By Daniel Roberts and Matt Hussey
5 min read
In the past few years, thousands of new cryptocurrencies have appeared, all claiming to offer something a little different. Bitcoin was the first, and its value famously rose to around $20,000 in late 2017, then crashed more than 60% in early 2018. Bitcoin took three years to get back to its prior high, and then, at the end of 2020, it doubled in less than a month. In 2021, big companies are buying in, and notable Wall Street skeptics are changing their tune.
Crypto is becoming impossible to ignore.
But let's zoom out. What are cryptocurrencies, how do they work, and why are people so excited by them? You're in the right place to learn.
A cryptocurrency is a digital-only token. It uses cryptography (hence the shortened name, "crypto") to regulate how the tokens are created, how they're traded, and how secure they are. And (here's the key appeal for many) it doesn't use or need a central bank or government to control or manage them.
Bitcoin was the first cryptocurrency, created by a person (or persons) using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto, first outlined in October 2008 in a white paper calling the concept "A peer-to-peer electronic cash system." The Bitcoin blockchain, the network on which Bitcoin runs, launched in January 2009. (Nowadays there are many other blockchains.)
In essence, cryptocurrencies are:
Most cryptocurrencies (but not all) generate new units or coins through the process of mining. This is where individuals or groups (miners) use expensive computers that race to solve complicated cryptographic puzzles to verify bundles of transaction records (blocks) to the ledger.
Miners get rewarded for their efforts, which is how new coins get created. (On the Bitcoin blockchain, the mining reward is halved every four years as a measure to slow the creation of new Bitcoins.)
These days, there are debates over whether cryptocurrencies really behave like currency, or if they're treated more like commodities. (Some people say they should be called "digital assets" rather than cryptocurrencies.) But cryptocurrencies weren't created just to be an alternative to your $ and £. They can be used for lots of different things. These are just three examples of those that followed Bitcoin:
The evolution of cryptocurrencies has been so rapid that to help you understand how it evolved, we've created this table to show how some of the largest cryptocurrencies are trying to solve different problems.
3 Generations of Crypto
Bitcoin was the first cryptocurrency and it solved some of the key problems of creating digital money. But it wasn't without its flaws. (See this article on Bitcoin's limitations.) As a result, developers, entrepreneurs, and programmers have been busy trying to build cryptocurrencies that serve a variety of different needs and fix different problems.
We're still right at the beginning of the cryptocurrency age. Many coins will come and go, and some will become incredibly valuable, while others might drop to zero.
But cryptocurrencies as a whole, the technology and industry around them, are here to stay.
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