Bitcoin Cash

Cryptocurrency that is a fork of Bitcoin

Bitcoin Cash
Denominations
CodeBCH[1]
Precision10−8
Development
Implementation(s)Bitcoin Unlimited
Latest release1.9.1 / 17 February 2021; 3 years ago (2021-02-17)[2]
Development statusActive
Project fork ofBitcoin
Ledger
Ledger start3 January 2009 (15 years ago) (2009-01-03)[3][4]: ch. 35 
Split height#478559 / 1 August 2017 (6 years ago) (2017-08-01)
Split fromBitcoin
Split ratio1:1
Timestamping schemeProof-of-work (partial hash inversion)
Hash functionSHA-256
Issuance scheduleInitially BCH 50 per block, halved every 210,000 blocks
Block rewardBCH 6.25 [a]
Block time10 minutes
Block explorerblockchair.com/bitcoin-cash/blocks
Supply limit21,000,000[b]
Website
Websitebitcoincash.org[citation needed]
  1. ^ As of April 2020; halved approximately every four years.
  2. ^ The supply will approach, but never reach, BCH 21 million. Issuance will permanently halt around 2140 at BCH 20,999,999.9769.

Bitcoin Cash is a cryptocurrency that is a fork of Bitcoin. Bitcoin Cash is a spin-off or altcoin that was created in 2017.[5][6]

In November 2018, Bitcoin Cash split further into two cryptocurrencies: Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV.[7]

History

Since its inception, Bitcoin users had maintained a common set of rules for the cryptocurrency.[8] On 21 July 2017, bitcoin miners locked-in a software upgrade referred to as Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP) 91, which meant that the Segregated Witness upgrade would activate at block 477,120. Segwit controversially would enable second layer solutions on Bitcoin such as the Lightning Network.[9] A key difference of opinion between Bitcoin users was over the running of nodes. Bitcoin supporters wanted to keep blocks small so that nodes could be operated with fewer resources, while some large block supporters find it acceptable that (due to large block sizes), nodes might only be run by universities, private companies and nonprofits.[10]

A group of Bitcoin activists,[11] developers[8], and China-based miners were unhappy with Bitcoin's proposed SegWit improvement plans meant to increase Bitcoin's capacity; these stakeholders pushed forward alternative plans which would increase the block size limit to eight megabytes through a hard fork.[12][8][13] Supporters of a block size increase were more committed to an on-chain medium of exchange function.[9]

In June 2017, hardware manufacturer Bitmain, described the would-be hard fork with the increased block size as a "contingency plan", should the Bitcoin community decide to fork implementing SegWit. The first implementation of the software was proposed under the name Bitcoin ABC at a conference that month. In July 2017, mining pool ViaBTC proposed the name Bitcoin Cash. In July 2017 Roger Ver and others stated they felt that adopting BIP 91 (that would later activate SegWit) favored people who wanted to treat Bitcoin as a digital investment rather than as a transactional currency.[8][13] The fork that created Bitcoin Cash took effect on 1 August 2017.[14] In relation to Bitcoin it is characterized variously as a spin-off,[15] a strand,[16] a product of a hard fork,[17] an offshoot,[18] a clone,[12] a second version[11] or an altcoin.

A Hong Kong newspaper likened this to a new version of word processing software saying:[19]

Bitcoin cash is like a new version of Microsoft Word, which generates documents that can no longer be opened via the older versions.

At the time of the fork anyone owning bitcoin came into possession of the same number of Bitcoin Cash units.[20][14] The technical difference between Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin is that Bitcoin Cash allows larger blocks in its blockchain than Bitcoin which, in theory, allows it to process more transactions per second.[21] Bitcoin Cash was the first of the Bitcoin forks, in which software-development teams modified the original Bitcoin computer code and released coins with “Bitcoin" in their names, with "the goal of creating money out of thin air".[22] On 1 August 2017 Bitcoin Cash began trading at about $240, while bitcoin traded at about $2,700.[14] On 20 December 2017 it reached an intraday high of $4,355.62 and then fell 88% to $519.12 on 23 August 2018.[23]

In 2018 Bitcoin Core developer Cory Fields found a bug in the Bitcoin ABC software that would have allowed an attacker to create a block causing a chain split. Fields notified the development team about it, and the bug was fixed.[24]

In November 2020, there was a second contested hard fork where the leading node implementation, BitcoinABC, created BCHA.[25]

Controversy

Controversy

The arguments have devolved over three or four years of bitter debate, the principles are real and they are important to preserve, but a lot of the drama has nothing to do with principles anymore. A lot of this debate is now more about hurt feelings. It’s about bruised egos. It’s about things that were said that can’t be unsaid, insults that were exchanged, and personalities and ego.

