• News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Learn
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
What's Hot

What Is Cardano (ADA)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

2026-02-11

This Bitcoin Reset Is Setting Up the Next Big Move

2026-02-11

What Is TRON (TRX)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

2026-02-10

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook Twitter Instagram
Crypto Investor News Network
  • News
    • Bitcoin
    • Altcoins
    • Blockchain
    • DeFi
    • Regulation
    • Scams
  • NFT

    Bitcoin Just Hit an All-Time High. Nobody Cares

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of May 27

    2025-09-11

    Bitcoin Vegas Belongs to the Suits Now

    2025-09-11

    NFC Summit Lisbon Founder on Evolving the Event and Weathering the Market

    2025-09-11

    All Eyes on Art: Upcoming Collections to Watch the Week of June 3

    2025-09-10
  • Metaverse

    Shib: The Metaverse – Part of the Expanding Shiba Inu Ecosystem

    2025-01-03

    Experience to Earn: Everdome’s Metaverse Frontier

    2024-12-30

    Beyond Bots: Meta Motivo and the Dawn of Humanlike Digital Life

    2024-12-13

    Exploring NetVRk: What Is Behind This AI-Driven Virtual Universe?

    2024-10-28

    Council of Europe Highlights Metaverse’s Impact on Privacy and Democracy

    2024-09-05
  • Analysis

    Crypto Exchange Coinbase Lists New DeFi Altcoin Project Built on Base Blockchain

    2023-12-13

    Ethereum Price Bears Keep Pushing, Why Decline Isn’t Over Yet

    2023-12-13

    Trader Bullish on Cosmos (ATOM), Says One Dogecoin Rival Setting Up for Next Leg Up – Here’s His Outlook

    2023-12-13

    AVAX Price Pumps 50% and Dumps 15%, Why Uptrend Is Still Strong

    2023-12-13

    Top Trader Predicts Parabolic Rally for Solana Competitor – Here’s His Upside Target

    2023-12-13
  • Learn

    What Is Cardano (ADA)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

    2026-02-11

    What Is TRON (TRX)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

    2026-02-10

    6 Indicators That Actually Work

    2026-02-10

    Can My Crypto Go Negative? Margin Trading, Liquidation & Protection

    2026-02-04

    What Beginners Should Know in 2026

    2026-02-04
  • Videos

    This Bitcoin Reset Is Setting Up the Next Big Move

    2026-02-11

    Bitcoin Has Never Been This Undervalued…

    2026-02-10

    Can Bitcoin Really Fall to $50,000?

    2026-02-09

    The Evidence: Institutions Buying YOUR Bitcoin

    2026-02-09

    Whales Are Buying 🐋 $4.7B Is the Trap 🚨 Follow the Money 💰

    2026-02-09
  • Blogs
  • Market Cap
  • Shop
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
Crypto Investor News Network
Home»Blockchain»Blockchains Are Not Immutable
Blockchain

Blockchains Are Not Immutable

2023-05-12No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Blockchain


Crypto has a bad reputation.

There are many other reasons why, but I think this bad rep often comes from crypto being misunderstood, both by its critics (haters?) and fans (cultists?).

These misunderstandings often arise from half-truths used as marketing material to promote the technology that ends up being taken at face value.

One such misunderstanding is the idea that blockchains are “immutable.” I was recently at a conference where most attendees I spoke with were crypto skeptics. A fairly regular pushback I heard was that immutability was bad and because blockchains are immutable, this is not a good or useful technology.

But are blockchains really immutable?

No.

When it comes to immutability, in fact, blockchains are no different from the “real” world in that the only thing that can’t be changed is the past.

Why even have blockchains?

You might be wondering what the point of a blockchain even is, if indeed any change can be reversed.

If a transaction recorded yesterday transferred some coins from X to Y, it is not possible to “rewrite” the transaction (almost without exception) to change the amount, recipient or sender of that specific transaction. However, it is possible to create another transaction from Y to X for the same amount to “restore” the balances.

Importantly, using the same mechanism as above, any “state” can be updated, not just balances, but also the code of smart contracts themselves in blockchains that support them, like Ethereum.

Rather than focusing on blockchain’s faux immutable state then, move your gaze over to who can change the state to see what actually matters. In the example above, only Y can ever send a new transaction to X.

See also  Permissionless Capital partners with Solana, Immutable, Chainlink for web3 startup competition

In Bitcoin, only the owner of a private key can change the balance of the account that matches this private key.

