Shared databases without shared trust.
Industries need shared registries—supply chains, licensing rights, credential verification. But who controls it? Traditional solutions require a trusted third party. Someone has to run the database, hold the keys, decide who gets access. That's a single point of failure and a power imbalance.
Blockchain enables true collaboration. Multiple organizations can contribute to and read from the same registry without any single entity controlling it. No administrator with special powers. No vendor holding your data hostage. Just shared infrastructure that everyone can verify.
What becomes possible.
Trustless Cooperation
Collaborate with partners or competitors without needing a third-party administrator to manage the relationship or hold the keys.
Real-Time Synchronization
Ensure all parties view the exact same data state simultaneously, eliminating reconciliation errors between different company databases.
Granular Access Control
Define exactly who can read or write specific data points, allowing for transparency where needed and privacy where required.
How collaborative registries work.
Each participant runs their own node or connects through a shared API. When one party writes data, it's cryptographically signed and broadcast to all participants. The network reaches consensus on the order of transactions, creating a single source of truth that no one controls but everyone can verify.
Immutable History
Once data is written, it cannot be altered without detection. Every change is logged, creating a complete audit trail.
Cryptographic Ownership
Your data remains yours. Private keys ensure only you can update your records, while others can read what you choose to share.
Automated Compliance
Smart contracts can enforce business rules automatically—no manual checks, no human error, no special exceptions.
Industry applications.
- Supply Chain — Multi-party tracking of goods, certifications, and handoffs across suppliers and distributors
- Identity — Shared credential verification across institutions without centralized identity providers
- Licensing — Cross-platform rights management for music, software, and intellectual property
- Real Estate — Property registries shared across agents, banks, and government agencies
- Healthcare — Medical credential verification across hospitals, insurers, and regulators

