Traditional, centralised security designs have serious flaws that have been made clear by the increasing complexity, frequency, and sophistication of cyberattacks. Despite their previous effectiveness, these centralised systems often have single points of failure, little transparency, and a significant susceptibility to large-scale breaches and insider attacks. With its decentralised, unchangeable, cryptographically secure, and transparent ledger system, blockchain technology provides a revolutionary way to think about and approach cybersecurity. Blockchain's immutable nature guarantees that once data is recorded, it cannot be changed without being detected, and by dispersing trust across many nodes, it naturally lowers the danger of compromise via centralised assaults. The potential uses of blockchain in protecting critical infrastructure systems (such as energy grids and transportation networks), identity management frameworks (such as self-sovereign identities and decentralised identifiers), data provenance and auditability for regulatory compliance, and intrusion detection systems that can identify and react to anomalies in almost real time are all systematically examined in this paper.
Srinivas Rao (Sat,) studied this question.
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