Web3 Glossary


Beginner Terms (Foundational)

Web3
The next evolution of the internet where users own their identity, data, and digital assets instead of platforms controlling them.

Blockchain
A shared, tamper-resistant digital ledger maintained by many computers that records transactions and data permanently.

Wallet
A digital tool that stores private keys and allows users to prove ownership, sign transactions, and access Web3 apps.

Public Address
A wallet’s visible identifier, similar to an account number. It can receive assets and be viewed by anyone.

Private Key
A secret cryptographic key that proves ownership of a wallet.
Whoever controls the private key controls the assets.

Custodial Wallet
A wallet where a third party (like an exchange) controls the private keys on behalf of the user.

Self-Custody
A model where the user controls their own private keys, and therefore their identity and assets.

Transaction
A signed action recorded on a blockchain, such as sending tokens, minting an NFT, or voting.

Gas Fee
A small fee paid to process and validate transactions on a blockchain network.


Intermediate Terms (How Web3 Works)

Smart Contract
Self-executing code deployed on a blockchain that automatically enforces rules and outcomes when conditions are met.

dApp (Decentralized Application)
An application that runs on blockchain infrastructure instead of centralized servers.

NFT (Non-Fungible Token)
A unique digital record that represents ownership, access rights, or licensing, verified on a blockchain.

Fungible vs Non-Fungible
  • Fungible: interchangeable (e.g., currencies)
  • Non-Fungible: unique and distinguishable (e.g., NFTs)

Token
A digital unit issued on a blockchain that can represent value, access, governance rights, or utility.

Minting
The process of creating a new token or NFT and recording it on the blockchain.

Royalties
Automatically enforced creator payments, often embedded into NFT smart contracts.

DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization)
A community-governed organization where rules, proposals, and voting are transparent and blockchain-based.

Governance
The system by which decisions are proposed, voted on, and enforced within a Web3 protocol or DAO.

Consensus
The method by which a blockchain network agrees on the current state of its ledger.


Advanced Terms (Architecture & Future Systems)

Immutability
The property of blockchains that makes recorded data extremely difficult or impractical to alter.

Permissionless
A system that allows anyone to participate without approval from a central authority.

On-Chain / Off-Chain
  • On-chain: data or actions recorded directly on the blockchain
  • Off-chain: data stored elsewhere but referenced or verified by the blockchain

Layer 1 (L1)
The base blockchain network itself, such as Ethereum.

Layer 2 (L2)
Scaling solutions built on top of Layer 1 blockchains to improve speed and reduce costs.

Interoperability
The ability for different blockchains and systems to communicate and exchange value or data.

Zero-Knowledge Proof (ZKP)
A cryptographic method that allows someone to prove something is true without revealing the underlying data.

Digital Identity
A portable, wallet-based identity that can authenticate users, devices, or AI agents without centralized control.

Machine-to-Machine Economy
An economic model where devices and AI systems transact with each other autonomously using wallets and smart contracts.

Digital Twin
A real-time digital representation of a physical object, system, or entity, often paired with blockchain identity.

Autonomous Agent
An AI system that can make decisions, execute smart contracts, and transact using a wallet.

Trustless
A system that does not require trust in intermediaries because rules are enforced by code and cryptography.