The Astonishing Bitcoin Resilience – Trustnodes - Bitcoin Market Capitalizations Index (2024)

The Astonishing Bitcoin Resilience – Trustnodes

The Astonishing Bitcoin Resilience – Trustnodes - Bitcoin Market Capitalizations Index (1)

It is difficult to think of anything else in living memory that has gone through so much stress testing, so many attempts to break it, to stop it, and even to delay it, and yet bitcoin not only has kept on, it has thrived.

There appears to be a certain quality. Perhaps you can call it a strong conviction, a movement, the will, people’s power, or just an unshakable belief, an idea.

Best clarity perhaps can be reached by calling it being self evident. An insight that doesn’t cross one’s mind, but once expressed, is obvious.

Such obviousness, however, was not immediately apparent. It is therefore more correct to say the phenomenon is freedom.

Most techies were probably introduced to bitcoin in 2011. They were debating whether it makes sense. The terms of debate appeared to be Yes or No, with little in between. A hack of the MT Gox exchange led to pretty much all techies deciding bitcoin doesn’t work.

The case was closed and the currency was to enter no history book, no footnote, but the dust of internet pages.

It didn’t because it kept running. Some nodes were still on somewhere in the world. Some still believed. They were free to keep on running it. So others at the edges of society started looking. Is this a solution?

Students and much of the millennial generation was probably introduced to bitcoin in 2013, but for this resilience story, we’ll go to 2015 when the scalability debate begun.

A tradeoff had to be made between costs and benefits. Some prominent developers were of the view that the costs to run the network should be increased to allow for greater benefits, such as accessible and cheap transactions.

Others were of the view that costs should be kept minimal as the above stated benefits can be provided by enhancing the technology through moving the tradeoff to a layer that runs on top of bitcoin.

Again, the question here was Yes or No. The above arguments therefore devolved into a Yes campaign and a No campaign. As with any campaign, there were broad views within both, turned into soundbites.

What is interesting here, from a resilience perspective, is not the debate which was needed to reach clarity, but that the majority pretty much ignored it.

The way it was resolved is also interesting and effectively proved bitcoin’s proposition as free money not quite controlled by anyone.

It is that forking which also made it clear why costs have to be kept low. Those few nodes running in 2011 would have probably been shut off had costs been high, and with that, there would have been no article examining its resilience.

Nor do we know whether there would have been a fork had costs been high. Keeping them low while scaling is now the challenge.

A power struggle of sorts between the elected and bankers has arguably been going on since the second half of 2017.

It started with China’s central bank exercising jurisdiction over money by shutting down crypto exchanges in September 2017.

They have no elected there. The elite just allowed them to do so, in the process turning a generation against the continued tech transfer to China, with calls now rising to bring tech manufacturing home as Trump largely finds support in his trade negotiations both on the left and the right.

The most clear glimpse of this power struggle was when Putin asked the Russian central bank to stand down over a proposed crypto ban.

We move to CFTC’s fiat settled futures. This is a regulatory attack in as far as they still haven’t allowed bitcoin settled futures. In addition, it is quite astonishing they have not allowed any exchange to offer regulated margins. It seems Bitfinex is the only one that does offer such margins, but in an unregulated way.

SEC’s regulatory attack on this space is of course known to all. The chairman happens to be an elite bankers lawyer. His wife works for Goldman Sachs.

In South Korea they came close to a significant regulatory attack, but they fell short of it. As a democracy, people exercised their rights to petition and all the rest. The elected gained the upper hand.

In India, it remains to be seen, but so far the central bank has prevailed. In Europe, the elected have won by far.

The above is somewhat of a simplification, but it lays clearly where bitcoin’s resilience comes from. Different people have different views, as do different countries. They have different interests too.

Bitcoin’s global nature, therefore, combined with inherent decentralization, and the freedom it provides to use it or not, makes it arguably an unstoppable force.

It’s unclear what else is left to try except for rounding up all coders. Even then it would be in just one country and bitcoin can run fine on current code. Just one node is needed in the entire world.

So bitcoin arguably won. It runs. It works. Its resilient. It withstood all tests so far. This is now global infrastructure.

