Microsoft is looking to re-enter the blockchain game with a new service aiming to help settle payment disputes.
The Windows 10 maker has revealed a new service aimed at helping companies manage their rights and royalty payments using the technology.
The service, powered by Microsoft's Azure cloud platform, will particularly look to target the gaming space, where rights disputes can often prove costly for content providers.
It will allow real-time access and insight into transactions, with a new smart contract systems helping makes sure that the right people get paid for their work.
Microsoft is hoping that the network will become one of the world's largest enterprise blockchain ecosystems when fully operational, potentially processing millions of transactions per day.
Step up
Microsoft has signed up banking titan EY to help support the service, and games publisher Ubisoft is set to be the first test subject, with a full launch soon set to be gradually rolled out worldwide.
The underlying network is built using the Quorum blockchain protocol and Microsoft's Azure cloud infrastructure and blockchain technologies, and implements confidentiality of agreements across entities.
"The scale, complexity and volume of digital rights and royalties transactions makes this a perfect application for blockchains," said Paul Brody, EY Global Innovation Leader, Blockchain.
"A blockchain can handle the unique nature of each contract between digital rights owners and licensors can be handled in a scalable, efficient manner with an audit trail for the participants. By deploying this on Microsoft Azure, we believe this will be highly scalable across thousands of royalties and content partners."
June 25, 2018 at 04:11PM
Mike Moore
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