How Does Bitcoin Work? - podcast episode cover

How Does Bitcoin Work?

May 05, 20166 min
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Episode description

If money is only valuable when we believe in it, how much is a Bitcoin actually worth? Christian explains the virtual currency as well as how to mine it and the risks involved in investing.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hi, I'm Christian Seger. This is brain Stuff, and I've got some bad news for you. Money is imaginary. Now, I don't mean that printed pieces of paper are make believe. I can feel a dollar's texture and the ink even smudges on my hands. But when you compare it to a blank piece of paper, what's really the difference. Well, one

is a recognized currency and the other isn't. And the reason why people agree that one piece of paper is a dollar and has value, that's where money's worth comes from. We all pretend it's a currency. This is one reason why the digital currency bitcoin appeals to some people. It's not tied to any political system or government, so it's not vulnerable to any of their failings, like the economic collapse in two thousand and eight. All it needs is for people to believe in it. But lately, well some

people are having a crisis of faith. That's why today on brain Stuff, we're going to quickly establish some facts about bitcoin to better inform your beliefs about it. Basically, it's virtual money you can use to buy and sell things online, and it mimics real world limited resources like gold, for instance, it's also a cryptocurrency, meaning it's encrypted in a way that prevents it from being copied. See every

bitcoin transaction is recorded using a blockchain. That information acts like a ledger that is encoded onto the bitcoin itself. This prevents people from spending the same bitcoin more than once, since everyone else on the currencies peer to peer network knows that it's been spent. It's essentially just a number associated with an Internet address. You can store it on your phone or a hard drive until it's used again.

Here's some ways you could acquire bitcoins, accept them as payment for goods and services, exchange them for a more traditional form of currency. Or you can mind them. That's right, Like gold, bitcoins are mind not by old timey grizzled prospectors, but by powerful computers. And like gold, the more people mind bitcoins, the less there are to be found, so they become harder to find. Instead of physically mining with the pick axe, you can attempt to solve math problems

with a computer. Imagine the problem is something like X plus Y equals fifteen. If you can figure out what X and why are, you get a bitcoin with little competition. The problems are easier to solve. But when more people join the search, you've got a race, and the problems get way more difficult. People start teaming up, crunching numbers

by networking multiple parallel processors together. Suddenly it's like Deadwood meets Silicon Valley and them bitcoins ain't so easy to find no more, especially because there's a limited supply of about twenty one million bitcoins. These can be divided down fractionally to eight decimal places. So the more we mind, the less bitcoins there are possible to find. Mind. In fact, every four years the amount of bitcoins you can find haves.

We're at a point now where people need computers specifically designed for bitcoin mining to even have a decent chance of getting them. But as bitcoin miners dwindle, the math problems will get easier again. To ensure the flow is steady, their value is boosted and they remain inflation proof. Not all have been mined yet, and we expect they won't be until around So let's say you just heard all this and you thought, well, I want to grow up

and be a professional bitcoin miner and trader. Well, there are a few risks you should probably know about first. For instance, because there's no regulatory agency setting a bitcoin's value, it tends to fluctuate wildly. Let's go back to the dollar bill. Today, I might be able to buy a candy bar with it, but what if tomorrow it could buy dinner at a nice restaurant, or a week later

it could buy the entire restaurant itself. Bitcoin is kind of like that, except the dollar would suddenly drop in value, so you couldn't even buy a piece of gum with it, And why would you spend it anyway if it could be worth a hundred times more tomorrow. Another bitcoin problem is security. Actually, the format itself is fine, but that doesn't protect it from hackers who targeted the banks and

exchanges that deal in bitcoins. So, for example, Mount Cox, one of the largest bitcoin trading floors, was hit for the equivalent of around four hundred and eighty million dollars that's seven percent of the world's supply of bitcoins. Flex Coin, a bitcoin bank, announced to all its users that their accounts had just disappeared, and when the online market silk Road was shut down in October, the FBI became one of the largest holders of bitcoins in the world. Now again,

This isn't the fault of the currency. If a bank was robbed, you wouldn't blame the dollar bill for getting stolen, right. So, yeah, Bitcoin has its slumps, and for it to become widely used, its volatility needs to settle down quite a bit. It's currently a high risk currency that is totally unpredictable, and we didn't even get into the mysterious identity of Bitcoin's founder,

Satoshi Nakamota. Check out the Brainstuff channel on YouTube, and for more on this and thousands of other topics, visit how stuff works dot com.

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