12.16.1. Encrypted open books, or anonymous auditing - Eric Hughes has worked on a scheme using a kind of blinding to do "encrypted open books," whereby observers can verify that a bank is balancing its books without more detailed looks at individual accounts. (I have my doubts about spoofs, attacks, etc., but such are always to be considered in any new protocol.) - "Kent Hastings wondered how an offshore bank could provide assurances to depositors. I wondered the same thing a few months ago, and started working on what Perry calls the anonymous auditing problem. I have what I consider to be the core of a solution. ...The following is long.... [TCM Note: Too long to include here. I am including just enough to convince readers that some new sorts of banking ideas may come out of cryptography.] "If we use the contents of the encrypted books at the organizational boundary points to create suitable legal opbligations, we can mostly ignore what goes on inside of the mess of random numbers. That is, even if double books were being kept, the legal obligations created should suffice to ensure that everything can be unwound if needed. This doesn't prevent networks of corrupt businesses from going down all at once, but it does allow networks of honest businesses to operate with more assurance of honesty." [Eric Hughes, PROTOCOL: Encrypted Open Books, 1993-08-16] 12.16.2. "How can software components be sold, and how does crypto figure in?" + Reusable Software, Brad Cox, Sprague, etc. - good article in "Wired" (repeated in "Out of Control") - First, certainly software is sold. The issues is why the "software components" market has not yet developed, and why such specific instances of software as music, art, text, etc., have not been sold in smaller chunks. + Internet commerce is a huge area of interest, and future development. - currently developing very slowly - lots of conflicting information...several mailing lists...lots of hype + Digital cash is often cited as a needed enabling tool, but I think the answer is more complicated than that. - issues of convenience - issues of there being no recurring market (as there is in, say, the chip business...software doesn't get bought over and over again, in increasing unit volumes)
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