Captcha Bitcoin



ubuntu bitcoin ethereum падает баланс bitcoin капитализация bitcoin bitcoin краны бесплатные bitcoin bitcoin миксер bitcoin symbol ethereum web3 pinktussy bitcoin

Ключевое слово

ethereum russia bitcoin автор iota cryptocurrency bitcoin 4 bitcoin основатель bitcoin книги bitcoin биржа

bitcoin elena

bitcoin скачать криптовалюты bitcoin динамика ethereum bitcoin магазин ethereum видеокарты ethereum валюта bloomberg bitcoin

бесплатный bitcoin

bitcoin converter обменник bitcoin

bitcoin machines

bitcoin spinner pay bitcoin video bitcoin

проект bitcoin

micro bitcoin bitcoin tor bitcoin client bitcoin вебмани bitcoin википедия эмиссия bitcoin

tether android

bitcoin rpc pow bitcoin bitcoin gambling testnet bitcoin bitcoin 4 dwarfpool monero ethereum erc20 alpari bitcoin siiz bitcoin контракты ethereum ethereum pow ethereum ios будущее bitcoin лотерея bitcoin local ethereum bitcoin приложение bloomberg bitcoin satoshi bitcoin чат bitcoin tor bitcoin bitcoin location bag bitcoin bitcoin girls арбитраж bitcoin bitcoin shops bitcoin фильм дешевеет bitcoin bitcoin кошелек bitcoin cz bitcoin capitalization bitcoin sign бонусы bitcoin bitcoin tools 2016 bitcoin bitcoin технология ethereum телеграмм bitcoin основы ethereum web3 bitcoin прогноз продам bitcoin

bitcoin bio

bitcoin passphrase падение ethereum bitcoin кэш bitcoin free дешевеет bitcoin bitcoin отследить currency bitcoin

bitcoin seed

майнинга bitcoin bitcoin get nonce bitcoin bitcoin кранов компиляция bitcoin bitcoin пулы bitcoin переводчик bitcoin dump bitcoin neteller bitcoin simple bitcoin betting mine monero

bitcoin swiss

bitcoin buying боты bitcoin bitcoin проект

ethereum покупка

io tether bitcoin agario autobot bitcoin bitcoin phoenix пополнить bitcoin icon bitcoin laundering bitcoin bitcoin people coingecko ethereum bitcoin приват24 monero майнить доходность bitcoin Blockchain gives the facility to verify and audit transactions by multiple supply chain partners involved in the supply chain management system. bitcoin основы bitcoin knots

pizza bitcoin

polkadot блог short bitcoin токен bitcoin bitcoin цена

ethereum forks

фонд ethereum

bitcoin grafik

bitcoin банк bitcoin статья bitcoin приват24 bitcoin экспресс gain bitcoin bitcoin 100 bitcoin торговля обновление ethereum bitcoin capital bitcoin fund india bitcoin monero сложность bitcoin вектор bitcoin golden настройка ethereum кредиты bitcoin bitcoin cudaminer buying bitcoin bitcoin base lealana bitcoin

bitcoin png

bitcoin synchronization bitcoin nonce seed bitcoin

rpg bitcoin

bonus bitcoin проблемы bitcoin mist ethereum поиск bitcoin doctrines which reflected the very essence of the rebellion—they were themine ethereum майнинга bitcoin charts bitcoin монеты bitcoin bitcoin обменники tether пополнить bitcoin loto bitcoin captcha bitcoin телефон реклама bitcoin

bitcoin работа

bitcoin котировка bitcoin news bitcoin wallpaper bitcoin описание обменник bitcoin roll bitcoin bitcoin скачать платформы ethereum bitcoin статья ecdsa bitcoin bitcoin биржа king bitcoin bitcoin change monero faucet blog bitcoin bitcoin книга

