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Introduction
This chapter introduces the integration of blockchain technology with the Internet of
Things to connect everything globally. Industry 5.0 is a new dawn in massive auto-
mated production based on the active collaboration between the creative potential of
people and accurate apparatuses. Internet of Things (IoT) can make environments
smarter, increasingly connected, and more profitable and efficient by connecting
many distributed and ubiquitously available intelligent devices and sensors through
multi-level communication infrastructures. While this should ideally map to a
decentralized hardware and software platform, current solutions are mostly based
on centralized infrastructures, with many disadvantages, e.g., high maintenance
costs, low interoperability, single point of failure, etc. An additional challenge in
supporting decentralization is achieving distributed consensus among autonomous
IoT objects [1–3]. In this view, blockchain represents a promising solution for
enabling a decentralized IoT framework [4–8]. However, due to the heterogeneity,
IoT requires addressing several additional challenges, including ensuring scalability,
interoperability, security, privacy, and efficiency [9].
Soft computing techniques are applied to analyze and classify data or predict
data from various systems—a blockchain shaped as digital transactions occurring
among the participants [10–14]. Blockchain is a peer-to-peer network where all
participating peers maintain identical copies of the distributed ledger. At the same
time, new entries containing information about transactions added to the blockchain
utilizing decentralized consensus among the peers. A blockchain is the amalgama-
tion of cryptography, critical public infrastructure, and economic modeling applied to
peer-to-peer networking and decentralized consensus to achieve distributed database
synchronization from a technological perspective. Besides its ability to digitize trans-
actions smoothly and efficiently, blockchain technology has gone mainstream in
various industries such as finance, insurance, logistics, and agriculture [14–18]. Its
unique capability is to provide “trustless” networks without centralized authorities
so data transacting nodes can reach faster reconciliation [19–23]. As a result, it
enables the flourishing of novel decentralized and fully autonomous applications
[24–29]. Such applications carry new opportunities, but they also introduce signif-
icant challenges for traditional soft computing tools and methodologies that need
to be adapted consequently. For example, the machine learning community is lever-
aging cryptographic techniques such as Multi-Party Computation and Homomorphic
Encryption for privacy-preserving training. Blockchain-based distributed intelligent
IoT applications.