Web3 Series: The Story of Blockchain
<p>Recently, I sat through a Blockchain 101 presentation from a self-styled expert who promised to make sense of the convoluted topic.</p>
<p>“Blockchain is immutable,” he told the group as I discreetly browsed dictionary.com.</p>
<p>“It’s decentralized.” (Okay?)</p>
<p>“It’s a distributed ledger.” (Meaning what, exactly?)</p>
<p>“You can’t hack it.” (Why not?)</p>
<p>The list of blockchain’s characteristics grew longer, but he never got around to directly answering the central question: What exactly <em>is</em> it and what makes it special?</p>
<p>The presentation dragged on for several sad minutes, culminating in a whimper as an attendee broke the awkward pause, following a solicitation for questions, with a halfhearted, “Thank you so much. This was very helpful.”</p>
<p>She was being kind. Here is the story this feeble expert should have told.</p>
<h1><strong>The double spending problem</strong></h1>
<p>From the early days of the internet, visionaries imagined the possibility of peer-to-peer digital payments in which one individual can pay another directly without the need of a third party to facilitate the transaction.</p>
<p>In the physical world, this is simple enough. I want to pay you a hundred dollars. I take a hundred-dollar bill and hand it to you. Now you have it and I don’t. Voila.</p>
<p><a href="https://medium.com/slalom-business/web3-series-the-story-of-blockchain-e48f9fc8a9ac"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>