Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? This webinar examines blockchain and the role it plays in supply chain by providing traceability.
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-supply-chain-2021/
Top 20 interview questions for blockchain & supply chain professionalBlockchain Council
Blockchain acts as a ledger where data is stored digitally and is time-stamped. Businesses can make use of these records to track the data and its provenance. Hence, it becomes beneficial for companies dealing with supply chain management. Some of the common records that can be stored on DLT are :
Supply chain with blockchain - Solution BriefPablo Junco
Blockchain technology is uniquely positioned to help create trust, transparency, collaboration, and accountability between parties in supply chain scenarios. The technology allows supply chain participants to track an asset’s status as it moves across a custodial chain and share information on its origins and how it’s handled along the way.
Microsoft Services can help you to quickly start your blockchain project to transform your supply chain with blockchain on Microsoft Azure. The Supply Chain with Blockchain Offer provides a framework to accelerate time to value through integrations and extensions to the cloud services and consuming apps you already use, and innovate with confidence on an open, trusted, and globally available platform.
Blockchain and Smart Contracts (Series: Blockchain Basics)Financial Poise
Blockchain is a tool. Samson Williams likens blockchain to a group text message, in which each participant receives a distributed, time-stamped, tamper-resistant (and encrypted) record of data transactions. Each group text has these characteristics. Everyone in the group “sees” the data, and none can change or gainsay any group message. Smart contracts are computer code put on the blockchain (how, exactly?) that establishes self-executing terms and conditions of a transaction. Are smart contracts smart? If certain data comes in and fulfills a pre-set term or condition, then rights and responsibilities are formed, terminated, modified, or shifted among the parties. Ah certainty and transparency, but also ah garbage in and garbage out. Are some contractual terms not amenable to smart contracting? And are smart contracts necessarily contracts? If not, can they still be useful? If a smart contract is a contract, what is the governing document? Is it the words business people and lawyers use, or is it the code that is supposed to reflect the words?
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-smart-contracts-2021/
The Quest for Enterprise Blockchain Solutions.Fran Strajnar
This presentation was delivered to the sold-out Ethereum.nz events on the 17th & 19th May 2016.
Blockchain for Enterprise:
•Exponential Tech & Macro
•5 Pillars / 3 Layers
•Solution Designs Examples
•Standards & Protocols
•Conclusion
Starting off by identifying the behavior of 'Exponential' technology and digging into the Macro-view of Blockchain's evolving out of it's early 'infrastructure building' days.
We take a look at the '5 Pillars & 3 Layers to Enterprise Blockchain Solution Design', breaking down what goes where and how to start.
Followed by examples of solutions design in Banking, Cross-Border Payments & Supply Chain.
Concluding with a comparison to the early internet days, where protocols and standards are continually evolving and what this means for Blockchain design considerations today.
If Blockchain Technology Interest you - please see BraveNewCoin.com for News, Analysis, charts, research and much more resources.
Slideset for my 30 minutes of fame at The Banking Scene 2018.
Two points I want to make:
(1) involve your business more than your IT, as your business has to do something they're not used to and
(2) don't over estimate the impact of blockchain, it's just a small part of your stack but especially an enabler of broad collaboration when you use it as an airbag.
Blockchain in enterprise - Challenges, Considerations and DesignsMichael Chi
What are challenges you will be facing while working on an enterprise Blockchain solution ? What are possible services, solutions we can leverage to create an enterprise blockchain solution ? Here we share our experience and walk you step by step through an on-production blockchain project process.
Its origins may be traced all the way back to the blockchain technology. There are decentralized blockchain networks. Blockchain technology is a wonderful innovation of the twenty-first century.
IBM Hyperledger Blockchain Course Project - Leveraging on enterprise design thinking my team propose a blockchain solution to improve real-estate asset liquidity in Singapore.
-With GH link.
Top 20 interview questions for blockchain & supply chain professionalBlockchain Council
Blockchain acts as a ledger where data is stored digitally and is time-stamped. Businesses can make use of these records to track the data and its provenance. Hence, it becomes beneficial for companies dealing with supply chain management. Some of the common records that can be stored on DLT are :
Supply chain with blockchain - Solution BriefPablo Junco
Blockchain technology is uniquely positioned to help create trust, transparency, collaboration, and accountability between parties in supply chain scenarios. The technology allows supply chain participants to track an asset’s status as it moves across a custodial chain and share information on its origins and how it’s handled along the way.
Microsoft Services can help you to quickly start your blockchain project to transform your supply chain with blockchain on Microsoft Azure. The Supply Chain with Blockchain Offer provides a framework to accelerate time to value through integrations and extensions to the cloud services and consuming apps you already use, and innovate with confidence on an open, trusted, and globally available platform.
Blockchain and Smart Contracts (Series: Blockchain Basics)Financial Poise
Blockchain is a tool. Samson Williams likens blockchain to a group text message, in which each participant receives a distributed, time-stamped, tamper-resistant (and encrypted) record of data transactions. Each group text has these characteristics. Everyone in the group “sees” the data, and none can change or gainsay any group message. Smart contracts are computer code put on the blockchain (how, exactly?) that establishes self-executing terms and conditions of a transaction. Are smart contracts smart? If certain data comes in and fulfills a pre-set term or condition, then rights and responsibilities are formed, terminated, modified, or shifted among the parties. Ah certainty and transparency, but also ah garbage in and garbage out. Are some contractual terms not amenable to smart contracting? And are smart contracts necessarily contracts? If not, can they still be useful? If a smart contract is a contract, what is the governing document? Is it the words business people and lawyers use, or is it the code that is supposed to reflect the words?
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-smart-contracts-2021/
The Quest for Enterprise Blockchain Solutions.Fran Strajnar
This presentation was delivered to the sold-out Ethereum.nz events on the 17th & 19th May 2016.
Blockchain for Enterprise:
•Exponential Tech & Macro
•5 Pillars / 3 Layers
•Solution Designs Examples
•Standards & Protocols
•Conclusion
Starting off by identifying the behavior of 'Exponential' technology and digging into the Macro-view of Blockchain's evolving out of it's early 'infrastructure building' days.
