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Welcome to the Bitcoin wiki. Here we aim to provide a correct and up-to date set of information on the Bitcoin network and its features and functionality.
 
Welcome to the Bitcoin wiki. Here we aim to provide a correct and up-to date set of information on the Bitcoin network and its features and functionality.

Revision as of 09:29, 17 January 2020

Temporary log in link

Welcome to the Bitcoin wiki. Here we aim to provide a correct and up-to date set of information on the Bitcoin network and its features and functionality.

Bitcoin is a peer to peer cash system created by Dr. Craig Wright under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto and released as open-source software in 2009. It does not rely on a central server to process transactions or store funds. The leaderless structure of the network famously solves The Byzantine Generals Problem allowing disconnected entities to follow a common direction without a centralised authority. New Bitcoins are issued to miners as rewards for winning a contest to extend the ledger. Over time the competition awards coins in decreasing amounts, using an algorithm which will see the last new coins created in around 2140.

The Bitcoin ledger is held on a distributed network of nodes who compete with each other to extend it by finding blocks. Nodes are operated by Bitcoin miners who build the network and are incentivized to be directly connected to as many of the other block winning miners as possible to ensure blocks they discover are accepted as fast as possible. This leads to miners forming a Small World Network which trends towards a Nearly Complete Graph where all miners are connected to all other miners. Miners receive transactions from peers and from other miners on the network and propagate them to make all other known miners aware of every new transaction. This defeats the double spending problem ensuring that global consensus can be reached on the validity of a transaction within roughly 2 seconds. The miners use hash based proof of work to compete for the right to extend the ledger, and as a means to vote on the network rules.

Bitcoins are the ledger's native unit of account. The base unit of exchange is Satoshis and 100,000,000 satoshis is referred to as one Bitcoin. Satoshis are held in script puzzles called Unspent Transaction Outputs or UTXOs. These are outputs from Bitcoin Transactions which are held by miners in a quick access database called the UTXO set. During the spending process, UTXOs being used in a transaction are consumed and the solution to their puzzle script is recorded in the transaction.

Valid transactions that are broadcast on The Bitcoin Network are committed to the Bitcoin public ledger by miners. The ledger is built in blocks which are discovered every 10 minutes on average and linked together forming a Block chain. The ledger is structured as a Directed acyclic graph (DAG) allowing the history of all Bitcoins to be traced back to the Coinbase transactions where they were created. Transactions can be exchanged peer to peer, allowing them to be modified in payment channels however once they have been committed to the ledger they are recorded immutably and their record cannot be removed.

The Bitcoin protocol defines the scripting language that is used to define transactions, the formatting of transactions and blocks, the rate at which new bitcoins are issued as rewards for adding to the ledger, and the mathematical rules outlining the target for the difficulty algorithm which tries to keep the network generating new blocks at an average rate of 10 minutes each. The protocol is agreed upon by the miners who control network operation. After the Genesis upgrade, miners will remove almost all limit based rules from the protocol enabling them to compete to offer better service to fee paying users by scaling their own capabilities.

Bitcoin has a rich history and has been attacked in many ways since its inception.

The following pages look at the concepts outlined above in greater detail.

  1. Transactions
  2. Blocks
  3. The Bitcoin Network
  4. Mining and Consensus
  5. Wallets and key management
  6. Making and receiving Bitcoin Payments

Bitcoin has a rich and diverse set of tools which are being added to all the time. Building on Bitcoin

Quick Links

Techniques Application Layer Protocols Products and Tools

Advanced Bitcoin Scripting

Digital Signatures (ECDSA)

Payment Channels

R-Puzzles

SVAlias

The Metanet


GearSv

Run

Tokenized

B://, C://, D://, BCAT

etc

ElectrumSV

Handcash

Moneybutton

Nakasendo

Planaria

Relay