Chevron Left
Back to Blockchain Business Models

Learner Reviews & Feedback for Blockchain Business Models by Duke University

4.7
stars
375 ratings

About the Course

Blockchain is an emerging and highly disruptive technology that is poorly understood. In this course you will learn what blockchain is and how it can create value by tokenization in cryptocurrencies and in many other practical applications. The applications include: stablecoins (like Facebook’s Libra and JP Morgan’s JPMCoin), machine to machine payments, identity protection, supply chain management (Walmart, Maersk, IBM), secure voting, distributed exchanges, decentralized finance, property transfers, central bank fiat crypto (e.g., Fedcoin and China’s digital Renminbi), dispensing prescription drugs, private records, intellectual property, financial reporting, and media and advertising, to name a few. The goals of the course are to: (i) provide an advanced understanding of the various blockchain technologies; (ii) determine the specific business situations where blockchain technology can be deployed to solve important problems; (iii) select the specific blockchain technology that has the best chance of success for a particular problem; and (iv) detail the risks presented by this new technology....

Top reviews

SI

Oct 24, 2021

This course is really a good start to understand basic of blockchain and cryptocurrencies. Since the course is quite old, after finish this course, I would recommend to study more in other resources.

RA

May 18, 2022

This is a very detailed course for someone enough curious to start the Blockchain path. This content quality is very good and the information is transmited on a very effecient and profecient way.

Filter by:

126 - 129 of 129 Reviews for Blockchain Business Models

By vikrant b

•

Aug 9, 2020

I am having acute difficulty in the Week 2 Qiz #1 (Questions 3/5 &7...tried 5 times , need help !

By Alvaro M

•

Feb 5, 2021

Terrible course, it has absolutely nothing to do with the scope of the specialization (finance and strategy). The course goes entirely in boring, unintelligible and useless technicalities and computer concepts together with explaining the operation of programs and algorithms being suitable for a specialization in computer subjects but not for a program with a focus on finance and strategy. Duke must solve this type of errors since it puts its prestige at stake, it should eliminate this course from the specialization, or change the focus, lessons, tests and content towards a more practical and useful profile (show examples of practical uses of the technology and the potential business it can generate).

By Torsten G

•

Jul 14, 2022

major problems in the grade section. some quizzes, tests or exams did NOT have a clear answer!! moreover a true/false question turned out wrong in both attempts - one time the answer true one time the answer false . please test and consider reconfiguration.

By John T

•

May 11, 2021

A largely incoherent mess. This course belabours many easy to grasp concepts in a scattergun approach but then airdrops references to irrelevant and complex notions. Its nether well thought out nor well targeted to any particular audience.