We take a look at the '5 Pillars & 3 Layers to Enterprise Blockchain Solution Design', breaking down what goes where and how to start.
Followed by examples of solutions design in Banking, Cross-Border Payments & Supply Chain.
Concluding with a comparison to the early internet days, where protocols and standards are continually evolving and what this means for Blockchain design considerations today.
If Blockchain Technology Interest you - please see BraveNewCoin.com for News, Analysis, charts, research and much more resources.
Slideset for my 30 minutes of fame at The Banking Scene 2018.
Two points I want to make:
(1) involve your business more than your IT, as your business has to do something they're not used to and
(2) don't over estimate the impact of blockchain, it's just a small part of your stack but especially an enabler of broad collaboration when you use it as an airbag.
Blockchain in enterprise - Challenges, Considerations and DesignsMichael Chi
What are challenges you will be facing while working on an enterprise Blockchain solution ? What are possible services, solutions we can leverage to create an enterprise blockchain solution ? Here we share our experience and walk you step by step through an on-production blockchain project process.
Its origins may be traced all the way back to the blockchain technology. There are decentralized blockchain networks. Blockchain technology is a wonderful innovation of the twenty-first century.
IBM Hyperledger Blockchain Course Project - Leveraging on enterprise design thinking my team propose a blockchain solution to improve real-estate asset liquidity in Singapore.
-With GH link.
Blockchain technology is increasingly being considered for applications in business contexts due to its key properties. It is also very much hyped for its potential to transform existing industries and business models. In Part 1, we will introduce the key properties of blockchain, its limitations, the field and the relevance for SAP and enterprises in general. In Part 2, we will focus on one of the prominent suites available today and provide an demonstration of the POC we’ve developed.
The presentation was used during the keynote session in the Blockchain DLT Summit at Lima, Peru (November 14). Thanks to the summit sponsors UTEC, R3, BCP, and Microsoft Peru.
Bitcoin is a well-known technological achievement in the digital age. More individuals recognise its benefits as it becomes more widely available and utilised.
Blockchain in Banking Bucharest Meetup C1 “The fourth industrial revolution will be built upon a Machine-to-Machine economy with autonomous vehicles, 3D printer, robots, drones and IoT.
Blockchain Technology and Its Application in LibrariesNabi Hasan
Background
Blockchain: Conceptual Understanding
What is Blockchain Technology?
The Three Pillars of Blockchain Technology
Why is Blockchain Popular?
What is Distributed Ledger?
Blockchain for Enterprise Application Developer
Possible Areas of Implimention of Blockchain Technology in Libraries
Blockchain 101 talks about blockchain from a very basic perspective (non-technical). This presentation gives you an idea of what blockchain really is beyond cryptocurrency, different types of the blockchain, components of a blockchain, essentials of the blockchain, and myths about blockchain. this presentation also throws light on major applications of the blockchain , its advantages and limitations, major consortiums and startups in this space and the timeline of development. we also tried to include how a use case for blockchain can be identified and how startups need to go about building a blockchain product or services
This presentation was developed by Jithin Babu and Sakshi Manthanwar. Both of them are blockchain researchers and consultants.
For more info regarding presentation kindly contact
jithinbabu555@yahoo.com
1. How the Royal Bank of Scotland is approaching research and innovation
2. What we have looked at in the distributed ledger space
3. Example: Building a digital wallet on the Hyperledger Fabric
4. What we've learnt about Hyperledger and other DLs
5. The challenges we face as a bank and as blockchain developers
6. Thoughts for the future
Just how closely should financial executives be paying attention? Is the disruption of blockchain technology a distant rumble or an imminent strike? Fintech is shaking the foundation of the traditional financial services industry and blockchain alone could be a game-changer, transforming transactions, custody, accounting, currency exchange, and more.
Navigating the associated business implications and expected timeline is no easy task for financial professionals. This webinar can help firms sift through the noise and will identify the most significant blockchain trends and tangible applications.
Sponsored by ALFI
This presentation was made at the March 3, 2016 "Disruptive Innovations in Financial Services" Conference sponsored by the Institute for Financial Services Analytics at the Lerner College of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware.
Blockchain for Financial Institutions (the beginning)Karnan Ariaratnam
Organizations ranging from small start-ups to major global banks and government agencies are already investing in Blockchain technology, is your organization thinking about it?
See our point of view on Blockchain, please reach out to me to discuss further (karnan.ariaratnam@ca.pwc.com)
Evaluating the potential of blockchain technology to radically transform business
[Feel free to download the presentation if you'd like to view it offline]
Overview of blockchain technology and architectureEY
The adoption of blockchain technology continues to accelerate across a wide array of industries, yet many of our clients are confused about how to deploy these solutions within their environment. EY has developed a blockchain stack that fits within the existing enterprise infrastructure, project and system development life cycle approaches that are customized to the new technology, and development frameworks to streamline our deployment.
Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? This webinar examines blockchain and the role it plays in supply chain by providing traceability.
Part of the webinar series: BLOCKCHAIN BASICS 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
Blockchain and Supply Chain (Series: Blockchain Basics)Financial Poise
Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions account affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? We have assembled for this discussion a builder of blockchain-based traceability solutions, a traceability entrepreneur via blockchain and other means, and an intellectual property attorney (and former software engineer) who advises clients on technology-driven transactions.
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-supply-chain-2020/
Blockchain technology is increasingly being considered for applications in business contexts due to its key properties. It is also very much hyped for its potential to transform existing industries and business models. In Part 1, we will introduce the key properties of blockchain, its limitations, the field and the relevance for SAP and enterprises in general. In Part 2, we will focus on one of the prominent suites available today and provide an demonstration of the POC we’ve developed.
The presentation was used during the keynote session in the Blockchain DLT Summit at Lima, Peru (November 14). Thanks to the summit sponsors UTEC, R3, BCP, and Microsoft Peru.
Bitcoin is a well-known technological achievement in the digital age. More individuals recognise its benefits as it becomes more widely available and utilised.
Blockchain in Banking Bucharest Meetup C1 “The fourth industrial revolution will be built upon a Machine-to-Machine economy with autonomous vehicles, 3D printer, robots, drones and IoT.
