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  • When you vote have you ever wondered whether your ballot is actually counted?

  • If you meet someone online how do you know they're who they say they are?

  • When you buy coffee that's labeled fair trade what makes you so certain of its origin?

  • To be sure really sure about any of those questions you need a system where

  • records could be stored, facts can be verified by anyone, and security is guaranteed.

  • That way no one could cheat the system by editing records because

  • everyone using the system would be watching. Systems like this are on the

  • horizon and the software that powers them it's called a blockchain.

  • Blockchains store information across the network of personal computers,

  • making them not just decentralized but distributed. This means no central company or person

  • owns the system, yet everyone can use it and help run it. This is important

  • because it means it's difficult for any one person to take down the network or corrupt it.

  • The people who run the system use their computer to hold bundles of

  • records submitted by others, known as "blocks," in a chronological chain.

  • The blockchain uses a form of math called cryptography to ensure that records can't

  • be counterfeited or changed by anyone else.

  • You've probably heard of the blockchain's first killer app: a form of digital cash called Bitcoin that you can send to anyone, even a complete stranger.

  • Bitcoin is different from credit cards,

  • PayPal, or other ways to send money because there isn't a bank or financial

  • middlemen involved.

  • Instead, people from all over the world help move the digital money by

  • validating others' Bitcoin transactions with their personal computers,

  • earning a small fee in the process. Bitcoin uses the blockchain by

  • tracking records of ownership over the digital cash, so only one person can be

  • the owner at a time and the cash can't be spent twice, like counterfeit money in

  • the physical world can. But bitcoin is just the beginning for blockchains.

  • In the future, blockchains that manage and verify online data could enable us to

  • launch companies that are entirely run by algorithms, make self-driving cars

  • safer, help us protect our online identities, and even track the billions

  • of devices on the Internet of Things. These innovations will change our lives

  • forever and it's all just beginning. To learn more about the urgent future of

  • the blockchain please visit www.iftf.org/blockchainfutureslab

When you vote have you ever wondered whether your ballot is actually counted?

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A2 初級 美國腔

兩分鐘內瞭解區塊鏈 (Understand the Blockchain in Two Minutes)

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    sCAT 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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