Centralized agricultural data platforms raise concerns about ownership, provenance, and vendor lock-in, motivating decentralized alternatives. This study evaluates BigchainDB as a blockchain-database hybrid for owner-controlled precision agriculture data sharing. We address three research questions: (1) functional feasibility for data integrity, access control, and heterogeneous sensor integration; (2) integration patterns bridging IoT ingestion with blockchain consensus; and (3) operational trade-offs versus centralized alternatives. A proof-of-concept implementation comprising a sensor simulator, FastAPI middleware, and three-node BigchainDB cluster demonstrates end-to-end data flow with cryptographic provenance. Key contributions include the following: identification of three integration patterns (message queue buffering for high-throughput ingestion, hierarchical asset modeling, and dual-key access control); comparative analysis against five blockchain-database alternatives; and characterization of deployment complexity. Results show BigchainDB satisfies the functional requirements for data integrity and access control, while requiring increased operational overhead compared to single-node databases. The architecture is viable when multi-party governance outweighs operational simplicity, though production deployments require further scalability validation, including detailed performance benchmarking.
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Džafić et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a3d7eeec16d51705d2e4dd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/fi18030121
Željko Džafić
University of Novi Sad
Branko Milosavljević
University of Novi Sad
Mladen Cucak
Pennsylvania State University
Future Internet
Pennsylvania State University
University of Novi Sad
University of Banja Luka
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