History of Bitcoin
Number of bitcoin transactions per month (logarithmic scale)
Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency, a form
of money that uses cryptography to control its creation and management, rather
than relying on central authorities. However, not all of the technologies and
concepts that make up bitcoin are new; the presumed pseudonymous Satoshi
Nakamoto (the creator of bitcoin, see below) integrated many existing ideas
from the cypherpunk community when creating bitcoin
Pre-history
Prior to the release of bitcoin there
were a number of digital cash technologies starting with the issuer based ecash
protocols of David Chaum and Stefan
Brands. Adam Back developed hashcash, a proof-of-work scheme for spam control.
The first proposals for distributed digital scarcity based cryptocurrencies
were Wei Dai's b-money and Nick Szabo's bit gold. Hal Finney developed RPOW.
Bit gold, b-money and RPOW all used hashcash as their proof-of-work algorithm.
Independently and at around the same
time, Wei Dai proposed b-money[3] and Nick Szabo proposed bit gold
Subsequently, Hal Finney implemented and deployed RPOW a reusable form of
hashcash based on IBM secure TPM hardware and remote attestation (centralized but with no issuer inflation
risk).
In the bit gold proposal which
proposed a collectible market based mechanism for inflation control, Nick Szabo
also investigated some additional enabling aspects including a Byzantine
fault-tolerant asset registry to store and transfer the chained proof-of-work solutions.
There has been much speculation as to
the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto with suspects including Wei Dai, Hal Finney
and accompanying denials The possibility that Satoshi Nakamoto was a computer
collective in the European financial sector has also been bruited.
Creation
In November 2008, a paper was posted
on the internet under the name Satoshi Nakamoto titled bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer
Electronic Cash System. This paper detailed methods of using a peer-to-peer
network to generate what was described as "a system for electronic
transactions without relying on trust". In January 2009, the bitcoin
network came into existence with the release of the first open source bitcoin
client and the issuance of the first bitcoins, with Satoshi Nakamoto mining the
first block of bitcoins ever (known as
the "genesis block"), which had a reward of 50 bitcoins. The
value of the first bitcoin transactions were negotiated by individuals on the
bitcointalk forums with one notable transaction of 10,000 BTC used to
indirectly purchase two pizzas delivered by Papa John’s
On 6 August 2010, a major
vulnerability in the bitcoin protocol was spotted. Transactions weren't
properly verified before they were included in the transaction log or
"block chain" which let users bypass bitcoin's economic restrictions
and create an indefinite number of bitcoins.[ On 15 August, the vulnerability
was exploited; over 184 billion bitcoins were generated in a transaction, and
sent to two addresses on the network. Within hours, the transaction was spotted
and erased from the transaction log after the bug was fixed and the network
forked to an updated version of the bitcoin protocol. This was the only major
security flaw found and exploited in bitcoin's history
Growth
And other organizations began to
accept bitcoins for donations. The Electronic Frontier Foundation began, and
then temporarily suspended, bitcoin acceptance, citing concerns about a lack of
legal precedent about new currency systems, saying that they "generally
don't endorse any type of product or service The EFF's decision was changed on
17 May 2013
On 22 March 2011 WeUseCoins published
the first viral video which has had over
6.4 million views. On 23 December 2011, Douglas Feigelson of BitBills filed a
patent application for "Creating And Using Digital Currency" with the
United States Patent and Trademark Office, an action which was contested based
on prior art in June 2013.
In January 2012, bitcoin was featured
as the main subject within a fictionalized trial on the CBS legal drama The
Good Wife in the third season episode "Bitcoin for Dummies". The host
of CNBC's Mad Money, Jim Cramer, played himself in a courtroom scene where he
testifies that he doesn't consider bitcoin a true currency, saying
"There's no central bank to regulate it; it's digital and functions
completely peer to peer".
In October 2012, BitPay reported
having over 1,000 merchants accepting bitcoin under its payment processing
service.
