An “oracle” sends data from the outside world, such as the daily temperature or the number of votes a political candidate received, to a blockchain such as Ethereum. A smart contract on the blockchain can then use the data, typically to make a decision about whether to dispense money and to whom.
Here’s a more concrete example: Farmers sometimes purchase agricultural derivatives, which provide insurance in case drought wipes out her crops. If the weather doesn’t go the farmer’s way one season, the derivative will pay her a lump sum to make up for the losses.
An oracle helps an Ethereum smart contract perform this sequence of tasks automatically. Smart contracts are tools made possible by blockchains such as Ethereum, which execute the terms of a relationship only if the correct conditions are met. Ethereum also happens to support the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, ether.
For example, at the end of a season, a weather oracle described above might inform the smart contract that it rained only 10 days or less this season. It sends this information directly to the smart contract, which then knows it is supposed to pay the farmer.
Conversely, if the season sees more than enough rain, the weather oracle will inform the smart contract, and the farmer will not be paid.
What are the problems with oracles?
The defining quality of a blockchain like Ethereum is that it’s able to run smart contracts. Once programmed, the smart contract is fully controlled by the blockchain; no entity needs to be trusted to execute the rules, and no middleman can prevent the transaction from taking place, assuming the conditions for the smart contract are met. The contract simply does what it’s programmed to do.
However, an oracle is a data feed run by an entity; in the above example, it’s a weather oracle. Blockchains like Ethereum were created to move away from third parties, yet an oracle is one.
Trusting a data source can lead to issues. The owner of an oracle’s data feed, for example, could post inaccurate data in order to sway smart contracts in favor of the data feed owner. Alternatively, someone could hack the data feed to sway the data in their favor.
Smart contracts that are not dependent on oracles don’t have this problem.
That said, researchers are exploring various ways to mitigate this issue and create oracles that are more decentralized or otherwise protected against bad actors. One such area of research is for oracle computers to use Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs), special areas of hardware with extra security, making them difficult to tamper with.
What applications use oracles?
Many Ethereum applications use oracles. Prediction market Augur, for instance, lets participants bet on what will happen in the future. For example, participants could have bet “yes” or “no” on the question: “Will Joe Biden win the 2024 election?” Augur would use data from oracles to figure out whether or not Biden won, thus settling the bet.
Other platforms, such as Chainlink, make oracles a central part of their platforms, and have explored various ways to make oracles resistant to false information.

 
															 Bitcoin
Bitcoin  Ethereum
Ethereum  Tether
Tether  XRP
XRP  BNB
BNB  USDC
USDC  Lido Staked Ether
Lido Staked Ether  Dogecoin
Dogecoin  TRON
TRON  Cardano
Cardano  Wrapped stETH
Wrapped stETH  Wrapped Bitcoin
Wrapped Bitcoin  Figure Heloc
Figure Heloc  Wrapped Beacon ETH
Wrapped Beacon ETH  Chainlink
Chainlink  Hyperliquid
Hyperliquid  Bitcoin Cash
Bitcoin Cash  Wrapped eETH
Wrapped eETH  Stellar
Stellar  Ethena USDe
Ethena USDe  USDS
USDS  Binance Bridged USDT (BNB Smart Chain)
Binance Bridged USDT (BNB Smart Chain)  LEO Token
LEO Token  WETH
WETH  Sui
Sui  Hedera
Hedera  Coinbase Wrapped BTC
Coinbase Wrapped BTC  Avalanche
Avalanche  Litecoin
Litecoin  WhiteBIT Coin
WhiteBIT Coin  Zcash
Zcash  Monero
Monero  Shiba Inu
Shiba Inu  Toncoin
Toncoin  Cronos
Cronos  USDT0
USDT0  Ethena Staked USDe
Ethena Staked USDe  Mantle
Mantle  Bittensor
Bittensor  Dai
Dai  Polkadot
Polkadot  MemeCore
MemeCore  World Liberty Financial
World Liberty Financial  sUSDS
sUSDS  Uniswap
Uniswap  Aave
Aave  Bitget Token
Bitget Token  USD1
USD1  OKB
OKB  BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund
BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund