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    • Cex or dex March 11, 2026
      Hi, I have some money and I want to buy some btc. I don't like binance so I was thinking to go at a broker (or whaever they're called) and have him send my money to a bitcoin wallet like bluewallet or similar. Do you guys think dex is a good option? I will be […]
    • Finding Satoshi | Official Trailer March 11, 2026
      submitted by /u/jkrmp [link] [comments]
    • Bitcoin traders be like: March 11, 2026
      Green candles: “I am a macro analyst.” Red candles: “This is manipulation.” Sideways market: “This is boring.” Reality: Most accounts are destroyed by overtrading and oversized positions — not by market direction. Anyone else learn this the hard way? submitted by /u/hajhajhaja [link] [comments]
    • Tax implications (UK, but give answers for your own country if you want) March 11, 2026
      I'm curious on the tax implications of Bitcoin. Obviously if you were to buy, hold, sell, then you would owe capital gains tax. What if you were to purchase something with Bitcoin? As I understand it, "selling" is not what triggers CGT, it's "disposing" of an asset. So by purchasing with Bitcoin, are you effectively […]
    • Accepting Bitcoin on my Shopify account? March 11, 2026
      I go to add new payments, type in Bitcoin and 6 options show up. Bankful Coinbase commerce Crypto.com Opennode Bitpay Solanapay And I can't get any of them to work. Multiple reasons. One doesn't like my Gmail, it wants an enterprise email. Coinbase commerce won't exist soon. One can't verify my documents even though they […]
    • Thus Spoke Satoshi March 11, 2026
      submitted by /u/Fiach_Dubh [link] [comments]
    • Inheritance money March 11, 2026
      Hi fellow bitcoiners. I just now received inheritence. My father passed away 4,5 years ago, leaving us with a huge house in city centre of a small village. For pas 3,5 years we have been renting this place, that eventually ended up by selling this house. I Just received a significant amount of money. I […]
    • How to help teen set up business accepting bitcoin? March 11, 2026
      I have a teen who is starting a business selling a product she is making. She has already been saving in bitcoin and she wants to accept bitcoin for payments along with other options. But, I’m really hesitant for her to advertise this as the wrench attack is my biggest concern with bitcoin. She wants […]
    • Running a node March 11, 2026
      Ive been trying to run a node on my ThinkPad with Debian installed on it for about a week. I keep getting all sorts of errors. I keep giving those errors to AI and it keeps giving me all sorts of solutions but then after some time another error pops up - this loop has […]
    • How Bitcoin is protecting people in Iran, video: March 11, 2026
      submitted by /u/Vegetable-Rabbit7503 [link] [comments]
    • Armory wallet recovery March 11, 2026
      Hello, I have 2 Armory wallet backup with the root numbers and the QR code. I would like to get the private key from there, to check if there are any btc left on theses adresse before deletting theses old backup. Any idea on how to generate the private/public address from the Armory backup ? […]
    • Best ways to spend BTC without selling it March 11, 2026
      Most traditional crypto cards either shut down or restricted regions in the last few years. The ones I've tried recently that integrate with Apple Pay or Google Pay make it pretty seamless to just tap and pay directly from crypto balances. Fees are usually reasonable too, depending on the card type. submitted by /u/Traditional_Rock_451 [link] […]
    • Daily Discussion, March 11, 2026 March 11, 2026
      Please utilize this sticky thread for all general Bitcoin discussions! If you see posts on the front page or /r/Bitcoin/new which are better suited for this daily discussion thread, please help out by directing the OP to this thread instead. Thank you! If you don't get an answer to your question, you can try phrasing […]
    • What made you believe in Bitcoin enough to hold it long term? March 11, 2026
      I’ve been learning more about Bitcoin recently and I’m curious about the people who decided to stick with it for the long run. Was there a specific moment, article, or experience that made you think “okay, this might actually be something big”? There’s so much noise online about crypto in general, so I’m interested in […]
    • Why don't we take the rest of the year off? March 10, 2026
      I'm not talking about stacking. I'm talking about expecting Bitcoin to shoot to the moon any time now and getting our hopes up only for it to yoyo and continue the slow downward trend. If we're getting a new upsurge it'll be towards the end of the year or the beginning of 2027 anyway. Lets […]
    • this is actually a really great analogy for bitcoin and why people distrust it March 10, 2026
      submitted by /u/21Bullish [link] [comments]
    • Netflix Secretly Banned Bitcoin From A Boxer’s Trunks Right Before The Fight Of His Life March 10, 2026
      Netflix blocked Bitcoin-related sponsors from appearing on a pro boxer’s fight trunks and gear during a major event it streamed live, forcing last-minute changes days before the bout, according to Sazmining CEO Kent Halliburton. Halliburton, whose company provides Bitcoin mining-as-a-service using renewable hydroelectric energy, detailed the incident in a statement shared with Bitcoin Magazine. The […]
    • One of the most important charts around! March 10, 2026
      submitted by /u/Crypto-hercules [link] [comments]
    • Bitcoin And The 95% Collision March 10, 2026
      The world is waiting for a financial revolution, but it already happened in silence. As of early 2026, over 95% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist has already been mined. We have officially transitioned from an era of monetary expansion to an era of fierce, global competition for a closed system. While retail investors […]
    • Trying to recover a July 2012 Bitcoin wallet need advice March 10, 2026
      Need advice from Bitcoin community about a 2012 wallet recovery. My client has a Bitcoin address from July 2012. We have a 12 word seed and the password, but nothing works. All 12 words exist in both the Blockchainwalletv3 list and the BIP39 list, and no word is missing. But when we try to recover […]

What is cryptocurrency

What is cryptocurrency:  21st-century unicorn – or the money of the future?

