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If you're a modern criminal, chances are you've used it to buy guns, drugs and even launder money.
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Sounds dodgy.
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But high profile institutions such as USAID and UNICEF have a different view.
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They think it could be a force for good, helping the poorest people in the world.
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What is blockchain?
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It's a technology called blockchain - a global online database that anyone, anywhere with an internet connection can use.
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Unlike traditional databases, which are owned by central figures like banks and governments, a blockchain doesn't belong to anyone.
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And with an entire network looking after it, cheating the system by faking documents, transactions and other information becomes near impossible.
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Here's how it works.
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Blockchains store information permanently across a network of personal computers.
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This not only decentralizes the information, but distributes it too.
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So how can a multi-purpose online database, whose users include criminals, work for everyday use?
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How does it stay relatively hack-proof?
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The answer is blockchain's millions of users.
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They make it difficult for any one person to take down the network or corrupt it.
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The many people who run the system use their own personal computers to hold bundles of records submitted by others.
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The records are known as blocks.
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Each block has a timestamp and a link to a previous block, forming a chronological chain.
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It's like a giant Google doc with one key difference.
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You can view it and add to it, but you can't change the information that's already there.
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The blockchain enforces this by using a form of math called cryptography, which means records can't be counterfeited or altered by someone else.
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Blockchain's most famous application is Bitcoin.
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It's a digital currency that is created and held electronically - and you can send it to anyone, whether you know them or not.
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Bitcoin provides a level of anonymity not seen in modern times.
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That's because unlike credit cards or PayPal payments, there are no middlemen such as banks or financial institutions asking for our personal information and home address.
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Instead people from all over the world move the digital money by validating other people's Bitcoin transactions, earning a small fee in the process.
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Where the blockchain comes in is verifying the ownership of this digital cash and making sure only one person is claiming it as their own at a time.
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Banks and businesses are rushing to adopt blockchain database technology.
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In a survey of 308 senior executives at U.S. companies with $500 million or more in annual revenue, Deloitte found that 28 percent of respondents had invested $5 million or more in blockchain technology.
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10 percent had invested $10 million or more.
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But why are they spending so much money?
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Well, to save money of course.
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When this study looked into the data of eight of the world's largest investment banks, it found that blockchain could save them $8 to $12 billion dollars every year.
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Bet that $5 million investment doesn't sound so bad now.
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But it's not all good news for the big players, of course.
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Blockchain lowers the barrier for entry into the banking industry, and that means fintech startups are popping up in pretty much every market they operate in.
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If banks and companies can't keep up, they're putting their own survival at risk.
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For the consumer, the future seems brighter with more security, less cost and better experiences.
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Yet, blockchain could be the biggest game changer for the poorest in society.
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The technology is open to people living in low income countries or fragile states at risk of economic collapse.
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Take a farmer with a small plot of land which is then flooded.
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The paper copy of the deeds to his land is washed away, resulting in the farmer having no proof of owning the land.
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Or perhaps he does have a digital copy on a government database but it is erased, altered or even destroyed in a political coup.
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If the farmer had filed that deed on a blockchain, he could have avoided all these problems.
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Along with speeding up the flow of cash and providing a secure place to keep records - the benefits for the poorest in society are enormous.
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From protecting our identities to running autonomous vehicles to managing a world that is increasingly dependent on the internet of things, the possibilities for blockchain technology seem endless.
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But whether it lives up to its promise remains to be seen.