Bitcoin
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) (→Commentary) |
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* [http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/12/why-i-want-bitcoin-to-die-in-a.html Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire] | * [http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/12/why-i-want-bitcoin-to-die-in-a.html Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire] | ||
* [https://medium.com/quinn-norton/f3db7e13e6e3 The Values of Money: Bitcoin, Money, and Datalove, Part One] | * [https://medium.com/quinn-norton/f3db7e13e6e3 The Values of Money: Bitcoin, Money, and Datalove, Part One] | ||
+ | * [http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/20/why-bitcoin-is-here-to-say-whether-gover Why Bitcoin is Here to Stay, Whether Governments Like It or Not.] | ||
== Other links and references == | == Other links and references == |
Revision as of 02:54, 21 December 2013
Bitcoin is an "alternative currency" that is generated electronically with no central authority, with a loosely-connected set of network nodes engaged in "mining" coins by being the first to solve difficult mathematical computations, validating transactions involving the "coins" (the process of validating others' transactions is in fact the manner in which coins are "mined", thus incentivizing using one's computer resources to facilitate this process), and storing transactions involving them. This is all accomplished algorithmically. The algorithms are defined such that the rate of coin issuance declines over the years until it tops out at a total money supply of 21 million bitcoins, unlike fiat currencies that can be issued without limit by their issuing authority.
A bitcoin, and its associated transactions, can be represented in various ways, even including actual physical metal coins if you can believe the picture in the Wikipedia article. A binary format is defined in the Bitcoin technical specs, but archived Bitcoin blocks in the "Block Explorer" site are displayed in a JSON-based format (served as text/plain).
The smallest possible unit in a Bitcoin transaction is .00000001 bitcoins, also known as a satoshi. Other subdivisions of the bitcoin are unsettled at the moment, but a unit of 1/1000 of a bitcoin (known as an mbit, or embit, or mBTC) seems to be emerging as rising prices make the bitcoin itself unwieldily large.
Contents |
Data format info
Other specs and definitions
Software
Sample files
- Block Explorer: a Bitcoin archive
- The "Genesis Block"; first Bitcoin block ever generated
- Genesis block in some other formats including raw binary
Current and historical prices
News coverage
- Government Ban On Bitcoin Would Fail Miserably
- Bitcoin ATM
- Bitcoin value reaches new high against US dollar (that was $32; as of late 2013 it's now over $600)
- Hackers steal over $12,000 in bitcoins
- Bitcoins Seized by DEA
- Bitcoin's vast ovvervaluation seems to be caused by usually-illegal price fixing
- Person gets windfall from Bitcoins he forgot he owned; bought for $24 and sold for around $1 million
- A Bitcoin Exchange Holding $4.1 Million For 1,000 Customers Has Simply Vanished
- Sir Richard Branson's Out of This World Plan for Bitcoin
- James Howells searches for hard drive with £4m-worth of bitcoins stored
- Chinese government says Bitcoin cannot be used as currency
- Casascius, maker of shiny physical bitcoins, shut down by Treasury Department
- IBM Files Patent to Track Value of Digital Currencies
Academic papers
- Paper criticizing Bitcoin (and the concept of decentralized currencies)
- Paper showing that selfish mining behavior could end up dominating Bitcoin
Commentary
- My adventure in donating bitcoins to the Internet Archive
- Open source governance in Bitcoin
- Anecdote about the wrong way to promote Bitcoins
- The Bitcoin Network is 0 FLOPS
- How the Bitcoin protocol actually works
- Bits of Bitcoin – What To Call Them?
- Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire
- The Values of Money: Bitcoin, Money, and Datalove, Part One
- Why Bitcoin is Here to Stay, Whether Governments Like It or Not.