Blockchain and Bitcoin – The technical concepts and underlying principles of “blockchain” and “bitcoin” may pose a challenge to one’s comprehension. However, it is noteworthy that the technology of blockchain has a broader scope than merely serving as a tool for managing bitcoin transactions. The advent of blockchain technology has introduced a novel digital innovation with the potential to substantially transform financial markets in the coming years.

In the cryptographic ecosystem, there is considerable potential for impacting trusted computing activities and thereby influencing cybersecurity concerns in their entirety.

“Bitcoin, a digital cryptocurrency that most have heard of”

Bitcoin, a type of virtual currency, is widely recognized among the majority. To put it differently, “Blockchain” refers to a decentralized electronic record-keeping system. Its power lies in its ability to handle the widest range of transactions that one could possibly imagine. It has 3 key elements Distributed Ledger, Cryptography and Smart Contracts.

Blockchain technology was first introduced in a white paper entitled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System” by Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008.

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The terms “Blockchain” (distributed ledger technology, cryptographic algorithms, and smart contracts), “Bitcoin,”, and AI are subjects of significant interest almost for every one. Their potential impact on our lives remains uncertain. The terms and new technologies are accompanied by numerous queries and concerns. This article could provide response to some important inquiries, such as:

  • No reliance on trust
  • Digital signatures
  • Peer-to-peer network
  • Proof-of-work
  • Public history of transactions
  • Honest, independent nodes control the majority of CPU computing power.
  • Nodes vote with CPU computing power.
  • Rules and incentives enforced through a consensus mechanism

Governance – an open source community of developers backed by the Bitcoin Foundation. Blockchain offer many protocols to work with for various business needs.

Democratic – if you don’t like one of the changes, you are more than welcome to fork the chain and implement your own rules

Deflationary by design – money supply cannot be manipulated and is fixed at 21 million coins, each divisible up to 8 decimal

Bitcoin is the latest rage in the online world. It has been around since 2009, but all of a sudden, it has become the new buzzword. Bitcoin (capital B) refers to the entire system, whereas bitcoins (b in lowercase) refer to the currency itself.

One can get started by obtaining a ‘Bitcoin wallet”—an app that stores bitcoins that needs to be installed on the phone or computer.

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Bitcoin is a “peer-to-peer” (“P2P”) system. In a P2P system, there is no central administrator. The ledger (“block chain”) is publicly available, and distributed nodes (“miners”) verify transactions.

Bitcoin is a “convertible” virtual currency. Bitcoin can be used to purchase real and virtual goods and services and is readily exchangeable for government-issued currency. Transactions are signed using public and private keys.

Bitcoin users now see the virtual currency largely as an “asset” to be traded rather than something to make payments with or a liquid asset for cash flow. So there is huge confusion on whether payment via bitcoin or crypto currencies should continue or need to stop immediately.

At this time, payment providers have stopped or are stopping this facilitation, and at the same time, service providers are also not showing interest in accepting it via bitcoin. Fewer online merchants wanted to accept the cryptocurrency.

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Bitcoin was the first digital, i.e., cryptocurrency. It is simply a means of sending and receiving numbers to and from “addresses”. Just as with real-world mining, energy must be invested to solve complex mathematical problems through which systems earn Bitcoins. It was the first digital, i.e., cryptocurrency. An open-source peer-to-Peer payment network.

  • Using Digital Signatures and Encryption
  • Decentralization is the basis for Bitcoin’s security and freedom.

A maximum of 21 million bitcoins can be generated. Cryptocoincharts claims to be indexing 4,220 cryptocurrencies. Most circulated: Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin. Think of Bitcoin as an electronic asset (as well as a digital currency). A network of computers keeps track of Bitcoin payments and adds them to an ever-growing list of all the Bitcoin payments that have been made, called “The Bitcoin Blockchain.”

The file that contains data about all the Bitcoin transactions is often called a “ledger”. Bitcoin value is created through transaction processing, referred to as “mining,” which is performed by distributed processors called “nodes” of the peer-to-peer network. Bitcoin is an artificial intelligence currency.

Because it is assured that in the future, robots will make use of Bitcoins. The robots will take over the enterprises’ operations. It is even predicted that in the future, robots will own property and assets and trade with Bitcoins.

There are lot of vital questions though around BitCoin

  • How did it get started?
  • How is the currency created?
  • Why does it have value?
  • Who controls the value?
  • Who Accepts Bitcoin?
  • How Would I buy some Bitcoins?
  • Why would I want some Bitcoins?

*Problems with Bitcoin currency.

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BitCoin How to Sell & Buy

Larger Buyers go to Exchanges. An Exchange is a website with significant software and funding. Exchanges act as a clearing house to match buyers and sellers similar to Stock Exchanges. They keep a very small transaction fee for each trade. There are at least 21 Bitcoin Exchanges in the U.S. alone. Mt Gox was one of the largest exchanges and was located in Japan. BitCoinFundi, BitMari etc are local in Zimbabwe. To Buy Bitcoins on an Exchange.

*Create an account at an exchange like Coinbase.com. Wire them some money (no credit cards allowed). Funds will show up in your account. Purchase or sell Bitcoins whenever you wish from your account. You can have all or some sent to your Bitcoin wallet on your computer.

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Blockchains compared to traditional big-data distributed databases like MongoDB. We can think of blockchains as “blue ocean” databases: they escape the “bloody red ocean” of sharks competing in an existing market, opting instead to be in a blue ocean of uncontested market space. Blockchain is here to stay, is Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) offerings from both IBM and Microsoft.

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The risks and challenges include security, environmental impact, equipment being expensive, and interoperability. The Bitcoin & Ethereum cryptocurrencies have both been hacked, although new safeguards were put in place each time to close their vulnerabilities.

Blockchain and Artificial Intelligence technologies have already started reinventing & demystifying the succinct and drastic transformation of Fintech. It would be coming time which will tell its mass adoption across the markets and guide into a completely new ecosystem whose rate of innovation will only accelerate at speed we have never perceived before.

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The approach to Bitcoin and blockchain technology does not only remain with universities; it also goes out of labs to real-world businesses to mentor them on how to implement and use blockchain technology. Cryptocurrencies are getting to spread in a clear form now and are seen as unstoppable. The days are not far when we will say yes; we are living in a digital world.

Disclaimer: Please note, the information given here is compiled from various open internet-based sources. I neither recommend nor advocate anything for Bitcoin. This entire information is just to read and get clear about this esoteric subject.

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By V Sharma

A seasoned technology specialist with over 22 years of experience, I specialise in fintech and possess extensive expertise in integrating fintech with trust (blockchain), technology (AI and ML), and data (data science). My expertise includes advanced analytics, machine learning, and blockchain (including trust assessment, tokenization, and digital assets). I have a proven track record of delivering innovative solutions in mobile financial services (such as cross-border remittances, mobile money, mobile banking, and payments), IT service management, software engineering, and mobile telecom (including mobile data, billing, and prepaid charging services). With a successful history of launching start-ups and business units on a global scale, I offer hands-on experience in both engineering and business strategy. In my leisure time, I'm a blogger, a passionate physics enthusiast, and a self-proclaimed photography aficionado.

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