A 51% attack is an event in which one individual or a collaborating group gains control over more than half of the entire hashing power of a blockchain network. In other words, the security of the network is directly related to the fact that no one is exceptionally powerful through the possession of that power.ย 

In case one surpasses the fifty percent threshold, he/she/they will be in a position to influence which transactions are validated. For instance, they can slow down the other miners, prohibit the addition of new blocks, or even reverse payments they madeโ€“this is called double-spending.

Massive blockchains like Bitcoin or Ethereum cannot be attacked easily, since the amount of power required would cost billions of dollars to acquire and maintain. On the other hand, the smaller and newer blockchains could be the ones most at risk, as there have been several occurrences of such attacks on them in the past (like on the Ethereum Classic Blockchain).

A 51% attack is a trigger for a full discussion of the advantages of decentralization in cryptocurrency. The more dispersed the computational power is, the more difficult it becomes for anyone to alter the past or to seize control from the community that supports the system.

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Quorum

The term quorum defines the essential number of required individuals or necessary votes which must be present to create valid decisions within blockchain networks and decentralized organizations. The crypto governance systems use quorum to guarantee that proposals receive approval only after sufficient stakeholders participate in the voting process. Quorum exists in decentralized autonomous organizations and token-based governance systems as a voting power requirement which must reach a specific percentage threshold. A proposal requires at least 20 percent of governance tokens

Gas Price

Every time money moves on a blockchain, someone bears the cost. That cost is called the gas price, and understanding it early can spare users some real frustration. Gas price is what a user offers to pay per unit of computational work when pushing a transaction through or executing a smart contract. It is not something a company sets or a bank quietly decides. It goes directly to the validators and miners doing the actual workโ€”processing, verifying, and locking transactions

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