Blockchain Technology and Its Application in LibrariesNabi Hasan
Background
Blockchain: Conceptual Understanding
What is Blockchain Technology?
The Three Pillars of Blockchain Technology
Why is Blockchain Popular?
What is Distributed Ledger?
Blockchain for Enterprise Application Developer
Possible Areas of Implimention of Blockchain Technology in Libraries
Blockchain 101 talks about blockchain from a very basic perspective (non-technical). This presentation gives you an idea of what blockchain really is beyond cryptocurrency, different types of the blockchain, components of a blockchain, essentials of the blockchain, and myths about blockchain. this presentation also throws light on major applications of the blockchain , its advantages and limitations, major consortiums and startups in this space and the timeline of development. we also tried to include how a use case for blockchain can be identified and how startups need to go about building a blockchain product or services
This presentation was developed by Jithin Babu and Sakshi Manthanwar. Both of them are blockchain researchers and consultants.
For more info regarding presentation kindly contact
jithinbabu555@yahoo.com
1. How the Royal Bank of Scotland is approaching research and innovation
2. What we have looked at in the distributed ledger space
3. Example: Building a digital wallet on the Hyperledger Fabric
4. What we've learnt about Hyperledger and other DLs
5. The challenges we face as a bank and as blockchain developers
6. Thoughts for the future
Just how closely should financial executives be paying attention? Is the disruption of blockchain technology a distant rumble or an imminent strike? Fintech is shaking the foundation of the traditional financial services industry and blockchain alone could be a game-changer, transforming transactions, custody, accounting, currency exchange, and more.
Navigating the associated business implications and expected timeline is no easy task for financial professionals. This webinar can help firms sift through the noise and will identify the most significant blockchain trends and tangible applications.
Sponsored by ALFI
This presentation was made at the March 3, 2016 "Disruptive Innovations in Financial Services" Conference sponsored by the Institute for Financial Services Analytics at the Lerner College of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware.
Blockchain for Financial Institutions (the beginning)Karnan Ariaratnam
Organizations ranging from small start-ups to major global banks and government agencies are already investing in Blockchain technology, is your organization thinking about it?
See our point of view on Blockchain, please reach out to me to discuss further (karnan.ariaratnam@ca.pwc.com)
Evaluating the potential of blockchain technology to radically transform business
[Feel free to download the presentation if you'd like to view it offline]
Overview of blockchain technology and architectureEY
The adoption of blockchain technology continues to accelerate across a wide array of industries, yet many of our clients are confused about how to deploy these solutions within their environment. EY has developed a blockchain stack that fits within the existing enterprise infrastructure, project and system development life cycle approaches that are customized to the new technology, and development frameworks to streamline our deployment.
Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? This webinar examines blockchain and the role it plays in supply chain by providing traceability.
Part of the webinar series: BLOCKCHAIN BASICS 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
Blockchain and Supply Chain (Series: Blockchain Basics)Financial Poise
Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions account affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? We have assembled for this discussion a builder of blockchain-based traceability solutions, a traceability entrepreneur via blockchain and other means, and an intellectual property attorney (and former software engineer) who advises clients on technology-driven transactions.
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-supply-chain-2020/
Blockchain and Smart Contracts (Series: Blockchain Basics 2020) Financial Poise
Blockchain is a tool. Samson Williams likens blockchain to a group text message, in which each participant receives a distributed, time-stamped, tamper-resistant (and encrypted) record of data transactions. Each group text has these characteristics. Everyone in the group “sees” the data, and none can change or gainsay any group message. Smart contracts are computer code put on the blockchain (how, exactly?) that establishes self-executing terms and conditions of a transaction. Are smart contracts smart? If certain data comes in and fulfills a pre-set term or condition, then rights and responsibilities are formed, terminated, modified, or shifted among the parties. Ah certainty and transparency, but also ah garbage in and garbage out. Are some contractual terms not amenable to smart contracting? And are smart contracts necessarily contracts? If not, can they still be useful? If a smart contract is a contract, what is the governing document? Is it the words business people and lawyers use, or is it the code that is supposed to reflect the words?
To view the accompanying webinar, go to: https://www.financialpoise.com/financial-poise-webinars/blockchain-and-smart-contracts-2020/
Blockchain is a tool. Samson Williams likens blockchain to a group text message, in which each participant receives a distributed, time-stamped, tamper-resistant (and encrypted) record of data transactions. Each group text has these characteristics. Everyone in the group “sees” the data, and none can change or gainsay any group message. Smart contracts are computer code put on the blockchain (how, exactly?) that establishes self-executing terms and conditions of a transaction. Are smart contracts smart? If certain data comes in and fulfills a pre-set term or condition, then rights and responsibilities are formed, terminated, modified, or shifted among the parties. Ah certainty and transparency, but also ah garbage in and garbage out. Are some contractual terms not amenable to smart contracting? And are smart contracts necessarily contracts? If not, can they still be useful? If a smart contract is a contract, what is the governing document? Is it the words business people and lawyers use, or is it the code that is supposed to reflect the words?
Part of the webinar series: Blockchain Basics 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
Blockchain Innovation In Healthcare & Life SciencesIFAH
A session by Michael Irish, CEO, Vivacitas Healthcare on the topic of 'Blockchain Innovation In Healthcare & Life Sciences' at IFAH USA 2019 held at Caesars Palace, 18-20 June, 2019.
It explains the concept of Blockchain which is going revolutionize the world economy. Blockchain is going to change money, business and thus the world.
Blockchain in Banking, Business and BeyondMichael Novak
An introduction to Blockchain, Smart Contracts, and use cases in industries such as Digital Identification, eCommerce, Healthcare, Government, and Finance.
Blockchain in Media. Description of blockchain and smart contracts. Presented Media pain points and possible solutions. Peeped into various frameworks built on Hyperledger fabric and ethereum for media
The ecosystem supporting blockchain technology has matured to the point where the rollout of multiple enterprise blockchain solutions is imminent. This is technology that cannot be ignored by any industry as it poses both a threat and an opportunity for organisations. This paper outlines the potential of blockchain technology.
