Bitcoins!.ppt
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1、Bitcoins!,Jim Coman, Not licensed to give financial advice; There is no financial advice contained herein Not a lawyer; There is no legal or tax advice herein Nothing here is designed to help you avoid paying taxes I do not represent my company; these opinions are my own I own some Bitcoin so I hav
2、e a vested interested in Bitcoin Undergrad: Purdue Computer Science Graduate: Northwestern Kellogg MBA: Finance Programming professionally since 1989: Unix and Windows Banking experience Hedge fund experience Derivatives (equities) trading experience Bond trading experience Asset backed and structur
3、ed securities experience Start-up experience Currently managing software developers making banking software (11 products) Advisory board member New Money Systems Board of the Lifeboat Foundation,Bitcoin,Is a global currency (symbol BTC) Very different from fiat currencies Around since January of 200
4、9 Not issued by any entity Peer-to-peer / decentralized Trading over the internet Protocol is open source Somewhat anonymous Protected by strong encryption (cryptoCurrency) If you know the secret “account number” the coins are yours People who transmit transactions are called miners The maximum numb
5、er of Bitcoins will be about 21 million A bitcoin is a unit of measurement Not completely illegal yet Not a scam or get-rich-quick scheme May change money forever,The Basic Mechanism,Transactions are published to the Bitcoin P2P network Miners (computers) compete to solve a proof-of-work problem on
6、average every 10 minutes The winning miner publishes a summary of recent transactions in a block Miners are rewarded with new coins for having published a valid block Blocks are linked to previous blocks, creating a block chain The value of every account is evident on the blockchain Everyone is expe
7、cted to know the whole blockchain,Genesis Story,The original version of the Bitcoin-QT program was apparently written and published by a person going by the name Satoshi Nakamoto. Some time after starting up the software, Mr. Nakamoto stopped communicating with the developers who took over the proje
8、ct. Nobody knows who Satoshi really is, but his English is really good as well as his programming Satoshi owns nearly 1M bitcoins He/she delivered the Bitcoin software with some incredibly insightful design decisions, but has so far declined to take credit. The software is open source and royalty fr
9、ee,There are Core Developers,The developers who wrote the core Bitcoin-QT program are still mostly working on the software They are passionate about Bitcoin There are many other developers and tools that emulate protocol Higher-security wallets Miners Exchanges Currency exchangers/transmitters Nobod
10、y is really “in control” but some people have a lot more influence than others It is possible for developers to alienate themselves and become irrelevant,There is a Bitcoin Foundation,Tries to represent Bitcoin Non-profit Modeled after Linux Foundation Fragile coalition of interested parties Pays th
11、e developers Small disagreements have led to calls for a new organization Way too cozy with the US government One member has been arrested so far (Silk Road),Physical Coins,You may have seen pictures Some of the pictures are of just play money They are not “real Bitcoins” but Casascius coins are sup
12、posed to be tradable for Bitcoins They are not a good way to hold Bitcoins Some guy in Utah makes them (Casascius) They have a number inside! The US Government (FinCEN) shut Casascius down,Bitcoin Wallets,The term Bitcoin wallet refers to a file that contains the number or numbers of accounts that h
13、old money There is also wallet software for managing accounts and transactions Since Bitcoins are valuable, wallets should be encrypted The secret numbers can be printed, generally as a barcode Printed Bitcoin values may be Locked up for securitys sake Held as a backup to an electronic wallet Used a
14、s paper money,Features of Bitcoin,All-electronic Provable value Fast transactions Low-cost transactions Divisible down to 0.00000001 BTC No third-party trust required Uncontrollable (Decentralized) Irreversible trades No double-spending Some anonymity (pseudonymity) Inflation resistant Deflationary
15、(Maximum of 21M issued) International Widely accepted as a currency,Uses For Bitcoin,Convenient online purchases Tips and donations Micro-payments Transactions that must be irreversible When information is transferred When an irreversible action is performed Embarrassing transactions Black-market tr
16、ansactions A store of value Investment A place to hide money Gambling Ransom Escape currencies that are in trouble International transactions and financing Buying foreign goods (currency lingua franca) Paying foreign employees,Comparison to US Dollar,US Dollar (Cash),Backed by United States? Control
17、led by US Primarily US-only Created by government Supply controlled by politics Easy to steal by muggers Hard to steal by hackers Hard to transmit Hard to trace Non-refundable Used for crime,Bitcoin,Backed only by other users Controlled by users International Created based on work done Fixed number
18、issued Hard to steal by muggers Easier to steal by hackers Easy to transmit Hard to trace Non-refundable Used for crime,Comparison to Gold,Gold,Backed by itself? Internationally accepted Supply controlled by miners Difficult/expensive to store Not easy to divide Difficult to use for transactions Can
19、 make jewelry out of it Easy to steal by muggers/invaders Hard to steal by hackers Hard to trace Non-refundable,Bitcoin,Backed only by other users Internationally accepted Supply is fixed Easy to store Easy to divide Easy to use for transactions Easy to make backups Hard to steal by muggers/invaders
20、 Easy to steal by hackers Hard to trace Non-refundable,Money Supply,Divisibility,1000 MilliBits = 1 BTC MilliBits is abbreviated mBTC For the time being, sandwiches are likely to be priced in millibit If Bitcoin are eventually worth $1,000,000, the lowest amount of money you will be able to transact
21、 is $0.01 worth,Reversible Transactions are Good,Take the form of chargebacks Reversibility “protects consumers” by allowing for an authority (ultimately the government) to mediate transactions Protection from unscrupulous vendors Recovery from identity theft Accidental transfers can be fixed Althou
22、gh they are expensive, most people demand reversible transactions from their governments The US government thinks chargebacks are important In the US, nearly all non-cash transactions are reversible,Reversible Transactions are Bad,They allow vendors to get scammed, increasing costs for everyone Requ
23、ire extensive work by vendors to coordinate Require extensive government oversight Obviates the need for extensive consumer data collection for credit checking Expensive and slow Prevents micro-payments Locks the poor out of many credit transactions,Irreversible Transactions,Bitcoin transactions are
24、 all irreversible But, for some transactions, people dont want the baggage of the government oversight If you use banknotes or coins, you are familiar with irreversibility,Anonymity,Bitcoin provides some anonymity (pseudonymity) Bitcoin addresses are like numbered bank accounts with a password The f
25、low of money from address to address is completely public You can try to deny that you “have” BTC You can try to deny knowing where BTC went There are ways to increase anonymity,Silk Road Website,A black market website that began on the TOR network starting in February of 2011 Bitcoin predates Silk
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