In February 2013 the bitcoin-based
payment processor Coinbase reported selling US$1 million worth of bitcoins in a
single month at over $22 per bitcoin. The Internet Archive announced that it
was ready to accept donations as bitcoins and that it intends to give employees
the option to receive portions of their salaries in bitcoin currency.
In March the bitcoin transaction log
or "block chain" temporarily forked into two independent logs with
differing rules on how transactions could be accepted. The Mt. Gox exchange
briefly halted bitcoin deposits and the exchange rate briefly dipped by 23% to
$37 as the event occurred before recovering to previous level of approximately
$48 in the following hours. In the US, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
(FinCEN) established regulatory guidelines for "decentralized virtual
currencies" such as bitcoin, classifying American "bitcoin
miners" who sell their generated bitcoins as Money Service Businesses (or
MSBs), that may be subject to registration and other legal obligations
In April, payment processors
BitInstant and Mt. Gox experienced processing delays due to insufficient
capacity resulting in the bitcoin exchange rate dropping from $266 to $76
before returning to $160 within six hours
Bitcoin gained greater recognition
when services such as OkCupid and Foodler began accepting it for payment
On 15 May 2013, the US authorities
seized accounts associated with Mt. Gox after discovering that it had not
registered as a money transmitter with FinCEN in the US
On 23 June 2013, it was reported that
the US Drug Enforcement Administration listed 11.02 bitcoins as a seized asset
in a United States Department of Justice seizure notice pursuant to 21 U.S.C. §
881 ,It is the first time a government agency has claimed to have seized
bitcoin
In July 2013 a project began in Kenya
linking bitcoin with M-Pesa, a popular mobile payments system, in an experiment
designed to spur innovative payments in Africa During the same month the
Foreign Exchange Administration and Policy Department in Thailand stated that
bitcoin lacks any legal framework and would therefore be illegal, which
effectively banned trading on bitcoin exchanges in the country According to
Vitalik Buterin, a writer for Bitcoin Magazine, "bitcoin's fate in
Thailand may give the electronic currency more credibility in some
circles", but he was concerned it didn't bode well for bitcoin in China
On 6 August 2013, Federal Judge Amos
Mazzant of the Eastern District of Texas of the Fifth Circuit ruled that
bitcoins are "a currency or a form of money" (specifically securities
as defined by Federal Securities Laws), and as such were subject to the court's
jurisdiction, and Germany's Finance Ministry subsumed bitcoins under the term
"unit of account"—a financial instrument—though not as e-money or a
functional currency, a classification nonetheless having legal and tax
implications
In October 2013, the FBI seized
roughly 26,000 BTC from website Silk Road during the arrest of alleged owner
Ross William Ulbricht
Two companies, Robocoin and
Bitcoiniacs launched the world's first bitcoin ATM on 29 October 2013 in
Vancouver, BC, Canada, allowing clients to sell or purchase bitcoin currency at
a downtown coffee shop]
In November 2013, the University of
Nicosia announced that it would be accepting bitcoin as payment for tuition
fees, with the university's chief financial officer calling it the "gold
of tomorrow .In December Overstock.com announced plans to accept bitcoin in the
second half of 2014. In January 2014, Zynga announced it was testing bitcoin
for purchasing in-game assets in seven of its games. That same month, The D Las
Vegas Casino Hotel and Golden Gate Hotel & Casino properties in downtown
Las Vegas announced they would also begin accepting bitcoin, according to an
article by USA Today. The article also stated the currency would be accepted in
five locations, including the front desk and certain restaurants
In September 2014 TeraExchange, LLC,
received approval from the U.S.Commodity Futures Trading Commission
"CFTC" to begin listing an over-the-counter swap product based on the
price of a bitcoin. The CFTC swap product approval marks the first time a U.S.
regulatory agency approved a bitcoin financial product .Prices and value
history
The price of a bitcoin reached an
all-time high of US$1124.76 on 29 November 2013, up from just US$13.36 on 5 January
at the start of the year; the price subsequently dropped into the $200-$300
range. (semi logarithmic plot)
Among the factors which may have
contributed to this rise were the European sovereign-debt crisis—particularly
the 2012–2013 Cypriot financial crisis—statements by FinCEN improving the
currency's legal standing and rising media and Internet interest .The current
all-time high was set on 17 November 2013 at US$1216.73 on the Mt. Gox
exchange.
