What is a cryptocurrency and how this works
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CryptoDony
Criptocurrencies are cryptographic digital assets that function as a medium of exchange as a common currency but use strong encryption to protect your transactions, control the creation of new amounts of currencies, and also verify and validate the transfer of active. The technology of cryptocurrencies is decentralized as opposed to centralized digital currency and central banking systems, but there are some types of cryptocurrencies that have some centralization and control.
The cryptocurrencies do not require a central authority and are maintained by consensus distributed network in a technology called blockchain.
Unlike government fiduciary coins generated in a central bank or state-owned mint the cryptocurrencies are created by a decentralized process called mining or minting depending on how their cryptographic algorithm and network consensus protocol functions. The consensus keeps the information of the transactions the same across the network or the entire chain of cryptocurrency blocks
The information about cryptocurrency, its properties and also its use resides in a wallet that is an application that allows users to transfer cryptocurrencies between these wallets of the same coin.
The first cryptocurrency was bitcoin and hundreds of others exist nowadays and some end up disappearing because they are not used or for other reasons.
Hassham Habib
A cryptocurrency is a digital or virtual currency designed to work as a medium of exchange. It uses cryptography to secure and verify transactions as well as to control the creation of new units of a particular cryptocurrency. Essentially, cryptocurrencies are limited entries in a database that no one can change unless specific conditions are fulfilled.
History :
There have been many attempts at creating a digital currency during the 90s tech boom, with systems like Flooz, Beenz and DigiCash emerging on the market but inevitably failing. There were many different reasons for their failures, such as fraud, financial problems and even frictions between companies’ employees and their bosses.
Notably, all of those systems utilized a Trusted Third Party approach, meaning that the companies behind them verified and facilitated the transactions. Due to the failures of these companies, the creation of a digital cash system was seen as a lost cause for a long while.
Then, in early 2009, an anonymous programmer or a group of programmers under an alias Satoshi Nakamoto introduced Bitcoin. Satoshi described it as a ‘peer-to-peer electronic cash system.’ It is completely decentralized, meaning there are no servers involved and no central controlling authority. The concept closely resembles peer-to-peer networks for file sharing.
One of the most important problems that any payment network has to solve is double-spending. It is a fraudulent technique of spending the same amount twice. The traditional solution was a trusted third party – a central server – that kept records of the balances and transactions. However, this method always entailed an authority basically in control of your funds and with all your personal details on hand.
In a decentralized network like Bitcoin, every single participant needs to do this job. This is done via the Blockchain – a public ledger of all transaction that ever happened within the network, available to everyone. Therefore, everyone in the network can see every account’s balance.
Every transaction is a file that consists of the sender’s and recipient’s public keys (wallet addresses) and the amount of coins transferred. The transaction also needs to be signed off by the sender with their private key. All of this is just basic cryptography. Eventually, the transaction is broadcasted in the network, but it needs to be confirmed first.
Within a cryptocurrency network, only miners can confirm transactions by solving a cryptographic puzzle. They take transactions, mark them as legitimate and spread them across the network. Afterwards, every node of the network adds it to its database. Once the transaction is confirmed it becomes unforgeable and irreversible and a miner receives a reward, plus the transaction fees.
Essentially, any cryptocurrency network is based on the absolute consensus of all the participants regarding the legitimacy of balances and transactions. If nodes of the network disagree on a single balance, the system would basically break. However, there are a lot of rules pre-built and programmed into the network that prevents this from happening.
Cryptocurrencies are so called because the consensus-keeping process is ensured with strong cryptography. This, along with the aforementioned factors, makes third parties and blind trust as a concept completely redundant.