What Are Private Blockchains & How do They Differ From Public Blockchains?

Was it Bitcoin that introduced Blockchain to the world or was it the other way round?

Well, this fact is as debatable as the chicken vs egg. But nonetheless, both Bitcoin and Blockchain have done remarkably well this year.

  • Bitcoin reached an all-time high of well above $7000.
  • Blockchain attracted more than $2 billion investment.

A handful of IT and banking pundits say that Blockchain is the real invention of Satoshi Nakamoto and not Bitcoin. It is so because the blockchain technology can be leveraged to solve many fundamental problems that our world faces in many areas.

Since its invention, the blockchain that Bitcoin introduced to us has mutated into several other types of the blockchain.

I have discussed some of the types of blockchain here on CoinSutra.

But out of these aforementioned mentioned types of the blockchain, I am interested in two types i.e. Public Blockchain and Private Blockchain, because I feel they have a lot of potential.

Blockchain

What Is A Public Blockchain?

Public

Anyone can participate in a public blockchain because it is open-source and public to all where no one is in charge. There is no access or rights management done for a public blockchain and anyone can be the part of the consensus. (Know more about consensus here)

Because of this, anyone at any given point of time can join or leave/read/write/audit the public blockchain ecosystem and the network will still be trustless.

Trustless here means you need not set-up a trusted party or entity to overlook the operations on this type of blockchain and yet it will be censorship resistance.

The catch is that this type of self-governed, decentralized yet trustless autonomy is ensured on the system by its method of decision making which is very difficult or nearly impossible to tamper with. This decision making is called in this realm.

Public blockchains like Bitcoin or Litecoin consume an enormous amount of energy, time and money because of the mining and hence in return ensure trustlessness and remain tamper resistant. (Read here to know more on how that happens on the Bitcoin network)

On Bitcoin or  Litecoin blockchain networks, anyone can do the following things that make it a truly public blockchain.

—>Anyone can run BTC/LTC full node and start mining.

—>Anyone can make transactions on BTC/LTC chain.

—>Anyone can review/audit the blockchain in a Blockchain explorer.

What Are Private Blockchains?

Private

Private Blockchain is an absolute opposite of public blockchain.

It is because many functions that are open to all on a public blockchain aren’t open here to all.

Here one can’t read/write or audit the blockchain anytime unless one has the permission to do so.

In private blockchains, the owner of the blockchain is a single entity or an enterprise which can override/delete commands on a blockchain if needed. That’s why in its true sense it is not decentralized and hence can just be called a distributed ledger or database with cryptography to secure it.

But it is not all that bad because in comparison to public blockchain it is much faster and cheaper because one doesn’t have to spend an enormous amount of energy, time and money to reach a consensus here.

But in other sense, it is much less secure and closed as compared to public blockchain because it can be edited/written or read as when wished and deemed fit by the benefiting parties.

Example: Bankchain

In such type blockchain:

—>Not everyone can run a full node and start mining.

—>Not everyone can make transactions on the chain.

—>Not everyone can review/audit the blockchain in a Blockchain explorer.

In simpler words, to make any changes in such types of blockchains, one needs special privileges and accesses.

Confusion and Conclusion

Public Blockchain Private Blockchain
Anyone can run BTC/LTC full node Anyone can’t run a full node
Anyone can make transactions Anyone can’t make transactions
Anyone can review/audit the blockchain Anyone can’t review/audit the blockchain

These differences are good to identify the right type of blockchain for various use-cases that you might want to apply to but there are few similarities between both public & private blockchains that make it confusing for its users to make the right choice.

Some of these similarities are:-

  1. Both types of the chains are decentralized and P2P
  2. Both types of chains maintain a replica of the ledger at each node that gets updated with consensus
  3. Both types of chains provide immutability (immutability of different levels.)

Hence, instead of getting carried away by these similarities let us always remember the above-elucidated differences between public and private blockchains.

Also, in my opinion, despite these differences and similarities, public blockchains have the potential to disrupt many industries and revolutionize the world but it doesn’t mean that private blockchain will be useless.

Private blockchain certainly has the potential to save millions of dollars for various industries by reducing many different types of behind the scene expenditures that can be automated in a trusted way through blockchain tech.

That is all from my side in this article. It would be good to hear your thoughts on the blockchain, private chains and public chains in the comments section below.

Hier finden Sie einige ausgewählte Artikel, die Sie als nächstes lesen sollten:

Helfen Sie uns zu verbessern. War dies hilfreich

Vielen Dank für Ihr Feedback!

1 thought on “What Are Private Blockchains & How do They Differ From Public Blockchains?”

Einen Kommentar hinterlassen

Ihre E-Mail Adresse wird nicht veröffentlicht. Erforderliche Felder sind mit * gekennzeichnet

Diese Website verwendet Akismet, um Spam zu reduzieren. Erfahren Sie, wie Ihre Kommentardaten verarbeitet werden.

Abonnieren, um auf dem Laufenden zu bleiben

Lernen Sie profitablen Krypto-Handel und erhalten Sie unsere kostenlosen Ressourcen, um automatisierte Bot 🤖 Handelsstrategien zu meistern.

(Wir respektieren Ihre Privatsphäre.)

Ressourcen

Coinsutra-Logo

CoinSutra stellt allgemeine Informationen zu Kryptowährungen und Blockchain ausschließlich zu Bildungszwecken zur Verfügung. Die Inhalte auf der Website von CoinSutra und in den sozialen Medien stellen keine Finanz-, Investitions-, Handels- oder professionelle Beratung dar. Die Leser sollten unabhängige Nachforschungen anstellen und einen zugelassenen Berater konsultieren, bevor sie Investitionsentscheidungen treffen.

CoinSutra empfiehlt oder befürwortet keine bestimmten Kryptowährungen, Projekte, Plattformen, Produkte, Börsen, Wallets oder andere Angebote. Meinungen, die von CoinSutra-Autoren geteilt werden, sind nur ihre persönlichen Ansichten und sollten nicht für finanzielle Entscheidungen herangezogen werden.

CoinSutra-Autoren sind keine zertifizierten Finanzberater oder Makler. Kryptowährungsaktivitäten wie Kauf, Handel, Besitz und Verkauf sind mit inhärenten Risiken verbunden. Die Leser sollten ihre Sorgfaltspflicht erfüllen, bevor sie sich beteiligen. CoinSutra und seine Autoren sind nicht für Investitionsverluste verantwortlich, die durch das Handeln auf der Website oder in den sozialen Medien entstehen. Besucher nehmen auf eigenes Risiko teil.



Nach oben blättern
71 Shares