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An annotated bibliography is a list of citations to books, articles, and documents. Each citation is followed by a brief (usually about 150 words) descriptive and evaluative paragraph, the annotation. The purpose of the annotation is to inform the reader of the relevance, accuracy, and quality of the sources cited. Cornell University Library

Contributors: Please consider adding entries to this annotated bibliography (AB) as you read and research articles. This AB will serve as a reference for papers and presentations we collaborate on together and as individuals. APA style.

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Christidis, K., Devetsikotis, M.  (2016 May). Blockchains and Smart Contracts for the Internet of ThingsIEEE Accesshttps://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/7467408 | Full Text

This paper starts off with one of the better high-level overviews of blockchain technology that I have read. The authors provide a great explanation of the basics around networking, protocols, smart contracts, and more. Following this overview, they discuss the benefits and challenges of using blockchain alongside IoT technology.  A few real-world examples are discussed such as Slock.it, a company that allows users to control access to a smart lock by paying in Ether. The last section of the paper discusses some important deployment considerations that any administers of a blockchain network should consider.

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The ideas are interesting and some introduction is provided regarding the GS1 protocol and tokenization using ERC-721 Non-Fungible Tokens on the Ethereum network. 

Mell, PLiang, Z., Huang, Y., Cao, Z., DrayLiu, JT., & ShookWang, JY. (2019 ). Smart contract federated identity management without third party authentication services. https://February). Creativity in trusted data; research on application of blockchain in supply chain. International Journal of Performability Engineering, 15(2), 526-535. https://doi.org/10.23940/ijpe.19.02.p17.526535 Full text

This document talks about creativity in software development and designing new functions in specific regards to supply chain.  It is discussed that the sharing of data and confirming that the data is not modified in any way while it is being shared is what brings it back to blockchain.  Standard use supply chains are compared with how back and forth data must be transferred and how easy it is to lose where the data came from, who created it and where it needs to go next.  After studying the supply chain functions, the document shows how blockchain management could be utilized in a way to streamline and provide full tracking of the information and how it can tie to new software development as it is created for supply chain management.

When comparing to other sources, this one does provide a reliable source.  Information and data that is presented is all backed up with additional sources that are also credible.  The information presented is neutral and not biased and is being presented as an improvement.  The author does not appear to have any reason for the supply chain management to be utilized in either format.

Mell, P., Dray, J., & Shook, J. (2019). Smart contract federated identity management without third party authentication services. https://arxiv.org/abs/1906.11057  full text

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Brammertz, W., & Mendelowitz, A.I. (2017 September). From digital currencies to digital finance: the case for a smart financial contract standard. The Journal of Risk Finance, 19 (1), 76-92. https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JRF-02-2017-0025/full/html

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Hartel, P., & Schumi, R. (2019 September. Gas limit aware mutation testing of smart contracts at scale. https://fr.arxiv.org/abs/1909.12563

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Hasan, H., AlHadhrami, E., AlDhaheri, A., Salal, K., & Jayaraman/html

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Hartel, P., & Schumi, R. (2019 ). Smart contract-based approach for efficient shipment management. Computers & Industrial Engineering, 136, 149-159September. Gas limit aware mutation testing of smart contracts at scalehttps://doifr.arxiv.org/10.1016abs/j.cie.2019.07.0221909.12563

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LiangHasan, ZH., HuangAlHadhrami, YE., CaoAlDhaheri, ZA., LiuSalal, TK., & WangJayaraman, YR. (2019 February). Creativity in trusted data; research on application of blockchain in supply chain. International Journal of Performability Engineering, 15(2), 526-535). Smart contract-based approach for efficient shipment management. Computers & Industrial Engineering, 136, 149-159https://doi.org/10.239401016/ijpej.19cie.022019.p1707.526535022

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Liu, X., Muhammad, K., Lloret, J., Chen, Y., Yuan, S. (2019). Elastic and cost-effective carrier architecture for smart contract in blockchain. Future Generation Computer Systems, 100, 590-599. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.future.2019.05.042

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