Earlier this month, Bitcoin completed 15 years of its existence. Although the maiden crypto token trades above $41,500 per unit in international crypto exchanges, its glory was conspicuously missing in the early days of inception.
Did you know that the first transaction in bitcoins occurred on May 22, 2010, when 10,000 bitcoins were paid to buy two Papa John’s pizzas? Did you also know that it took three years and ten months for Bitcoin to touch $1,000 for the first time?
Cut to January 10, 2024, the US markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), gave a green signal to spot bitcoin ETF, garnering an investment of $4.6 billion within a few days.
How was Bitcoin introduced?
Bitcoin’s creator, Satoshi Nakamoto (a pseudonym used by the inventor), released a whitepaper titled Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System on October 31, 2008, to a cryptography mailing list.
Satoshi took two years to write the code before he completed the last task, i.e., the white paper.
He even mentioned that he had been working on Bitcoin for two years when the white paper was finally released, writing: “I did this kind of backward. I had to write all the code before convincing myself that I could solve every problem, and then I wrote the paper.”
He implemented the Bitcoin software as open-source code and released it in January 2009. Nakamoto’s identity remains unknown.
The total number of bitcoins is limited to 21 million. And by design, the number of bitcoins minted per block is reduced by 50 percent every four years. The creator designed it to create scarcity and increase demand and price.
Earlier attempts before bitcoin
Several digital cash technologies were released before Bitcoin came into being, with David Chaum’s e-cash being the first in the 1980s. The very idea that solutions to computational puzzles could have some value was first proposed by cryptographers Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor in 1992.
Another attempt was made in 2004 when Hal Finney developed the first currency based on reusable proof-of-work. Notably, these attempts were not successful.
Satoshi did not use the term ‘cryptocurrency.’
It is intriguing that the terms’ blockchain’ and ‘cryptocurrency’ were never used in the Bitcoin white paper. Instead, Satoshi calls the blockchain a timestamp server.
Surprisingly, Satoshi named Bitcoin quite late in the process, and it is believed that he wanted to refer to it as’ electronic cash’ or ‘bitcoin.’
In fact, in early emails Satoshi sent to other scientists for review, bitcoin was referred to as ‘electronic cash’ — a term that has been in use since the 1990s.
Where is the Bitcoin creator now?
Although Satoshi never revealed his identity, some speculations suggest that Satoshi is, in fact, the first Bitcoin user, Hal Finney or mathematician John Nash.
Unconfirmed estimates say that Nakamoto had already mined nearly one million bitcoins before s/he disappeared a year later in 2010, but only after handing over the network alert key and control of the code repository to Gavin Andresen.
Gavin later became the lead developer at the Bitcoin Foundation, an organization founded in September 2012 to promote Bitcoin.
What experts say about Bitcoin completing 15 years
Some industry representatives MintGenie spoke to believe that Bitcoin will play a significant role in the finance industry soon. Thanks to the approval to spot bitcoin ETF by the US markets regulator and the follow-up inflow of billions of dollars, there are expectations that bitcoin will soon reclaim its lifetime high of $67,566.83 that it touched on November 8, 2021.
Shivam Thakral, CEO of BuyUcoin, says, “Bitcoin’s future relevance depends upon its ability to face challenging circumstances, regulatory acceptance and adjusting to the changing environment will determine its continued significance. Despite competition and volatility, its well-established brand, scarcity, and technical potential indicate that it will probably continue to play a big role in the finance industry in the future.”
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“As Bitcoin completed 15 years this year, it has shown remarkable resilience in its journey as an asset class, from the fringes of crypto-punk communities to being touted as a ‘digital safe-haven’ by the world’s largest asset manager, Blackrock. The journey has been volatile with shadow bans, regulatory scrutiny, and mining disruptions. Still, the network continues to chug along with almost no downtime,” says Parth Chaturvedi, Investments Lead, CoinSwitch Ventures.
“The algorithmically hardcoded supply schedule has worked like clockwork, and with an upcoming halving of supply, we can expect the historical price cycle to repeat itself. The spot ETF approvals might have been a ‘sell the news’ event in the short term, but with over $10 billion in volume flow in the first week of trading, BTC has cemented its place in risk-adjusted diversified portfolios,” he adds.