Etiket arşivi: bitcoin

How Can I Buy Bitcoin?

So you’ve learned the basics about bitcoin, you’re excited about the potential and now you want to buy some*. But how?

(*Please, never invest more than you can afford to lose – cryptocurrencies are volatile and the price could go down as well as up.)

Bitcoin can be bought on exchanges, or directly from other people via marketplaces.

You can pay for them in a variety of ways, ranging from hard cash to credit and debit cards to wire transfers, or even with other cryptocurrencies, depending on who you are buying them from and where you live.

1 – set up a wallet

The first step is to set up a wallet to store your bitcoin – you will need one, whatever your preferred method of purchase. This could be an online wallet (either part of an exchange platform, or via an independent provider), a desktop wallet, a mobile wallet or an offline one (such as a hardware device or a paper wallet).

Even within these categories of wallets there is a wide variety of services to choose from, so do some research before deciding on which version best suits your needs.

The most important part of any wallet is keeping your keys (a string of characters) and/or passwords safe. If you lose them, you lose access to the bitcoin stored there.

BUYING ONLINE

2 – open an account at an exchange

Cryptocurrency exchanges will buy and sell bitcoin on your behalf. There are hundreds currently operating, with varying degrees of liquidity and security, and new ones continue to emerge while others end up closing down. As with wallets, it is advisable to do some research before choosing – you may be lucky enough to have several reputable exchanges to choose from, or your access may be limited to one or two, depending on your geographical area.

The largest bitcoin exchange in the world at the moment in terms of US$ volume is Binance, although it is mainly aimed at spot traders. Other high-volume exchanges are Cex.ioBitfinexCoinbase and Poloniex, but for small amounts, most reputable exchanges should work well. (Note: at time of writing, the surge of interest in bitcoin trading is placing strain on most retail buy and sell operations, so a degree of patience and caution is recommended.)

With the clampdown on know-your-client (KYC) and anti-money-laundering (AML) regulation, many exchanges now require verified identification for account setup. This will usually include a photo of your official ID, and sometimes also a proof of address.

Most exchanges accept payment via bank transfer or credit card, and some are willing to work with Paypal transfers. And most exchanges charge fees (which generally include the fees for using the bitcoin network).

Each exchange has a different procedure for both setup and transaction, and should give you sufficient detail to be able to execute the purchase. If not, consider changing the service provider.

Once the exchange has received payment, it will purchase the corresponding amount of bitcoin on your behalf, and deposit them in an automatically generated wallet on the exchange. This can take minutes, or sometimes hours due to network bottlenecks. If you wish (recommended), you can then move the funds to your off-exchange wallet.

BUYING WITH CASH

2 – choose a purchase method

Platforms such as LocalBitcoins will help you to find individuals near you who are willing to exchange bitcoin for cash. Also, LibertyX lists retail outlets across the United States at which you can exchange cash for bitcoin. And WallofCoins, Paxful and BitQuick will direct you to a bank branch near you that will allow you to make a cash deposit and receive bitcoin a few hours later.

ATMs are machines that will send bitcoin to your wallet in exchange for cash. They operate in a similar way to bank ATMs – you feed in the bills, hold your wallet’s QR code up to a screen, and the corresponding amount of bitcoin are beamed to your account. Coinatmradar can help you to find a bitcoin ATM near you.

(Note: specific businesses mentioned here are not the only options available, and should not be taken as a recommendation.)


Source: coindesk

What is Bitcoin?

To cut through some of the confusion surrounding bitcoin, we need to separate it into two components. On the one hand, you have bitcoin-the-token, a snippet of code that represents ownership of a digital concept – sort of like a virtual IOU. On the other hand, you have bitcoin-the-protocol, a distributed network that maintains a ledger of balances of bitcoin-the-token. Both are referred to as “bitcoin.”

The system enables payments to be sent between users without passing through a central authority, such as a bank or payment gateway. It is created and held electronically. Bitcoins aren’t printed, like dollars or euros – they’re produced by computers all around the world, using free software.

It was the first example of what we today call cryptocurrencies, a growing asset class that shares some characteristics of traditional currencies, with verification based on cryptography.

Who created it?

A pseudonymous software developer going by the name of Satoshi Nakamoto proposed bitcoin in 2008, as an electronic payment system based on mathematical proof. The idea was to produce a means of exchange, independent of any central authority, that could be transferred electronically in a secure, verifiable and immutable way.

