Ten years have passed since bitcoin became a reality. And this is a good reason to recall the history of bitcoin, what preceded the appearance of the first cryptocurrency and what obstacles were overcome to make bitcoin an alternative to fiat money.
In this article, we will tell you when bitcoin appeared and how it has developed to this day.
- The history of Bitcoin
- Predecessors
- When did Bitcoin appear
- The formation of cryptocurrency
- The fall of bitcoin due to the scam of the Mt Gox exchange
- The peak value of bitcoin
- Cryptowinter
- "Bullrun" 2019
- "Roller Coaster" 2020
- Price 2021
- The history of Bitcoin: the BTC sign
- Satoshi Logo
- The Bitcoin sign as a Unicode standard
The history of Bitcoin
Predecessors
When did Bitcoin appear? This question is difficult to answer. Officially, it is believed that the first cryptocurrency was born in 2008. But although the history of bitcoin began on the day of domain registration Bitcoin.org - August 18, 2008, the roots of the blockchain technology on which it is built go far back to the 80-90s.
The very concept of digital money was proposed by David Chaum back in 1982 in a document where he proposed using such coins for autopayments. Later, Chaum founded the company DigiCash in order to develop a digital currency, but the product remained unclaimed, and soon the company went bankrupt.
The second attempt in 1997 was made by Adam Beck. He invented the health check, the so-called Hashcash system, which is still used in Bitcoin today. A year later, Wei Dai (b-money) and Nick Szabo (Bit Gold) tried to create a digital analogue of money. However, none of them brought the matter to the realization of the final product.
It took another decade for the first cryptocurrency to appear — bitcoin.
When did Bitcoin appear
The date of birth of bitcoin is considered to be October 31, 2008, when the article "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System" was published, in which the author of the project — Satoshi Nakamoto for the first time spoke about the protection of digital signatures, payments without the participation of a third party, health checks, blockchain and the digital currency itself. By the way, there are still disputes about who was hiding under the pseudonym Satoshi.
A few months later, on January 3, 2009, Satoshi moved from theory to practice, creating the first Genesis block. And already on January 12, the world's first transaction was made: the developer Hal Finney received 10 BTC from Satoshi. In October, the first Bitcoin exchange rate was also approved, equal to $1 to 1309.03 BTC.
The formation of cryptocurrency
Now, surprisingly, at the very beginning, bitcoin was worth so little that it took 10,000 BTC to exchange them for two ordinary pizzas for $25.
But still, this particular case, which occurred on May 22, 2010, became the first real transaction for bitcoin and went down in history.
This year was a key one for the coin: the first bitcoin exchanges were opened, the first mining pool for bitcoin mining was successfully launched, and the first crypto scams appeared.
By November, the market capitalization of bitcoin exceeded $1 million.
In February 2011, the cost of bitcoin was equal to a dollar, and by June — $30. Bitcoin became noticeable. His popularity grew every day. At the same time, other developers were trying to improve Bitcoin or create their own digital coins. So, competing cryptocurrencies appeared-Namecoin and Litecoin cryptocurrency.
If in April 2012 the price of Bitcoin broke the threshold of $100, then in 2013 it exceeded $1000, and Bitcoin became the most recognizable cryptocurrency.
The fall of bitcoin due to the scam of the Mt Gox exchange
The subsequent increase in value was artificially caused by Mt Gox — the first Bitcoin exchange. Presumably, the platform used a trading bot to inflate the prices of bitcoin. By the end of 2013, Mt Gox began to have problems with cash flow, and on February 24, 2014, the exchange closed, leaving customers without 850,000 bitcoins.
There is still a lot of uncertainty about how the scammers pulled off the largest scam in the history of the cryptocurrency market. The voiced version is the hacking of the platform by hackers.
At the same time, for the first time, there was a significant drop in bitcoin to $300. It took more than 2 years before the value of the coin returned to $1000 again. Moreover, bitcoin almost lost its leading position when the popularity of the Ethereum cryptocurrency began to grow in 2016.
The peak of the bitcoin price
The most successful year for bitcoin was 2017, when its value returned to the previous price value of $1000, to grow triumphantly to $20 thousand on December 17 of the same year.
An increasing number of users saw the prospect in cryptocurrencies. In addition, the number of places where you can spend them grew. The infusion of fiat money into the ecosystem of decentralized funds has also increased.
However, just a few days later, the prices of most cryptocurrencies, including BTC, fell by 30%.
There was another problem: with the increase in the number of users of the Bitcoin network, the commission grew and it took more and more time to conduct a transaction. The search for a way out of this situation led the community to split into two factions: one directed its efforts to increase the blockchain block from 1 MB to 8 MB (Bitcoin Cash (BTH)); the other chose the technical solution Segregated Witness (Bitcoin (BTC)). The principle of SegWit was to reduce the amount of transaction data in each block, which allowed for more transactions.