mikrotik bitcoin

free monero хайпы bitcoin bitcoin etherium bitcoin flex bitcoin asic bitcoin red bitcoin crypto panda bitcoin The impact of blockchain technology is genuinely far-reaching and has far more use-cases than being a facilitator for transactions. Several industries have discovered the benefits of blockchain integration. While Bitcoin and Ethereum are examples of public blockchains, most of these industries require specific functionalities out of their distributed ledger architecture. This is why they use a special kind of blockchain called 'permissioned blockchain.'What is a Permissioned Blockchain?bitcoin даром 8 bitcoin store bitcoin alipay bitcoin bitcoin group фермы bitcoin plasma ethereum create bitcoin проверка bitcoin bitcoin rub bitcoin pools bitcoin capitalization bitcoin оплатить котировки ethereum wallet tether bitcoin metatrader ethereum описание bitcoin com keys bitcoin

monero btc

blogspot bitcoin 'But those who clamor for 'conscious direction'—and who cannot believe that anything which has evolved without design (and even without our understanding it) should solve problems which we should not be able to solve consciously—should remember this: The problem is precisely how to extend the span of our utilization of resources beyond the span of the control of any one mind; and therefore, how to dispense with the need of conscious control, and how to provide inducements which will make the individuals do the desirable things without anyone having to tell them what to do.' – Hayek, The Use of Knowledge in Society.Bitcoin is Common Senseпродам bitcoin japan bitcoin stealer bitcoin rpc bitcoin cryptocurrency news explorer ethereum

Click here for cryptocurrency Links

If you have read about bitcoin in the press and have some familiarity with academic research in the field of cryptography, you might reasonably come away with the following impression: Several decades' worth of research on digital cash, beginning with David Chaum, did not lead to commercial success because it required a centralized, bank-like server controlling the system, and no banks wanted to sign on. Along came bitcoin, a radically different proposal for a decentralized cryptocurrency that did not need the banks, and digital cash finally succeeded. Its inventor, the mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto, was an academic outsider, and bitcoin bears no resemblance to earlier academic proposals.

This article challenges that view by showing nearly all of the technical components of bitcoin originated in the academic literature of the 1980s and 1990s . This is not to diminish Nakamoto's achievement but to point out he stood on the shoulders of giants. Indeed, by tracing the origins of the ideas in bitcoin, we can zero in on Nakamoto's true leap of insight—the specific, complex way in which the underlying components are put together. This helps explain why bitcoin took so long to be invented. Readers already familiar with how bitcoin works may gain a deeper understanding from this historical presentation. Bitcoin's intellectual history also serves as a case study demonstrating the relationships among academia, outside researchers, and practitioners, and offers lessons on how these groups can benefit from one another.
The Ledger

If you have a secure ledger, the process to leverage it into a digital payment system is straightforward. For example, if Alice sends Bob $100 by PayPal, then PayPal debits $100 from Alice's account and credits $100 to Bob's account. This is also roughly what happens in traditional banking, although the absence of a single ledger shared between banks complicates things.

This idea of a ledger is the starting point for understanding bitcoin. It is a place to record all transactions that happen in the system, and it is open to and trusted by all system participants. Bitcoin converts this system for recording payments into a currency. Whereas in banking, an account balance represents cash that can be demanded from the bank, what does a unit of bitcoin represent? For now, assume that what is being transacted holds value inherently.

How can you build a ledger for use in an environment like the Internet where participants may not trust each other? Let's start with the easy part: the choice of data structure. There are a few desirable properties. The ledger should be immutable or, more precisely, append only: you should be able to add new transactions but not remove, modify, or reorder existing ones. There should also be a way to obtain a succinct cryptographic digest of the state of the ledger at any time. A digest is a short string that makes it possible to avoid storing the entire ledger, knowing that if the ledger were tampered with in any way, the resulting digest would change, and thus the tampering would be detected. The reason for these properties is that unlike a regular data structure that is stored on a single machine, the ledger is a global data structure collectively maintained by a mutually untrusting set of participants. This contrasts with another approach to decentralizing digital ledgers,7,13,21 in which many participants maintain local ledgers and it is up to the user querying this set of ledgers to resolve any conflicts.

Linked timestamping. Bitcoin's ledger data structure is borrowed, with minimal modifications, from a series of papers by Stuart Haber and Scott Stornetta written between 1990 and 1997 (their 1991 paper had another co-author, Dave Bayer).5,22,23 We know this because Nakamoto says so in his bitcoin white paper.34 Haber and Stornetta's work addressed the problem of document timestamping—they aimed to build a "digital notary" service. For patents, business contracts, and other documents, one may want to establish that the document was created at a certain point in time, and no later. Their notion of document is quite general and could be any type of data. They do mention, in passing, financial transactions as a potential application, but it was not their focus.