To this day, no-one knows who Satoshi Nakamoto really is.

In what ways is it different from traditional currencies?

Bitcoin can be used to pay for things electronically, if both parties are willing. In that sense, it’s like conventional dollars, euros, or yen, which are also traded digitally.

But it differs from fiat digital currencies in several important ways:

1 – Decentralization

Bitcoin’s most important characteristic is that it is decentralized. No single institution controls the bitcoin network. It is maintained by a group of volunteer coders, and run by an open network of dedicated computers spread around the world. This attracts individuals and groups that are uncomfortable with the control that banks or government institutions have over their money.

Bitcoin solves the “double spending problem” of electronic currencies (in which digital assets can easily be copied and re-used) through an ingenious combination of cryptography and economic incentives. In electronic fiat currencies, this function is fulfilled by banks, which gives them control over the traditional system. With bitcoin, the integrity of the transactions is maintained by a distributed and open network, owned by no-one.

 

2 – Limited supply

Fiat currencies (dollars, euros, yen, etc.) have an unlimited supply – central banks can issue as many as they want, and can attempt to manipulate a currency’s value relative to others. Holders of the currency (and especially citizens with little alternative) bear the cost.

With bitcoin, on the other hand, the supply is tightly controlled by the underlying algorithm. A small number of new bitcoins trickle out every hour, and will continue to do so at a diminishing rate until a maximum of 21 million has been reached. This makes bitcoin more attractive as an asset – in theory, if demand grows and the supply remains the same, the value will increase.

3 – Pseudonymity

While senders of traditional electronic payments are usually identified (for verification purposes, and to comply with anti-money laundering and other legislation), users of bitcoin in theory operate in semi-anonymity. Since there is no central “validator,” users do not need to identify themselves when sending bitcoin to another user. When a transaction request is submitted, the protocol checks all previous transactions to confirm that the sender has the necessary bitcoin as well as the authority to send them. The system does not need to know his or her identity.

In practice, each user is identified by the address of his or her wallet. Transactions can, with some effort, be tracked this way. Also, law enforcement has developed methods to identify users if necessary.

Furthermore, most exchanges are required by law to perform identity checks on their customers before they are allowed to buy or sell bitcoin, facilitating another way that bitcoin usage can be tracked. Since the network is transparent, the progress of a particular transaction is visible to all.

This makes bitcoin not an ideal currency for criminals, terrorists or money-launderers.

4 – Immutability

Bitcoin transactions cannot be reversed, unlike electronic fiat transactions.

This is because there is no central “adjudicator” that can say “ok, return the money.” If a transaction is recorded on the network, and if more than an hour has passed, it is impossible to modify.

While this may disquiet some, it does mean that any transaction on the bitcoin network cannot be tampered with.

5 – Divisibility

The smallest unit of a bitcoin is called a satoshi. It is one hundred millionth of a bitcoin (0.00000001) – at today’s prices, about one hundredth of a cent. This could conceivably enable microtransactions that traditional electronic money cannot.


Source: coindesk

BOE/Carney: Kripto paralar “para” olarak başarısız oldu

Kripto paralarla ilgili değerlendirmede bulunan İngiltere Merkez Bankası Başkanı Carney, daha fazla düzenleme çağrısında bulundu.

İngiltere Merkez Bankası (BOE) Başkanı Mark Carney, kripto para “anarşisi”nin son bulması için daha fazla düzenleme çağrısında bulundu.

Carney, Cuma günü Bloomberg’e yaptığı değerlendirmede:

“Kripto para ekosistemini finansal sistemin kalanıyla aynı standartlara getirmenin zamanı geldi.”

şeklinde görüş bildirdi.

BOE Başkanı, Bitcoin teknolojisinin potansiyel değerine değinmesine karşın dijital paraların “para” olarak başarısızlığa uğradığını ifade etti.

Carney, yakın zamanda merkez bankası kaynaklı bir dijital paraya yönelik beklentiyi reddetti.

Almanya Bitcoin’den Vergi Almayacak

Maliye Bakanlığının yaptığı açıklamaya göre Almanya, Bitcoin’i bir ödeme aracı kullananlardan vergi almayacak.

Salı günü yayınlanan kılavuz, ABD ile Almanya arasındaki farkları ortaya çıkarıyor. Milli Hasılat Servisi Bitcoin’i vergi amaçlarına dahil mülk olarak gören ABD’de eğer bir vatandaş Bitcoin ile bir bardak kahve satın alırsa bu teknik olarak gayrimenkul satışı sayıldığı için sermaye kazancı vergisi uygulanıyor.

