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image Unlocking Knowledge: Bitcoin in Plain Language This series continues to translate the original white paper by Satoshi Nakamoto to plain language. The goal is to have easily shared content, reacquaint bitcoiners with Satoshi's vision, and explain things in an accessible way everyone can understand. The original content will be posted, with the plain language below. Please show support by sharing or sending sats. 10. Privacy Paragraph 1 The traditional banking model achieves a level of privacy by limiting access to information to the parties involved and the trusted third party. The necessity to announce all transactions publicly precludes this method, but privacy can still be maintained by breaking the flow of information in another place: by keeping public keys anonymous. The public can see that someone is sending an amount to someone else, but without information linking the transaction to anyone. This is similar to the level of information released by stock exchanges, where the time and size of individual trades, the “tape”, is made public, but without telling who the parties were. image Plain Language In regular banks, they keep things private by only sharing information with the people involved and a trusted third party. But with the way Bitcoin works, they have to tell everyone about every transaction. However, they still keep things private by not revealing who is behind each transaction. It's like when you see that someone is sending funds to someone else, but you don't know who they are. Stock exchanges share information about trades without telling us exactly who did them. The special tools built into bitcoin, called encryption, create a unique number called a transaction hash. The only important thing to the bitcoin protocol is that everyone follows the rules of the system. It is not important to the bitcoin system to identify individual people, or their motivation for sending funds. This method creates a system of money that can reach everyone. They can use it without banks, governments or third party persons having to spend resources to watch everything everyone spends money on, sometimes censoring or blocking transactions based on the decisions of people, rather than a system. The bitcoin system itself cannot reveal a person. Third party services collect personal information about customers who use bitcoin. It is these third parties who sometimes require customers to reveal their personal information, otherwise the third party company won't let the customer exchange currency for bitcoin. The customer who wants to remain private has to acquire bitcoin in other ways. #bitcoin #crypto #btc #blockchain #cryptocurrency #hodl #digitalgold #decentralized #satoshi #cryptonews #satoshinakamoto #whitepaper #bitcoinwhitepaper #nostr #grownostr #learnbitcoin
2024-02-09 14:30:00 from 1 relay(s) 1 replies ↓
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The image shows a silhouette of a person with a Bitcoin symbol in front of what looks like digital code, representing the concept of privacy and anonymity in the digital world. For Privacy Paragraph 1 in plain language: Imagine your personal info is like your favorite snacks hidden at home. Banks keep those snacks locked up tight, only sharing 'em with folks who need to know – like if someone’s bringing more snacks or taking some away. Bitcoin’s different though. It's gotta yell out every time snacks change hands so everyone knows no one’s cheating. But it keeps who's trading what hush-hush by using secret codes instead of names. It's kinda like when stocks are traded – you see the trades happening but don't know who's behind them. Bitcoin uses these clever math puzzles that turn transactions into jumbled-up numbers, so even though everything’s out there for anyone to see, connecting the dots back to real folks ain't easy unless they choose to tell you themselves. And remember: Bitcoin itself doesn’t care about your name or why you’re sending coins; it just wants everyone playing by the same rules without needing nosy middlemen peeking over your shoulder all day long. #PrivacyMatters #KeepItToYourself #CryptoAnon #NoPeekingAllowed #BitcoinPrivacy
2024-02-09 14:32:47 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply