The Blockchain Mystery: Three Things You Should Know

By Lori Cameron
Published 08/11/2017
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binary code on connected blocks held together by locks

Blockchain technology promises to revolutionize the world of finance, banking, and contract negotiation.

What it is and how it works, however, remain a mystery to many people.

Because it promises to significantly change the way contracts and financial transactions are verified, you should know at least three important things:

What is blockchain?

A blockchain is a digital ledger of verified transactions locked together chronologically in an encrypted chain.

Blockchain is “a distributed storage of timestamped documents where no party can tamper with the content of the data or the timestamps without detection,” writes Massimo Di Pierro of DePaul University in his article “What Is the Blockchain?” (login may be required for full text) appearing in the September/October 2017 issue of Computing in Science & Engineering.

Read about blockchain research (login may be required for full text)

How does it work?

Transactions are placed in an encrypted, digital ledger distributed to a network of computers that can view and share it but not copy it.

The ledger is updated with new transactions every few minutes, allowing each computer to access the same current shared ledger.

The chain of transactions in a block is encrypted so that, in order to tamper with a document in the block, hackers would have to tamper with all the transactions in the block. It’s virtually impossible to do without getting caught.

What kinds of transactions can the blockchain be used for?

Almost anything.

In addition to financial transactions, blockchain can secure and verify any personal, legal, and business document—wills, trusts, patents, contracts, notarizations, marriage certificates, death certificates, anything.

“Someone could store an idea for a patent in the blockchain to later prove a first-to-invent claim. You could also store a promise to do something at a later time, with the promise stored in the form of code that would execute the promise in an automated manner,” Di Pierro writes.

“This is what’s called a smart contract; for example, let’s say we have this promise: ‘Alice promises to pay Bob $1 if on 1 January 2028 it rains in Chicago.’ As long as the promise is in the blockchain, and an application program interface (API) can check whether the conditions are met, the system can automatically execute the transaction should the condition be fulfilled.”

Blockchain promises to make virtually every type of transaction faster and more secure. And while it could potentially eliminate plenty of white collar jobs, it will create a wealth of new ones.

Related research on blockchain and bitcoin from the Computer Society Digital Library

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About Lori Cameron

Lori Cameron is a Senior Writer for the IEEE Computer Society and currently writes regular features for Computer magazine, Computing Edge, and the Computing Now and Magazine Roundup websites. Contact her at l.cameron@computer.org. Follow her on LinkedIn.