

{"id":17255,"date":"2018-06-04T09:47:28","date_gmt":"2018-06-04T09:47:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/data-flair.training\/blogs\/?p=17255"},"modified":"2022-04-10T21:23:47","modified_gmt":"2022-04-10T15:53:47","slug":"blockchain-terminologies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/data-flair.training\/blogs\/blockchain-terminologies\/","title":{"rendered":"80 Blockchain Terminologies | Glossary of Blockchain"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Blockchain is a novice concept for almost everyone inside and outside the world of technology, hence while learning more about it one realizes that there are a lot of unfamiliar terms and the best way to learn them is by understanding what each one entails. Hence, here is a list of some of the most popular blockchain terminologies with their meaning:<\/p>\n<h3>Blockchain Terminologies<\/h3>\n<h4>1. Addresses<\/h4>\n<p>Quite similar to a URL, a blockchain address is a location to or from which transactions occur on the blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>2. Agreement Ledgers<\/h4>\n<p>These are the distributed ledgers utilized by 2 or more parties to trade and reach an agreement.<\/p>\n<h4>3. Altcoin<\/h4>\n<p>This is an abbreviation of \u201cBitcoin alternative\u201d. Currently, the bulk of altcoins are forks of Bitcoin with some minor changes to the proof of labour (POW) algorithmic<\/p>\n<h4>4. Attestation Ledgers<\/h4>\n<p>These are the distributed ledgers that give a sturdy record of agreements, commitments or statements, providing proof (or, attestation) of the mentioned agreements, commitments or statements.<\/p>\n<h4>5. ASIC<\/h4>\n<p>This is a signifier for \u201cApplication Specific Integrated Circuit\u201d. ASICs are element chips specifically designed to do one task. Within the case of bitcoin, they\u2019re designed to method SHA-256 hashing issues to mine new bitcoins.<\/p>\n<h4>6. Bitcoin<\/h4>\n<p>This is a documented cryptocurrency, supported by the proof-of-work blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>7. Block Ciphers<\/h4>\n<p>This is a way of encrypting text (to convert to ciphertext) where a key and algorithmic rule is applied to convert plain text into non-decipherable format.<\/p>\n<h4>8. Block Height<\/h4>\n<p>These refer to the quantity of blocks connected along within the blockchain. For instance, Height 0, would be the initial block that is additionally known as the Genesis Block.<\/p>\n<h4>9. Block Rewards<\/h4>\n<p>These are rewards given to a mineworker who has successfully hashed a dealing block. Block rewards are a combination of coins and dealing fees.<\/p>\n<h4>10. Central Ledger<\/h4>\n<p>These refer to a ledger maintained by a central agency.<\/p>\n<h4>11. Chain Linking<\/h4>\n<p>This is the method of connecting 2 blockchains with one another, therefore permitting transactions between the chains to take place.<\/p>\n<h4>12. Cypher<\/h4>\n<p>This is an algorithmic rule used for the secret writing and\/or decoding of data.<\/p>\n<h4>13. Confirmation<\/h4>\n<p>This means that a blockchain transaction has been verified by the network.Once confirmed, it can&#8217;t be reversed or double spent.<\/p>\n<h4>14. Consensus Process<\/h4>\n<p>This method involves a cluster of peers who make decisions for maintaining a distributed ledger used to achieve accord on the ledger\u2019s contents via consensus.<\/p>\n<h4>15. Consortium Blockchain<\/h4>\n<p>This is a blockchain where the accord method is controlled by a pre-selected set of nodes.<\/p>\n<h4>16. Cryptanalysis<\/h4>\n<p>This is the study of ways for getting the means of encrypted data, while not accessing the key data that ordinarily need to try to do this.<\/p>\n<h4>17. Cryptocurrency<\/h4>\n<p>This type of digital currency supported arithmetic, where secret writing techniques are used to regulate the generation of units of currency and verify the transfer of funds.<\/p>\n<h4>18. Cryptography<\/h4>\n<p>This refers to the method of encrypting and decrypting data.