What makes Bitcoin a new kind of money?
Bitcoin is global. You can send it
across the planet as easily as you can pay with cash in the physical world. It isn't
closed on weekends, doesn’t charge you a fee to access your money, and doesn't impose any
arbitrary limits.
Bitcoin is irreversible. Bitcoin is
like cash, in the sense that transactions cannot be reversed by the sender. In comparison,
credit cards, conventional online payment systems, and banking transactions can be reversed
after the payment has been made—sometimes months after the initial transaction—due to the
centralized intermediaries that complete the transactions. This creates higher fraud risk for
merchants, which can lead to higher fees for using credit cards.
Bitcoin is private. When paying with
bitcoin, there are no bank statements, or any need to provide unnecessary personal information
to the merchant. Bitcoin transactions don’t contain any identifying information other than the
bitcoin addresses and amounts involved.
Bitcoin is secure. Due to the
cryptographic nature of the Bitcoin network, bitcoin payments are fundamentally more secure
than standard debit/credit card transactions. When making a bitcoin payment, no sensitive
information is required to be sent over the internet. There is a very low risk of your
financial information being compromised, or having your identity stolen.
Bitcoin is open. Every transaction on
the Bitcoin network is published publicly, without exception. This means there's no room
for manipulation of transactions (save for a highly unlikely 51% attack scenario) or changing
the supply of bitcoin. The software that constitutes the core of Bitcoin is free and
open-source so anyone can review the code.
Bitcoin is safe. In more than ten
years of existence, the bitcoin network has never been successfully hacked. And because the
system is permissionless and open-sourced, countless computer scientists and cryptographers
have been able to examine all aspects of the network and its security.