Blockchain Technology for Kids: what's a ledger?

in steemiteducation •  7 years ago  (edited)

Blockchain technology is changing the world at a rapid pace. Kids just getting familiar with terms like blockchain, hash, and hardfork might need some help to better understand them. So we're going to spend some time explaining these concepts on a level kids can understand. And our first question would be, what exactly is the blockchain?

The answer is pretty simple. A blockchain is a ledger.

ledger.jpg

Way back when, a paper ledger is what accountants used to keep track of money: the incoming money and outgoing debits. Accountants were also called “bookkeepers” because these old ledgers looked like books: the sheets of data were bound for easy storage. And the accountants had to keep or maintain these books of information in order to keep business moving and banks running.

But they weren't just for money tracking. We've used ledgers of all kinds to keep track of any type of data list. For example, a hotel ledger kept a running list of their guests. A sports ledger kept a record of wins, losses, and statistics. A payroll ledger allowed a company to keep track of payments made for the hours their employees worked.

Then, along came computers and we moved our ledgers from paper to digital spreadsheets. An accountant could input numbers rather than writing them down, and make automated calculations. These digital spreadsheets were a revolution in bookkeeping because the data could be rearranged and reorganized with a few simple clicks. Columns of data could be added together. Input types could be grouped.

Like the paper and spreadsheet versions that came before, a blockchain can be a list of financial exchanges (and many of them are). But the blockchain can be any list of information that can be digitized. It can be a list of blog posts like we have here on Steemit. The Steemit blockchain actually records the text, votes, exchanges, rewards, and even the users of the Steemit platform. Anything that can be turned into digital data can be recorded on the blockchain.

So a blockchain is very similar to both a paper ledger and a digital spreadsheet. But a blockchain differs from both paper ledgers and spreadsheets in one very important way: a blockchain can't be altered. A blockchain record makes it impossible to “cook the books” – the act of committing fraud by changing the amounts of a financial ledger.

The reason it's impossible to alter or “cook” a blockchain record is because it's decentralized: no one person or entity has control over it. Its data can't be removed. Its data can't be altered. Its data can't be censored. And that one difference makes all the difference! Tomorrow we'll look at how “nodes” work independently yet cooperatively to build the blockchain.


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Very beautifully explained... Kudos @geke..
I enjoyed reading your post... Keep it coming please.. I'll get my son to read it too..

Very nice explanation @geke

Very easily explained.Easy for anyone to understand.thank's.@upvoted

What a great breakdown of the blockchain technology and how it works! Love the comparisons and the great info:)

need not to talk much. Your ways of teaching have always been simple and interactive.

its funny how I have a little niece and she has always been talking about blockchain, interchanging bitcoin and other currencies, Shes heard of them but does not know what they are or what they do .. lol it became worse when last December she was me into it .. she needs this .... **thanks **

This was helpful for ME to understand it! Thanks :)

Oh, do I love this! I am a reasonably intelligent adult whose areas of knowledge do not intersect much with numbers, finance or computer networks. I have other gifts. So ‘splain me about Steemit and crypto like I’m a kid. Huge help. Thank you.

really well explained!!! I know a few adults who I'll send this lesson to :D

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Very helpful post. I'm trying to each my 12-year old son about blockchain, and this is perfect. Thank you!

Beautifully explained I’ll be touching on this topic Tuesday:)

Intelligence blockchain

You and Thundergod (@geekorner) - Right/Left brain in sync -
You can write poetry! And you can understand this economics stuff!
And you're a gorgeous blonde, besides.
I'm in awe. And thankful that you can write this in terms so simple, even I could get it. (Getting there! Thanks to you!)

This is pretty much EXACTLY how @techslut explained it to me. Very clear, very concise, very useful.

This is great! But there's a third network type (distributed), and in your next installment, you say that blockchain nodes are "distributed." I think that distinction matters because decentralized networks still have points of vulnerability. So would you say blockchain is decentralized or distributed?

This explains what a ledger is beautifully, not just for children but for some of us who don't have an IT background.

I hope the series becomes required reading for everyone joining Steemit.

Wow, thats for the great read. I will be sharing this with my 5 children. Am

Great breakdown. I try to explain it in a similar fashion. The major advantage of the blockchain is in its integrity. It kind of eliminates the need for trust. In the past, you might say "Trust me, I have the money", but on the blockchain that is a verifiable fact. Thanks for putting these things into layman's terms.