Open finance is evolving and extending open banking. This creates a large context that implies a financial and identity data exchange paradigm, which faces challenges to balance customer experience, security, and the self-control over personal identity information. We propose Self-Sovereign Banking Identity (SSBI), a Blockchain-based self-sovereign identity (SSI) to secure private data sharing by utilizing trusted customer’s banking cards as a key storage and identity transaction-signing enclave. The design and implementation of the SSI framework is based on the Veramo SDK and Ethereum to overcome the limitation of signing curve availability on the current banking Java Cards needed for Hyperledger Indy. SSBI uses the elliptic curve SECP256K1 for transaction signing, which exists for several payment cards in the market. SSBI enables automated financial services and trust in the service provider communication. This work analyzes the flow and framework components, and evaluates the usability, integration, and performance in terms of throughput, latency, security, and complexity. Furthermore, the proposed approach is compared with related solutions. The presented prototype implementation is based on a test Ethereum network and signing transactions on the banking card. The preliminary results show that SSBI provides an effective solution for integrating the customer’s banking cards to secure open banking identity exchange. Furthermore, it allows the integration of several scenarios to support trusted open banking. The Blockchain layer settings need to be scaled and improved before real-world implementation.
This paper presents a new benchmarking framework for XSLT. The project, called XT-Speedo 1 , is open source and we hope that it will attract a community of developers. The tangible deliverable consists of a set of test material, a set of test drivers for various XSLT processors, and tools for analyzing the test results. Underpinning these deliverables is a methodology and set of measurement objectives that influence the design and selection of material for the test suite, which are also described in this paper. A description of the XSLTMark benchmark, including an acknowledgement of the problems in using it for cross-product comparisons
In this paper we present work on improving an existing inhouse License Tool application. The current tool is a serverside web application, using XForms in the front end. The tool generates licenses for the Saxon commercial products using server-side XSLT processing. Our main focus is to move parts of the tool's architecture client-side, by using "interactive" XSLT 3.0 with Saxon-JS. A beneficial outcome of this redesign is that we have produced a truly XML endto-end application.
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