The Bitcoin Protocol can’t be set in stone?
Today’s self-anointed Bitcoin intelligentsia use nearly constant straw man arguments against the notion of the fixed protocol. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Today’s self-anointed Bitcoin intelligentsia use nearly constant straw man arguments against the notion of the fixed protocol. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The @Bitcoin Twitter account has changed its description, in a possible attempt to morph public’s perception of Bitcoin.
The transaction took place between Dr. Craig S. Wright using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto and long-time cryptographer Hal Finney.
It’s been an explosive start to the year for Bitcoin SV after its prices jumped 20% this week.
With SPV, people can transact peer-to-peer in Bitcoin SV without being a miner themselves or making use of the full blockchain.
The word has found itself in Bitcoin conversations, riddled with controversy on whether using the blockchain for transactions outside of monetary use cases could be labeled as spam.
2019 saw Dr. Wright committing himself to explaining his vision for Bitcoin now that it’s returning to its original protocol with Bitcoin SV.
CoinPoint predicts 2020 will be another huge year for Bitcoin SV, as it returns to the origins of Bitcoin in the original whitepaper.
Dr. Craig Wright has been helping to set the record straight on what Bitcoin is truly supposed to do, and what it was designed to provide.
The U.S. Copyright office have clarified recent events, and Dr. Craig Wright has laid down the terms of battle and what he’s trying to accomplish by proving his identity as Satoshi Nakamoto.
The copyright was awarded after the Copyright office was presented with the concrete proof that Dr. Wright was indeed the author of the seminal paper which started the Bitcoin revolution.