On August 1, 2017, SegWit supporters held a soft fork. At the same time, another faction created Bitcoin Cash (BCH), which today has become the 4th coin by market capitalization.
Cryptowinter
The peak of $20,000 turned out to be too much for the first cryptocurrency, and just a few days after the triumph, bitcoin rapidly collapsed down, one after another breaking through the points of resistance and investors ' hopes for a bright future. So, on February 5, 2018, bitcoin lost 50% of its market value and fell to $10,000 in just 16 days, on October 31, its value was $6,300, and by the end of November it fell below $4,000.
This situation was observed throughout the crypto market — after bitcoin, altcoins (most of which were tied to BTC) went down rapidly, turning the monitors of analysts and traders into an impenetrable red canvas, on which only sometimes green spots broke through.
In general, the rapid decline of bitcoin and other currencies is caused by a number of factors:
- The bubble became too big — the currency exchange rate grew mainly due to a massive infusion of money from people who knew nothing about cryptocurrency, except that it gives "X" to profit. Most of the coins were not used for calculations, but were stored for the purpose of selling when the exchange rate jumps even more. And at the $20,000 mark, the holders decided that they had enough profit and massively merged all their coins;
- Regulators finally woke up — on January 22, 2018, South Korea shut down anonymous trading, forcing all traders to pass verification, and on March 7, the SEC ordered all trading platforms to register as exchanges. Gradually, the EU countries also began to develop positions. The wild wild "Crypto West" began to be gradually mastered, and investors realized that there would be no more fast "X";
- Cryptocurrencies have been declared an advertising jihad — due to the growing number of scam ICOs and the use of pump-n-dump by financial sharks for earnings, the largest platforms have banned advertising of cryptocurrencies. On January 30, Facebook did it, on March 14, Google, and Twitter and Bing pulled up behind them. The news "hype" around bitcoin and cryptocurrencies began to subside, and with it the flow of funds from amateur traders and self-taught investors disappeared;
- The network could not cope with the load — it is during this period that the issue of scaling bitcoin becomes an edge. Due to the huge number of transactions, transfers were processed by miners for up to several days, and the commission reached several tens of dollars. Micropayments in bitcoins have become simply unprofitable, devaluing bitcoin as a tool for calculations.
Under the pressure of these factors, bitcoin, accelerated to insane fluctuations (from $10,000 to $20,000, the currency grew in just a week), could not keep its balance and a colossus on clay feet collapsed, dragging most of the industry with it.
Many investment funds went bankrupt, losing the money of their depositors, regulators considered cryptocurrencies just a "mosquito squeak" and even the media and online publications unanimously fell silent.
A long crypto winter has come in the history of bitcoin, which lasted until the first quarter of 2019.
"Bull Run" 2019
On February 7, 2019, bitcoin fell to the bottom, which was at $3300 and it had only one road left-up. By the end of February, the ice is gradually melting, and the price of bitcoin is growing to $4,200, in early April it is already $5,200, and by the end of May, with numerous adjustments, it takes the mark of $8,700. Well, then "to the moon" begins — for a month the rate rises to $12,600, and on July 26 it takes the maximum of 2019 - $13,689 (according to CoinMarketCap).
As with the "crypto winter" of 2018 in the history of bitcoin, experts identify several reasons for growth at once:
- Mass adoption of cryptocurrency among users-platforms and major market players have adopted the rules dictated by regulators and active and, most importantly, legal trading has resumed in the most progressive countries such as the United States and Switzerland. This has increased the trust of ordinary users. In addition, there are new altcoins, stablecoins and other payment instruments supported by banks and financial structures;
- The technology has become user-friendly — you can pay with cryptocurrency via the phone, in some countries even cryptocurrency cards have appeared. People have got a convenient interface for using the new technology;
- The announcement of major crypto projects and a new wave of" noise " — on October 26, 2018, Google lifted the moratorium on advertising cryptocurrencies, on May 10, 2019, Facebook did it. And a month later, the latter announced that it was launching its own cryptocurrency — Libra (which has already made a lot of noise). To this we can add the scandals with Craig Wright, the Binance hack and other less significant news, which together form a new information wave;
- Bitcoin stabilization - SegWit is gradually spreading, improving the network bandwidth, and LightningNetwork removes, according to various estimates, another 5-20% of the load on miners. After the growth of the exchange rate, the latter eagerly returned to transaction processing, armed with a new generation of Bitmain asics. Now bitcoin copes with the load and there are no long delays in confirming transfers;
- Trade wars between the US and China-experts believe that the July rally is largely caused by the support of the revived Asian market, mainly the Chinese one. Despite the ban by the Chinese authorities on the turnover of cryptocurrency in the country, many citizens continue to invest in bitcoin. This trend has especially intensified against the background of the trade wars between the United States and China, when the yuan began to rapidly lose its position in the market.