A blockchain is essentially a distributed database of records or public ledger of all transactions or digital events that have been executed and shared among participating parties. Each transaction in the public ledger is verified by consensus of a majority of the participants in the system. And, once entered, information can never be erased. The blockchain contains a certain and verifiable record of every single transaction ever made. To use a basic analogy, it is easy to steal a cookie from a cookie jar, kept in a secluded place than stealing the cookie from a cookie jar kept in a marketplace, being observed by thousands of people. In the report, it distinguishes between multiple types of blockchains and explains the two biggest platforms, namely Bitcoin and Ethereum. While introducing those two platforms we explain the most important technology and algorithms used such as proof of work concept. Some of the security issues and solutions are also covered. We conclude with some concrete Ethereum based applications that demonstrate the usage of blockchain technology beyond cryptocurrency and illustrate current developments in this field.
Blockchain in Banking: A Measured ApproachCognizant
Here's our foundational view on what the financial services industry needs to consider as organizations move from ideation to experimentation to pilot deployments of blockchain.
All about Blockchain Technology and it's applications in Finance functionvinodavg
Blockchain Technology is a vast, distributed ledger, operating on millions of devices, recording anything, with identical copies maintained on each of the network computers. When a new transaction or an edit to an existing transaction comes in, generally a majority of the nodes within a blockchain network must execute some algorithms and essentially evaluate and verify the history of the transaction that is proposed and come to a consensus that the history and signature is valid, then the new transaction is accepted into the ledger. If a majority of nodes do not concede to the addition or modification of the ledger entry, then it is denied and not added to the chain. All the members can review previous entries and record new transactions. These are then grouped into ‘blocks’, which then form part of a ‘chain’, thus leading to a ‘blockchain
Blockchain Introduction - Canada Nov 2017.pptxAntony Welfare
Back in 2017 I joined the world of #Blockchain and presented my first ever Blockchain presentation on 14th November 2017 at a Tech meetup in Penticton, BC (Canada)
A few key highlights:
* The fundamentals of Blockchain technology have not changed (Trust, Transparency, Security, Quality/Certainty, Reduced costs)
* We were talking about Web 3.0 back in 2017 😉
* People still miss define Blockchain
* Janet Yellen and Christine Lagarde were commenting on Blockchain back in 2017
* Checkout the Dapps section – I was ahead of my time there!
* And the last three slides on the Market cap and increases – I was excited to tell people the market cap was $200bn, BTC was $8,000 and ETH was nearly $400 ……… Ahhh the good old days 😉
And finally – my “leaders comment” back in 2017 still stands “Blockchain is the next disruptive technology to transform the lives of our customers and our business operations”
What a journey so far…and guess what…its only just begun 👍👍👍
IP-301 POST-GRANT REVIEW TRIALS 2022 - Things to Consider Before You FileFinancial Poise
This segment will delve into considerations that come into play when filing or responding to post-grant review proceedings. These considerations include issues of real party in interest, timing, and substantive arguments.
Part of the webinar series: IP-301 POST-GRANT REVIEW TRIALS 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
This segment will discuss the statutory and procedural background of post-grant review proceedings. It will discuss the types of proceedings available and provide a high-level discussion of how the proceedings are conducted.
Part of the webinar series:
IP-301 POST-GRANT REVIEW TRIALS 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
THE NUTS & BOLTS OF BANKRUPTCY LAW 2022: The Nuts & Bolts of a First Day HearingFinancial Poise
Even when a bankruptcy petition is the result of a soft-landing rather than a freefall, filing a chapter 11 petition is a disruptive event. To facilitate the debtor’s entry into chapter 11 with as little disruption as possible, first day motions are filed to ensure that a debtor-in-possession can minimize interruptions and continue operating its business in order to achieve its goals in chapter 11. This webinar provides an overview of the administrative and operational first day motions typically filed by chapter 11 debtors and the process for requesting a first day hearing, providing notice of the hearing, and ensuring that the hearing runs smoothly.
Part of the webinar series: THE NUTS & BOLTS OF BANKRUPTCY LAW 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
RESTRUCTURING, INSOLVENCY & TROUBLED COMPANIES 2022: Bad Debtor Owes Me Money!Financial Poise
Sometimes it begins when a client, tenant, or customer starts to slow-pay, with the result that your accounts receivable start to accrue gradually. Other times the issue presents itself more suddenly. Either way, you find your company owed a great deal of money that looks like it may not be collected because your client/tenant/customer has filed bankruptcy, has commenced an assignment for the benefit of creditors, has been put into receivership, or is otherwise just plain insolvent. What do you do? What should you not do? The topics discussed in this webinar include the pros and cons of putting a counterparty into involuntary bankruptcy; when and how you may be able to pursue third parties (like guarantors, directors, or officers) for the amount owed; risks related to preference attack; pros and cons of sitting on a “creditors’ committee” in a Chapter 11; how to negotiate for “critical vendor” protection in Chapter 11; and practical guidance for continuing to provide goods or services to an insolvent counterparty.
Part of the webinar series: RESTRUCTURING, INSOLVENCY & TROUBLED COMPANIES 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
We’ve all long heard about writing practices to avoid, including run-on sentences, excessive passive voice, and nominalization. This webinar not only discusses how those habits can damage briefs, but also explores a key habit brief-writers should embrace: using strong, precise verbs, which are the engine of a persuasive sentence. Panelists also exchange views about finding the most persuasive voice and tone, as well as the right temperature for rhetoric.
Part of the webinar series: PERSUASIVE BRIEF WRITING 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
CYBER SECURITY and DATA PRIVACY 2022: Data Breach Response - Before and After...Financial Poise
You’ve received the dreaded call that your company has just suffered a data breach – what do you do next? Who do you call for help? What notification obligations do you have?
With proper preparation, you can mitigate the damage caused by this unfortunate event and put your business in a position to recover. Your company may have already implemented its information security program and identified the responsible parties, including applicable outside experts, to be contacted in the event of a breach. However, now you must call up your incident response team to investigate the extent of the breach, evaluate the possible damage to your company, and determine whether you must notify your clients, customers, or the public of the breach. This webinar will help prepare you to take action when the worst happens.
