1 / 32

Bitcoins and the Digital Economy

Bitcoins and the Digital Economy. Presented By: Matt Blackman. Defining Bitcoins or BTCs. Currency Open Source Decentralized Non-Localized Peer generated. Big Picture. How do they look? What use do they serve? What keeps Bitcoins secure? Times they have been secure

fisseha
Download Presentation

Bitcoins and the Digital Economy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bitcoins and the Digital Economy Presented By: Matt Blackman

  2. Defining Bitcoins or BTCs • Currency • Open Source • Decentralized • Non-Localized • Peer generated

  3. Big Picture • How do they look? • What use do they serve? • What keeps Bitcoins secure? • Times they have been secure • How does their economy compete and plan to survive?

  4. When Were These Bits Coined? • Idea proposed by Saroshi Nakamoto in 2008 • A need for a third-party free payment system • Anonymous money transfers • Network went live January 3, 2009

  5. Itty Bitty Uses ^ Not Entirely True ^ • Easy solution for monetary exchanges • Provides anonymity needed by some • Investable money market

  6. The Little Giant http://www.thinlinedata.com/

  7. Otherwise Impossible http://www.marketplace.org/sites/default/files/styles/slide-show-2-column-530x396/public/Silk-Road-Slide-1_0.jpg http://www.marketplace.org/sites/default/files/styles/slide-show-2-column-530x396/public/Silk-Road-Slide-1_0.jpg

  8. Making $$$$$$$ http://www.bitcoincharts.com/bitcoin/

  9. What Bitcoins look like

  10. Well actually... 319475h26cmg7eir85k38960125f834e or • A string of characters • Around 33 characters to be inexact • Leading with a 1 or 3

  11. Where do Bitcoins come from Mommy? • Generated by users by mining • Mining creates blocks of bitcoin transaction solutions • Incentive given to miners through Bitcoin rewards • No central distributer of Bitcoins

  12. Et Compute Brute • Psuedo-Random Hash Generation • Accept lowest value • Millions of processors mining • Over 275 PetaFlops https://en.bitcoin.it/w/images/en/f/f6/Quick-and-dirty-4x5970-cooling.jpg

  13. Blocks to Bits • Market started at 50 BTC per block • Number halved every 210,000 blocks • Set Bitcoin limit • 21 Million Bitcoins • More Bitcoins, less reward • Good news • Value of BTCs in USD always rises

  14. Blocks For Adults

  15. Stacking Blocks • New block found every 10 minutes • Block is around 80 bytes size • 80 bytes * 6 blocks/hour * 24 hours/day * 365 days/year = 4.2 MB http://cache.kotaku.com/assets/images/9/2011/02/800px-minecraft_classic.png

  16. Public Records • Block information public • Names not signed to block • Only user keys

  17. Who Monitors Bitcoins? ? ? ? ? http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/95/Capital_Building.JPG http://www.peakpositions.com/PeakServerRoom.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/84/Stantheman.jpg/230px-Stantheman.jpg

  18. Moving Wasn't Intended As Recreation • User computers verify exchanges • Nodes rehash Bitcoin data • Validate • Pass to next node in chain • Longest chain serves as validator • Let's look at a transfer

  19. Just What You Thought

  20. Double Spending • Issue with reusing Bitcoins • Time stamps in Bitcoin block-chain hashes

  21. Who Runs the Nodes? • They are run by viewers like you • Bitcoin incentive to validate • Only nodes whom validated rewarded • Add "Difficulty"

  22. Using the System • Honest Chain • Valid Nodes trying to authentic transfer • Attacker can send invalid data to nodes trying to verify their plan • Creates attack chain that must validate quicker than Honest Chain

  23. If All Else Fails • Attacker could send BTCs then send them back in future with invalid nodes • Attacker would plan chain of nodes in advanced • If resending of BTCs detected the original receiver generates new keys

  24. Not Perfect, ButClose August 15, 2010 • Block 74638 • Generated 92233720368.54277038 BTC • UINT_MAX • Devalued market for months

  25. Where are we at? • Bitcoins always growing • More people find Bitcoins benefits

  26. Even Bad Publicity is Good • June 2011 • Gawker wrote about the Silk Road • Negatively • Brought light to Bitcoins • Value of BTCs boomed afterwards

  27. A Distant Digital Horizon • Future in store • Market won't fill out till 2140 • Competing economies • Real Government free digital markets

  28. Acceptance of my failure to teach Q&A

More Related