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Category Archives: Cryptocurrency
cryptocurrency : The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics
Posted: September 25, 2014 at 11:46 am
Cryptocurrency is the name given to a system that uses cryptography to allow the secure transfer and exchange of digital tokens in a distributed and decentralised manner. These tokens can be traded at market rates for fiat currencies. The first cryptocurrency was Bitcoin, which began trading in January 2009. Since then, many other cryptocurrencies have been created employing the same innovations that Bitcoin introduced, but changing some of the specific parameters of their governing algorithms. The two major innovations that Bitcoin introduced, and which made cryptocurrencies possible, were solutions to two long-standing problems in computer science: the double-spending problem and the Byzantine Generals Problem.
Until the invention of Bitcoin, it was impossible for two parties to transact electronically without employing a trusted third party intermediary. The reason was a conundrum known to computer scientists as the double spending problem, which has plagued attempts to create electronic cash since the dawn of the Internet.
To understand the problem, first consider how physical cash transactions work. The bearer of a physical currency note can hand it over to another person, who can then verify that he is the sole possessor of that note by simply looking at his hands. For example, if Alice hands Bob a $100 bill, Bob now has it and Alice does not. Bob can easily verify his possession of the $100 bill and, implicitly, that Alice no longer has it. Physical cash transfers are also final, in the sense that to reverse a transaction the new bearer must give back the currency note. In our example, Bob would have to hand the $100 bill back to Alice. Given all of these properties, cash makes it possible for different parties, including strangers, to transact without trusting each other.
Now, consider how electronic cash might work. Obviously, paper notes would be out of the picture. There would have to be some kind of digital representation of currency. Essentially, instead of a $100 bill, we might imagine a $100 computer file. When Alice wants to send $100 to Bob, she attaches a $100 file to a message and sends it to him. The problem, as anyone who has sent an email attachment knows, is that sending a file does not delete it from ones computer. Alice will retain a perfect digital copy of the $100 she sends Bob, and this would allow her to spend the same $100 a second time, or indeed a third and fourth. Alice could promise to Bob that she will delete the file once he has a copy, but Bob has no way to verify this without trusting Alice.
Until recently, the only way to overcome the double spending problem was to employ a trusted third party intermediary. In our example, both Alice and Bob would have an account with a third party that they each trust, such as PayPal. Trusted intermediaries like PayPal keep a ledger of all account balances and transactions. When Alice wants to send $100 to Bob, she tells PayPal, which in turn deducts the amount from her account and adds it to Bobs. The transaction reconciles to zero. Alice cannot spend the same $100, and Bob relies on PayPal, which he trusts, to verify this. At the end of the day, all transfers among all accounts reconcile to zero. Note, however, that unlike cash, transactions that involve a third party intermediary are not final, as we have defined it, because transactions can be reversed by the third party.
Like PayPal, the Bitcoin system employs a ledger, which is called the block chain. All transactions in the Bitcoin economy are recorded and reconciled in the block chain. However, unlike PayPals ledger, the block chain is not maintained by a central authority. Instead, the block chain is a public document that is distributed in a peer-to-peer fashion across thousands of nodes in the Bitcoin network. New transactions are checked against the block chain to ensure that the same bitcoins have not been previously spent, but the work of verifying new transactions is not done by any one trusted third party. Instead, the work is distributed among thousands of users who contribute their computing capacity to reconcile and maintain the block chain ledger. In essence, the whole peer-to-peer network takes the place of the one trusted third party.
Bitcoins solution to the double spending problem distributing the ledger among the thousands of nodes in a peer-to-peer network presents another problem. If every node on the network has a complete copy of the ledger that they share with the peers to which they connect, how does a new node connecting to the network know that she is not being given a falsified copy of the ledger? How does an existing node know that she is not getting falsified updates to the ledger? The difficult task of reaching consensus among distributed parties who do not trust each other is another longstanding problem in the computer science literature known as the Byzantine Generals Problem, which Bitcoin also elegantly solved.
The Byzantine Generals Problem posits that a number of generals each have their armies camped outside a city that they have surrounded. The generals know that their numbers are large enough that if half their combined force attacks at the same time they will take the city, but if they do not attack at the same time they will be spread too thinly and will be defeated. They can only communicate via messenger, and they have no way of verifying the authenticity of the messages being relayed. They also suspect that some of the generals in their ranks are traitors who will send fake messages along to their peers. How can this large group come to a consensus on the time of attack without employing trust and without a central authority, especially when there will likely be attempts to confuse them with fake messages?
