Techdee

Decentralized Transaction Data Storage System: Is Blockchain Reliable?

All conventional systems (banks, savings banks, ministries, and other state bodies, etc.) use a centralized system when transferring money from one place to another, where information is collected and recorded in one place and all those interested receive it from that one center.

In contrast, behind Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is a system called blockchain that’s completely decentralized – there’s no central place or any central server. What makes the difference at blockchain? The way in which transaction information is sent and stored, that is, checked.

What’s a Blockchain?

First the term: Blockchain is a register of all transactions that take place in a system – in this case in the system of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. This is where to follow changes in Bitcoin price.

Blockchain characteristics:

To make it clearer to you, compare the Bitcoin address with the bank account number, and the private key with the pin of that account. In banks, if you lose a pin, they will give you a new one, but in the blockchain, it won’t happen. It will happen that you lose your bitcoins forever. They still exist but you can’t have them.

How Are Blockchain Transactions Performed?

When you want to send an amount to someone, you first need to enter their Bitcoin address, currency amount, and sign the transaction with your private key. This information is sent to the users with whom you’re directly connected and then they send it to the entire peer-to-peer network in order to eventually reach the recipient.

Checking Transactions

Each node in the blockchain checks and forwards each transaction. There are thousands of these nodes, as we’ve already said, and each of them checks. Only when everyone has checked, the transaction meets the conditions to be inserted into the block and thus become part of the blockchain.

The following things are checked:

The most important for checking transactions are full node hubs. They have a complete blockchain on their servers (all transactions that have ever happened) and they know, at any time, how many Bitcoins there are exactly at which address and whether the addresses and signatures are valid or not. This may seem complicated to you, but blockchain transactions take less than a second.

Skeptics have the most distrust of the security and reliability of the blockchain. What would happen if someone sent the wrong transaction? The answer is that nothing would happen. Why? Because blockchain users are constantly in communication and constantly compare their databases.

Let’s not forget that there are thousands of these users. If a wrong transaction comes from one user, the others will have the correct one. That participant will simply be ignored and misinformation can’t be spread further through the network.

The information above 50% is accepted as correct – the position of the majority is accepted as accurate. One successful attack requires thousands of highly coordinated attacks. Attackers must be in the majority and everyone must send the same wrong information at the same time and at the exact same time when the transaction they want to change occurs. That hasn’t happened to this day.