Blockchain technology is overhyped, but its potential holds much promise, said Peter Mell, a senior computer scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, at Fordham’s 2019 International Conference on Cyber Security on July 24. 

“Blockchains are not the panacea. They’re not the silver bullet,” he said. “But they can be useful for certain applications.” 

Mell’s lecture, “Can blockchain improve operational efficiency while enhancing trust?” explored the areas where blockchains, or append-only distributed ledgers linked by cryptography, may be useful in the future. Among them are identity management, random number production, and potential government-managed cryptocurrencies. 

He spoke in depth about the possibility of managing identities using both blockchains and smart contracts, a computer protocol that helps one exchange money while avoiding the services of a middleman. In other words, a smart contract is an immutable, publicly readable, and executable code that acts as a trusted third party in transactions, he said. 

“If we had such infrastructure that worked, that would be very powerful,” Mell said. 

It reminded him of the time an FBI special agent visited his home and asked Mell a few questions about a person of interest. Mell asked the agent to show him proof of his identity. The agent took out a black, leather wallet. Inside that was a “metal star.” 

“It looked very pretty. It looked very authentic … I answered personal questions about one of my friends to an absolute stranger because he had a metal star,” he said, to chuckles from the audience, including a few FBI special agents. “Now imagine with smart contracts … that special agent could come to me, and if I had an app on my phone and I gave him some identifier from my app, [he could]digitally prove to me that he was a special agent and authorized to be doing this kind of work.” 

At the end of his 30-minute lecture, he concluded that although blockchain technology isn’t a universal remedy, it holds great potential for the future.

“If we can overcome a lot of scalability issues and assure ourselves of security issues, then we can create a smart contract infrastructure that’s scalable and secure and can be used worldwide,” Mell said. 

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Taylor is a 2018 graduate of the Stony Brook University School of Communication and Journalism, where she was valedictorian of her class and garnered several awards for her reporting and writing. Now she is a senior staff writer and videographer in Fordham University's news and media relations bureau, where she writes stories; shoots photos of people and events; and films, edits, and produces short-form videos. She earned her master's degree in public media from Fordham in August 2020. Her work has appeared on NPR, NBC New York, and amNewYork METRO.