In essence, this is the same problem faced by Bitcoins miners, the specialised nodes that verify new transactions and add them to the distributed ledger. Bitcoins solution is to require additions to the ledger to be accompanied by the solution to a mathematical problem that is very difficult to solve but simple to verify. (This is much like calculating prime factors; costly to do, but easy to check.) New transactions are broadcast in a peer-to-peer fashion across the network by parties to those transactions. Miners look at those transactions and confirm by checking their copy of the ledger (the block chain) that they are not double-spends. If they are legitimate transactions, miners add them to a queue of new transactions that they would like to add as a new page in the ledger (a new block in the block chain). While they are doing this, they are simultaneously trying to solve a mathematical problem in which all previous blocks in the block chain are an input. The miner that successfully solves the problem broadcasts his solution to the problem along with the new block to be added to the block chain. The other miners can easily verify whether the solution to the problem is correct, and if it is they add that new block to their copy of the block chain. The process begins anew with the new block chain as an input of the problem to be solved for the next block.
The mathematical problem in question takes an average of 10 minutes to solve. This is key because the important thing is not the solution itself, but that the solution proves that the miner has expended 10 minutes of work. On average, a new block is added to the block chain every 10 minutes because the problem that miners must solve takes on average 10 minutes to solve. However, if more miners join the network, or if computing power improves, the average time between blocks will decrease. To maintain the rate at which blocks are added to six per hour, the difficulty of the problem is adjusted every 2016 blocks (every two weeks). Again, the key here is to ensure that each block takes about 10 minutes to discover.
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cryptocurrency : The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics
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028 Mashup GooglePlus SoulTradeGame Innovation BitcoinDog CryptoCurrency Cat Rap – Video
Posted: September 24, 2014 at 4:46 pm
028 Mashup GooglePlus SoulTradeGame Innovation BitcoinDog CryptoCurrency Cat Rap
http://www.twitter.com/VanosEnigmA + @SoulTradeGame #FollowBack 😉 plus.google.com/+VanosEnigmaisland/about http://www.facebook.com/VanosEnigmA http://www.youtube.com/user/Enigma...
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028 Mashup GooglePlus SoulTradeGame Innovation BitcoinDog CryptoCurrency Cat Rap - Video
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Gold backed cryptocurrency….. LOL – Video
Posted: at 4:46 pm
Gold backed cryptocurrency..... LOL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_hUtuaHYGs.
By: AlmostCirculated
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Gold backed cryptocurrency..... LOL - Video
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HTMLCOIN Transitions To HTML5 – Alt Coins, Cryptocurrency – Video
Posted: at 4:46 pm
HTMLCOIN Transitions To HTML5 - Alt Coins, Cryptocurrency
You can buy/sell/trade HTML5 at Bleutrade: https://bleutrade.com/exchange/1679 (See the Dogecoin and Litecoin marketplaces for the best prices because as of ...
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HTMLCOIN Transitions To HTML5 - Alt Coins, Cryptocurrency - Video
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GroestlCoin Cryptocurrency of the Future – Video
Posted: at 4:46 pm
GroestlCoin Cryptocurrency of the Future
GroestlCoin (GRS) is a new cryptocurrency utilizing the Groestl algorithm for Proof-Of-Work. To cut it short essentially GroestlCoin is about one thing - mak...
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GroestlCoin Cryptocurrency of the Future - Video
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Bitcoin-mining company Butterfly Labs shut down by FTC
Posted: at 4:46 pm
Company marketed specialized computers designed to produce the cryptocurrency but delivered useless machines, according to an FTC complaint.
A bitcoin-related company that allegedly engaged in deceptive marketing of specialized computers designed to produce the cryptocurrency has been shut down at the request of the US Federal Trade Commission.
In a complaint filed earlier this month, the FTC alleged that the Butterfly Labs charged consumers thousands of dollars for computers that mine Bitcoins but then failed to deliver the machines "until they were practically useless, or in many cases, did not provide the computers at all," the agency said in a statement Tuesday.