As the market valuation of the total
stock of bitcoins approached US$1 billion, some commentators called bitcoin
prices a bubble .In early April 2013, the price per bitcoin dropped from $266
to around $50 and then rose to around $100. Over two weeks starting late June
2013 the price dropped steadily to $70. The price began to recover, peaking
once again on 1 October at $140. On 2 October, The Silk Road was seized by the
FBI. This seizure caused a flash crash to $110. The price quickly rebounded,
returning to $200 several weeks later .The latest run went from $200 on 3
November to $900 on 18 November bitcoin passed a US$1000 all-time high on 28
November 2013 at Mt. Gox.
Prices fell to around $400 in April
2014, before rallying in the middle of the year. They then declined to not much
more than $200 in early 2015.
Until 2013 almost all market with
bitcoins were in US
Bitcoin value history (comparison to
US$) Date Price for 1 BTC Notes
Jan 2009 – Jan
2010 basically none No exchanges or market, users were mainly
cryptography fans who were sending bitcoins for low or no value.
Feb 2010 – May 2010 less than $0.01 On 22 May 2010 user
"laszlo" made the first real-world transaction by buying two pizzas
in Jacksonville, Florida for 10,000 BTC.User "SmokeTooMuch" auctioned
10,000 BTC for $50 (cumulatively), but no buyer was found.
July 2010 $0.08 In five days, the price grew 1000%, rising
from $0.008 to $0.08 for 1 bitcoin.
Feb 2011 – April
2011 $1 bitcoin takes parity with US dollar
8 July 2011 $31 top of first "bubble",
followed by the first price drop
Dec 2011 $2 minimum after few months
Dec 2012 $13 slowly rising for a year
April 11, 2013 $266
top of a price rally, during which the value was growing by 5-10% daily.
May 2013 $130 basically stable, again slowly rising.
June 2013 $100 in June slowly dropping to $70, but
rising in July to $110
Nov 2013 $350 – $1250 from October $150–$200 in November,
rising to $400, then $600, eventually reaching $900 on 11/19/2013 and breaking
$1000 threshold on 27 November 2013.
Dec 2013 $600 – $1000 Price crashed to $600, rebounded to
$1,000, crashed again to the $500 range. Stabilized to the ~$650–$800 range.
Jan 2014 $750 – $1000 Price spiked to $1000 briefly, then
settled in the $800–$900 range for the rest of the month.[82]
Feb 2014 $550 – $750 Price fell following the shutdown of
Mt. Gox before recovering to the $600–$700 range.
Mar 2014 $450 – $700 Price continued to fall due to a false
report regarding bitcoin ban in China and uncertainty over whether the Chinese
government would seek to prohibit banks from working with digital currency
exchanges
Apr 2014 $340 – $530 The lowest price since the 2012–2013
Cypriot financial crisis had been reached at 3:25 AM on April 11
May 2014 $440 – $630 The downtrend first slow down and then
reverse, increasing over 30% in the last days of May.
Mar 2015 $200 – $300 Price fell through to early 2015.
Early Nov 2015 $395 – $504 Large spike in value from 225-250 at
the start of October to 2015's record high of $504
Satoshi Nakamoto
"Satoshi Nakamoto" is
presumed to be a pseudonym for the person or people who designed the original
bitcoin protocol in 2008 and launched the network in 2009. Nakamoto was
responsible for creating the majority of the official bitcoin software and was
active in making modifications and posting technical information on the
BitcoinTalk Forum.
