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Bitcoin

Oct 16, 20176 min
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Episode description

The cryptocurrency Bitcoin is never out of the news cycle for long. How does it actually work and is it possible this so-called currency is more like a commodity?

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Transcript

Speaker 1

In August, the value of a single bitcoin reached a staggering four thousand dollars. What's the story behind this cryptocurrency? I'm Jonathan Strickland, and this is tex Stuff Daily. Let's imagine it's Halloween two thousand and eight and we're listening to tales from the crypt oh currency. On that day, a mysterious person or persons going by the name Satoshi Nakamoto published a white paper about a new type of currency that wouldn't be tied to any nation or bank system.

It would exist on a peer to peer network of computers, and the record of transactions using this currency would become an intrinsic part of how it worked. The white paper called the currency Bitcoin. In that paper, Nakamoto laid out the case for a new currency. He or she or they said that transactions between two entities online necessitated the involvement of a third party that would facilitate this transaction, which in turn required trust to exist between all the

parties in question. Now, in the physical world, you could stride up to a vendor, plunk some physical currency down, and purchase something with no other party's involvement. Not so with online transactions that need for trust brings other issues to the foreground. For example, to limit abuse of the system, third parties might request a great deal of information about

the two entities making transactions. People concerned about their privacy might be worried that this data could potentially come back to haunt them, and from the third party's perspective, there's always the chance someone commits fraud, leaving the third party liable as the one that facilitated the transaction in the first place. The peer to peer cryptocurrency approach by passes this problem. It all gets a bit technical, but we

can explain it on general terms. Imagine a network of computers joined through using a common suite of cryptocurrency software. These computers are scattered across the world, and they share information about every transaction that happens using this cryptocurrency. The computers pack these transactions into blocks. Those blocks form a chain. Every single transaction is part of this blockchain, with computers in the network constantly validating transactions so that no bitcoin

may be spent by the same person twice. The peer to peer network creates a decentralized structure. No one entity is in charge of the fate of bitcoins, so there's no single point of failure. When people first began to use bitcoins, they weren't worth very much. A single dollar was equal to more than one thousand bitcoins. Oh, how the tables have turned. While Bitcoin has experienced from matic ups and downs. In August, the value of a single

bitcoin hit the incredible four thousand dollar mark. This volatility has led some people, including myself, to suggest bitcoin is more like a commodity than a currency. When the value of your currency fluctuates wildly, there's less of an incentive to use it as an actual currency. How would you feel if you paid a dollar for a candy bar only to find out the next day that this same dollar could have bought four thousand candy bars. There's a lot more to bitcoin as well. For one thing, there's

a finite number of bitcoins that will ever exist. Eventually, every bitcoin that can exist will be in circulation. That number is just three bit sents short of twenty one million bitcoins. The way more bitcoins inner circulation is through mining. Mining is the process of validating and storing transaction information in the bitcoin blockchain by solving complex mathematical problems with a computer. As you apply more processing power to this operation,

the operations get more complex. There's no perfect analogy for this, but imagine a gold mine in which the gold could actually hide itself further away if miners were bringing in heavy duty mining gear. The slighting difficulty scale helps ensure that bitcoins inner circulation at a pre established rate. In addition, there's a schedule to release a certain number of bitcoins every time a new block is mined. That schedule requires a smaller number of bitcoins issued as a reward per

successful mining operation over time. For example, when they first came out, you could get fifty bitcoins for mining a block. Before June nine, the rate was about twenty five bitcoins for successfully mining a block, and after that date it dropped down to twelve point five bitcoins. Over time, this number will again be reduced by half, and then again and again until sixty four. Divisions will happen, and reward will reach its lowest point until all the bitcoins that

will ever exist have entered circulation. And like most currency, you can divide a bitcoin into smaller amounts. With American currency, we have quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies. With bitcoin, you can divide down to eight decimal places. So while a penny is point zero one of a dollar, the smallest increment of a bitcoin is point zero zero zero zero zero zero zero one bitcoins. Why are bitcoins worth so much?

That's because people put that much value in them. When you get down to it, a currency's value depends upon the faith placed in it by a population. If the confidence drops away, no one will accept the currency as payment. There's nothing intrinsically valuable about it. To learn more about bitcoins, be sure to subscribe to the tech Stuff podcast, where

we explore topics like this in detail. If you've ever wondered how the large Hadron collider works, or you want to know the story behind the Night three video game crash, you should check out tech Stuff. Episodes publish every Wednesday and Friday. That's all for me for now, See you next time.

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