Why 2020 will be Bitcoin’s Most Important Year
If 2019 was the rebuilding year for Bitcoin, 2020 is a year heavy with anticipation. People are expecting things to happen in 2020.
If 2019 was the rebuilding year for Bitcoin, 2020 is a year heavy with anticipation. People are expecting things to happen in 2020.
Connor Murray discusses the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, and what makes Bitcoin different from other electronic currencies.
We’re just a couple of weeks away from the start of a fresh year, and fresh opportunities for the cryptocurrency world to grow.
The separation of bank and state will be initiated by the same tool: a parabolic leap in the integrity of distributed data.
Joshua Henslee explores Bitcoin and gold as money as he attempts to determine if one functions more effectively as money over the other in today’s age.
Bitcoin is an archetypal element. It is simultaneously a general purpose tool for the masses while it is also the proverbial Excalibur to be wielded by the new world economy.
Bitcoin is almost 11 years old now, but November 15, 2018 marked the start of a movement to restore Satoshi Nakamoto's original vision—and with it, the technological revolution we were promised in 2009.
It may be the one-year anniversary of the ticker symbol BSV, but November 15 is also the official Bitcoin Independence Day holiday.
In 2016, cryptocurrency really started to gain attention on a global level. It was also the beginning of a split for Ethereum, as well as one of the darker sides of the Bitcoin ecosystem—the initial coin offering.
Dr. Craig Wright, fed up with the excuses of those who wish to protect criminals, laid down the law at the Malta conference.
As Bitcoin continued to gain recognition since the first block of the cryptocurrency was established in 2009, it saw its ups and downs, just like any new innovation.
After more than 11 years since it was first introduced, Bitcoin still has difficulty being understood, even by some of the most adept tech geeks in the business.