<\/p>\n<h4>19. dApp<\/h4>\n<p>An abbreviation of \u2018decentralised application\u2019, these applications have to be utterly ASCII text files, it should operate autonomously, and with no entity dominating the bulk of its tokens.<\/p>\n<h4>20. DAO (Decentralised Autonomous Organisation)<\/h4>\n<p>These can be understood as an organisation run without associate degree with non-human involvement underneath the management of an incorrupt set of business rules.<\/p>\n<h4>21. Digital Signature<\/h4>\n<p>A mathematical scheme for verifying digital messages or documents satisfy two requirements &#8211; they have authenticity (from a known sender) and integrity (were not altered in transit.<\/p>\n<h4>22. Decryption<\/h4>\n<p>This is the method of turning cypher-text into plaintext.<\/p>\n<h4>23. Encryption<\/h4>\n<p>It is the method of turning a clear-text message (plaintext) into an information stream (cypher-text) that seems like a pointless and random sequence of bits.<\/p>\n<h4>24. Ether<\/h4>\n<p>It is the native token of the Ethereum blockchain that can be used to purchase dealing fees, mineworker rewards and different services on the network.<\/p>\n<h4>25. Ethereum<\/h4>\n<p>This is an open-source blockchain technology that allows developers to jot down good contracts and build and deploy localized applications.<\/p>\n<h4>26. Ethereum Classic<\/h4>\n<p>This may split from associate degree existing cryptocurrency, Ethereum when a tough fork.<\/p>\n<h4>27. EVM code<\/h4>\n<p>This is the programming language within which accounts on the Ethereum blockchain will contain code.<\/p>\n<h4>28. Digital Commodity<\/h4>\n<p>These goods may be scarce, electronically transferrable, and intangible, with a value.<\/p>\n<h4>29. Digital identity<\/h4>\n<p>This is an internet or networked identity adopted or claimed on the internet by a private, organization, or device.<\/p>\n<h4>30. Distributed ledgers<\/h4>\n<p>These are a kind of database or ledgers that are present across multiple sites, countries or establishments.<\/p>\n<h4>31. Double Spent<\/h4>\n<p>This refers to a state of affairs, within a blockchain network, wherever somebody tries to send a token group action to 2 completely different recipients at an identical time.<\/p>\n<h4>32. Fiat currency<\/h4>\n<p>This is any cash declared by a government to be valid for meeting an indebtedness, like USD or EUR.<\/p>\n<h4>33. Fork<\/h4>\n<p>This is the creation of another version of the current blockchain, by making 2 blocks at the same time on completely different elements of the network. This creates 2 parallel blockchains, wherever one amongst the 2 is the winning blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>34. Gas<\/h4>\n<p>An activity roughly appreciates process steps (for Ethereum). Each action needs to incorporate a gas limit and a fee that it is willing to pay per gas; miners have the choice of together with the group action and assembling the fee or not. 35. Halving<\/p>\n<h4>36. Hardfork<\/h4>\n<p>This could be a modification to the blockchain protocol that creates antecedently invalid blocks\/transactions valid and thus needs all users to upgrade their shoppers.<\/p>\n<h4>37. Hashrate<\/h4>\n<p>The range of hashes that may be performed by a bitcoin mine worker during a given amount of your time (usually a second).<\/p>\n<h4>38. Initial Coin offering (ICO)<\/h4>\n<p>There is an occasion during which a brand new cryptocurrency sells tokens from its overall coinbase, in exchange for direct capital. ICOs are often used by developers of a brand new cryptocurrency to lift capital.<\/p>\n<h4>39. Interoperability<\/h4>\n<p>The ability of two or more systems to communicate and exchange data.<\/p>\n<h4>40. IPFS (Interplanetary File System)<\/h4>\n<p>A peer-to-peer hypermedia protocol for storing and sharing data in a distributed file system to uniquely identify each file in a global namespace connecting all computing devices.<\/p>\n<h4>41. Know Your Customer (KYC)<\/h4>\n<p>The legal process of a business identifying and verifying the identity of its clients. KYC requirements vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.