Part of the webinar series:
CYBER SECURITY and DATA PRIVACY 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
CYBER SECURITY and DATA PRIVACY 2022_How to Build and Implement your Company'...Financial Poise
Data is one of your business’s most valuable assets and requires protection like any other asset. How can you protect your data from unauthorized access or inadvertent disclosure?
An information security program is designed to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of your company’s data and information technology assets. Federal, state, or international law may also require your business to have an information security program in place.
This webinar will provide the basics of how to create and implement an information security program, beginning with identifying your incident response team, putting applicable insurance policies into place, and closing any gaps in the security of your data.
Part of the webinar series:
CYBERSECURITY & DATA PRIVACY 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
NEWBIE LITIGATOR SCHOOL - 101 Part 3 2022 - Enforcement: Post-Judgment Procee...Financial Poise
Obtaining a final and enforceable judgment is often just the first phase of the civil litigation process; without effective enforcement and collection, a judgment is merely a piece of paper (or electronic docket entry). This webinar provides an overview of the technical, procedural and strategic considerations necessary to monetize judgments and make litigation worthwhile.
Part of the webinar series: NEWBIE LITIGATOR SCHOOL - 101 Part 3 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
NEWBIE LITIGATOR SCHOOL - 101 Part 3 2022 -Appellate Practice- 101 Financial Poise
When is an appeal permitted and when should you take one? What rules and procedures govern appellate practice and how can you best avoid technical and procedural mistakes. How are appellate briefs different from those filed with the trial court and what are some keys to making them successful? And how can you best prepare for appellate oral argument? This webinar explores these questions and more with a panel of experienced appellate litigators.
Part of the webinar series: NEWBIE LITIGATOR SCHOOL - 101 Part 3 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
MARKETING TIPS FOR THE NEW (OR OLD!) BUSINESS OWNER 2022: Learn How to Do Con...Financial Poise
There's creating content; then there's creating great content; and then there's creating great content that actually gets seen by the ideal audience. Each of those layers has its own unique challenges. In this webinar episode, we share insights from a variety of highly experienced content creators. Each panelist member provides their own unique spin on how to create great content that gets seen by the intended audience. By the completion of this episode, the audience member will have a clear and actionable plan on how to create outstanding content that meets their unique marketing needs.
Part of the webinar series: MARKETING TIPS FOR THE NEW (OR OLD!) BUSINESS OWNER 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
CHAPTER 11 - INDUSTRY FOCUS 2022 - Focus on Oil and Gas Financial Poise
Although issues in oil and gas chapter 11 cases vary from case to case, there are, nonetheless, certain issues that tend to arise in most oil and gas cases. Among them: treatment of oil and gas leases, the payment of royalties, hedging agreements, and valuation. This webinar addresses such issues.
Part of the webinar series: CHAPTER 11 - INDUSTRY FOCUS 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
BUSINESS LAW REVIEW- 2022: Selling a Business Financial Poise
A Startup is the Founders’ baby - they dream it, created it and worked tirelessly to make it successful. Deciding it may be time to sell all or part is the easy part - acknowledging and addressing the financial and emotional issues can be challenging.
Negotiating with potential buyers or investors is time intensive, to say the least. Positioning a business for a value maximizing transaction requires planning. What professionals need to be engaged? How do the parties come to a valuation? What is the profile of the likely investor or buyer? These are just some of the questions this webinar addresses.
Part of the webinar series: BUSINESS LAW REVIEW- 2022
See more at https://www.financialpoise.com/webinars/
BUSINESS LAW REVIEW- 2022: Immigration Law for Business-101Financial Poise
A basic understanding of immigration law is critical to a vast array of businesses operating in today’s economy. Foreign employees and their sponsoring companies will navigate a complex maze in the attempt to achieve the desired goals of the employee maximizing their ability to provide services and value to the company. One of various determining factors as to which pathway to attempt is whether the goal is an immigrant visa (also known as a “green card”) which may ultimately allow lawful permanent residence in the United States or a non-immigrant visa. The need for foreign labor affects various industries and applies to large segments of skilled, unskilled and semi-skilled workers in jobs ranging from farm to seasonal to high-tech. This webinar explains what businesses need to know in the current environment as well as how political and globalization issues will affect immigration laws going forward.
Part of the webinar series:
BUSINESS LAW REVIEW- 2022
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Expert witnesses are an integral part of modern commercial litigation. They can be used for everything from calculating damages to explaining software workflows to establishing industry standards. This webinar begins with an exploration of the common types of cases that call for use of expert testimony. From there, we discuss the rules governing experts, including expert disclosures, discovery, and expert depositions. We also discuss the Daubert standard for excluding expert testimony, and discuss how a successful Daubert motion may be brought. This hour will help you figure out when and how to hire your own expert, and will give you some ideas on how to challenge your opponent’s expert when the time comes.
Part of the webinar series:
NEWBIE LITIGATOR SCHOOL - Part I 2022
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Executive compensation continues its movement towards performance pay as the standard. Compensation structures and proxy disclosures are more and more complex. Investors and proxy advisors continue to increase influence on compensation issues. This webinar examines executive compensation, including equity-based compensation plans and executive employment and severance agreements. The importance of disclosure, alignment of risk, and metrics is also examined. Practical guidance on pay-for-performance and supplemental pay definitions is provided. The panelists discuss the effect of the Dodd-Frank Act on executive compensation, including SEC regulations. Exchange rules are compared to applicable federal law. Best practices regarding executive compensation committees and regulatory requirements for those committees are examined. Shareholder advisory groups promulgate executive compensation related advisory policies for their institutional shareholder clients annually and these policies are also discussed. Issues regarding board composition and leadership structure issues are discussed in relation to executive compensation.
