Bitcoin is a new ‘currency’ that has caught the imagination of the world, and I thought it may be worthwhile to step in and see what it looks like.
What is Bitcoin ?
A Google search on the topic will lead to lots of fairly detailed explanations, but let me summarize what I have understood so far.
- Bitcoin is more like a commodity, like gold or guar seeds, that are being traded at a price dictated by the demand and supply in the market.
- Since it is a digital artifact, it is being ‘mined’ or ‘created’, by running a computer program — that consumes time, power and CPU cycles — and seeing if the result meets certain requirements. Think of it as if you are asked to locate the next prime number.
- These requirements are defined ‘collaboratively’ by a federation of computer servers located on the internet. So unlike a Central Bank there is no single body that controls the supply Bitcoins.
- Anyone can join this federation by installing the server software on his machine and running the Bitcoin program, that is available for free download. Think of it as an SMTP mail server or a P2P file sharing server that must obey the mandated protocols if it wants to operate.
- Since the Bitcoin is a digital artifact that can be ‘duplicated’ and ‘spent twice’, each transaction of a Bitcoin is cryptographically signed by the payer and the payee and recorded across all federated servers. So the probability of a double spend is almost negligible.
How do you enter the Bitcoin economy?
In the case of gold you can either lease land, buy mining equipment and employ people to get the gold out of the ground, or you can buy it at a jewellery store. Even simpler is if you by units of a Gold based mutual fund. Bitcoins are similar. You can ‘mine Bitcoins’ using heavy duty servers or you can ‘get’ or ‘buy’ Bitcoins and store them with you.
Let me tell you what I did…
Mining Bitcoins is a complicated process and I decided to stay away from it. Instead my focus was on acquiring some Bitcoins, but even if you want to acquire you need a place to store it. You need a wallet.
A wallet is a piece of software that is identified with a long string of numbers. This software can be located on your desktop or laptop ( like having a safe built into the wall of your house to store gold, cash ) or you can get an online wallet hosted by vendor.
I opened an account with Blockchain and created my wallet with this identifier 1AoD4Ax1xHtwPCa99GbiQo86Bya77Hu8Bo.
The next challenge was to fill the wallet with some Bitcoins.
How I got Bitcoins
You can join a Bitcoin mining consortium, offer your Internet-connected machine for running the ‘mining’ program and get a tiny share of a Bitcoin if and when your consortium gets a Bitcoin. You can also search Google for places where you can get free Bitcoins.
I visited Bitvisitor and entered my wallet identifier, and pressed submit. This leads through a series of websites where you are required to spend five minutes, at the end of which a tiny fraction of a Bitcoin was credited to my wallet. This was good but far too slow. After spending hours, I just had less than a thousandth of a Bitcoin! Clearly something faster was required !
Then I remembered Second Life and the stash of Linden Dollars that I had accumulated as my avatar called Calcutta Cyclone. Now to extract my Linden Dollars and convert them to Bitcoin. This is possible through an account in the Virtual World Exchange.
So I entered Second Life with my Calcutta Cyclone avatar, located a Virtual World Exchange terminal and transfered my Linden Dollars to my Virtual World Exchange account. Next I logged into Virtual World Exchange — which is nothing but a normal commodity or currency exchange — converted my Linden Dollars to Bitcoins at the current rate of exchange ( around SLL 36,000 = 1 BTC). The last step was to transfer the Bitcoins from my Virtual World Exchange to my Bitcoin wallet at BlockChain.
This takes time because this transaction must be agreed to by a large number of Bitcoin servers who must confirm that there was no double spend. This process can be accelerated by paying higher fees but I was patient and after a couple of hours, the transfer was formally recognized by the Blockchain server.
So now I have a clean pile of Bitcoins in my wallet. I can either withdraw this money as US Dollars through my Paypal account, which will show up in my Standard Chartered Bank account, or — and this what I intend to do, I will use it to pay for website domain payments. If and when Bitcoins become more acceptable to mainstream eCommerce platforms then I would be able to use them on Flipkart or eBay.
Image courtesy: Bitcoin
[Dr. Prithwis Mukerjee, is a former director at IBM, and is currently program director, Business Analytics, at Praxis Business School.]