Blockchain 101
Understand the foundational technology behind cryptocurrency — what a blockchain is, how blocks and transactions work, the role of nodes, and why distributed ledgers are revolutionary.
What Is a Blockchain?
A blockchain is a special type of database shared across many computers. Instead of one company controlling the data (like a bank controls your account balance), thousands of computers around the world each keep an identical copy. When someone makes a transaction, every computer updates its copy at the same time. This makes the data extremely difficult to tamper with — you would need to hack thousands of computers simultaneously.
Think of it like a shared Google Doc that everyone can read but nobody can secretly edit. Every change is recorded permanently, and everyone can see the full history. The key difference is that no single person or company owns the document — it belongs to everyone on the network.
Blocks, Chains, and Transactions
Transactions are grouped together into "blocks" — like pages in a book. Each block is linked to the previous one using a special code called a "hash," creating a chain of blocks (hence "blockchain"). This linking means if someone tried to change a past transaction, every block after it would break, making fraud immediately detectable.
Real-World Analogy
Imagine a notebook where every page has a unique stamp that includes information from the previous page. If someone ripped out a page and replaced it, the stamps would no longer match — everyone would instantly know the book was tampered with. That is essentially how a blockchain works.
Key Takeaways
- A blockchain is a shared database that no single entity controls
- Transactions are grouped into blocks, and blocks are linked together in a chain
- The chain structure makes it nearly impossible to alter past records
- Thousands of computers (nodes) each hold an identical copy of the data
Continue Learning
Consensus Mechanisms
Learn how blockchain networks agree on a single source of truth — from Proof of Work mining to Proof of Stake validation, Delegated PoS, and Proof of Authority.
Crypto Wallets
Everything about storing cryptocurrency safely — hot vs. cold wallets, custodial vs. non-custodial, seed phrases, hardware wallets, and best practices for protecting your assets.
DeFi Basics
Explore decentralized finance — how DEXs, lending protocols, yield farming, and liquidity pools work, and what TVL really means.
Mining & Staking
How mining works in Proof of Work, staking mechanics in Proof of Stake, validator requirements, rewards, and the economics behind securing blockchain networks.
Smart Contracts
What smart contracts are, how they work, writing in Solidity, the importance of audits, and how self-executing code powers DeFi, NFTs, and DAOs.
Trading Basics
Learn the fundamentals of crypto trading — exchanges, trading pairs, order types, market and limit orders, fees, and how to avoid common beginner mistakes.
Security 101
Protect your crypto — learn about 2FA, hardware wallets, seed phrase storage, common scams, and operational security practices that keep your assets safe.
Regulation & Taxes
Navigate the complex and evolving landscape of crypto regulation — KYC/AML requirements, SEC enforcement, MiCA in Europe, tax treatment of crypto transactions, and DeFi-specific tax challenges.
DAOs & Governance
How decentralized autonomous organizations work — governance tokens, voting mechanisms, Snapshot, treasury management, delegation, and the risks of governance attacks.
Bridges & Cross-Chain
Understand how assets move between blockchains — bridge types, wrapped tokens, cross-chain messaging, major bridge exploits, and the emerging world of ZK bridges.
Blockchain Security & Attacks
Deep dive into blockchain-level security — 51% attacks, MEV exploitation, flash loan attacks, oracle manipulation, reentrancy, and how protocols defend against these threats.
Tokenomics
Understand the economics of crypto tokens — supply dynamics, token distribution, vesting schedules, burn mechanisms, inflation vs. deflation, and how to spot Ponzi-nomics red flags.
How Exchanges Work
Understand how centralized and decentralized exchanges operate, including order books, AMMs, fees, and the tradeoffs between convenience and self-custody.
Reading Charts & Market Data
Learn to read candlestick charts, understand timeframes and volume, identify support and resistance levels, interpret moving averages, and explore on-chain metrics — while understanding that technical analysis is pattern recognition, not prediction.
Portfolio Management
Learn the principles of building and managing a crypto portfolio — diversification, risk tolerance, dollar-cost averaging, rebalancing, position sizing, and tax considerations. This is educational content, not financial advice.