This introduction explains the most important thing about cryptocurrencies. After you‘ve read it, you‘ll know more about it than most other humans.

Today cryptocurrencies have become a global phenomenon known to most people. While still somehow geeky and not understood by most people, banks, governments and many companies are aware of its importance.

In 2016, you‘ll have a hard time finding a major bank, a big accounting firm, a prominent software company or a government that did not research cryptocurrencies, publish a paper about it or start a so-called blockchain-project.

But beyond the noise and the press releases the overwhelming majority of people – even bankers, consultants, scientists, and developers – have a very limited knowledge about cryptocurrencies. They often fail to even understand the basic concepts.

So let‘s walk through the whole story. What are cryptocurrencies?

  • Where did cryptocurrency originate?
  • Why should you learn about cryptocurrency?
  • And what do you need to know about cryptocurrency?

What is cryptocurrency and how cryptocurrencies emerged as a side product of digital cash

Few people know, but cryptocurrencies emerged as a side product of another invention. Satoshi Nakamoto, the unknown inventor of Bitcoin, the first and still most important cryptocurrency, never intended to invent a currency.

In his announcement of Bitcoin in late 2008, Satoshi said he developed “A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.“

His goal was to invent something; many people failed to create before digital cash.

After seeing all the centralized attempts fail, Satoshi tried to build a digital cash system without a central entity. Like a Peer-to-Peer network for file sharing.

This decision became the birth of cryptocurrency. They are the missing piece Satoshi found to realize digital cash. The reason why is a bit technical and complex, but if you get it, you‘ll know more about cryptocurrencies than most people do. So, let‘s try to make it as easy as possible:

To realize digital cash you need a payment network with accounts, balances, and transaction. That‘s easy to understand. One major problem every payment network has to solve is to prevent the so-called double spending: to prevent that one entity spends the same amount twice. Usually, this is done by a central server who keeps record about the balances.

In a decentralized network, you don‘t have this server. So you need every single entity of the network to do this job. Every peer in the network needs to have a list with all transactions to check if future transactions are valid or an attempt to double spend.

But how can these entities keep a consensus about this records?

If the peers of the network disagree about only one single, minor balance, everything is broken. They need an absolute consensus. Usually, you take, again, a central authority to declare the correct state of balances. But how can you achieve consensus without a central authority?

Nobody did know until Satoshi emerged out of nowhere. In fact, nobody believed it was even possible.

Satoshi proved it was. His major innovation was to achieve consensus without a central authority. Cryptocurrencies are a part of this solution – the part that made the solution thrilling, fascinating and helped it to roll over the world.

 

 

 

The transaction is known almost immediately by the whole network. But only after a specific amount of time it gets confirmed.

Confirmation is a critical concept in cryptocurrencies. You could say that cryptocurrencies are all about confirmation.

As long as a transaction is unconfirmed, it is pending and can be forged. When a transaction is confirmed, it is set in stone. It is no longer forgeable, it can‘t be reversed, it is part of an immutable record of historical transactions: of the so-called blockchain.

Only miners can confirm transactions. This is their job in a cryptocurrency-network. They take transactions, stamp them as legit and spread them in the network. After a transaction is confirmed by a miner, every node has to add it to its database. It has become part of the blockchain.

For this job, the miners get rewarded with a token of the cryptocurrency, for example with Bitcoins. Since the miner‘s activity is the single most important part of cryptocurrency-system we should stay for a moment and take a deeper look on it.

What are miners doing?

Principally everybody can be a miner. Since a decentralized network has no authority to delegate this task, a cryptocurrency needs some kind of mechanism to prevent one ruling party from abusing it. Imagine someone creates thousands of peers and spreads forged transactions. The system would break immediately.

So, Satoshi set the rule that the miners need to invest some work of their computers to qualify for this task. In fact, they have to find a hash – a product of a cryptographic function – that connects the new block with its predecessor. This is called the Proof-of-Work. In Bitcoin, it is based on the SHA 256 Hash algorithm.

 

What is Cryptocurrency

 

You don‘t need to understand details about SHA 256. It‘s only important you know that it can be the basis of a cryptologic puzzle the miners compete to solve. After finding a solution, a miner can build a block and add it to the blockchain. As an incentive, he has the right to add a so-called coinbase transaction that gives him a specific number of Bitcoins. This is the only way to create valid Bitcoins.

Bitcoins can only be created if miners solve a cryptographic puzzle. Since the difficulty of this puzzle increases the amount of computer power the whole miner’s invest, there is only a specific amount of cryptocurrency token that can be created in a given amount of time. This is part of the consensus no peer in the network can break.

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