And in the Ethereum world, each smart contract has its own logic for which a user is allowed to make what change. A currency contract (like ERC-20) would probably only allow the owner of any coin to transfer them, but it may also enable some special admin user to perform transfers (like the USDC contract does, for example).

Similarly, if a contract is upgradable, it is likely only upgradable by a single address. Interestingly, this specific address itself may be another contract like a multisig or a DAO, opening up the possibility of oversight controls.

This means that the really exciting consequence of blockchain isn’t immutability at all, but accountability, i.e. anything that’s executed or changed is only possible because it was previously specified. Of course, that doesn’t mean code will never have bugs that result in unintended behaviors, but there’s a level of accountability with the code being publicly visible by anyone.

This accountability is what makes blockchains really useful for things that are widely shared and require “trust” that no one can arbitrarily change. This is true of money, but also of many foundational pieces of infrastructure that enable collaboration between humans.

Accountability makes the concept of governance critical. Accountability lets groups of users collectively set the rules (if any!) that determine what can be changed in a contract, how, by whom, when…etc. And even on blockchains that have no concept of smart contracts that predefine custom rules — Bitcoin being the most prominent example — governance can happen.

See also  Kinetex Secures Funding to Build Future of Cross-Chain Trading On Gnosis Chain

The myth of immutability

Blockchains are vast networks of machines (nodes) that collectively agree on the state of a ledger. That agreement is, in fact, the protocol, and each individual node can decide on what “version” of the protocol it adheres to.

The state of the blockchain is determined by the version of the majority of nodes. Even when there are no explicit rules around changes, if the majority of nodes decide to change, the blockchain will change. This happens with Bitcoin (Segwit, Taproot…), Ethereum and any other network.

That’s the reason why even the most repeated claims about any blockchain’s immutability, like the permanence of the supply of coins or the balances of certain accounts, can in reality be changed…as long as enough of the actual members of that network want the change.

The immutability of blockchains is therefore subject to humans collectively working together.

When we use applications on these blockchains, we can trust that history will remain unchanged — but not because of some intrinsic properties baked into the technology. It’s because the human actors governing the blockchains decide for it to be that way.

And it’s this human coordination that allows applications to always perform the same certain actions in the same certain ways that could not be more valuable.


Julien is the founder and CEO of Unlock, where he’s building the web’s new business model by enabling brands and creators to connect directly with their audiences through a decentralized access control system. He previously founded SuperFeedr, which became one of the leading real-time web APIs, received funding from Mark Cuban and Betaworks, and was later acquired by Medium. At Medium, Julien led the company’s SEO efforts and quadrupled the share of traffic Medium receives from search. He created his first company, Jobetudiant, while still in school. After nearly 20 years, it’s still one of the largest job boards for students in France.

See also  IoT project turns smartphones into blockchain nodes to broaden connectivity

blockchains Immutable
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Threshold Network Integrates Chainlink Feeds to Strengthen tBTC Ecosystem Across Four Top Blockchains

2024-09-20

Echelon raises $3.5m to advance DeFi lending on Move-based blockchains

2024-08-27

Uniswap Labs Shares the List of Total Weekly Pools on Diverse Blockchains

2024-08-19

The Rise of DeFi-Centric Blockchains Transforming the World of Finance

2024-08-08
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts
Videos

Guess Who JUST ADMITTED To Manipulating Bitcoin!

2023-10-13

Caroline Ellison and Sam Bankman-Fried have been working together in order to manipulate Bitcoin, plus…

Videos

Coinbase Paper Bitcoin?

2024-09-17

Please help to support this channel’s work: https://www.youtube.com/@Bitcoin_University/join In this video, I discuss the claims…

Blockchain

Verato and CLEAR Revolutionize Healthcare with Digital Identity Partnership

2023-10-10

MCLEAN, Va. — Verato and CLEAR announce partnership aimed at turbocharging the adoption of digital…

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Update from CINN about Crypto, Metaverse and NFT.

Editors Picks

What Is Cardano (ADA)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

2026-02-11

This Bitcoin Reset Is Setting Up the Next Big Move

2026-02-11

What Is TRON (TRX)? How It Works, History, Roadmap

2026-02-10

Bitcoin Has Never Been This Undervalued…

2026-02-10
Crypto Investor News Network
Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Disclouser
© 2026 - All rights are reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 67,541.00
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 1,951.92
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 0.999517
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 1.38
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 610.49
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.999868
solana
Solana (SOL) $ 79.74
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.276674
jusd
JUSD (JUSD) $ 0.999053
figure-heloc
Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) $ 1.03