In a simplified version of Haber and Stornetta's proposal, documents are constantly being created and broadcast. The creator of each document asserts a time of creation and signs the document, its timestamp, and the previously broadcast document. This previous document has signed its own predecessor, so the documents form a long chain with pointers backwards in time. An outside user cannot alter a timestamped message since it is signed by the creator, and the creator cannot alter the message without also altering the entire chain of messages that follows. Thus, if you are given a single item in the chain by a trusted source (for example, another user or a specialized timestamping service), the entire chain up to that point is locked in, immutable, and temporally ordered. Further, if you assume the system rejects documents with incorrect creation times, you can be reasonably assured that documents are at least as old as they claim to be. At any rate, bit-coin borrows only the data structure from Haber and Stornetta's work and reengineers its security properties with the addition of the proof-of-work scheme described later in this article.

In their follow-up papers, Haber and Stornetta introduced other ideas that make this data structure more effective and efficient (some of which were hinted at in their first paper). First, links between documents can be created using hashes rather than signatures; hashes are simpler and faster to compute. Such links are called hash pointers. Second, instead of threading documents individually—which might be inefficient if many documents are created at approximately the same time—they can be grouped into batches or blocks, with documents in each block having essentially the same time-stamp. Third, within each block, documents can be linked together with a binary tree of hash pointers, called a Merkle tree, rather than a linear chain. Incidentally, Josh Benaloh and Michael de Mare independently introduced all three of these ideas in 1991,6 soon after Haber and Stornetta's first paper.

Merkle trees. Bitcoin uses essentially the data structure in Haber and Stornetta's 1991 and 1997 papers, shown in simplified form in Figure 2 (Nakamoto was presumably unaware of Benaloh and de Mare's work). Of course, in bitcoin, transactions take the place of documents. In each block's Merkle tree, the leaf nodes are transactions, and each internal node essentially consists of two pointers. This data structure has two important properties. First, the hash of the latest block acts as a digest. A change to any of the transactions (leaf nodes) will necessitate changes propagating all the way to the root of the block, and the roots of all following blocks. Thus, if you know the latest hash, you can download the rest of the ledger from an untrusted source and verify that it has not changed. A similar argument establishes another important property of the data structure—that is, someone can efficiently prove to you that a particular transaction is included in the ledger. This user would have to send you only a small number of nodes in that transaction's block (this is the point of the Merkle tree), as well as a small amount of information for every following block. The ability to efficiently prove inclusion of transactions is highly desirable for performance and scalability.

Merkle trees, by the way, are named for Ralph Merkle, a pioneer of asymmetric cryptography who proposed the idea in his 1980 paper.33 His intended application was to produce a digest for a public directory of digital certificates. When a website, for example, presents you with a certificate, it could also present a short proof that the certificate appears in the global directory. You could efficiently verify the proof as long as you know the root hash of the Merkle tree of the certificates in the directory. This idea is ancient by cryptographic standards, but its power has been appreciated only of late. It is at the core of the recently implemented Certificate Transparency system.30 A 2015 paper proposes CONIKS, which applies the idea to directories of public keys for end-to-end encrypted emails.32 Efficient verification of parts of the global state is one of the key functionalities provided by the ledger in Ethereum, a new cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin may be the most well-known real-world instantiation of Haber and Stornetta's data structures, but it is not the first. At least two companies—Surety starting in the mid-1990s and Guardtime starting in 2007—offer document timestamping services. An interesting twist present in both of these services is an idea mentioned by Bayer, Haber, and Stornetta,5 which is to publish Merkle roots periodically in a newspaper by taking out an ad. Figure 3 shows a Merkle root published by Guardtime.
Byzantine fault tolerance. Of course, the requirements for an Internet currency without a central authority are more stringent. A distributed ledger will inevitably have forks, which means that some nodes will think block A is the latest block, while other nodes will think it is block B. This could be because of an adversary trying to disrupt the ledger's operation or simply because of network latency, resulting in blocks occasionally being generated near-simultaneously by different nodes unaware of each other's blocks. Linked timestamping alone is not enough to resolve forks, as was shown by Mike Just in 1998.26

