₿rMoon on Nostr: When people call bitcoin a “digital currency,” they’re missing the point. The ...
When people call bitcoin a “digital currency,” they’re missing the point. The euro is a digital currency, the US dollar is a digital currency. Less than 8 percent of these currencies exist in physical form; the rest is bits on ledgers. But the fundamental difference is that these ledgers are controlled by centralized organizations, whereas in bitcoin, they’re not. Bitcoin has a decentralized network, an open network.
Antonopoulos, Andreas M.. The Internet of Money
Published at
2023-02-24 16:24:40Event JSON
{
"id": "e543ee30128576dedb348827d8a69807c4169f36ac7cefdc12cdcda9451f985e",
"pubkey": "7edef9bf36f13cf17ea40d5f7f84459dc9d92e38bf23a5cc77fa603c4eb947f7",
"created_at": 1677255880,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [],
"content": "When people call bitcoin a “digital currency,” they’re missing the point. The euro is a digital currency, the US dollar is a digital currency. Less than 8 percent of these currencies exist in physical form; the rest is bits on ledgers. But the fundamental difference is that these ledgers are controlled by centralized organizations, whereas in bitcoin, they’re not. Bitcoin has a decentralized network, an open network. \n\nAntonopoulos, Andreas M.. The Internet of Money",
"sig": "637672869dd53cda171df0d3ea09b5b9ba6974a18010ea75a39b3929a68eb305adfbc4a1b79199379fd18e892ec4b739a48b53b87ca24ea791737b0c0cd27609"
}