- Bitcoin Bear Markets To succeed in Bitcoin investment, you must weather the inevitable storms of volatility. The complete Bitcoin price graph is a dizzying moonshot, but new Bitcoin investors are often shocked by bear market phases they fail to psychologically or financially prepare for. We can’t predict how long future downturns will last, but we can learn from […]
- Bitcoin Investment for Beginners Often, my friends want to invest in Bitcoin, but are quickly overwhelmed by the details. I’d like to share my current thoughts on what works well for investment in Bitcoin for an average person. The basics of investment apply to Bitcoin. When you buy any asset, you need to establish a time horizon for how […]
- The Inevitability of Privacy in Lightning Networks Here’s a risky myth pervading the Bitcoin community: The Lightning Network model will inherently improve Bitcoin privacy. Off-chain transaction techniques move some transaction data from the indefinitely public blockchain record to other places. By this virtue, advocates conclude this will make sensitive data harder for privacy attackers to gather. Unfortunately, we do not have the […]
- Estimating Bitcoind’s Share of Blocks bitcoind is a daemon process that handles sending and receiving bitcoins for Bitcoin Core (formerly the “Satoshi client”) and its various forks (XT, Classic, Unlimited). Some people who use bitcoind to manage their funds use Bitcoin-Qt (sometimes also referred to as “Bitcoin Core”), a graphical interface for bitcoind available on many popular operating systems. Based on […]
- Bitcoin: Calculation Problems Key Concepts Crypto-economics is the study of the economic implications of engineering decisions in cryptographic consensus networks. Crypto-economics currently does not get enough attention in Bitcoin. Central planning of the protocol is the fastest way to alleviate problems, but introduces technical debt and makes the system less competitive. Planning Bitcoin’s Future As many writers have […]
- A Brief History of Bitcoin Forks This post was originally published at: https://blog.blockchain.com/2016/02/26/a-brief-history-of-bitcoin-forks/ Content was co-authored by Peter Smith. TL;DR Summary Soft consensus forks render previously valid blocks invalid, and create security risks for non-upgrading nodes. Hard consensus forks render previously invalid blocks valid, and make non-upgrading nodes incompatible. Unplanned forks pose the greatest risk, and are generally caused by poorly […]
- RFC: Tool for tracking and visualizing Bitcoin address reuse I want to end address reuse in the Bitcoin blockchain. Today, I’m releasing source code for a tool that collects data about address reuse in the blockchain and visualizes it. I’m also releasing visualizations of the data for the first 200,000 blocks in the blockchain (up to September 22, 2012). This is my request for […]
- Main Street’s Financial Privacy The following is an introduction I wrote for the Open Bitcoin Privacy Project’s Spring 2015 Wallet Privacy Rating Report, published May 17th, 2015. You can download the report here [github.com]. Any technology as revolutionary as Bitcoin is bound to come with surprises. In fact, if you’ve been following the technology for any appreciable amount of […]
- Joining the Blockchain.info Team, OBPP 2014 was a big year for me. My love of crypto-currencies, and their security and privacy possibilities in particular, blossomed. A few of the highlights included: Publishing my first book, Anonymous Bitcoin: How to Keep Your ฿ All To Yourself Delivering online and offline presentations at the Texas Bitcoin conference, Bitcoin in the Beltway conference, […]