A different research field, fault-tolerant distributed computing, has studied this problem, where it goes by different names, including state replication. A solution to this problem is one that enables a set of nodes to apply the same state transitions in the same order—typically, the precise order does not matter, only that all nodes are consistent. For a digital currency, the state to be replicated is the set of balances, and transactions are state transitions. Early solutions, including Paxos, proposed by Turing Award winner Leslie Lamport in 1989,28,29 consider state replication when communication channels are unreliable and when a minority of nodes may exhibit certain "realistic" faults, such as going offline forever or rebooting and sending outdated messages from when it first went offline. A prolific literature followed with more adverse settings and efficiency trade-offs.

A related line of work studied the situation where the network is mostly reliable (messages are delivered with bounded delay), but where the definition of "fault" was expanded to handle any deviation from the protocol. Such Byzantine faults include both naturally occurring faults as well as maliciously crafted behaviors. They were first studied in a paper also by Lamport, cowritten with Robert Shostak and Marshall Pease, as early as 1982.27 Much later, in 1999, a landmark paper by Miguel Castro and Barbara Liskov introduced practical Byzantine fault tolerance (PBFT), which accommodated both Byzantine faults and an unreliable network.8 Compared with linked time-stamping, the fault-tolerance literature is enormous and includes hundreds of variants and optimizations of Paxos, PBFT, and other seminal protocols.
In his original white paper, Nakamoto does not cite this literature or use its language. He uses some concepts, referring to his protocol as a consensus mechanism and considering faults both in the form of attackers, as well as nodes joining and leaving the network. This is in contrast to his explicit reliance on the literature in linked time-stamping (and proof of work, as we will discuss). When asked in a mailing-list discussion about bitcoin's relation to the Byzantine Generals' Problem (a thought experiment requiring BFT to solve), Nakamoto asserts the proof-of-work chain solves this problem.35

In the following years, other academics have studied Nakamoto consensus from the perspective of distributed systems. This is still a work in progress. Some show that bitcoin's properties are quite weak,45 while others argue that the BFT perspective does not do justice to bitcoin's consistency properties.41 Another approach is to define variants of well-studied properties and prove that bitcoin satisfies them.19 Recently these definitions were substantially sharpened to provide a more standard consistency definition that holds under more realistic assumptions about message delivery.37 All of this work, however, makes assumptions about "honest," that is, procotol-compliant, behavior among a subset of participants, whereas Nakamoto suggests that honest behavior need not be blindly assumed, because it is incentivized. A richer analysis of Nakamoto consensus accounting for the role of incentives does not fit cleanly into past models of fault-tolerant systems.

back to top Proof Of Work

Virtually all fault-tolerant systems assume that a strict majority or supermajority (for example, more than half or two-thirds) of nodes in the system are both honest and reliable. In an open peer-to-peer network, there is no registration of nodes, and they freely join and leave. Thus an adversary can create enough Sybils, or sockpuppet nodes, to overcome the consensus guarantees of the system. The Sybil attack was formalized in 2002 by John Douceur,14 who turned to a cryptographic construction called proof of work to mitigate it.

The origins. To understand proof of work, let's turn to its origins. The first proposal that would be called proof of work today was created in 1992 by Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor.15 Their goal was to deter spam. Note that spam, Sybil attacks, and denial of service are all roughly similar problems in which the adversary amplifies its influence in the network compared to regular users; proof of work is applicable as a defense against all three. In Dwork and Naor's design, email recipients would process only those email messages that were accompanied by proof that the sender had performed a moderate amount of computational work—hence, "proof of work." Computing the proof would take perhaps a few seconds on a regular computer. Thus, it would pose no difficulty for regular users, but a spammer wishing to send a million email messages would require several weeks, using equivalent hardware.

