What is Oracle?
An oracle is a service that feeds external data — prices, sports scores, weather, randomness — into smart contracts. Because contracts can't make HTTP calls, oracles are the bridge to the real world. Their honesty and uptime are critical: most DeFi exploits trace back to oracle manipulation.
Why Oracle matters
Understanding Oracle is part of building a solid mental model of how Bitcoin, blockchain and Web3 systems actually work. Concepts in the Ethereum category sit at the foundation of the broader stack — get them right and the rest is far easier.
Learn this interactively
Reading the definition is a start. ZeroToBlock teaches concepts like Oracle through hands-on, browser-based simulations. Build the mental model by actually using it:
- Bitcoin 101 — interactive fundamentals course
- Bitcoin Proof of Work — mining, hashing and consensus
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Related terms
- Smart Contract — Code on a blockchain that automatically enforces its rules.
- DeFi (Decentralized Finance) — Financial services built from smart contracts.
- Chainlink — A leading decentralized oracle network.
More ethereum terms
- Ethereum — A programmable blockchain that supports smart contracts.
- EVM (Ethereum Virtual Machine) — The execution environment for Ethereum smart contracts.
- Gas — The unit measuring computational cost on Ethereum.
- NFT (Non-Fungible Token) — A unique, non-interchangeable token on a blockchain.
- Solidity — The most popular programming language for Ethereum smart contracts.
- Web3 — An umbrella term for blockchain-based, user-owned internet applications.
- DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) — An on-chain organization governed by token holders.
- dApp (Decentralized Application) — An app whose backend lives on a blockchain.
Keep exploring
Continue with the full blockchain glossary — 136 terms in total — or read the developer blog and FAQ for deeper context.