Fujitsu leverages blockchain

Fujitsu customers deploying the DocumentFlow enterprise blockchain app can track and verify the legitimacy of any digital asset.

  • Thursday, 22nd August 2019 Posted 5 years ago in by Phil Alsop
Fujitsu introduces the new fraud-busting DocumentFlow, an easy-to-use web-based application that uses blockchain technology to track the validity of any digital file or asset, including documents, audio and video files, images and files from almost any application. DocumentFlow joins the Fujitsu Flow suite of blockchain-as-a-service offerings, alongside InvoiceFlow, an application to guard against invoice fraud.

 

As businesses become smarter and more connected, they are increasingly challenged to control and manage vast amounts of accumulated data. The significant value of this digitalised data means that trust is an increasingly crucial factor. Fujitsu is leveraging blockchain’s Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) to help businesses establish trust, as DLT provides an immutable, permanent record that cannot be altered and provides all participants and users with proper evidence that an asset is genuine, even at bit level.

 

Blockchain-based notary service on all digitised assets

Fujitsu DocumentFlow drastically reduces instances of document fraud or piracy, as it can track where a digital file is manipulated, unlawfully copied or simply to check that an asset is the latest and agreed version. The technology works on any digital file type, providing a clear audit trail to validate anything from a university graduation certificate to an engineering drawing file. DocumentFlow can immediately flag and label any alterations, and help trace distribution and changes to copyrighted or protected corporate and governmental materials. DocumentFlow registers what happens to data via an immutable audit log, which also facilitates verifications and audits. Fujitsu DocumentFlow uses blockchain to provide a notary service on digitised assets which provides indisputable visibility and traceability over each digital asset.

 

Frederik De Breuck, Head of Fujitsu’s Blockchain Innovation Centre in Brussels, comments: “By using an immutable record combined with automated tracing, it is possible to gain immediate insights into any changes to a digital document of any kind. For example, the removal of DRM on a copyrighted media file, changing a value in a spread sheet or a proposal, or any unauthorised changes to something like a CAD file, which could have unexpected consequences further down the line. This enables businesses to have complete confidence in any digital file – and helps stop fraudulent use, since it’s easy to see that a file has been manipulated. Just like a security seal helps reassure consumers in the grocery store that products are sealed and have not been tampered with, we are helping provide confidence for all file types in the digital world. Fujitsu is enabling people to have more confidence in the data they work with. We’re using blockchain technologies to enhance and complement existing technology solutions, providing a trusted digital signature.”

 

Introduced earlier this year, the Fujitsu InvoiceFlow service enables enterprises and government agencies avoid, or even eliminate, the very real issue of accidental data processing error and to tackle the growing problem of invoice fraud. Now commercially available, the service uses DLT-based technology to verify and validate the invoicing process, linking invoice and purchase order data, from the creation of an invoice to its authorisation for payment.

 

Fujitsu offers InvoiceFlow and DocumentFlow as on-premises solutions or as-a-service running on any cloud platform. They complement Fujitsu’s services designed to help customers deploy scalable, secure, business-ready blockchain and DLT solutions from consulting, development, applications, infrastructure and managed services to cloud, software and standalone solutions.