At the end of August, bitcoin underwent an adjustment to $9500, but before October 12, it rose again to $10300. According to experts' forecasts, by the end of 2019, it was expected that the cryptocurrency would undergo several more adjustments, but it would remain within $9,000. But in fact, bitcoin did not stay at this price and the maximum mark in December was $7750, and at the moment it even fell to $6450.
Read more: What are Stablecoins and how do they differ from other cryptocurrencies
"Roller Coaster" 2020
According to analysts ' forecasts, another rally was expected at the beginning of 2020 — up to $14,000, then a pullback to $9,000 again. And indeed, already in January 2020, bitcoin began to get out of the" abyss " into which it fell at the end of the previous year, and the maximum mark in January was the price of $9620, and in February the value exceeded the value of $10,000.
Then the first cryptocurrency received one of the strongest "blows" in history — "Black Thursday" on March 12, when the stock market fell against the background of news about the coronavirus and lockdown, and with it bitcoin. At the moment, the marks fell to $3778. But the market was quickly bought off and in April the market returned to the level above $9000.
This was followed by rapid growth, which resembled the "bull run" of 2017. In December 2020, bitcoin crossed the psychological mark of $20,000 and set a new historical maximum. The first cryptocurrency met the new year 2021 at the level of $35,000.
Read more: How to determine the beginning of the movement of the "bull" market?
Bitcoin Price 2021
The year 2021 has just begun, and bitcoin is setting new historical highs one by one. In 2019-2020, analysts predicted that the next bull run of the 2017 type would happen in 2022-2024, but bitcoin did it earlier.
On February 8, the last price maximum at the time of writing was set at almost $45,000, after Elon Musk invested $1.5 billion from the income of his company Tesla in bitcoin and said that the first cryptocurrency in the future will be a means of payment for his enterprise.
Also watch our video, which will tell you about interesting Bitcoin facts and when bitcoin appeared:
The history of Bitcoin: the BTC sign
From the very beginning, the founder of bitcoin was attentive to the choice of a symbol for the coin. However, for Satoshi Nakamoto, the project was a kind of social experiment, and not a way to monetize an idea.
Satoshi Logo
Satoshi proposed the first bitcoin token. However, later the image went through several stages of formation.
Initially, the Satoshi bitcoin symbol consisted of two letters "BC" on the gold field of the coin. A little later, he replaced it with a single capital letter "B" with two vertical lines, like a dollar. Apparently, the author sought to make the bitcoin sign simple, recognizable and at the same time similar to fiat money. This way, the required association with a monetary unit, albeit a virtual one, arose faster.
But in 2010, there was talk of replacing it so that the sign could be supplemented with the Unicode standard, such as the dollar ($), euro (€) or yen (¥).
The Bitcoin sign as a Unicode standard
It was then that a Bitcointalk forum participant under the nickname NewLibertyStandard proposed to accept the Thai baht currency symbol (sign: Y; code: THB) as the official symbol of Bitcoin, and BTC as its abbreviation.
In addition, the name of the ticker "BTC" did not comply with the standard of the International Organization for Standardization ISO 4217, which required that the first two letters mean the country code, and the third — the initial letter of the national currency. For example, CNY (Chinese yuan) is China (CN) and its national currency is the yuan. Also, the code "BTC" came into conflict with the currency of Bhutan, which has the ticker BTN (Bhutanese ngultrum). This is why some people use the alternative abbreviation "XBT" for bitcoin.
The proposal was actively discussed by members of the cryptocurrency community. Some shared the fear that the symbol of the baht could cause confusion or bitcoin would be accused of embezzlement.
And on November 1, 2010, a participant of the bitboy forum presented his version of the bitcoin sign, which consisted of an orange letter "B" and two vertical lines, and the sign was tilted by 14 degrees. By the way, he has retained his inclined position to this day.
Almost immediately, in 2011, actions began to implement the Unicode character for bitcoin. However, Sander van Golovin's first attempt was rejected. The second offer from Ken Sheriff was considered by the consortium for 1.5 years. And finally, on June 20, 2017, the long-awaited day for the bitcoin community came — the version of the Unicode 10.0 standard was released, with the bitcoin symbol numbered U+20BF.
Thanks to the use of the logo on the official Bitcoin website, brand awareness was created as a coin, a monetary unit and a platform.
The history of bitcoin continues, there are many unexpected turns, ups and downs ahead. The question is whether bitcoin will be able to become a full-fledged and reliable alternative to fiat assets, which will be popular with users.