What Is a Blockchain Network?

2026-07-02

What Is a Blockchain Network?

A blockchain network is the group of computers that together run a blockchain — storing the shared ledger, checking transactions, and agreeing on what's valid. There's no central server; the network is the nodes plus the rules they follow. This guide explains it simply.

Nodes working together

A blockchain network is made up of computers called nodes, connected peer-to-peer [1]. Each node keeps a copy of the ledger, relays transactions, and helps confirm that new blocks follow the rules. Because the record is spread across many nodes rather than one server, there is no single point that can be shut down or quietly altered [2].

Public, private and consortium

The bottom line

A blockchain network is simply the community of computers that maintain a blockchain together — validating transactions and reaching consensus without a central authority. Public networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum are open to anyone, while private and consortium networks limit who can join. To keep learning the fundamentals, follow more from Bitbase Academy.

Disclaimer: This article is educational content from Bitbase Academy, provided for information only. It does not constitute investment, trading, tax, or financial advice. Crypto assets are volatile; assess your own risk. Written as of June 2026; refer to the latest official information.

References

[1] Coinbase, "What is a blockchain?" https://www.coinbase.com/learn/crypto-basics/what-is-a-blockchain

[2] IBM, "What is blockchain?" https://www.ibm.com/topics/blockchain

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