March 22, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Blockchain Technology Explained: What is a Blockchain?

Blockchain technology explained: what is a blockchain?

Blockchain Technology Explained: What is a Blockchain?

Blockchain technology explained: what is a blockchain?This video https://youtu.be/eXJHPDs4M3Y provides an easy to understand introduction to Blockchain Technology.

Please leave comments and questions below the video.

Here is the full transcript for your convenience:

What is a Blockchain?
A Blockchain is a distributed database that multiple parties share and everyone can trust. A Blockchain network provides a mutually trusted, transparent way of sharing and transacting. Each party participating in a Blockchain network maintains their own copy of the database.

What makes Blockchain secure?
Transactions on the database are atomic (this means that they’re processed one at a time). The next transaction will be a different write or a read, but only after the preceding transaction has completed (or failed). Each write to the database is considered a ‘block’. Each new block contains a cryptographic hash (a unique fingerprint) of the previous block, creating a chain that can always be validated by checking the hashes back to the original root block.

Before a block can be committed, all participants are required to validate the transaction and provide consensus that the block can be added to the chain. This effectively makes it impossible to add a record unless all parties participating in the bitcoin [BTC] agree the record is valid.

Because all records are chained together by their hash value, once committed to the chain, all records are immutable (they cannot be changed). It is impossible to alter a previous record without altering every party’s copy of the chain. If one node is compromised, then it can no longer participate in the chain until it regenerates the true chain from the other participants.

How does Blockchain prevent double spending?
A major challenge of digitising assets is the potential to spend/redeem/use an asset multiple times. Because digital assets are much easier to forge than many traditional assets (such as currency, tickets, physical coupons, etc.), a secure system is required to ensure that an asset is only used once.

With Blockchain, every time an asset is used or consumed, the owner of the asset signs the transfer with a private cryptographic key. This key is unique to the owner and is extremely difficult to forge. In order to initiate the transaction, the transferrer requires both the asset and their private key. The Blockchain will check both the validity of the key, and ownership of the asset. Therefore, even if the asset is cloned, it cannot be used without the private key.

Once the transaction has been committed to the chain, the owner of the asset will have changed. This means, each node that receives a second transaction requesting transfer of ownership (or redemption, etc.) will see that there was a previous transaction that already transferred the asset and will reject that transaction. This prevents a second transfer block from being added to the chain.

How does Blockchain ensure privacy?
Personal data and identifiers are not required to be stored in the chain. Such data is stored as a hash value which provides both anonymity and security. The user may provide data such as their name, telephone number, email address, Facebook account id, unique user name, password etc. (in reality a combination of these values is used) to determine their identity. This data is hashed to provide a unique token that can only be recreated by providing the original values, and only this hash is stored to identify the party in the chain.

Since it is impossible to obtain the input values by reverse engineering a hash value, the user is practically anonymous to all parties within the chain. But, they can be validated whenever required by providing the original values used to create the hash.

How is PassKit utilising Blockchain?
PassKit provides a private bitcoin [BTC] service to parties that wish to issue, record or redeem anything of value. This can be anything from loyalty points, punch card programmes, event tickets, boarding passes, to government identification, insurance policies or claim histories, tax records and educational transcripts.

We utilise existing mobile wallet technology as a gateway for transacting, validating or querying our secure, private Blockchain networks. We ensure that mobile wallet content can be validated and trusted in a frictionless, realtime manner, by both consumers and by the businesses and institutions with whom they transact.

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The Bitcoin Game #49: Digging Deeper (Part Two) – Eric Lombrozo

Hello, welcome to episode 49 of The bitcoin Game, I’m Rob Mitchell.

After moderating a bitcoin scaling panel at the State Of Digital Money in Los Angeles, I followed up by arranging back-to-back interviews with Ryan X. Charles and Eric Lombrozo. I wanted to dig a bit deeper into some issues around scaling and bitcoin forks. Last episode was my interview with Ryan, and now the yin to Ryan?’?s yang, Eric Lombrozo.

SHOW LINKS

The bitcoin Game #48: Digging Deeper (Part One) – Ryan X. Charleshttps://letstalkbitcoin.com/blog/post/the-bitcoin-game-48-digging-deeper-part-one-ryan-x-charles

bitcoin Core
https://bitcoincore.org

bitcoin Cash
https://www.bitcoincash.org

SegWit2x
https://segwit2x.github.io

Ciphrex
https://ciphrex.com

Eric on Twitter
https://twitter.com/eric_lombrozo

Eric on Medium
https://medium.com/@elombrozo

bitcoin Core’s Github
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin

Scaling bitcoin panel with Paul Puey, Tone Vays, Ryan X. Charles, and Eric Lombrozo
https://letstalkbitcoin.com/blog/post/the-bitcoin-game-47-scaling-bitcoin-with-paul-puey-tone-vays-ryan-x-charles-eric-lombrozo


Hanging with Eric after the Scaling bitcoin panel at SODM 2017


STAY IN TOUCH

https://Twitter.com/TheBTCGame
http://TheBitcoinGame.com
Rob@TheBitcoinGame.com

Thanks so much for taking the time to listen to The bitcoin Game!

bitcoin tipping address:
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SPONSOR

While much of a Bitcoiner’s time is spent in the world of digital assets, sometimes it’s nice to own a physical representation of the virtual things you care about. For just the price of a cup of coffee or two (at Starbucks), you can own your own Bitcoin Keychain or the newer Bitcoin Fork Pen.

As Seen On
TechCrunch ?’ Engadget ?’ Ars Technica ?’ Popular Mechanics
Maxim ?’ Inc. ?’ Vice ?’ RT ?’ Bitcoin Magazine ?’ VentureBeat
CoinDesk ?’ Washington Post ?’ Forbes ?’ Fast Company

BKeychain.com
BitcoinForks.com


CREDITS

All music in this episode of The bitcoin Game was created by Rob Mitchell.

The bitcoin Game box art was created from an illustration by Rock Barcellos.