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Blockchain PIAIC v2 Lecture-1

This document provides an overview of the topics that will be covered in the Blockchain Specialist Program lecture, including misconceptions about blockchain, what blockchain is, how blocks are created, cryptography and hashing, types of blockchain, blockchain use cases, blockchain adoption, and web 3.0. The lecture will also cover blockchain basics like decentralized networks and ledgers, mining blocks, consensus algorithms, and what Bitcoin is and how it works.

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Umair
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
221 views

Blockchain PIAIC v2 Lecture-1

This document provides an overview of the topics that will be covered in the Blockchain Specialist Program lecture, including misconceptions about blockchain, what blockchain is, how blocks are created, cryptography and hashing, types of blockchain, blockchain use cases, blockchain adoption, and web 3.0. The lecture will also cover blockchain basics like decentralized networks and ledgers, mining blocks, consensus algorithms, and what Bitcoin is and how it works.

Uploaded by

Umair
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

Ahmad Manzoor

Jawad Ahmed

Aamir Ali

PIAIC Blockchain Specialist Program

Blockchain Specialist
Program Lecture-1
Muzammil

Course Objectives
❖ Misconception ❖ Mining a Block
❖ What is Blockchain – The Types of Consensus
Blockchain (Basics)

Basics
❖ Blockchain and
❖ Blockchain Use Cases
Cryptocurrency ❖ Blockchain Adoption
❖ Why Use Blockchain
❖ Web 3.0
❖ Decentralized Networks and
Ledgers ❖ Blockchain
Implementation
❖ Types of Blockchain
❖ How Blocks are Created ❖ Whats Bitcoin
❖ Cryptography and Hashing ❖ How Bitcoin works?
Misconceptions Blockchain is like
❖ Blockchain = Bitcoin
❖ Blockchain can only be used for financial sector
❖ Everyone can see private information on the Blockchain
❖ Smart Contracts have the same legal value as regular
contracts
❖ Blockchain can only be public

Blockchain is backbone of New type of Internet: The


Decentralised Era Revolution of Web
❖ The main frames with dumb terminals (1960s) IBM took ❖ Web 1.0 (1989 to 2004) - Echo System

the market ❖ Web 1.0 was just a set of static websites with a load of information and no
interactive content
❖ The Desktop (1980s) Apple came into market with new ❖ Web 2.0 (2006 to 2016) - Participation and Interaction
idea ❖ The global sharing of information spawned the age of ‘Social Media’.
Youtube, Wikipedia, Flickr and Facebook gave voices to the voiceless and a
❖ The Internet, all desktops connected (1990s) means for like-minded communities to thrive.
❖ Web 3.0 (2016+) - Understanding self
❖ Walled Gardens, all powers with big companies
❖ Rather than concentrating the power (and data) in the hands of huge
(Facebook, Google, and Amazon) behemoths with questionable motives, it would be returned the rightful
owners.
❖ The Blockchain Era, a decentralised internet (WEB 3.0) ❖
Information to Value Blockchain

What is Blockchain? Old Technologies using by Blockchain


❖ In its simplest form, Blockchain is a distributed database, an ❖ Blockchain is a combined use of existing older technology.
unchangeable record (or Ledger) of asset ownership.
❖ Ledger – 7,000 year old technology, triple-entry
❖ Blockchain is primarily defined as a shared immutable ledger, or just accounting
an “unchangeable record of who owns what”
❖ Global, peer to peer, and distributed immutable record of transactions.
❖ Cryptography – “coding messages” has been used for
thousands of years, and still used in complex S/W
❖ Used to transfer and permanently record any change of assets between
algorithms for military and business applications like
two or more parties without intermediaries.
Blockchain
❖ Assets are defined as anything of value that requires accountability of
ownership, i.e. money, cryptocurrency, real estate, records of any kind,
❖ Computer Networking Technology – Blockchain makes
identities, personal property, etc. extensive use of P2P networking architectures
Blockchain Rules Blockchain Basics
❖ Once something has happened, and we create a record of
that, the fact that it happened never changes
❖ Data written into a blockchain is a historical record and is
immutable
❖ Blockchains have to prove that they haven’t been tampered
with
❖ All the nodes (computers) running on a blockchain must
agree (i.e. have consensus) on ALL the data stored on it
(aka – The World State of the Blockchain)

Blockchain Is Blockchain Is
❖ A record keeping system – of Any Asset

❖ A record keeping system – of Money


❖ to record the transactions of importance (Non-
Monetary)
❖ to record the transfer of “tokens” or “coins”
representing wealth (Monetary/currency)
❖ Update to a medical record

❖ Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies such as Ether,


❖ Transfer of ownership
LiteCoin, Monero, etc. ❖ Educational certificates on Blockchain
❖ Recording Important single-party announcements
Transferring Assets, Building Value Blockchain Is
❖ An event tracking system
❖ Anything that is capable of being owned or controlled to produce value, is an asset
❖ Two fundamental types of asset
❖ Announcements mark events

❖ Tangible, e.g. a house ❖ Events are actionable


❖ Intangible e.g. a mortgage ❖ Smart Contracts running on the Blockchain allow actions to be taken on
❖ Intangible assets subdivide events/transactions
❖ Financial, e.g. bond ❖ Blockchain is a workflow platform
❖ Intellectual e.g. patents ❖ Now being implemented in financial contracts, manufacturing
❖ Digital e.g. music supply chains, quality tracking, shipping and international
transactions, international currency exchange/transfers. Unlimited
❖ Cash is also an asset
Possibilities!
❖ Has property of anonymity

Blockchain is Immutable? Blockchain Provides Identity


❖ To use the network, you need a Cryptographic Identity
❖ Cannot change the data once it’s committed to the ❖ (similar to an email address)
ledger
❖ If you want to access your email, you need the
❖ Data is auditable password, which functions similarly to a private key
and your public key is like your address (more
❖ Change by issuing offsetting transaction
complicated)
❖ Smart contract code ❖ Authentication: peers sign transactions with their
cryptographic identity, this enables account “ownership”
Consensus in Distributed Networks Blockchain is based on Ledgers
❖ In order to update the ledger, the network needs to come to ❖ Ledgers are Important
consensus using an algorithm
❖ Ledger is THE system of
❖ Consensus: what does it mean to come to consensus on a record for a business
distributed network?
❖ records asset transfer
❖ It means that everyone agrees on the current state (e.g. between participants.
how much money does each account have) and making
❖ Business will have multiple
sure that no one is double-spending money (easy in
ledgers for multiple business
Bitcoin, more complex in Ethereum, business networks)
networks in which they
❖ Consensus methodologies will be discussed a little later. participate.

What is a Ledger? History of ledgers


❖ To understand the Ledger, we need to go back in time
❖ A ledger is like a database, a Google ❖ In 1000 BC, a Small island called Yap Island
or Excel spreadsheet ❖ The Yapese people had a very unique form of
currency called Rai Stones
❖ Add new records by appending
❖ Which is 12’ tall, 8,000lbs!!
rows
❖ Their ownership can be tracked on a ledger (do
❖ Each row contains information not have to be physically traded)
❖ Everyone knew who owned which Rai stone at
❖ Account balances, who owns anytime
certain assets ❖ When two parties wished to transact, the would
Decentralised Ledger
announce their transaction to the tribe (This is
❖ Memory and execution state of a called Consensus)
computer program ❖ When a transaction was announced, all tribe
members updated their mental ledger
Manage the Ledger

Thanks a lot

End of Lecture-1

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