Public Key
Quick Answer
A public key is the cryptographic counterpart to a private key, used to derive wallet addresses and verify transaction signatures. It can be shared openly.
Full Definition
A public key is the cryptographic counterpart to a private key, used to derive a wallet address and verify digital signatures. Public keys can be shared openly — they allow others to send funds to the associated address and verify that transactions were signed by the corresponding private key holder. The public-private key pair is the foundation of blockchain identity and transaction authorisation.
Related Terms
Payment Channel
A payment channel allows multiple off-chain transactions between two parties, with only opening and closing settled on-chain — enabling micro-payments at near-zero cost.
Payment Gateway
A payment gateway facilitates the transfer of payment information between customer, merchant, and processor. Crypto payment gateways replace traditional card networks with faster, cheaper blockchain rails.
Peer-to-Peer (P2P)
Peer-to-peer means direct interaction between parties without an intermediary. Blockchain payments flow directly from sender to receiver without a bank in the middle.
Private Key
A private key is a cryptographic secret giving full control over a blockchain address. Anyone with the private key can move all funds — losing it means permanent loss of access.
Proof of Stake (PoS)
Proof of Stake is a consensus mechanism where validators stake crypto as collateral, offering faster blocks and lower fees than Proof of Work — critical for payment processing.
Proof of Work (PoW)
Proof of Work is a consensus mechanism where miners solve computational puzzles to validate transactions. Used by Bitcoin, it is secure but slow (10-minute blocks).