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Microsoft

Microsoft Is Shutting Down Its Azure Blockchain Service (zdnet.com) 44

Microsoft is shutting down its Azure Blockchain Service on September 10, 2021. Existing deployments will be supported until that date, but as of May 10 this year, no new deployments or member creation is being supported. ZDNet reports: Microsoft's initial foray into Azure Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) began in 2015 with an offering on the Etherum Platform with ConsenSys. In late January 2016, Microsoft made available a preview of a lab environment in Azure's DevTest Labs so that Blockchain-related services and partners can decouple the Blockchain technology from virtual machines. Microsoft's short-term goal for the Azure BaaS was to make available a certified blockchain marketplace. In the interim, the focus was to add blockchain partners of all kinds, rather than trying to pick a limited number of potential winners, officials said.

Microsoft ended up fielding a preview of Azure BaaS, but lately had not done much to update the service. However, Microsoft's product page for Azure BaaS lists GE, J.P. Morgan, Singapore Airlines, Starbucks and Xbox as customers. Microsoft's documentation suggests users start migrating to an alternative now. The recommended migration destination is ConsenSys Quorum Blockchain Service. Users also could opt to self-manage their blockhains using VMs.

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Microsoft Is Shutting Down Its Azure Blockchain Service

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  • Or corporate ball and chain?
  • chain of fools.

  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday May 13, 2021 @09:03PM (#61382678)
    Blockchain going down the tubes with no replacement buzzword in sight!
  • https://yro.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]
    What else is Disney going to use to implement there brilliant blockchain antipiracy platform?

    • Why would anyone want to pirate Disneys crap. They have been making the same movie over and over again for over 50 years.
  • From a May12 article in EhackingNews..

    "Cybersecurity researchers have said a threat actor has been adding malicious servers into the Tor network to intercept traffic heading to cryptocurrency websites and carry out SSL stripping attacks on users while accessing mixing websites. The threat actor, through its exit relays, performed an SSL stripping attack on traffic headed towards cryptocurrency websites, downgrading the encrypted HTTPS connection to plaintext HTTP. In the case of the attacks against the
  • Microsoft has a blockchain service? I had no idea.
  • Without the possibility to connect nodes outside of Azure it was rather useless anyway. Seems like Microsoft didn't understand the blockchain eco system in the first place.
    • All blockchain services are useless. The only people who thought they were a good idea for anything were the marketing people, or technical people who didn't understand it (which basically means marketing people).

      Strew your data around in containers everywhere where literally the only thing keeping you from disaster is a single cryptographic primitive. Cryptography is great, and we use it daily for many things. But for the most part it's a safety railing. I am in the navy and we tell people every day wh

      • The concept that you can create a unique data type that can be verified by/as a service to any platform that uses the data? That is not a bad idea, but creating the same instance of data on the same platform that needs it verified? Then using that same platform as the verifier? That Is an Operating System... nothing new or more secure in that idea.
    • Not suggesting their service is good or bad as I have not tried it, but it sounds more like you don't understand blockchain. Blockchain in most commercial systems has absolutely no need to connect to external nodes.
      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        I keep reading this. Can outline a use case for a private - as in intra-organization block chain, that is solved more easily, cheaply, or reliably, than it can be using traditional more mature solutions?

        I keep getting pulled into conversations that start out 'blockchain' and ending up with 'well I guess ${favorite database} and ${favorite message queue} would be a lot easier and compares favorably in terms of costs and risks'

        • No I can't, I never suggested Blockchain was a good solution. In fact nearly every use case I have ever scene traditional methods make more sense, which is proibably why services like this are now shutting down as the hype train is passing and the reality that blockchain doesn't actually do much that can't already be done easier and more efficiently is setting in.
      • Blockchains only make sense when connected to external nodes. For all data storage requirements within your company: use a database!
    • "Seems like Microsoft didn't understand the blockchain eco system"

      Or maybe they understood all too well that they had customers demanding blockchain for no good reason but were still trying to throw their money away.

  • by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Friday May 14, 2021 @03:48AM (#61383302)

    Any traditional SQL database, such as MariaDB. It works for 99.9% of the alleged use cases of blockchain.

    However, since probably nobody is using it in production, no one will care.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      There are a decent number of applications for hash trees. The unique feature of blockchain is the absence of a central authority to control write operations though. So far, except for some experiments with currency, I haven't seen a credible purpose for that.

  • Oh my god , I never thought Microsoft will ever shut down blockchain
  • Just disappointed nobody used that as an article title for this one!

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