracting, is a significant development in this area.

This leads to the concept of the “smart-business paradigm,” where various business elements such as relationships, structures, organizations, and contracts gradually transition to public blockchains, implemented with tokenization, smart contracts, and potentially AI. This paradigm aims to integrate various components like tokenization and smart contracts, akin to how a smartphone combines multiple technologies.

In exploring different tokenization protocols on the BSV blockchain, the STAS and Tokenized protocols stand out for their unique designs and philosophies. STAS, ideal for on-chain tokenization and verification, suits assets less reliant on existing companies and benefits from blockchain permanency. In contrast, Tokenized is better suited for assets requiring flexibility and off-chain management, offering a comprehensive platform for integrating on-chain and off-chain business operations.

The broader platform, sCrypt, is not just a tokenization protocol but a smart contract platform with long-term potential, initially focusing less on off-chain development.

The broader aspect of contracting in the business world may never fully transition to smart contracts due to the limitations of human reality. These can either remain traditional (inefficient) or be reformed using software frameworks integrated with tokenization, smart contracts, and AI.

“Software contracts,” which are machine-readable/manageable but not fully machine-executable like smart contracts, might offer a solution. An example of this is the Ricardian contract.

There’s also the question of compatibility between on-chain tokenization and smart contracts, like STAS, with off-chain software frameworks. While technically feasible, the business reality might present challenges, especially in industries requiring private database management.

Looking ahead, the “smart-business paradigm” might evolve to include concepts like triple-entry accounting and shared ledgers, though this would likely be a more advanced stage of implementation.

In conclusion, we’re assessing different business opportunities, considering their practicality and resource constraints, and exploring how blockchain technology can complement and enhance traditional business practices.