Sign up for our free daily newsletter
YOUR PRIVACY - PLEASE READ CAREFULLY DATA PROTECTION STATEMENT
Below we explain how we will communicate with you. We set out how we use your data in our Privacy Policy.
Global City Media, and its associated brands will use the lawful basis of legitimate interests to use
the
contact details you have supplied to contact you regarding our publications, events, training,
reader
research, and other relevant information. We will always give you the option to opt out of our
marketing.
By clicking submit, you confirm that you understand and accept the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy
The application, built by the EY Blockchain Security Lab in Israel, is now entering a private Beta test, and will allow users to monitor smart contracts and tokens for known security risks.
Making sense
The EY Smart Contract testing service will be integrated into its EY Blockchain Analyzer, the firm’s blockchain analytics, tax and monitoring platform, later in 2019 for general availability. A list of more than 250 standard tests has been developed that cover aspects ranging from known malware and coding errors to standard tests that confirm for investors that tokens are behaving according to accepted industry standards. EY say that making public blockchains secure and scalable is “a priority” for the firm. Paul Brody, EY global innovation leader, blockchain, said “Our clients are increasingly entrusting key enterprise business processes and valuable investments to software code. We don’t run enterprise computing systems without anti-virus tools and it only makes sense to run blockchain-based investment systems with smart contract and token testing tools.’
Blockchain priorities
In addition, EY has announced a suite of other blockchain solutions and upgrades, including the release of the first generation of EY Ops Chain Public Edition into the public domain. Mr Brody said “Making public blockchains secure and scalable is a priority for EY. The fastest way to spread this privacy-enhancing technology was to make it public. The gold standard in security is only achieved with the kind of intense review and testing that comes with public domain releases.” EY recently inked a deal to use legal AI company Luminance for document review, and bought Thomson Reuters’ LMS group, which has an ongoing agreement with eBrevia/Donnelley Financial for AI-powered doc review and analysis.
Email your news and story ideas to: [email protected]