By Daniel Phillips and Matt Hussey
10 min read
We’re all familiar with apps and app stores. You browse, download the app you want, and away you go.
Behind the lovely UX and UI interfaces of mobile devices, these apps are performing a specific set of instructions as laid out by their creator. It could be a game, a calendar, or a way to buy goods and services.
Smart contracts perform a very similar function.
A smart contract is a contract—expressed as a piece of code—that’s designed to carry out a set of instructions.
With smart contracts, however, there’s no middleman. There’s no person or company holding your information or verifying it. The blockchain verifies and holds information for you.
Vitalik Buterin, and the Ethereum community, believe that this is the future of the blockchain. If Bitcoin is the gold of the business world, smart contracts are the oil the business world runs on.
Let's imagine a conventional online transaction, without a smart contract. Let's say you want to buy a car online. In order to do so, you need:
Each of these components requires a level of trust between you and the site or service in question. In addition, each part of that process is typically controlled by a different company or individual.
It wouldn’t take much for a sneaky person or organization to meddle with any of the above elements, spoiling or voiding the whole process.
Why? Smart contracts are:
Usually, at the heart of a smart contract, you'll find a mechanism that says (in computer code) “if this happens, then do this.”
These already exist today. Let’s say you want to pay for something using a debit or credit card. The software your bank runs on will use the “if this happens, then do this” function in the following way:
The difference with smart contracts is, instead of a bank (or any third party) being the controller of that decision, the blockchain makes the determination.
Taking the above example and applying it to a smart contract built on a blockchain, you’d see the following:
The exciting thing about smart contracts is it means anyone can enter into an agreement with anyone else, with the blockchain keeping a record of the whole thing.
Like regular contracts, smart contracts are designed to enforce the terms of an agreement—whether this is an exchange of cryptocurrencies, tokenized rights, proof of identity, or practically anything else.
Smart contracts will automatically execute when pre-defined conditions are met. The operation of a smart contract can be briefly described with three main terms:
For most blockchains, the code underlying the smart contracts is immutable. Several blockchains also support updateable smart contracts, however.
Like the blockchain technology used to power most cryptocurrencies, smart contracts were derived from earlier technologies that weren’t quite complete. In the case of smart contracts, they are derived from earlier electronic instruction execution programs that used "if/else" statements and other conditional logic to automatically produce an outcome based on the information presented.
The term “smart contract” itself was coined in the 1990s in an academic paper created by Nick Szabo, a prominent computer scientist and cryptographer that was also responsible for developing one of the earliest precursors to Bitcoin, known as Bit Gold. Szabo initially described smart contracts for a variety of basic purposes like fraud reduction and enforcing contractual arrangements, but later expanded the potential use-cases of the technology to include digital cash, smart property, and more in a 1996 paper.
Ethereum implemented a Turing-complete language on its blockchain, allowing for complex and sophisticated logic in its smart contracts.
Dapps, or decentralized apps, can be best thought of as a bunch of smart contracts tied together.
A smart contract on its own can only be used for one type of transaction. A dapp, however, can bundle multiple smart contracts together to do more sophisticated things.
A dapp can also put a friendly interface on top of the contracts—just like apps do today.
Smart contracts are a relatively new technology, but they have already seen widespread implementation among crypto projects.
Smart contracts are at the heart of the entire decentralized finance (DeFi) revolution, and are used to power popular DeFi protocols like Compound, Aave, Uniswap, and hundreds of others.
But they’ve also been adopted by a whole host of corporations, and even some governments have begun experimenting with smart contracts. Some of the most prominent examples include:
Although smart contracts are generally considered to be a “trustless” way of enforcing agreements and logic, they aren’t without their fair share of problems.
For one thing, smart contracts are immutable on many blockchains. This means that once launched, they cannot be changed or upgraded, which can lead to disastrous consequences if there are underlying issues with the code. Unknown and novel attack vectors can be exploited, usually ending with investors losing money.
This is perhaps best highlighted by the 2016 Ethereum DAO hack, which saw an unknown hacker siphon off millions of ether (ETH) by exploiting a loophole in the DAO’s split function.
September 2020 saw the collapse of the test version of Eminence, a project by Yearn Finance's Andre Cronje. It was exploited for $15 million by an unknown hacker after a huge number of investors sank their money into it.
Likewise, simple bad code can render smart contracts effectively useless. This was seen with the August 2020 collapse of the DeFi yield farming project known as YAM, which used unaudited smart contracts and was thwarted by a critical bug that nullified its governance feature.
Though smart contracts are secured by their underlying blockchain technology, they also need to be secure by design. As noted above, certain functions or errors in their code can be exploited.
This has happened a number of times in the past, and remains one of the biggest challenges to wider adoption. In 2021 alone, $1.3 billion was lost to DeFi hacks, according to blockchain security firm CertiK.
In total, billions of dollars worth of assets have been drained from unsecured smart contracts, including the aforementioned Eminence hack and a $325 million hack of DeFi project Wormhole in January 2022.
To help minimize the risk of this, a number of third-party development and security firms like as Mythx and ConsenSys Diligence now offer smart contract auditing services. This involves scrutinizing the smart contract code to identify vulnerabilities, which can then be fixed. This usually occurs before a smart contract is made public.
Popular dapps will often post their smart contract audit results in the footer of their website, providing confidence to users who don’t have the time or expertise to check its code themselves.
Smart contract platforms have grown to become one of the most significant sectors of the crypto economy. Of the top 10 crypto assets by market capitalization (based on data from CoinMarketCap), three are smart contract platforms, with one—Ethereum—second only to Bitcoin itself.
Between them, the 10 leading smart contract platforms have a combined market capitalization of over $481 billion as of this writing. They include:
Today, most blockchains have smart contract functions, with active communities of developers creating dapps using smart contracts on blockchains such as Cosmos and Hyperledger. The scope of smart contract capabilities can range from very simple based on something like Bitcoin or Litecoin, to more advanced on dapp-capable blockchains like Ethereum and Polkadot.
We’re still in the early days of what smart contracts and dapps can do. But there are companies and even governments experimenting with their potential already. They are now used for a huge range of tasks, including digital identities, supply chain management, insurance, data storage, and a whole lot more.
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