What is Bitcoin? Best Explanation
Bitcoin is a collection of concepts and technologies that form the basis of a digital money
ecosystem. Units of currency called bitcoins are used to store and transmit value among
participants in the bitcoin network. Bitcoin users communicate with each other using
the bitcoin protocol primarily via the Internet, although other transport networks can
also be used.
The bitcoin protocol stack, available as open source software, can be run
on a wide range of computing devices, including laptops and smartphones, making the
technology easily accessible.
Users can transfer bitcoin over the network to do just about anything that can be done
with conventional currencies, such as buy and sell goods, send money to people or
organizations, or extend credit. Bitcoin technology includes features that are based on
encryption and digital signatures to ensure the security of the bitcoin network.
Bitcoins
can be purchased, sold and exchanged for other currencies at specialized currency ex‐
changes. Bitcoin in a sense is the perfect form of money for the Internet because it is
fast, secure, and borderless.
Unlike traditional currencies, bitcoins are entirely virtual. There are no physical coins
or even digital coins per se. The coins are implied in transactions which transfer value
from sender to recipient. Users of bitcoin own keys which allow them to prove owner‐
ship of transactions in the bitcoin network, unlocking the value to spend it and transfer
it to a new recipient. Those keys are often stored in a digital wallet on each user’s com‐
puter. Possession of the key that unlocks a transaction is the only prerequisite to spend‐
ing bitcoins, putting the control entirely in the hands of each user.
Bitcoin is a fully-distributed, peer-to-peer system.
As such there is no “central” server
or point of control. Bitcoins are created through a process called “mining”, which in‐
volves looking for a solution to a difficult problem. Any participant in the bitcoin net‐
work (i.e., any device running the full bitcoin protocol stack) may operate as a miner,
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using their computer’s processing power to attempt to find solutions to this problem.
Every 10 minutes on average, a new solution is found by someone who then is able to
validate the transactions of the past 10 minutes and is rewarded with brand new bitcoins.
Essentially, bitcoin mining de-centralizes the currency-issuance and clearing functions
of a central bank and replaces the need for any central bank with this global competition.
The bitcoin protocol includes built-in algorithms that regulate the mining function
across the network. The difficulty of the problem that miners must solve is adjusted
dynamically so that, on average, someone finds a correct answer every 10 minutes re‐
gardless of how many miners (and CPUs) are working on the problem at any moment.
The protocol also halves the rate at which new bitcoins are created every 4 years, and
limits the total number of bitcoins that will be created to a fixed total of 21 million coins.
The result is that the number of bitcoins in circulation closely follows an easily pre‐
dictable curve that reaches 21 million by the year 2140. Due to bitcoin’s diminishing
rate of issuance, over the long term, the bitcoin currency is deflationary. Furthermore,
bitcoin cannot be inflated by “printing” new money above and beyond the expected
issuance rate.
Behind the scenes, bitcoin is also the name of the protocol, a network and a distributed
computing innovation.
The bitcoin currency is really only the first application of this
invention. As a developer, I see bitcoin as akin to the Internet of money, a network for
propagating value and securing the ownership of digital assets via distributed compu‐
tation. There’s a lot more to bitcoin than first meets the eye.
In this chapter we’ll get started by explaining some of the main concepts and terms,
getting the necessary software and using bitcoin for simple transactions. In following
chapters we’ll start unwrapping the layers of technology that make bitcoin possible and
examine the inner workings of the bitcoin network and protocol.
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