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  2. Gavin Andresen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavin_Andresen

    Andresen discovered bitcoin in 2010, considering its design to be brilliant. Soon after he created a website named The Bitcoin Faucet which gave away bitcoin. [1] In April 2011, Forbes quoted Andresen as saying, "Bitcoin is designed to bring us back to a decentralized currency of the people," and "this is like better gold than gold."

  3. What Is a Bitcoin Faucet? Here’s How They Work - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/bitcoin-faucet-222311370.html

    The Bitcoin Aliens faucet has been awarding cryptocurrency since 2014 — and not just bitcoins. The site’s collective apps have given away more than $20 million worth of bitcoin, bitcoin cash ...

  4. History of bitcoin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bitcoin

    A bitcoin faucet was a website or software app that dispensed rewards in the form of bitcoin for visitors to claim in exchange for completing a captcha or task as described by the website. There have also been faucets that dispense other cryptocurrencies. The first example was called "The Bitcoin Faucet" and was developed by Gavin Andresen in ...

  5. Cryptocurrency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptocurrency

    By November 2018, bitcoin was estimated to have an annual energy consumption of 45.8TWh, generating 22.0 to 22.9 million tons of CO 2, rivalling nations like Jordan and Sri Lanka. [251] By the end of 2021, bitcoin was estimated to produce 65.4 million tons of CO 2, as much as Greece, [252] and consume between 91 and 177 terawatt-hours annually ...

  6. The Open Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Open_Network

    Wallet example For access to wallets uses 24 secret words, on the basis of which calculates 256-bit private key of the wallet. The Open Network (previously Telegram Open Network, [1] both abb. as TON) is a decentralized computer network [2] consisting of a layer-1 blockchain with various components.

  7. Bitcoin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin

    The unit of account of the bitcoin system is the bitcoin. It is most commonly represented with the symbol ₿ [1] and the currency code BTC. However, the BTC code does not conform to ISO 4217 as BT is the country code of Bhutan, [63] and ISO 4217 requires the first letter used in global commodities to be 'X'. [63]

  8. Bitcoin protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin_protocol

    A diagram of a bitcoin transfer. The bitcoin protocol is the set of rules that govern the functioning of bitcoin.Its key components and principles are: a peer-to-peer decentralized network with no central oversight; the blockchain technology, a public ledger that records all bitcoin transactions; mining and proof of work, the process to create new bitcoins and verify transactions; and ...

  9. Mt. Gox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mt._Gox

    Mt. Gox was a bitcoin exchange based in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan. [1] Launched in 2010, it was handling over 70% of all bitcoin transactions worldwide by early 2014, when it abruptly ceased operations amid revelations of its involvement in the loss/theft of hundreds of thousands of bitcoins, then worth hundreds of millions in US dollars.