<\/p>\n<h4>42. Liquidity<\/h4>\n<p>The ease of converting an asset (or, in this case, cryptocurrency) to cash (fiat).<\/p>\n<h4>43. Mainnet<\/h4>\n<p>The production version of a blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>44. Merkle Tree\/Hash Tree<\/h4>\n<p>In cryptography, a Merkle or hash tree is a tree in which every leaf node is labelled with the hash of a data block, and every non-leaf node is labelled with the cryptographic hash of the labels of its child nodes.<\/p>\n<h4>45. Mining<\/h4>\n<p>In a public blockchain, the process of verifying a transaction and writing it to the blockchain for which the successful miner is rewarded in the cryptocurrency of the blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>46. Node<\/h4>\n<p>A computer that holds a copy of the blockchain ledger.<\/p>\n<h4>47. Non-Fungible<\/h4>\n<p>The property is an item of not being exchangeable with other like items.<\/p>\n<h4>48. Off-chain<\/h4>\n<p>Data stored external to the blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>49. On-chain<\/h4>\n<p>Data stored within the blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>50. Open Source<\/h4>\n<p>Software products that include permission to use, enhance, reuse or modify the source code, design documents, or content of the product.<\/p>\n<h4>51. Oracle<\/h4>\n<p>An application that connects blockchain applications to legacy applications.<\/p>\n<h4>52. Peer-to-Peer (P2P)<\/h4>\n<p>A direct connection between two participants in a system &#8211; can be computer to computer or person to person.<\/p>\n<h4>53. Provenance<\/h4>\n<p>The entire history of a product during its lifecycle including its chain of custody and all documentation of value added services and activities which were used to produce that product or service.<\/p>\n<h4>54. Public\/Private Key<\/h4>\n<p>A public key is a unique string of characters derived from a private key which is used to encrypt a message or data. The private key is used to decrypt the message or data.<\/p>\n<h4>55. Satoshi Nakamoto<\/h4>\n<p>The name used by the person or entity who developed bitcoin, authored the bitcoin white paper, and created and deployed bitcoin&#8217;s original reference implementation. As part of the implementation, Nakamoto also devised the first blockchain database.<\/p>\n<h4>56. Seed Phrase<\/h4>\n<p>A random sequence of words which can be used to restore a lost wallet.<\/p>\n<h4>57. Sharding<\/h4>\n<p>A type of database partitioning that separates very large databases into smaller, faster, more easily managed parts called data shards.<\/p>\n<h4>58. Sidechain<\/h4>\n<p>A discrete blockchain that is linked to a main blockchain via two-way pegs which enable assets to be interchanged between the main blockchain and the sidechain.<\/p>\n<h4>59. Smart Contract<\/h4>\n<p>Self-executing computer code deployed on a blockchain to perform a function, often, but not always, the exchange of value between a buyer and a seller.<\/p>\n<h4>60. Solidity<\/h4>\n<p>A JavaScript-like object-oriented programming language for Ethereum for implementing smart contracts on the Ethereum blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>61. Stablecoin<\/h4>\n<p>A cryptocurrency which is underwritten by an asset or assets (e.g., fiat currency, commodities, etc.) designed to minimise the volatility of the price of the coin\/token.<\/p>\n<h4>62. State Channel<\/h4>\n<p>A process by which blockchain transactions are executed off-chain, collected and then written to the main chain as a single transaction in order to improve performance and reduce cost.<\/p>\n<h4>63. Testnet<\/h4>\n<p>A staging blockchain environment for testing application before being put into production (or onto the mainnet)<\/p>\n<h4>64. Token<\/h4>\n<p>Cryptographic tokens represent programmable assets or access rights, managed by a smart contract and an underlying distributed ledger.<\/p>\n<h4>65. Token Generation Event<\/h4>\n<p>The creation and first sale of a blockchain coin or token.