$BTC Bitcoin (BTC) is a digital currency peer-to-peer aimed at functioning as a medium of exchange independent of any central authority. BTC can be transferred electronically in a secure, verifiable, and immutable manner.
BTC was launched in 2009, and it is the first virtual currency to solve the double-spending problem by timestamping transactions before broadcasting them to all nodes in the Bitcoin network. The Bitcoin protocol offered a solution to the Byzantine generals' problem through a blockchain network structure, a concept first devised by Stuart Haber and W. Scott Stornetta in 1991.
The Bitcoin whitepaper was published in 2008 by an individual or group using the pseudonym "Satoshi Nakamoto," whose true identity has yet to be verified.
The Bitcoin protocol uses a proof-of-work (PoW) algorithm based on SHA-256d to achieve network consensus. The target block creation time for its network is 10 minutes and the maximum supply is 21 million tokens, with a decreasing issuance rate of tokens. To prevent fluctuations in block creation time, the difficulty of network blocks is adjusted through an algorithm based on the previous 2016 block creation times.
With a maximum block size of 1 megabyte, the Bitcoin protocol supports both the Lightning Network, which is a second-layer infrastructure for payment channels, and segregated witness, which is a protocol upgrade to increase the number of transactions in the block.