Andreas Antonopoulos, "The Verge"

In 2017 there were two factions of Bitcoin supporters: those that supported large blocks and those who preferred small blocks.[21] The Bitcoin Cash faction favors the use of its currency as a medium of exchange for commerce, while the Bitcoin-supporting faction view Bitcoin's primary use as that of a store of value.[21] Bitcoin Cash is sometimes also referred to as Bcash.[26] Bitcoin Cash detractors call the cryptocurrency "Bcash", "Btrash", or "a scam", while its supporters maintain that "it is the pure form of Bitcoin".[21]

Bryan Kelly, a stock analyst likened it to a software upgrade:[27]

Bitcoin cash is doing a “hard fork” or “effectively a software upgrade”, Kelly said on “Fast Money”. “When you do a software upgrade, everybody usually agrees. But in this particular case, everybody is not agreeing.”

Samson Mow of Blockstream pointed to Bitcoin Cash's use of the "Bitcoin" name as a source of animosity between the Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash camps.[21] Emin Gün Sirer, a professor at Cornell stated that Bitcoin Cash was focused on use and Bitcoin was "enormously" focused on store of value.[21]

Trading and usage

Number of Bitcoin Cash transactions per month (logarithmic scale)[28]

Bitcoin Cash trades on digital currency exchanges using the Bitcoin Cash name and the BCH currency code for the cryptocurrency.[29][30][31] On 26 March 2018, OKEx removed all Bitcoin Cash trading pairs except for BCH/BTC, BCH/ETH and BCH/USDT due to "inadequate liquidity".[15] As of May 2018[update], daily transaction numbers for Bitcoin Cash are about one-tenth of those of bitcoin.[15] Coinbase listed Bitcoin Cash on 19 December 2017 and the Coinbase platform experienced price abnormalities that led to an insider trading investigation.[32] As of August 2018, Bitcoin Cash payments are supported by payment service providers such as BitPay, Coinify and GoCoin.[33]

Difficulty adjustment algorithm

Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash both use a proof-of-work algorithm to timestamp every new block. The proof of work algorithm used is the same in both cases. It can be described as a partial inversion of a hash function. Additionally, both Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash target a new block to be generated every ten minutes on average. The time needed to calculate a new block is influenced by a parameter called the mining difficulty. If the total amount of mining power increases, an increase of the mining difficulty can keep the block time roughly constant. Vice versa, if the mining power decreases, a decrease of the mining difficulty can keep the block time roughly constant.[34]

To keep the block generation time equal to ten minutes on average, both Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash use an algorithm adjusting the mining difficulty parameter. This algorithm is called the difficulty adjustment algorithm (DAA). Originally, both Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash used the same difficulty adjustment algorithm, adjusting the mining difficulty parameter every 2016 blocks. Since 1 August 2017, Bitcoin Cash also used an addition to the DAA, called an Emergency Difficulty Adjustment (EDA) algorithm. EDA was used alongside the original DAA and it was designed to decrease the mining difficulty of Bitcoin Cash by 20%, if the time difference between 6 successive blocks was greater than 12 hours.[34]

EDA adjustments caused instabilities in mining difficulty of the Bitcoin Cash system, resulting in Bitcoin Cash being thousands of blocks ahead of Bitcoin. To address the problem with stability, a change of the Bitcoin Cash DAA was implemented and the EDA canceled. The change took effect on 13 November 2017. After the change, the Bitcoin Cash DAA adjusts the mining difficulty after each block. To calculate the difficulty for a new block, the Bitcoin Cash DAA uses a moving window of last 144 blocks.[34]

A group of researchers demonstrated that, as of June 2019, Bitcoin DAA fails to generate new blocks at a constant rate as long as the hash supply is elastic. In contrast to that, the group demonstrated that Bitcoin Cash DAA is stable even when the cryptocurrency price is volatile and the supply of hash power is highly elastic.[35]

2018 split to create Bitcoin SV

Bitcoin SV
Denominations
Symbol
CodeBSV
Precision10^-8
Development
Original author(s)Satoshi Nakamoto
Project fork ofBitcoin Cash
Ledger
Timestamping schemeProof-of-work
Block reward6.25 BSV
Block time10 minutes
Circulating supply18,874,300 BSV (2021-10-20)
Supply limit21,000,000