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The Securities and Exchange Commission has been entrusted with a significant corporate compliance regulatory function, which has been expanded by seminal legislation in the recent past such as the Sarbanes-Oxley (“SOX”) and Dodd-Frank Acts. This webinar discusses board fiduciary duties and the tension between state corporate law standards and federal law. Board composition, independence, structure and processes (including best practices in regard to committees) are analyzed. Specifically, director independence is discussed as is audit committees and related requirements, regulations and exemptions. NASDAQ and the NYSE also have similar requirements for director independence and those are also discussed. The webinar also covers disclosure matters related to SOX compliance, including timing and content of an issuer's periodic disclosures. Both the legal requirements and best practices related to disclosure procedures and internal controls under SOX are examined. Means of controlling the costs of SOX, especially for smaller public companies, are also discussed, including trends in the industry related to high regulatory compliance costs. Finally, the applicability and best practices for privately held companies and SOX are considered.
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The deal is complete, and the parties have finished the hard work. Or have they? Integration planning turns to execution as people, process, and technology are combined once the deal is legally closed. The buyer will need to consider the purchased business or assets from the standpoint of employees, IT, customers, suppliers, and a multitude of other areas. In addition, numerous post-closing legal issues may arise, including purchase price adjustments, breaches of representations and warranties, enforcement of key negative employment-related covenants and restrictive covenants, collection of pre-closing accounts receivable, and true-ups of final financials. This episode guides listeners through the process, timing, and issues which most commonly arise after the closing of deals.
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M&A BOOT CAMP - 2022
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Although every deal is different, understanding any purchase/sale agreement will help you understand other purchase sale agreements. Stated another way, most M&A documents include a similar set of sections and use a similar vocabulary. This episode explains specific, common provisions and discusses how buyers and sellers approach these provisions differently, particularly in light of situational differences (e.g. whether the assets being bought and sold are equity of a company or the assets of a company; whether the seller is going to cease to exists or not). Topics covered will include tax issues; corporate governance; closing conditions; representations and warranties; indemnification provisions; earn-outs; restrictive covenants; antitrust; intellectual property; and employment issues.
Part of the webinar series:
M&A BOOT CAMP - 2022
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Buying, selling, or merging a company typically follows a similar set of steps from deal to deal. The amount of time each step takes varies but the order of the steps is fairly uniform because the steps follow a certain logic: before the parties share meaningful information, they should sign a confidentiality agreement (a/k/a “non-disclosure agreement,” or “NDA”); once a baseline amount of information is known by the would-be buyer, it commonly presents a letter of intent or term sheet to the target or its owner, which serves as an outline for a deal but does not necessarily bind the parties to consummate the transaction; additional due diligence and the negotiation, drafting and signing of definitive documents comes next. The parties then obtain any needed regulatory and/or contractual third party approvals; followed by closing; and finally by post-closing tasks. This webinar will discuss all these steps from a macro perspective so that you can see the forest for the trees, but does not do a deep dive into any single topic. Think of this webinar as a road map or timeline for a typical deal.
Part of the webinar series:
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This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
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Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
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A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
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Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
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Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
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Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
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unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
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Pride Month Slides 2024 David Douglas School District
Blockchain and Supply Chain
1.
2. 2
Practical and entertaining education for
attorneys, accountants, business owners and
executives, and investors.
3.
4. Disclaimer
The material in this webinar is for informational purposes only. It should not be considered
legal, financial or other professional advice. You should consult with an attorney or other
appropriate professional to determine what may be best for your individual needs. While
Financial Poise™ takes reasonable steps to ensure that information it publishes is accurate,
Financial Poise™ makes no guaranty in this regard.
4
5. Meet the Faculty
MODERATOR:
Chris Cahill - Sugar Felsenthal Grais & Helsinger LLP
PANELISTS:
Leonardo Bonanni - SOURCEMAP
Joseph Koo - Armanino LLP
Matt Liotine- University of Illinois-Chicago
Dan Waterloo - Interface Technologies
5
6. About This Webinar – Blockchain and Supply Chain
Traceability of components of products - from food to fashion - is central to the promise of
using blockchain to organize and operationalize data from the web of supply chains. How
would traceability bring value? How do blockchain and smart contracts work? And how would
these foster traceability? What has been done so far in this regard? What issues and tensions
affect adoption of traceability, whether by blockchain or other means? This webinar examines
blockchain and the role it plays in supply chain by providing traceability.
6
7. About This Series – Blockchain Basics
In Dr. Strangelove, a party created a “doomsday machine” that would automatically destroy all life if the machine
detected a nuclear attack on that party. There was no override, and, well, let’s just say that the film is hilarious but
probably not a comedy in a conventional sense. There, if the “network” received certain information, the device would
activate. Like a smart contract on a blockchain, the problem in Dr. Strangelove was that the party that created the
doomsday machine activated it before telling its adversary (i.e., the other network participant). That “smart contract” was
critically not smart. Blockchain smart contracts (with much smaller but still meaningful stakes) are computer code
designed to adjust automatically the rights and obligations of network participants based upon the inputting of information
to the network, with such information visible to all and inputted per means and procedures agreed upon by all before the
contracts become effective. And thus paper-intensive, multi-step and multi-party transactions, like securities sales,
supply chain coordination, and supply chain finance, might proceed with greater ease and security. Costs could be
lowered, transactional speed quickened, and litigation simplified or evaded entirely. We will examine these areas of
promise.
Each Financial Poise Webinar is delivered in Plain English, understandable to investors, business owners, and
executives without much background in these areas, yet is of primary value to attorneys, accountants, and other
seasoned professionals. Each episode brings you into engaging, sometimes humorous, conversations designed to
entertain as it teaches. Each episode in the series is designed to be viewed independently of the other episodes so that
participants will enhance their knowledge of this area whether they attend one, some, or all episodes.