Investigations into the real identity
of Satoshi Nakamoto were attempted by The New Yorker and Fast Company. The New
Yorker's investigation brought up at least two possible candidates: Michael
Clear and Vili Lehdonvirta. Fast Company's investigation brought up
circumstantial evidence linking an encryption patent application filed by Neal
King, Vladimir Oksman and Charles Bry on 15 August 2008, and the bitcoin.org
domain name which was registered 72 hours later. The patent application
(#20100042841) contained networking and encryption technologies similar to
bitcoin's, and textual analysis revealed that the phrase "...
computationally impractical to reverse" appeared in both the patent
application and bitcoin's whitepaper .All three inventors explicitly denied
being Satoshi Nakamoto .In May 2013, Ted Nelson speculated that Japanese
mathematician Shinichi Mochizuki is Satoshi Nakamoto .Later in 2013 the Israeli
researchers Dorit Ron and Adi Shamir pointed to Silk Road-linked Ross William
Ulbricht as the possible person behind the cover. The two researchers based
their suspicion on an analysis of the network of bitcoin transactions .These
allegations were contested.Ron and Shamir later retracted their claim
Nakamoto's involvement with bitcoin
does not appear to extend past mid-2010.In April 2011, Nakamoto communicated
with a bitcoin contributor, saying that he had "moved on to other things.
Stefan Thomas, a Swiss coder and
active community member, graphed the time stamps for each of Nakamoto's
500-plus bitcoin forum posts; the resulting chart showed a steep decline to
almost no posts between the hours of 5 a.m. and 11 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time.
Because this pattern held true even on Saturdays and Sundays, it suggested that
Nakamoto was asleep at this time, and the hours of 5 a.m. to 11 a.m. GMT are
midnight to 6 a.m. Eastern Standard Time (North American Eastern Standard
Time). Other clues suggested that Nakamoto was British: A newspaper headline he
had encoded in the genesis block came from the UK-published newspaper The
Times, and both his forum posts and his comments in the bitcoin source code
used British English spellings, such as "optimize" and "color.
An Internet search by an anonymous
blogger of texts similar in writing to the bitcoin whitepaper suggests Nick
Szabo's "bit gold" articles as having a similar author.[6] Nick
denied being Satoshi, and stated his official opinion on Satoshi and bitcoin in
a May 2011 article.
In a March 2014 article in Newsweek,
journalist Leah McGrath Goodman doxed Dorian S. Nakamoto of Temple City,
California, saying that Satoshi Nakamoto is the man's birth name.
The fork of March 2013
On 12 March 2013, a bitcoin miner running
version 0.8.0 of the bitcoin software created a large invalid block. This
created a split or "fork" in the block chain since computers with the
recent version of the software accepted the invalid block and continued to
build on the diverging chain, whereas older versions of the software rejected
it and continued extending the block chain without the offending block. This
split resulted in two separate transaction logs being formed without clear
consensus, which allowed for the same funds to be spent differently on each
chain. In response, the Mt. Gox exchange temporarily halted bitcoin deposits.
The exchange rate fell 23% to $37 on the Mt. Gox exchange but rose most of the
way back to its prior level of $48.
Miners resolved the split by
downgrading to version 0.7, putting them back on track with the canonical
blockchain. User funds largely remained unaffected and were available when
network consensus was restored. The network reached consensus and continued to
operate as normal a few hours after the split.
Regulatory issues
On 18 March 2013, the Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network (or FinCEN), a bureau of the United States
Department of the Treasury, issued a report regarding centralized and
decentralized "virtual currencies" and their legal status within
"money services business" (MSB) and Bank Secrecy Act regulations.It
classified digital currencies and other digital payment systems such as bitcoin
as "virtual currencies" because they are not legal tender under any
sovereign jurisdiction. FinCEN cleared American users of bitcoin of legal
obligations by saying, "A user of virtual currency is not an MSB under
FinCEN's regulations and therefore is not subject to MSB registration,
reporting, and recordkeeping regulations." However, it held that American
entities who generate "virtual currency" such as bitcoins are money
transmitters or MSBs if they sell their generated currency for national
currency: "...a person that creates units of convertible virtual currency
and sells those units to another person for real currency or its equivalent is
engaged in transmission to another location and is a money transmitter."