Almanya ise bunun yerine Bitcoin’i ödeme aracı olarak kullanıldığında tedavülde bir para sayacak ve vergi amaçlarına dahil etmeyecek.

Alman Maliye Bakanlığı kılavuzlarını 2015 tarihli Avrupa Birliği Adalet Divanı’nda alınan katma değer vergisi kararlarını baz alarak oluşturdu. Kılavuzlar bu yeni vergi kararlarını, kripto paralarını yasal bir ödeme aracı sayarak savundu:

Sanal para birimleri (kripto paralar, Bitcoin, vs.) tedavüldeki ödeme araçlarına denk hale geldi, o kadar ki bu sözde sanal para birimleri sözleşmesel veya anında ödeme yapmak için daha çok tercih edilmeye başlandı.”

Vergi amaçları açısından, Bitcoin’i fiat’a dönüştürmek bir ”vergilendirilebilir muhtelif menfaat” olarak görülüyor. Kılavuza göre, bir alıcı hizmet veya ürünler için Bitcoin ile ödeme yaptığında AB’nin KDV direktifindeki maddeler, işlem anında uygulanarak satıcı tarafından belgelendirilecek. Dijital cüzdan sağlayıcılarından veya diğer hizmetlerden alınan ücretler de aynı şekilde vergilendirilecek

Fakat bununla birlikte, AB hükümlerine göre, Bitcoin’i fiat’a dönüştürme işleminin kendisi ”hizmet arzı” sayıldığı için işlem sırasında aracı olacak bir parti ise vergilendirilmeyecek.

Kripto para ekosisteminin diğer ögeleri ise vergilendirilmeyecek. Kılavuza göre blok ödülleri alan madenciler, yaptıkları çalışma gönüllü sayıldığı için vergilendirilmeyecek. Benzer olarak, aracı olarak kendi adına Bitcoin alım satımı yapan işlem operatörleri de vergi muafiyetine dahil olacak fakat teknik piyasa olarak işlem yapan bir borsa bu muafiyetten yararlanamayacak.

Kaynak: CoinDesk

Şubat Ayında En Çok Litecoin Kazandırdı

Kripto para piyasaları 2017 sonunda müthiş bir yükseliş dönemine girdi. 6 bin dolardan 20 bin dolara uzun ve kesintisiz bir tırmanışa geçen bitcoin, peşine altcoin’leri de taktı. 2018’e ise keskin düşüşlerle girildi ve kripto paralar tekrar eski fiyat seviyelerine döndü. Ocak ayını kıpkırmızı fiyat grafikleriyle kapatan kripto paralar için Şubat ayı ‘kıpırdanma dönemi’ olarak kayıtlara geçti.

Şubat ayında kripto paraların çoğu önceki aya kıyasla daha iyi bir performans gösterse de, tüm spot ışıklarını üzerine çekmeyi başaran kripto para tartışmasız litecoin oldu. Litecoin 11 milyar doların üzerinde piyasa değeriyle en büyük 5. kripto para konumunda. Bitcoin’in % 4 değer kaybettiği Şubat ayında litecoin tam % 21’lik bir büyüme oranı yakaladı.

Bitcoin’deki düşüş bir yana; listenin 2. ve 3. sırasındaki ethereum ve ripple da yıl bazında sırasıyla  % 20 ve % 22 düştü. Şubat ayında kripto para piyasası % 8 değer kaybına uğradı ve haberimizin yayına girdiği sırada kripto paraların toplam hacmi 450 milyar doların az üstünde seyrediyor.

Peki litecoin neden fark yarattı? Bunun belki de en büyük sebebi Bloomberg Terminal’ın litecoin’i Şubatın ikinci haftasında platformuna eklemiş olması. Tüm dünyadan BTC, XRP, ETH gibi kripto paraların fiyat takibini yapan finansal müşteriler artık takip ekranında LTC’yi de görmeye başladı.

Şubat ayındaki iyi performansına rağmen litecoin tüm zamanlar rekoruna oldukça uzak. Bitcoin’in 20 bine vurduğu ve altcoin’lerin zirve yaptığı Aralık ayında litecoin de 365 dolarla tüm zamanlar rekorunu kırmıştı. Birçok kaynak litecoin’i geleceği en parlak para birimleri arasında gösteriyor.

Kaynak: coin-turk