"We often see that when a new and little-understood opportunity like bitcoin presents itself, scammers will find ways to capitalize on the public's excitement and interest," Jessica Rich, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. "We're pleased the court granted our request to halt this operation, and we look forward to putting the company's ill-gotten gains back in the hands of consumers."
Bitcoin, which is unregulated and allows for anonymous, untraceable transactions, can be obtained by purchasing it on an exchange or accepting it as payment for goods or services. The peer-to-peer currency can also be generated, or "mined," by solving complex mathematical equations, a process that requires greater computational effort as the pool of possible solutions shrinks. The amount of bitcoins possible is capped at 21 million; there are currently 13.3 million bitcoins in existence.
To perform the arduous mining process, the company marketed what it called a cutting-edge computer for as much as $29,899, the FTC alleged. As of September 2013, more than 20,000 orders for the computer, called BitForce, had not been fulfilled, according to the FTC. The complaint also alleges that Butterfly Labs began marketing a follow-up computer called the Monarch in August 2013 for as much as $4,680 but that by last month few, if any, had been delivered.
"Even where Butterfly Labs did deliver a Bitcoin mining computer to a consumer, the complaint notes that because of the unique nature of the Bitcoin system, the outdated computers were useless for their intended purpose," the FTC said, indicating that a company representative said the passage of time had rendered some machines as effective as a "room heater."
Responding to the FTC's lawsuit, Kansas-based Butterfly Labs said Tuesday it was "disappointed in the heavy-handed actions" of the commission.
"In a rush to judgment, the FTC has acted as judge, jury and executioner, contrary to our intended system of governmental checks and balances," the company said in a statement. "Butterfly Labs is being portrayed by the FTC as a bogus and fake company. To the contrary, Butterfly Labs is very real."
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Bitcoin-mining company Butterfly Labs shut down by FTC
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PayPal Testing Bitcoin Payments By Partnering With Cryptocurrency Processors
Posted: at 4:46 pm
PayPal announced Tuesday that it will partner with bitcoin payment processors BitPay, Coinbase and GoCoin to allow customers to buy and sell digital products such as online games using the cryptocurrency. The announcement is not an indication that PayPal will transact in the currency, only that the three partners will handle bitcoin processing for PayPal merchants trading in specific businesses.
PayPal, which is owned by eBay, said that it will allow the third parties into its PayPal Payments Hub in part because each of them already offers its customers some level of protection when trading with the still-questionable digital currency. Tuesdays announcement comes after eBay CEO John Donahoe expressed his admiration for bitcoin on multiple occasions, saying in May that PayPal was actively considering integrating bitcoin.
The company maintained that it only sees digital products (i.e., video games and music) being sold utilizing the decentralized cryptocurrency for the foreseeable future. American and Canadian users will be able to use bitcoin first, though PayPal said it is considering expanding to other markets soon.
Merchants were asking for bitcoin integrations, Scott Ellison, senior director of corporate strategy at PayPal, told Forbes. Digital goods were an easy way to do it first.... People are comfortable paying online for those things.
PayPals announcement has already been portrayed as more of a test program than a full-fledged embrace of bitcoin. Overtstock.com started accepting bitcoin in January and began permitting international customers to use bitcoin in August. Still, questions have persisted about bitcoins volatility and governments inability to regulate it.
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PayPal Testing Bitcoin Payments By Partnering With Cryptocurrency Processors
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Cryptocurrency Market Trendline – Video
Posted: September 22, 2014 at 9:50 pm
Cryptocurrency Market Trendline
http://www.bitcoinprice.mobi/portfolio/cryptomarket-trendline/
By: Bitcoin Price
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MazaCoin: The First Native American Cryptocurrency (Documentary) | Mashable – Video
Posted: at 9:50 pm
MazaCoin: The First Native American Cryptocurrency (Documentary) | Mashable
Can Bitcoin solve poverty on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation? Payu Harris thinks so. The South Dakota entrepreneur is trying to convince his tribe, the Ogl...
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MazaCoin: The First Native American Cryptocurrency (Documentary) | Mashable - Video
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Bitcoin 101 – How to start with Cryptocurrency – Video
Posted: at 9:50 pm
Bitcoin 101 - How to start with Cryptocurrency
http://www.ReadTheReviewsFirst.com.
By: Peter Griffen
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Bitcoin 101 - How to start with Cryptocurrency - Video
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