On 15 November 2018, a hard fork chain split of Bitcoin Cash occurred between two rival factions called Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV.[36][37] On 15 November 2018 Bitcoin Cash traded at about $289, and Bitcoin SV traded at about $96.50, down from $425.01 on 14 November for the un-split Bitcoin Cash.[38]

The split originated from what was described as a "civil war" in two competing Bitcoin Cash camps.[27][39] The first camp, supported by entrepreneur Roger Ver and Jihan Wu of Bitmain, promoted the software entitled Bitcoin ABC (short for Adjustable Blocksize Cap), which would maintain the block size at 32 MB.[39] The second camp led by Craig Steven Wright and billionaire Calvin Ayre put forth a competing software version Bitcoin SV, short for "Bitcoin Satoshi Vision", which would increase the block size limit to 128 MB.[36][39] The Bitcoin SV blockchain is the largest of all Bitcoin forks, exceeding 2.5 terabytes[a] in size.[citation needed]

See also

Number of Bitcoin SV transactions per month (logarithmic scale)[28]

Notes

  1. ^ The Bitcoin SV blockchain size is 2562.92 GB as of Jan 10 2022, which is 2.56292 TB.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Vigna, Paul (1 August 2017). "Bitcoin Rival Launches in Volatile First Day". WSJ. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  2. ^ "Download Bitcoin Unlimited". Bitcoin Unlimited. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  3. ^ Cuthbertson, Anthony (21 May 2018). "The Battle over Bitcoin: Scandal and Infighting as 'Bitcoin Cash' Threatens to Overthrow the Most Famous Cryptocurrency". Independent. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  4. ^ Mukhi, Vijay; Khanapurkar, Nitin (2017). The Undocumented Internals of the Bitcoin, Ethereum and Blockchains. BPB Publications. ISBN 978-9-3865-5130-6.
  5. ^ Vigna, Paul (23 December 2017). "Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, Ether, Oh My! What's With All the Bitcoin Clones?". WSJ. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  6. ^ Wilson, Tom (17 July 2019). "Smaller cryptocurrencies feel pain as criticism of Facebook's Libra grows". Reuters. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  7. ^ Kharif, Olga (23 November 2018). "Bitcoin Cash Wars End With No Relief for Biggest Cryptocurrency". Bloomberg LP. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d Popper, Nathaniel (25 July 2017). "Some Bitcoin Backers Are Defecting to Create a Rival Currency". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  9. ^ a b "SegWit and the bitcoin transaction fee conspiracy theory". FT Alphaville. FT. 21 March 2018.
  10. ^ Cuen, Leigh (22 August 2017). "Why Some People Love Bitcoin Cash". International Business Times. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  11. ^ a b "Bitcoin divides to rule". The Economist. 5 August 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b Irrera, Anna; Chavez-Dreyfuss, Gertrude (2 August 2017). "Bitcoin 'clone' sees a slow start following split". Independent. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  13. ^ a b Nakamura, Yuri; Kharif, Olga (4 December 2017). "Battle for 'True' Bitcoin Is Just Getting Started". Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  14. ^ a b c Selena Larson (1 August 2017). "Bitcoin split in two, here's what that means". CNN Tech. Cable News Network. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  15. ^ a b c Kelly, Jemima (15 May 2018). "Bitcoin cash is expanding into the void". Financial Times. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  16. ^ Titcomb, James (2 August 2017). "Bitcoin Cash: Price of new currency rises after bitcoin's 'hard fork'". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  17. ^ Orcutt, Mike (14 November 2017). "Bitcoin Cash Had a Big Day, Hinting at a Deep Conflict in the Cryptocurrency Community". MIT Technology Review. Archived from the original on 9 November 2018. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  18. ^ Chen, Lulu Yilun; Lam, Eric. "Bitcoin Is Likely to Split Again in November, Say Major Players". Bloomberg. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  19. ^ Huang, Zheping (15 November 2018). "Bitcoin cash "hard fork": everything you need to know about the latest cryptocurrency civil war". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  20. ^ Kharif, Olga (15 January 2019). "Ethereum Seeks to Prove a Crypto Fork Need Not Be Contentious". CNBC. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Jeffries, Adrianne (12 April 2018). "THE ONE TRUE BITCOIN – Inside the struggle between Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash". The Verge. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  22. ^ Kharif, Olga (18 September 2018). "Bitcoin Cash's Survival in Question as Possible Split Looms". Bloomberg. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  23. ^ Osipovich, Alexander (24 August 2018). "It Was Meant to Be the Better Bitcoin. It's Down Nearly 90%". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  24. ^ Evans, John (10 August 2018). "Cryptocurrency insecurity: IOTA, BCash and too many more". Techcrunch. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  25. ^ "Bitcoin ABC 0.22.10 Release Notes". 29 December 2020. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  26. ^ Bcash Nickname Sources:
