Part 1 Beginner Why long-term crypto holders borrow against assets instead of selling A strategic guide to liquidity management, capital preservation, and the real tradeoff between selling and borrowing crypto Open guide Every time you send money through a bank, you are trusting that one institution to record the transfer correctly, keep the record safe, and not freeze your account. For most transactions, that works fine. But it also means the bank controls the record. If it goes down, gets hacked, makes an error, or decides to block your transaction, there is no independent version of events you can check against.
Blockchain was built to change that. It is a record-keeping system where many computers around the world hold copies of the same ledger, agree on what gets added to it, and make it very difficult for any single party to alter history. No bank approves each entry. No single server holds the only copy. The record is maintained by a network that follows shared rules.
That is the core idea.
But is it really all safe?
The ledger can be tamper-evident and publicly verifiable, but it cannot protect you from losing your password, sending funds to the wrong address, or trusting a fraudulent exchange. Those risks live outside the chain, and they are where most beginners actually lose money.
This guide covers how blockchain works, what the key terms mean, where it genuinely helps, and where its limits sit.
