How Do Cryptocurrencies Prove Ownership Without a Bank?

Imagine you have a special notebook that everyone can see but no one can erase. When you give your toy to a friend, everyone writes it down together so nobody can lie about who owns the toy now.

The Shared Notebook

In banks, they keep the books in their office. With cryptocurrency, there is no single office. Instead, thousands of computers around the world hold copies of this notebook. They are called a blockchain.

Showing Your ID

To prove you own your coins, you use two keys:

  1. A public key like your email address. Anyone can see what you have.
  2. A private key like your password. Only you know it.

When you spend money, you sign the transaction with your private key. It is like putting a special wax seal on a letter that no one else can copy.

Asking the Group

Before anyone accepts your coins, they ask other people in the network to check. This process is called mining. Miners solve hard math puzzles to agree that you really have the money and haven't spent it twice.

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Examples

  1. You send a coin to your friend like trading a digital sticker, and everyone on their phone sees it change hands.
  2. Your private key is like a secret combination lock that only you can open to take your money out.
  3. A group of computers votes together to confirm that you really have the coins before anyone else does.

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