    • Divine, John (17 February 2021). "Bitcoin Cash vs. Bitcoin: What's the Difference?". Fortune. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
    • Kharpal, Arjun (3 August 2017). "'Bitcoin cash' potential limited, but a catalyst could be looming for it to take off". CNBC. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
    • Jeffries, Adrienne (1 May 2018). "A Bitcoin podcaster brilliantly trolled his own hacker". The Verge. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
    • Browne, Ryan (20 December 2017). "Litecoin founder Charlie Lee says he's sold all his holdings in the cryptocurrency". CNBC. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
    • Jeffries, Adrienne (9 April 2018). "Twitter briefly shut down @Bitcoin, sparking wild conspiracy theories". The Verge. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
    • Shen, Lucinda (8 August 2017). "Bitcoin Just Surged to Yet Another All-Time High". Fortune Magazine. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
    • Ambler, Pamela (9 August 2017). "The Rapid Rise And Fall Of Bitcoin Cash". Forbes. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
    • Evans, John (10 August 2018). "Cryptocurrency insecurity: IOTA, BCash and too many more". Techcrunch. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
    • Kharpal, Arjun (3 August 2017). "TECH TRANSFORMERS: 'Bitcoin cash' potential limited, but a catalyst could be looming for it to take off". CNBC. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
    • Ou, Elaine (10 December 2017). "An Expert's Guide to Navigating the World of Bitcoin: A Q&A between Julie Verhage and Elaine Ou on crypto-assets and the resources involved in bitcoin mining". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  27. ^ a b Clifford, Tyler (14 November 2018). "'Crypto civil war' slams bitcoin, but it won't last, says BKCM's Brian Kelly". CNBC. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  28. ^ a b "Blockchair". Blockchair.com. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  29. ^ Peterson, Becky (9 January 2018). "Coinbase blames extreme buyer demand for last month's Bitcoin cash disaster". Business Insider. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  30. ^ del Castillo, Michael (14 May 2018). "Winklevoss Brothers Bitcoin Exchange Adds Zcash, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash". Forbes. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  31. ^ Decambre, Mark (2 August 2017). "Meet Bitcoin Cash—the new digital-currency that surged 122% in less than a day". MarketWatch. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  32. ^ Osipovich, Alexander (20 December 2017). "Coinbase may have given away its own Bitcoin Cash surprise". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  33. ^ Kharif, Olga (20 August 2018). "'Bitcoin Jesus' Is Having a Hard Time Winning Over True Believers". Bloomberg. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  34. ^ a b c Aggarwal, Vipul; Tan, Yong (January 2019). "A Structural Analysis of Bitcoin Cash's Emergency Difficulty Adjustment Algorithm". ResearchGate. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3383739. S2CID 214022150.
  35. ^ Noda, Shunya; Okumura, Kyohei; Hashimoto, Yoshinori (26 June 2019). "A Lucas Critique to the Difficulty Adjustment Algorithm of the Bitcoin System". SSRN. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3410460. S2CID 213032647. SSRN 3410460.
  36. ^ a b Kharif, Olga (17 November 2018). "Bitcoin Cash Clash Is Costing Billions With No End in Sight". Bloomberg. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  37. ^ Kharif, Olga (23 November 2018). "Bitcoin Cash Wars End With No Relief for Biggest Cryptocurrency". Bloomberg. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  38. ^ Kharif, Olga (15 November 2018). "Bitcoin Cash Fork Hits Investors' Pocketbooks as Two Coins Slip". Bloomberg. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  39. ^ a b c Huang, Zheping (15 November 2018). "Bitcoin cash "hard fork": everything you need to know about the latest cryptocurrency civil war". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 18 November 2018.

External links

Media related to Bitcoin Cash at Wikimedia Commons

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