Security and Permissibility

Security and Permissibility
Network tenant architecture and our patented permissibility layer
What happens when two or more trading partners want to transact or collaborate? Today the process requires costly upgrades and implementations for the numerous systems on each side to properly interact with each other. The Real Time Value Network’s underlying platform, designed with Network Tenant Architecture, is a unique technology that solves this longstanding problem. It delivers to tenants on the network (i.e. participating organizations) both private functionality and shared collaborative functionality via a patented permissibility layer. This enables organizations to easily share and withhold information from each other while still providing all trading partners with a “single version of the truth” safely and securely. All from the cloud.
One Network’ Network Tenant Architecture is based on the insight that modern supply chains are best understood as networks. They contain thousands of trading partners that share and withhold information from each other depending on the specific business relationship. Furthermore, within industries there is a large amount of overlap; retailers share the same logistics providers and manufacturers, manufacturers share the same raw material suppliers, and logistics providers often serve two competing companies, sometimes carrying their products on same truck. Is your company’s supply chain management software architected to reflect this underlying network? Only the Real Time Value Network is built upon this Network Tenant Architecture and a patented permissibility layer.
Security and Permissibility at a Glance
- Network Tenant Architecture allows a virtually unlimited number of trading partners to connect to the network and share and withhold information among each other
- Patented permissibility layer ensures the highest security–organizations see only what they are allowed to see
- Easily transact with organizations already on the network (more than 30 thousand leading organizations)