This specifically extends to "miners" of the bitcoin currency who may
have to register as MSBs and abide by the legal requirements of being a money
transmitter if they sell their generated bitcoins for national currency and are
within the United States .Since FinCEN issued this guidance, dozens of virtual
currency exchangers and administrators have registered with FinCEN, and FinCEN
is receiving an increasing number of suspicious activity reports (SARs) from
these entities.
Additionally, FinCEN claimed
regulation over American entities that manage bitcoins in a payment processor
setting or as an exchanger: "In addition, a person is an exchanger and a
money transmitter if the person accepts such de-centralized convertible virtual
currency from one person and transmits it to another person as part of the
acceptance and transfer of currency, funds, or other value that substitutes for
currency.
In summary, FinCEN's decision would
require bitcoin exchanges where bitcoins are traded for traditional currencies
to disclose large transactions and suspicious activity, comply with money
laundering regulations, and collect information about their customers as traditional
financial institutions are required to do.
Patrick Murck of the Bitcoin
Foundation criticized FinCEN's report as an "overreach" and claimed
that FinCEN "cannot rely on this guidance in any enforcement action.non-primary
source needed
Jennifer Shasky Calvery, the director
of FinCEN said, "Virtual currencies are subject to the same rules as other
currencies. ... Basic money-services business rules apply here.
In its October 2012 study, Virtual
currency schemes, the European Central Bank concluded that the growth of
virtual currencies will continue, and, given the currencies' inherent price
instability, lack of close regulation, and risk of illegal uses by anonymous
users, the Bank warned that periodic examination of developments would be
necessary to reassess risks.
In 2013, the U.S. Treasury extended
its anti-money laundering regulations to processors of bitcoin transactions.
In June 2013, Bitcoin Foundation
board member Jon Matonis wrote in Forbes that he received a warning letter from
the California Department of Financial Institutions accusing the foundation of
unlicensed money transmission. Matonis denied that the foundation is engaged in
money transmission and said he viewed the case as "an opportunity to
educate state regulators.
In late July 2013, the industry group
Committee for the Establishment of the Digital Asset Transfer Authority began
to form to set best practices and standards, to work with regulators and
policymakers to adapt existing currency requirements to digital currency technology
and business models and develop risk management standards.
In 2014, the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission filed an administrative action against Erik T. Voorhees,
for violating Securities Act Section 5 for publicly offering unregistered
interests in two bitcoin websites in exchange for bitcoins.
Theft and exchange shutdowns
Theft of bitcoin has been documented
on numerous occasions. At other times, bitcoin exchanges have shut down, taking
their clients' bitcoins with them. A Wired study published April 2013 showed
that 45 percent of bitcoin exchanges end up closing.
On 19 June 2011, a security breach of
the Mt. Gox bitcoin exchange caused the nominal price of a bitcoin to
fraudulently drop to one cent on the Mt. Gox exchange, after a hacker used
credentials from a Mt. Gox auditor's compromised computer illegally to transfer
a large number of bitcoins to himself. They used the exchange's software to
sell them all nominally, creating a massive "ask" order at any price.
Within minutes, the price reverted to its correct user-traded value. Accounts
with the equivalent of more than US$8,750,000 were affected.
In July 2011, the operator of
Bitomat, the third-largest bitcoin exchange, announced that he lost access to
his wallet.dat file with about 17,000 bitcoins (roughly equivalent to
US$220,000 at that time). He announced that he would sell the service for the
missing amount, aiming to use funds from the sale to refund his customers.