<\/p>\n<h4>66. Token Type &#8211; ERC-20<\/h4>\n<p>A type of fungible Ethereum token (i.esmart contract) standard which is defined by a series of functions that must be supported, including functions to retrieve the total supply, transfer from one wallet to another, and approve a transaction.<\/p>\n<h4>67. Token Type &#8211; ERC-721<\/h4>\n<p>A type of non-fungible Ethereum token (i.e., smart contract) standard which is defined by a series of functions that must be supported, including functions to retrieve the total supply, transfer from one wallet to another, and approve a transaction.<\/p>\n<h4>68. Token\/Coin Exchange<\/h4>\n<p>An application to buy, sell and trade cryptocurrencies.<\/p>\n<h4>69. Tokenless Ledger<\/h4>\n<p>A ledger that doesn&#8217;t require a native currency to operate.<\/p>\n<h4>70. Tokenomics<\/h4>\n<p>The study, design and implementation of monetary management and distribution based on blockchain technology.<\/p>\n<h4>71. Transactions Per Second (TPS)<\/h4>\n<p>A measurement of the speed of a blockchain. The low TPS of most blockchains is a significant barrier to using blockchain for business, especially financial, applications.<\/p>\n<h4>72. Transparency<\/h4>\n<p>A primary property of public blockchains whereby any participant in a system or transaction can view the transactions on the blockchain.<\/p>\n<h4>73. Trust<\/h4>\n<p>Confidence in the integrity of an entity (e.g., person, organisation, etc.).<\/p>\n<h4>74. Trustless<\/h4>\n<p>Blockchain is called a trustless system because the two entities performing a transaction do not need to trust one another. The properties of blockchain &#8211; digital signatures, cryptography, etc. &#8211; provide the trust.<\/p>\n<h4>75. Vyper<\/h4>\n<p>A Python-like programming language for the Ethereum blockchain built for security, language and compiler simplicity, and auditability.<\/p>\n<h4>76. Wallet<\/h4>\n<p>A digital file that holds coins and tokens held by the owner. The wallet also has a blockchain address to which transactions can be sent.<\/p>\n<h4>77. Wallet (Cold)<\/h4>\n<p>A wallet disconnected from the internet.<\/p>\n<h4>78. Wallet (Hot)<\/h4>\n<p>A wallet connected to the Internet.<\/p>\n<h4>79. Wallet (Multisignature)<\/h4>\n<p>A wallet that requires multiple digital signatures to execute a transaction.<\/p>\n<h4>80. Zeppelin\/Open Zeppelin<\/h4>\n<p>A community of like-minded Smart Contract developers.<\/p>\n<h3>Conclusion<\/h3>\n<p>In this highly informative article we reviewed some of the most commonly used blockchain terminologies. We understood what they mean in the easiest language to get a better idea of the blockchain concepts.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Blockchain is a novice concept for almost everyone inside and outside the world of technology, hence while learning more about it one realizes that there are a lot of unfamiliar terms and the best&#46;&#46;&#46;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":17257,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[1222,2021,2092,2889,2909,2918,3179,3182,3191,3245,3648,3917,3918,3995,4037,4147,4203,4206,4228,4663,5111,5355,5363,6710,14617,14624,14667],"class_list":["post-17255","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blockchain","tag-attestation-ledgers","tag-block-cyphers","tag-blockchain-terminologies","tag-confirmation","tag-consensus-process","tag-consortium-blockchain","tag-cryptanalysis","tag-cryptocurrency","tag-cryptography","tag-dao-decentralized-autonomous-organization","tag-decryption","tag-digital-commodity","tag-digital-identity","tag-distributed-ledgers","tag-double-spent","tag-encryption","tag-ethereum","tag-ethereum-classic","tag-evm-code","tag-fiat-currency","tag-glossary-of-blockchain","tag-halving","tag-hardfork","tag-initial-coin-offering-ico","tag-terminologies-in-blockchain","tag-terms-for-blockchain","tag-the-dao"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.8 - 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