Editorial Copyrights Trustnodes.com

Published at Sat, 11 May 2019 13:24:11 +0000

The Astonishing Bitcoin Resilience – Trustnodes - Bitcoin Market Capitalizations Index (2024)

FAQs

What is the market capitalization of the Bitcoin? ›

Today's Cryptocurrency Prices by Market Cap
#Market cap24h %
1BTC 1.32T0.13%
2ETH 373.07B0.33%
3USDT 111.43B0.02%
4BNB 85.15B0.61%
92 more rows

How much will $1 Bitcoin be worth in 2025? ›

BTC Price Prediction 2024-2030
YearMinimum Price / Maximum Price
2024$82,000 to $88,000
2025$115,000 to $118,000

How much will 1 Bitcoin be worth in 2030? ›

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Prediction 2030
YearPrice
2025$ 73,551.23
2026$ 77,228.80
2027$ 81,090.24
2030$ 93,872.08
1 more row

What is Bitcoin Delta capitalization? ›

Delta Cap is the difference between Realized Cap and Average Cap, where Average Cap is assumed to be the life-to-date moving average of Market Cap. It attempts to detect major market bottoms in Bitcoin cycles. This metric was put forward by David Puell.

How much is $1 Bitcoin in US dollars? ›

$67,178.95

Who owns the most Bitcoin? ›

Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin, is believed to own the most bitcoins, with estimates suggesting over 1 million BTC mined in the early days of the network.

What will Bitcoin be worth in 10 years? ›

However, some experts have offered bold projections. Cathie Wood, the founder, chief executive officer, and chief investment officer of ARK Invest, believes that Bitcoin could be worth $1 million per coin before 2030, as adoption by institutional investors increases.

What will Bitcoin be worth 5 years from now? ›

Bitcoin Price Prediction 2025

With the launch of potentially more Bitcoin-related financial services and the global adoption spark of Bitcoin, BTC prices will maintain a bullish trend in 2025. The cryptocurrency is expected to create a high of $140,449 with a low of $61,357.

What will Bitcoin be worth in 2050? ›

If we draw a line connecting Bitcoin's historical lows, we get a prediction of $1.3 million by 2030 and a staggering $200+ million by 2040 and 2050, which would put its market cap at an unreasonable $4 quadrillion. By this time, this asset class will likely be matured.

Which crypto will boom in 2024? ›

Top 10 Cryptos in 2024
CoinMarket CapitalizationCurrent Price
Binance Coin (BNB)$85 billion$580
Solana (SOL)$72 billion$162
Ripple (XRP)$28 billion$0.51
Dogecoin (DOGE)$22 billion$0.15
6 more rows
5 days ago

How much will 1 ethereum be worth in 2025? ›

By the year 2025, Ethereum is expected to reach the maximum level of $6,500 with a minimum of $ 4,500 and an average of $5,500. And by the year 2030, it is expected that it may go up to a maximum of $20,500. The current year will witness the Dencun upgrade, which is anticipated to positively boost the value of ETH.

What will Bitcoin be worth in 2040? ›

Bitcoin Overview
YearMinimum PriceMaximum Price
2032$1,556,210.36$1,890,559.93
2033$2,330,561.92$2,724,386.53
2040$3,255,046.46$3,906,056.36
2050$4,557,065.25$4,918,737.08
8 more rows

Why does Bitcoin have a cap? ›

The Bitcoin hard cap is the maximum number of bitcoin that can ever be created, which is set at 21 million BTC. Bitcoin's supply limit, known as the hard cap, is a key feature of Bitcoin's monetary policy, designed to create scarcity and prevent inflation.

What is Bitcoin's realised price? ›

Bitcoin Realized Price is the value of all bitcoins at the price they were last transacted on-chain, divided by the number of bitcoins in circulation.

Does Bitcoin need a capital B? ›

Technically, bitcoin spelled with a lowercase “b” refers to the digital currency, whereas Bitcoin spelled with a capital “B” refers to the Bitcoin network. For consistency, however, we will spell it with a capital “B”.

What is the total market cap of Bitcoin cash? ›

Price of BCH today

The live price of Bitcoin Cash is $ 475.72 per (BCH / USD) with a current market cap of $ 9.38B USD. 24-hour trading volume is $ 400.78M USD.

What is the cap of Bitcoin? ›

Bitcoin Market Cap: There is a limited supply of bitcoins that can ever exist, with a total cap of 21 million. Currently, over 19 million bitcoins have been mined and are in circulation, leaving approximately 1.5 million left to be mined.

What is the market cap of ETH? ›

Price of ETH today

The live price of Ethereum is $ 3,083.22 per (ETH / USD) with a current market cap of $ 370.38B USD. 24-hour trading volume is $ 10.93B USD. ETH to USD price is updated in real-time. Ethereum is -0.14% in the last 24 hours with a circulating supply of 120.13M.

How long does it take to mine 1 Bitcoin? ›

How long does it take to mine one Bitcoin? It takes around 10 minutes to mine just one Bitcoin, though this is with ideal hardware and software, which isn't always affordable and only a few users can boast the luxury of. More commonly and reasonably, most users can mine a Bitcoin in 30 days.

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