Note that the proof-of-work instance (also called a puzzle) must be specific to the email, as well as to the recipient. Otherwise, a spammer would be able to send multiple messages to the same recipient (or the same message to multiple recipients) for the cost of one message to one recipient. The second crucial property is that it should pose minimal computational burden on the recipient; puzzle solutions should be trivial to verify, regardless of how difficult they are to compute. Additionally, Dwork and Naor considered functions with a trapdoor, a secret known to a central authority that would allow the authority to solve the puzzles without doing the work. One possible application of a trapdoor would be for the authority to approve posting to mailing lists without incurring a cost. Dwork and Naor's proposal consisted of three candidate puzzles meeting their properties, and it kicked off a whole research field, to which we will return.



bitcoin иконка эфириум ethereum сложность bitcoin pay bitcoin dwarfpool monero bitcoin elena

ethereum forks

bitcoin usd сети ethereum bitcoin инструкция hd bitcoin ethereum проекты tabtrader bitcoin monero пул bitcoin land reklama bitcoin monero windows mine ethereum

joker bitcoin

bitcoin calc bitcoin pools mine ethereum bitcoin доллар bitcoin автоматический polkadot bitcoin кран расширение bitcoin ethereum доходность monero logo bitcoin начало rus bitcoin claymore ethereum

bitcoin scanner

bitcoin коллектор ethereum gas bitcoin today

bitcoin доллар

bitcoin department india bitcoin connect bitcoin p2pool monero

автосборщик bitcoin

de bitcoin plus bitcoin solo bitcoin connect bitcoin обменять bitcoin ssl bitcoin алгоритм monero bitcoin vps poloniex ethereum bitcoin site bitcoin anonymous торги bitcoin

ann monero

2018 bitcoin bitcoin primedice bitcoin charts bitcoin бизнес bitcoin торговля ютуб bitcoin bitcoin pools usa bitcoin cryptocurrency wallet bitcoin конец шифрование bitcoin machines bitcoin конвертер bitcoin

андроид bitcoin

lealana bitcoin ethereum wallet раздача bitcoin bitcoin исходники bitcoin видеокарты

q bitcoin

ethereum platform

bitcoin play token ethereum fpga bitcoin ethereum windows метрополис ethereum ethereum online tether provisioning total cryptocurrency addnode bitcoin micro bitcoin monero fee bitcoin transaction bitcoin ключи addnode bitcoin майнинг bitcoin 3.3 Schnorr Signature upgrade proposal

bitcoin crush

bitcoin usd blogspot bitcoin autobot bitcoin jpmorgan bitcoin wild bitcoin crococoin bitcoin polkadot блог bitcoin вирус bitcoin таблица bitcoin продам

monero

bitcoin принцип

asics bitcoin

приложения bitcoin apple bitcoin equihash bitcoin bitcoin course asic ethereum заработок ethereum описание bitcoin bitcoin core otc bitcoin monero free bitcoin растет bitcoin linux bitcoin com

bitcoin virus

io tether удвоить bitcoin bitcoin maps

monero сложность

ethereum fork bitcoin nvidia bitcoin calc

monero minergate

bitcoin расшифровка ethereum os microsoft ethereum bitcoin dogecoin

monero кран

blacktrail bitcoin reklama bitcoin покупка bitcoin casinos bitcoin bitcointalk bitcoin

top bitcoin

check bitcoin bitcoin работа

rx470 monero

ethereum php bitcoin information mac bitcoin сша bitcoin foto bitcoin сервисы bitcoin робот bitcoin

bitcoin com

bitcoin tools bitcoin grafik bitcoin софт bitcoin виджет bitcoin me bitcoin land tether usd bitcoin casascius настройка monero

bitcoin com

платформы ethereum bitcoin antminer криптовалюта tether настройка monero spend bitcoin bitcoin адреса free monero кран ethereum робот bitcoin space bitcoin bitcoin roll field bitcoin bitcoin сборщик green bitcoin таблица bitcoin падение bitcoin ru bitcoin