7
8. Episodes in this Series
#1: Blockchain and Smart Contracts
Premiere date: 7/22/21
#2: Blockchain and Supply Chain
Premiere date: 8/19/21
#3: Evolution of Trade Finance Technology
Premiere date: 9/23/21
8
10. What is Blockchain?
• A ledger
• Not stored in any one place
• Composed of a decentralized network of nodes
• New data on the blockchain must be verified by a majority of nodes
• Verification occurs by executing energy-intensive cryptographic calculations
• Once validated, a block of data is added to the chain
• Blocks may never be removed or edited
10
11. What is Blockchain?
• Decentralized – data on the blockchain is not stored in any single place but distributed
across many nodes
• Immutable – once data is added to the blockchain, it cannot be removed, edited or
backdated
11
12. Types of Blockchains
• Public Blockchains (permission-less)
• Private Blockchains (permissioned)
12
13. From Centralized Ledger to Decentralized
• Blockchain establishes a decentralized ledger, by contrast to the familiar centralized
ledger, with a custodian or administrator being trusted to process monetary transactions and
manage the transfer of property
• See the two diagram on the following pages, from David Sneyd, “Blockchain solutions to
ESG problems” (BMO Global Asset Management, Oct. 2018)
13
15. How Does Blockchain Establish a Decentralized Ledger?
• Participant makes an entry, i.e., creates a new block
• Proposed transaction is broadcast to each participant on the network
• Validity of the new block is subject to pre-set criteria and a complex algorithm called
“proof of work”
• A majority of miners conclude that transaction is valid
• New block is created and time-stamped
• All are provided with an updated version of the ledger:
15
17. Some Components of a Blockchain
• Each block contains:
✓ A “hash,” which is a digital fingerprint or unique identifier
✓ Time-stamped batches of recent valid transactions
✓ And the hash of the previous block
• The previous block hash links the blocks together and prevents the past form being
altered or rewritten
• Each subsequent block strengthens the verification of previous blocks (and the entire
blockchain)
17
18. Some Components of a Blockchain, 2
• Proof of work requires high computational capacity, provided by “miners”
• Miners supply the network with computing power, to allow the updating of the database
• A majority of mining power must be able to confirm the new blocks by decrypting the data
• Once a “block” (a record of a purchases and sales created by miners by solving a
mathematical puzzle that validates the transactions) is added to the network ledger of
older transaction (the “chain”), such record on the blockchain can’t be changed or
reversed (i.e., the transaction is immutable)
• Thus a blockchain, to be non-falsifiable, must not have any operator holding at any time
more than half of the computational power of the chain
18
19. According to Satoshi
• A coin can be defined as a chain of digital signatures
• The input to each transaction is the output of one or more other transactions
• The balance in your Bitcoin wallet is the sum of your unspent transactions
• The coins in your wallet can be traced all the way back to the miner that mined it
19
20. So What is Gained by Going from a Centralized to a
Decentralized Ledger?
• If a bank or credit card company keeping a centralized ledger is hacked, then other
participants lose access to their data
• With a decentralized ledger, all participants keep a copy of the data
• With a decentralized ledger, there is no extra cost of (or litigation from) efforts to
synchronize records kept by counterparties to a transaction
20
21. Smart Contracts
• Smart contracts are “self-executing contracts with the terms of the agreement between [a]
buyer and seller being directly written into lines of code. Once a smart contract has been
created, computer transaction protocols will execute the terms of a contract automatically
based on a set of conditions.” Rensel v. Centra Tech, Inc., 2018 WL 4410110 at *10 (S.D.
Fla. June 14, 2018). The promise re smart contracts:
✓ Self-executing
✓ Additional parties not needed to monitor the transactions
✓ Greater cost efficiency and faster transaction speed
• To determine whether contractual conditions are met, smart contracts use “oracles,”
which are agreed-upon real-time data providers which confirm triggering events
21
22. According to the CDC
• Each year, 48 Million Americans are sickened by a Food Bourne Illness.
• Globally, over 600 Million People are affected.
• The problem causes $55 Billion to $90 Billion in economic loss Each year.
22
23. Blockchain Solution
• Food Traceability is a series of inputs & outputs.
• Blockchain stores data in terms of inputs and outputs.
• Blockchain transfers assets across identities.
• Blockchain nodes are public, protected, and easy to implement.
23
25. A Proposed GS1 Numbering System that Works with
Blockchain
• PTI label is the GS1 formatted label that goes on around 60% of all produce sold in the
US. GS1 is a worldwide organization: its website for the US is https://www.gs1us.org/
✓ All companies that sell in a store are members of GS1: the UPC barcode is managed by
GS1
✓ The GTIN (Global Trade Identification Number) uniquely identifies items worldwide
✓ Items can be identified on the blockchain by address, GTIN, and lot number
✓ GLN is global location number representing each factory or shipping location
✓ Companies that sell at retail and need UPC codes for their products must join GS1
✓ Others on the supply chain join because a party requires it (adoption rate declines earlier
in the supply chain)
25
26. Supply Chain, End to End
• Hundreds of shipping links
• Thousands of vendors, manufacturers, distributors, customers
• Data validation, chain-of-custody reporting, supplier
benchmarking, risk heat maps and alerts, emergency response
• The above parties and factors interact dynamically
• A dashboard display might be needed for “visibility” of a simple supply chain, with data
shifting in real-time
26
27. Supply Chain Desiderata
• Provenance of goods (quality, safety, compliance with norms and regulations re:
environmental and labor and other factors)
• More accurate forecasts and product adjustments
• More efficient allocation of talent and capital assets
• More accurate and efficient inputs for financing supply and insuring credit
27
28. Blockchain-Managed Supply Chain: A Few Key
Components
• Purchase Orders
• Ocean Bill of Lading
• Automated Manifest System (required to be field for goods entering the US)
• Importer Security Filing (same)
• Customs Clearance (same)
28
29. Blockchain-Managed Purchase Orders on Blockchain
• Create indelible record of each step (block)
• Execute encrypted actions (identification of parties, authentication of transaction, time-
stamping blocks)
• Digitization upon the ledger of aspects of the contractual agreements, i.e., smart contracts
• Purchase Orders embed within them many business rules (cover price, currency,
quantities, ship date, Incoterms Rules – which may change over the course of the
movement of goods and components (e.g., production capacity of supplier, changes in
raw material costs)
