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20 sats \ 7 replies \ @RedNinja39 OP 27 Aug 2023 \ parent \ on: Inquiring about the halving bitcoin
I see. Thank you for clarifying. So theoretically, if the demand stays the same, but the supply goes down, then value per Bitcoin should go up. But as far as miners are concerned, wouldn't this make mining less attractive?
Not if the price for bitcoin is going up. I'm not up on cycles, and there's no certainty to this, but historically bitcoin's price goes up post halving.
I know you're new. I've been there. May I suggest you read The Bitcoin Standard and learn all you can about bitcoin? Watch Andreas Antonopolos videos on YouTube. Try not to focus so much on price.
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Thank you. I’ll definitely give it a read and dig into the videos. I wasn't too concerned about price here, but moreso about the functioning of the network(wondering: if miners drop out then transactions might slow down/become more expensive which might theoretically have a negative effect on the network), but I suppose that might not be the case. Thank you for the recommendations. I’ll dig in there and work my way further down the rabbit hole :)
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The transaction speed and cost doesn't depend on the mining hashrate, the difficulty adjustment takes care of that.
So, no matter whether it's only one CPU in the whole world, or the whole world mining Bitcoin, there is a fixed amount of blocks created. The only thing that more mining power does is increases the network security against the 51% attack
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This makes a lot of sense, thank you. So if I understand correctly, more mining rigs does not necessarily increase the speed of transactions, and visa versa. Instead, it really only increases the security of the network, as it would make a 51% attack harder to achieve?
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Correct, they don't.
The PoW Blockchain is, at a glance, a very inefficient system. Bitcoin could have been millions of times faster running on some AWS node and using a simple database.
But that's not very secure, is it? A single point of trust/failure is a bad thing to have for such an important thing as money. Hence, the point of PoW is to make it extremely costly for the attacker to get enough hashpower to add fraudulent transactions to the ledger, and having hashing power of 400000000000000000000 hashes/second certainly helps ;)
I'd recommend reading the Bitcoin Whitepaper, it's very short and explains a lot:
https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
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Thank you! I’ll give the whitepaper a read! I looked into it before hut I think i will have a deeper understanding reading it now.
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It's a deep hole! A lot of smart people on here will help you as long as they know you sincerely want help. I'm still learning myself.
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