Bitcoin Explain by Decenterlized

Hi

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Interduced

Welcome to Bitcoins.com.
I'm mumarismail and I'll be your guide through this video series
Bitcoin Whiteboard Saturday.
We're going to cover a lot of topics such as
Bitcoin mining, Bitcoin wallets, how to trade Bitcoin, and a lot more.
Today we're going to start from scratch
and answer the third most searched term on Google, what is Bitcoin?
If you’re worried that we’re going to get too technical
and use a lot of complicated words, don’t.
Here at 99Bitcoins, we translate Bitcoin into plain English
so even if you have no technical background
you’ll be able to understand everything.
By the end of this course,
you’ll know more about Bitcoin and how it works
than 99% of the population.
So let’s get started…

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Explain

Before we talk about Bitcoin
I want to take a moment and talk about money.
What is money exactly?
At its core, money represents value.
If I do some work for you,
you give me money in exchange for the value I gave you.
I can then use that money to get something of value
from someone else in the future.
Throughout history, value has taken many forms
and people used a lot of different materials to represent money.
Salt, wheat, shells, and of course gold
have all been used as a medium of exchange.
However, for something to represent value
people have to trust that it is indeed valuable
and will stay valuable long enough for them to
redeem that value in the future
Up until a hundred years ago or so
we always trusted in someTHING to represent money.
However, something happened along the way
and we’ve changed our trust model
from trusting someTHING to trusting in someONE.
Let me explain.
Over time, people found it too cumbersome
to walk around the world carrying bars of gold
or other forms of money, so paper money was invented.
Here’s how it worked:
a bank or government would offer to take possession of your bar of gold;
let’s say worth $1000,
and in return, that bank would give you receipt certificates,
which we call bills, amounting to $1000.

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Pocket

Not only were these pieces of paper much easier to carry,
but you could spend a dollar on a cup of coffee
and not have to cut your gold bar into a thousand pieces.
And if you want your gold back,
you simply took $1000 in bills back to the bank
to redeem them for the actual form of money,
in this case that gold bar, whenever you needed…
And so, the paper began its use as money
as an instrument of practicality and convenience.
However as time progressed, and due to macroeconomic changes,
this bond between the paper receipt and the gold it stands for was broken.
Now, to explain the path that led us away from the gold standard
is extremely complex, but suffice to say that
governments told their people that
the government itself would be liable for the value of that paper money.
We all said
“let’s just forget about gold and trade paper instead”.
So people continued to
trade with receipts that are backed by nothing but the government’s promise.
And why did that continue to work?
Well, because of trust.
Even though there is no actual commodity backing paper money,
people trusted the government and that’s how fiat money was created.
Fiat is a Latin word that means “by decree”.
Meaning the dollars, or euros, or any other currency for that matter
have value because the government orders it to.
It’s what is known as “legal tender” -
coins or banknotes that must be accepted
if offered as payment.
So the value of today’s money
comes from a legal status given to it by a central authority,
in this case, the government.
And so the trust model has changed,
from trusting someTHING to trusting someONE,
in this case, the government.
Fiat money has two main drawbacks:

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Decenteralized

  1. It is centralized:
    You have a central authority that controls and issues it.
    In this case the government or central bank.
    And two, it is not limited by quantity:
    The government or central bank can print as much as they want
    whenever needed and inflate the money supply on the market.
    The problem with printing money is that
    because you’re flooding the market with more money
    the value of each dollar drops, so your own money is worthless.
    When you see prices rising throughout the years
    it’s not necessarily that prices are rising as much as that
    the purchasing power of your money is dropping.
    You need more dollars to buy something that used to be “costless”.
    Once fiat money was in place,
    the move to digital money was pretty simple.

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Authority

We already have a central authority that issues money,
so why not make money mostly digital
and let that authority keep track of who owns what.
Today we mainly use credit cards, wire transfers, Paypal, and others forms of digital money.
The amount of physical money in the world is almost negligible
and is getting smaller with each year that passes.
So if money today is digital, how does that even work?
I mean, if I have a file that represents a dollar,
what’s to stop me from copying it a million times
and having a million dollars?
This is called the “double-spend problem”.
The pollution that banks use today is a “centralized” solution;
they keep a ledger on their computer which keeps track of who owns what.
Everyone has an account
and this ledger keeps a tally for each account.
We all trust the bank and the bank trusts their computer,
and so the solution is centralized on this ledger in this computer.
You may not know this,
but there were many attempts to create alternative forms of digital currencies,
however, none were successful in solving the double-spend problem
without a central authority.
Whenever you give anyone control over the money supply
you’re giving them enormous power and this creates three major issues:

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First Corruption

The first issue is corruption;
power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
When banks have a mandate to create money, or value,
they control the flow of value in the world,
which gives them almost unlimited power.
A small example of how power corrupts
can be seen in the Wells Fargo scandal
where employees secretly created
millions of unauthorized bank and credit card accounts
to inflate the bank’s revenue stream,
without their customers knowing about it for years.
The second issue of a centralized system is mismanagement.
If the central authority’s interest isn’t aligned with the people it controls
there may be a case of mismanagement of the money.
For example, printing a lot of money
to save a certain bank or institution from collapsing,
as what happened in 2008.
The problem with printing too much money is that
it causes inflation and erodes the value of the citizen’s money.
One extreme example of this is Venezuela,
where the government has printed so much money,
and the value of it has dropped so much,
that people are no longer counting money but are weighing it instead.
The last issue is controlled.
You are giving away all control of your money
to the government or bank.
At any point in time,
the government can decide to freeze your account
and deny you access to your funds.
Even if you use only cold hard cash
the government can cancel the legal status of your currency
as was done in India a few years back.
This was the state of things until 2009.
Creating an alternative to the current monetary system
seemed like a lost cause.
But then everything changed….
In October 2008
a document was published online by a guy calling himself Satoshi Nakamoto.

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Creating System

The document also called a whitepaper,
suggested a way of creating a system
for a decentralized currency called Bitcoin.
This system claimed to create digital money that solves
the double-spend problem without the need for a central authority.
At its core Bitcoin is a transparent ledger without a central authority,
but what does this confusing phrase even really mean?
Well, let’s compare Bitcoin to the bank.
Since most money today is already digital,
the bank manages its ledger of balances and transactions.
However, the bank’s ledger is not transparent
and it is stored on the bank’s main computer.
You can’t sneak a peek into the bank’s ledger,
and only the bank has complete control over it.
Bitcoin on the other hand is a transparent ledger.
At any point in time, I can sneak a peek into the ledger
and see all of the transactions and balances that are taking place.
The only thing you can’t figure out is
who owns these balances and who is behind each transaction.
This means Bitcoin is pseudo-anonymous;
everything is open, transparent, and trackable
but you still can’t tell who is sending what to whom.
Let’s explain this with an example.
You can see on your screen certain rows from Bitcoin’s ledger.
We can see that a certain Bitcoin address
sent 10,000 Bitcoins to another Bitcoin address
in May of 2010.
This specific transaction is the first purchase
that was ever made with Bitcoin
and it was used to buy 2 pizzas by a guy named Laszlo.
Laszlo published a post back in 2010
asking for someone to sell him 2 pizzas in exchange for 10,000 Bitcoins.
Well, someone did, and now the price of these two Pizzas
is worth well over 100 million dollars today.
Bitcoin is also decentralized;
no one computer holds the ledger.
With Bitcoin, every computer that participates in the system
is also keeping a copy of the ledger, also known as the Blockchain.
So if you want to take down the system or hack the ledger
you’ll have to take down thousands of computers
that are keeping a copy and constantly updating it.
Like most money today, Bitcoin is also digital.
This means there’s nothing physical that you can touch in Bitcoin.
There are no actual coins,
there are only rows of transactions and balances.
When you “own” Bitcoin
it means that you own the right to access
a specific Bitcoin address record in the ledger
and send funds from it to a different address.
So what does all of this mean?
Why is Bitcoin such big news?

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Digital Money

Well for the first time since digital money came into existence
we now have an alternative to the current system.
Bitcoin is a form of money that no government or bank can control.
Think about the time before the Internet,
and how centralized the flow of information was.
If you wanted information
you could get it from a few major players
like the New York Times, The Washington Post, and others like them.
Today, thanks to the Internet, information is decentralized
and you can communicate and consume knowledge
from around the world with the click of a button.
Bitcoin is the Internet of money
and it’s offering a decentralized solution to money.
Bitcoin has several advantages over the current system.
First, it gives you complete control over your money.
With Bitcoin, you and you alone can access your funds.
How you do this will be explained in a later video.
No government or bank can decide to freeze your account
or confiscate your holdings.
Bitcoin also cuts a lot of the middlemen from the process of transferring money.
This means that in many cases
Bitcoin is cheaper to use than traditional wire transfers or money orders.
Also, unlike fiat currencies,
Bitcoin was designed to be digital by nature,
this means you can add additional layers of programming on top of it
and turn it into “smart money”, but more on that in later videos.
Finally, Bitcoin opens up digital commerce to
2.5 billion people around the world

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who doesn’t have access to the current banking system?
These people are unbanked or underbanked
because of where they leave and the reality that they have been born into.
However, today, with a mobile phone and a click of a button
they can start trading using Bitcoin, with no permission needed.
Today there are several merchants online and offline that accept Bitcoin.
You can order a flight or book a hotel with Bitcoin if you like.
There are even Bitcoin debit cards
that allow you to pay at almost any store with your Bitcoin balance.
However, the road toward acceptance by the majority of the public
is still a long one.
As we continue in this video series,
we will break down exactly how Bitcoin works and how to use it.
We will learn about Bitcoin mining, Bitcoin wallets, how to buy Bitcoins, and much more.
The revolution of money began in 2009
and these days we are seeing it change money as we know it.
Thanks for joining me here at the Whiteboard.
For Bitcoins.com, I @mumarismail, and I’ll see you… in a bit.

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