• As each step in the process is verified, invoices can be triggered by smart contracts upon
proof of delivery, the ID of goods can be verified (or not)
Per “Blockchain for Supply Chain: Smart Contracts & Purchase Order Management” (Amber Road White Paper)
29
30. Smart Contract: Smart Invoices
• Euler Hermes has provided trade credit insurance for over 100 years, and is looking at blockchain-
based “smart invoices” (to help manage transaction for which it provides insurance)
• It experimented with having companies upload their invoices onto the Ethereum “Smart Contract”
blockchain
• When a supplier’s invoice is uploaded, the smart contract “reads” it to learn payment due date,
amount, and the purchaser’s identity
• Smart contract then identifies the network of suppliers for that purchaser
• If the supplier is not paid timely, the smart contract can “decide” (based upon rules coded into it),
whether to send an alert (and what kind of alert) to the other suppliers in the network
• PURPOSE: to forestall other payment defaults, lessen trading with insolvent purchaser, and lower
risk of insurable events
• Pierre Sein, “Invoices on Blockchain at EHDA” (Medium, July 27, 2017) at
https://medium.com/@pierresein/invoices-on-blockchain-at-ehda-85d03a929062 (visited Aug. 21, 2019)
30
31. Blockchain 50: Billion Dollar Babies (Forbes, April
16, 2019)
Note: the article includes links to “full profile” of each enterprise described
• Bumble Bee Foods: transparency in the tuna supply chain form catch to grocery stores
• Cargill: using Intel’s Hyperledger Sawtooth to track turkeys through its supply chain;
worked with Intel and Bitwise to build Hyperledger Grid to sell to others
• Foxconn: pilot projects to use blockchain to streamline supply chains and provide working
capital to suppliers
• Golden State Foods: participating in IBM’s Food Trust (consortium of companies seeking
to track food across entire supply chain) and leading effort to track temperatures at which
beef is kept
• IBM: created “IBM Blockchain” and has filed for >100 patents
31
32. Blockchain 50: Billion Dollar Babies (Forbes, April
16, 2019)
• Maersk: with IBM developed TradeLens platform, a global blockchain for shippers contra
paperwork – 100+ organizations have signed up to use TradeLens
• Nestle: testing use of IBM Food Trust to track provenance of food ingredients in baby food
and other products
• Seagate Technology: working with IBM on blockchain to track products through distribution
and life, to ensure that fake hard drives are not returned to its warehouses (and re-sold by
mistake)
• Walmart: has filed for 50 blockchain patents for tracking shipments, operating drones, and
other; focused on finding the culprit in food-safety scares; helped create the IBM Food
Trust; plans to require all lettuce and spinach suppliers to log shipments on blockchain
32
34. About The Faculty
Chris Cahill - CCahill@sfgh.com
Mr. Cahill is partner at Sugar Felsenthal Grais & Helsinger LLP, in Chicago, Illinois. He guides
secured lenders, creditors, debtors, creditors’ committees, potential purchasers and others
through bankruptcy cases, out-of-court workouts, assignments for the benefit of creditors, and
receiverships. Mr. Cahill has substantial mega-case experience representing very large
debtors, and counsels and litigates on behalf of manufacturers and secured lenders in large
and middle-market cases. Mr. Cahill also publishes frequently and speaks regularly on
commercial insolvency issues. For example, he is an executive editor of Commercial
Bankruptcy Litigation, 2d Edition (Jonathan P. Friedland & Christopher M. Cahill eds., 2021).
34
35. About The Faculty
Leonardo Bonanni - leonardo.bonanni@gmail.com
Leonardo Bonanni is the founder and CEO of Sourcemap, the supply chain transparency
platform. Sourcemap helps manufacturers and brands trace products from raw materials to
end consumers, and in the process save money, reduce risk, and improve social and
environmental compliance. Leo has been named among the ‘Most Influential People in
Business Ethics’ by Ethisphere, and among ‘America’s Most Promising Social Entrepreneurs’
by Bloomberg Businessweek. He is a supply chain transparency advocate, a designer and
engineer. He developed Sourcemap as part of his PhD at the MIT Media Lab in 2006. He also
teaches at NYU is a visiting researcher at MIT.
35
36. About The Faculty
Joseph Koo - Joseph.Koo@armaninoLLP.com
Senior Consultant – Digital Asset & Blockchain
Joseph is part of Armanino’s Digital Asset & Blockchain team, which is at the forefront of
developing innovative solutions and creating standards for the Digital Asset ecosystem.
Previously Joseph was at Deloitte, where he explored the blockchain technology and the use
cases for the technology in depth.
36
38. About The Faculty
Dan Waterloo - dan@i-t.com
Dan is a native Chicagoan. He has a BS in Electrical Engineering from University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. He received an
MBA from Keller Graduate School of Business. He received a Masters of Project Management from Keller Graduate School of
Business in1991.
After college, Dan worked for Schlumberger Well Services, in the oil fields of West Texas. He moved back to Chicago in 1979,
selling test equipment to Electrical Engineers (EEs) (Tektronix). Then he sold electronics components to EEs as a Manufacturer's
Representative (Dolin Sales). In 1984, started selling Computer Aided Design (CAD) tools to Electrical Engineers (Cadence
Design Systems). In 1993, he became a VAR (Value added reseller) of CAD software (self employed). As an entrepreneur, Dan
had to learn marketing, developed a direct mail company, and email marketing company, as well as digital marketing service. In
the early 2000’s, Dan created a 'private cloud'... currently consisting of about 50 servers that provide digital marketing and
communication services. In 2017, Dan started teaching 'Entrepreneurship in Industry' INTM 477 at IIT. That same year, he started
co-chairing the Blockchain and Crypto currencies Special interest group at FinTank.org (Chicago fintech incubator/accelerator)
2020. He taught IBM Skills Academy Blockchain for Business class at IIT. In 2021, he is teaching MBA 534 (Blockchain) at Stuart
School of Business. Dan truly has a diverse background in technology and business. He is an E=entrepreneur, pivoting as
business conditions evolved. He has a personal interest in Blockchain and currency/cryptocurrency
38
39. Questions or Comments?
If you have any questions about this webinar that you did not get to ask during the live
premiere, or if you are watching this webinar On Demand, please do not hesitate to email us
at info@financialpoise.com with any questions or comments you may have. Please include
the name of the webinar in your email and we will do our best to provide a timely response.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The material in this presentation is for general educational purposes
only. It has been prepared primarily for attorneys and accountants for use in the pursuit of
their continuing legal education and continuing professional education.
39
40. About Financial Poise
40
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