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What is blockchain, explained simply

What is blockchain, explained simply

July 18, 2026
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A blockchain is a distributed database where records (blocks) are chained together and secured with cryptography so that altering already-recorded information after the fact is practically impossible. Instead of one central server, a copy of the database is stored on thousands of computers (nodes) around the world at once, and they all have to agree on a new entry before it joins the chain.

How It Works in Practice

  • New transactions are grouped into a block
  • Network nodes verify the block against the protocol's rules and reach consensus that it's valid
  • The block gets a cryptographic fingerprint (a hash) that depends on the previous block's contents — which is what chains blocks together, since altering one old block would break the hashes of every block after it
  • The confirmed block is added to the chain and propagated across all network nodes at once

Why It Matters

The core idea behind blockchain is removing the need to trust a single central intermediary — a bank, a platform, a government — to confirm a transaction or ownership of an asset. Trust instead rests on math, and on the fact that faking records across thousands of independent computers simultaneously is practically impossible. This is the exact idea Bitcoin, Ethereum, and most other cryptocurrencies are built on.

What This Means in Practice

Blockchain isn't a synonym for cryptocurrency — it's the technology cryptocurrencies are built on, and the same idea gets applied outside finance too, for tracking product provenance, storing digital certificates, or voting. But in cryptocurrency specifically, blockchain solves one concrete problem: how to send digital money without a bank intermediary, and without the risk of spending the same coin twice.

Maks

Author

Maks

Trading man

I've been interested in the cryptocurrency market for a long time, am a trader, and write articles and news about my experience and crypto in simple terms.

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