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…It was conceived in 2008, when a person or group under the name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (whose real identity is still a mystery) published a white paper called ‘Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System’. The title of the paper captures the two key features of Bitcoin: Peer-to-Peer (P2P): Bitcoin allows direct P2P payments without third-party intermediaries, such as banks or payment processors. This is a major reason why Bitcoin is commonly regarded as a decentralised currency.Electron…
Learn More…It was conceived in 2008, when a person or group under the name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (whose real identity is still a mystery) published a white paper called ‘Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System’. The title of the paper captures the two key features of Bitcoin: Peer-to-Peer (P2P): Bitcoin allows direct P2P payments without third-party intermediaries, such as banks or payment processors. This is a major reason why Bitcoin is commonly regarded as a decentralised currency.Electron…
Learn More…It was conceived in 2008, when a person or group under the name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (whose real identity is still a mystery) published a white paper called ‘Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System’. The title of the paper captures the two key features of Bitcoin: Peer-to-Peer (P2P): Bitcoin allows direct P2P payments without third-party intermediaries, such as banks or payment processors. This is a major reason why Bitcoin is commonly regarded as a decentralised currency.Electron…
Learn More…It was conceived in 2008, when a person or group under the name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (whose real identity is still a mystery) published a white paper called ‘Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System’. The title of the paper captures the two key features of Bitcoin: Peer-to-Peer (P2P): Bitcoin allows direct P2P payments without third-party intermediaries, such as banks or payment processors. This is a major reason why Bitcoin is commonly regarded as a decentralised currency.Electron…
Learn More…It was conceived in 2008, when a person or group under the name ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (whose real identity is still a mystery) published a white paper called ‘Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System’. The title of the paper captures the two key features of Bitcoin: Peer-to-Peer (P2P): Bitcoin allows direct P2P payments without third-party intermediaries, such as banks or payment processors. This is a major reason why Bitcoin is commonly regarded as a decentralised currency.Electron…
Learn More…These projects can look legitimate at first glance, including having professional-appearing websites, white papers, roadmaps, and even robust online communities. The project starts off promising to be the next big thing. Scammers will start shilling the project and artificially pumping its price by using their own funds to make purchases. Victims — driven by FOMO — rush to buy. In the rush, demand for the project inflates the price of the associated asset. Rug pulls often run over a long tim…
Learn More…Instead, it would use a novel currency with a fixed supply and no central organisation to manage it. Why did Nakamoto want to introduce a unique currency for Bitcoin’s system? According to the Bitcoin white paper, it all comes back to the idea of trust. Nakamoto believed that the only trust required for most transactions was between the buyer and seller, so they set out to prove this could happen online without the need for a financial institution. A limited currency with no central manager wo…
Learn More…Instead, it would use a novel currency with a fixed supply and no central organisation to manage it. Why did Nakamoto want to introduce a unique currency for Bitcoin’s system? According to the Bitcoin white paper, it all comes back to the idea of trust. Nakamoto believed that the only trust required for most transactions was between the buyer and seller, so they set out to prove this could happen online without the need for a financial institution. A limited currency with no central manager wo…
Learn More…The starting point should be their website and white paper. A cryptocurrency without a white paper may be considered to raise a red flag. Take a closer look at the team: What is their team size? A very small project with only two to three people on board may carry the risk of the project falling apart if a team member quits. Also, if everyone in the company is a C-level executive, this doesn’t necessarily match their experience, as title inflation is likely at play. Does the team have relevant…
Learn More…As ARC exists in both the crypto and AI spaces, it faces an uncertain regulatory environment. However, ARC provides foundational documentation detailing its technical architecture and intended functionality, but currently lacks a formalised long-term roadmap or comprehensive updated white paper. Ongoing developments and community initiatives are shared via official documentation and channels. ARC’s float limits its price upside potential even if everything goes right, but the underlying tec…
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