In August 2011, MyBitcoin, a now
defunct bitcoin transaction processor, declared that it was hacked, which
caused it to be shut down, paying 49% on customer deposits, leaving more than
78,000 bitcoins (equivalent to roughly US$800,000 at that time) unaccounted
for.
In early August 2012, a lawsuit was
filed in San Francisco court against Bitcoinica — a bitcoin trading venue —
claiming about US$460,000 from the company. Bitcoinica was hacked twice in
2012, which led to allegations that the venue neglected the safety of
customers' money and cheated them out of withdrawal requests.
In late August 2012, an operation
titled Bitcoin Savings and Trust was shut down by the owner, leaving around
US$5.6 million in bitcoin-based debts; this led to allegations that the
operation was a Ponzi scheme.In September 2012, the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission had reportedly started an investigation on the case.
In September 2012, Bitfloor, a
bitcoin exchange, also reported being hacked, with 24,000 bitcoins (worth about
US$250,000) stolen. As a result, Bitfloor suspended operations.The same month,
Bitfloor resumed operations; its founder said that he reported the theft to
FBI, and that he plans to repay the victims, though the time frame for
repayment is unclear.
On 3 April 2013, Instawallet, a
web-based wallet provider, was hacked. resulting in the theft of over 35,000
bitcoins] which were valued at US$129.90 per bitcoin at the time, or nearly
$4.6 million in total. As a result, Instawallet suspended operations. On 11
August 2013, the Bitcoin Foundation announced that a bug in a pseudorandom
number generator within the Android operating system had been exploited to
steal from wallets generated by Android apps; fixes were provided 13 August
2013.
In October 2013, Inputs.io, an
Australian-based bitcoin wallet provider was hacked with a loss of 4100
bitcoins, worth over A$1 million at time of theft. The service was run by the
operator TradeFortress. Coinchat, the associated bitcoin chat room, has been
taken over by a new admin.
On 26 October 2013, a Hong-Kong based
bitcoin trading platform owned by Global Bond Limited (GBL) vanished with 30
million yuan (US$5 million) from 500 investors.
On 3 March 2014, Flexcoin announced
it was closing its doors because of a hack attack that took place the day
before. In a statement that now occupies their homepage, they announced on 3
March 2014 that "As Flexcoin does not have the resources, assets, or
otherwise to come back from this loss [the hack], we are closing our doors
immediately. Users can no longer log in to the site.
Taxation and regulation
In 2012, the Cryptocurrency Legal
Advocacy Group (CLAG) stressed the importance for taxpayers to determine
whether taxes are due on a bitcoin-related transaction based on whether one has
experienced a "realization event": when a taxpayer has provided a service
in exchange for bitcoins, a realization event has probably occurred and any
gain or loss would likely be calculated using fair market values for the
service provided.
In August 2013, the German Finance
Ministry characterized bitcoin as a unit of account, usable in multilateral
clearing circles and subject to capital gains tax if held less than one year.
On 5 December 2013, the People's Bank
of China announced in a press release regarding bitcoin regulation that whilst
individuals in China are permitted to freely trade and exchange bitcoins as a
commodity, it is prohibited for Chinese financial banks to operate using
bitcoins or for bitcoins to be used as legal tender currency, and that entities
dealing with bitcoins must track and report suspicious activity to prevent
money laundering. The value of bitcoin dropped on various exchanges between 11
to 20 percent following the regulation announcement, before rebounding upward
again.
Sports sponsorship
On June 18, 2014, it was announced
that bitcoin payment service provider BitPay would become the new sponsor of
the St. Petersburg Bowl game under a two-year deal, renamed the Bitcoin St.
Petersburg Bowl. Bitcoin will be accepted for ticket and concession sales as
part of the sponsorship, and the sponsorship itself was also paid for using
bitcoin. On April 2, 2015, after one year of sponsorship, BitPay declined to
renew sponsorship of the game.
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