bitcoin forums

Proof of Workmonero алгоритм bitcoin investing 777 bitcoin

bitcoin 4000

bitcoin betting Although technically transactions occur instantaneously on both the Bitcoin and Litecoin networks, time is required for those transactions to be confirmed by other network participants. Litecoin was founded with the goal of prioritizing transaction speed, and that has proven an advantage as it has grown in popularity. According to data from Blockchain.info, the Bitcoin network’s average transaction confirmation time is currently just under 9 minutes per transaction (the time it takes for a block to be verified and added to the blockchain), though this can vary widely when traffic is high.10 The equivalent figure for Litecoin is roughly 2.5 minutes.11 In principle, this difference in confirmation time could make Litecoin more attractive for merchants. For example, a merchant selling a product in exchange for Bitcoin would need to wait nearly four times as long to confirm payment as if that same product were sold in exchange for Litecoin. On the other hand, merchants can always opt to accept transactions without waiting for any confirmation at all. The security of such zero-confirmation transactions is the subject of some debate.12виталик ethereum You can join Ethereum mining pools like Ethpool, F2Pool, and DwarfPool to split the responsibilities and rewards of running the blockchain with other users.Making and accepting payments for servicesпополнить bitcoin On February 20, 2014, a member of the Harvard community was stripped of his or her access to the University's research computing facilities after setting up a Dogecoin mining operation using a Harvard research network, according to an internal email circulated by Faculty of Arts and Sciences Research Computing officials.виталик ethereum ethereum вывод The Altcoins Market also effects a bitcoin price. The emergence of serious altcoins can distract the attention of Bitcoin audience. A lot of investors, traders, users start to use the altcoins which seem to be more serious and prospective in their point of view in comparison to bitcoin. Hereby, we will observe the bitcoin price drop due to the decreasing demand.'If you’re stupid enough to buy it, you’ll pay the price one day', said JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon in October 2017, in response to a question about the popularity of cryptocurrencies.bitcoin statistics bitcoin кошелек decred ethereum bitcoin ферма block ethereum chaindata ethereum bitcoin обналичить bitcoin 10000 ethereum платформа carding bitcoin poloniex ethereum bank cryptocurrency bitcoin стратегия bitcoin брокеры bistler bitcoin стоимость monero bitcoin пополнить bitcoin кэш bitcoin кошелек ethereum blockchain bitcoin рулетка bitcoin money что bitcoin bitcoin bank ethereum contracts 33 bitcoin bitcoin friday apple bitcoin вывод ethereum click bitcoin app bitcoin bitcoin wallet eth ethereum ethereum stats

bitcoin weekend

bitcoin игры bitcoin darkcoin usb tether bitcoin desk bitcoin electrum blog bitcoin заработка bitcoin bitcoin вложения Satoshi Nakamoto was the creator of Bitcoin. Bitcoin is a kind of cryptocurrency that is stored and created eletronically. There is no group or institution controls Bitcoin that is why it is a decentralized currency.bitcoin 99 daemon monero konvert bitcoin bitcoin crush bitcoin conf buy bitcoin bitrix bitcoin bitcoin services bitcoin сервисы котировка bitcoin wired tether secp256k1 bitcoin bitcoin значок cryptocurrency prices bitcoin магазины vector bitcoin ethereum платформа вывести bitcoin bitcoin ios bitcoin stellar bitcoin exe habrahabr bitcoin bitcoin monero bitcoin 4000 If you want to own some Litecoin but aren't interested in mining it, purchase cryptocurrency with another cryptocurrency on an exchange site. Some of these exchanges, and other services, such as Coinbase, allow you to purchase Litecoin with fiat currency (currency that's backed by its issuing government), like U.S. dollars.bitcoin растет amazon bitcoin cryptocurrency tech bitcoin переводчик лотерея bitcoin bitcoin шахта bitcoin 2 символ bitcoin bitcoin bazar bitcoin майнить окупаемость bitcoin ethereum contract project ethereum цена ethereum настройка bitcoin платформу ethereum bitcoin обозреватель bitcoin novosti bitcoin 1000 инструкция bitcoin bitcoin ruble обзор bitcoin ethereum casino 99 bitcoin bitcoin loto bitcoin mail

keyhunter bitcoin

bitcoin tools tether кошелек monero coin pool bitcoin bitcoin php ethereum debian

bitcoin symbol

эмиссия ethereum виджет bitcoin ethereum news coin ethereum bitcoin alert ethereum сайт кошелька bitcoin oil bitcoin bitcoin форки генератор bitcoin bitcoin алгоритм стоимость bitcoin monero dwarfpool bitcoin чат bitcoin ферма bitcoin расшифровка electrum bitcoin bitcoin hesaplama nicehash bitcoin