It’s been 10 years since Satoshi Nakamoto published his/her/their paper called “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System” where blockchain took main stage. Fast-forward to today, blockchain is the hot topic in technology. Companies all around the world are dabbling in this revolutionary ‘new’ technology and in this post I will discuss how education can be revolutionized with the blockchain.
There are numerous definitions online, so I’ll keep it short and sweet for the benefit of those who are coming across their first blockchain-related post.
A blockchain is a decentralized and distributed ledger which records transactions between two users of the same network in a transparent, secure, immutable and verifiable manner. It works as follows:
GIF courtesy of realdolmen
I mentioned above that the blockchain is decentralized, but what does that mean?
A decentralized system is one in which no single person, institution, or machine is telling others what to do. Ethereum’s Co-Founder, Vitalik Buterin, categorized decentralization into 3 types (you can read more here), with the blockchain offering 2 out of 3:
Now that we’ve got the basics of the blockchain and decentralization out of the way, there are certain characteristics of the blockchain which can revolutionize education. These include:
1 — Proof of OwnershipProof of ownership and proof of intellectual property is extremely easy to achieve using the blockchain, due to its immutable and transparent nature. Unfortunately, the centralized systems that exist today are vulnerable to weak provenance (“the place of origin or earliest known history of something”) and tampering. The blockchain offers exceptional provenance thus bringing protection to the content creator.
What does this mean for education?
**2 — Decentralized Information Sharing**The blockchain can bring down walls and barriers through decentralization. This promotes a new, revolutionary way of sharing information, which was not available until the advent of the decentralized blockchain.
What does this mean for education?
**3 — Tokenized Economy**One of the biggest applications of blockchain today are cryptocurrencies. Cryptocurrencies “are digital assets designed to work as a medium of exchange to secure financial transactions”. Therefore, whole economies can now be tokenized using cryptocurrencies, including the student economy.
What does this mean for education?
A project which has caught my attention tackling this space is Spitball. Spitball is an Educational Technology (EdTech) company with an existing user-base of over 500,000 students, a massive content database, a team with great operational experience and a lot of education partnerships already under their belt. They are now looking to launch a decentralized student economy (called Spitball 2.0) aiming to tackle education.
Spitball is a marketplace in which students reap the rewards of a shared ecosystem of knowledge and services while also themselves earning money for their provided knowledge, content and services. The marketplace enables students to receive homework help, buy and sell course notes, find work, buy and sell books and much more, disrupting a market dominated by middlemen taking huge margins.
Using blockchain technology, Spitball 2.0 is establishing the first of its kind global decentralized Student Economy that connects and incentivizes students from all over the world. It allows them to directly exchange knowledge, goods, and services using a native SBL token — creating proof of ownership on the platform and making tokenized cross-border transactions cheap, fast, and secure.
As a matter of fact, Spitball has already launched a beta version of the marketplace on its existing platform with a blockchain-powered application running on top of it.
You can find more information about Spitball by visiting their website, here, and reading their whitepaper, here.
If you would like to know more about Spitball, please drop me a comment on my various social media, or leave a comment below!
If you enjoyed this post, please feel free to 👏 clap 👏 many times (you know you want to!), give my blog a 👣 follow 👣 and 🤲 share 🤲 with your friends. There’s a limit of 👏 50 claps 👏 you can give to each post, so I urge you not to try and exceed that limit… you might break Medium!
If I still have your attention, please leave a comment and let me know what else you would like to see me writing about. You can find links to my social media and sign up to my newsletter below.
You can also show your support by donating to the following address:ETH: 0x4c7195E074cf0Ab6F77Bdb7C97Fd2567066Bb712
Disclaimer: All information and data on this blog post is for informational purposes only. My opinions are my own. I do not provide personal investment advice and I am not a qualified licensed investment advisor. I make no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity, of any information. I will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or any losses, or damages arising from its display or use. All information is provided as is with no warranties and confers no rights.