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56 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
56 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Terminology
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description: Terminology specific to Ocean Protocol.
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---
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## Ocean Network
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Any EVM-compatible network where all[^1] the Ocean Protocol smart contracts ([keeper contracts](https://github.com/oceanprotocol/keeper-contracts)) are deployed. There can be many Ocean networks and you can use the Ocean Protocol in several EVM-compatible networks, including:
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- the Ethereum Mainnet (also called the Main Ethereum Network)
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- the Ocean [Pacific Main Network](/concepts/pacific-network/)
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- various Ocean [test networks](/concepts/testnets/)
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## Asset or Data Asset
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Anything that can be registered with and made available via an Ocean Network. Examples include data sets, trained model parameters, pipelines, and data-cleaning services.
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## Data Owner or Data Service Provider
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Someone who has assets that they want to sell (or give away freely). An example is an almond distributor with 30 years of data about almond sales.
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> Initially, most data owners or data service providers will also be the publishers of their own assets.
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## Publisher
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A service which mediates access to assets on behalf of data owners or data service providers.
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> Initially, most publishers will also be the owners of the assets they publish.
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## Consumer
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Someone who wants assets. An example is a data scientist working at an economic think tank.
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## Marketplace
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A service where publishers can list what assets they have, and consumers can see what's available then buy it (or get it for free). Every marketplace has a database where they store metadata about the assets they know about (but not the assets themselves). An Ocean network can support many marketplaces.
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## Verifier
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A person or a software service that checks some steps in transactions. For example, a verifier might check to see if a cryptographic signature is valid and then get rewarded for doing so.
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## Service Execution Agreement (SEA) or Service Agreement
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A contract-like agreement between a publisher, a consumer, and a verifier, specifying what assets are to be delivered (from publisher to consumer), the conditions that must be met, and the rewards for fulfilling the conditions.
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We published a blog post that explains SEAs in more detail:
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- [Blog: Exploring the SEA: Service Execution Agreements](https://blog.oceanprotocol.com/exploring-the-sea-service-execution-agreements-65f7523d85e2)
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## More Terminology
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- See the page about Ocean's [Software Components](/concepts/components/).
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- See the page about [wallets (and other Ethereum terminology)](/concepts/wallets/).
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[^1]: The _Dispenser_ smart contract should only be deployed to testnets.
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