If you still canât figure out what the heck a bitcoin is, this simple explanation for a five-year-old may help you â¦
Weâre sitting on a park bench. Itâs a great day. I have one apple with me, I give it to you.
You now have one apple and I have zero. That was simple, right?
Letâs look closely at what happened:
My apple was physically put into your hand. You know it happened. I was there, you were there â you touched it.
We didnât need a third person there to help us make the transfer. We didnât need to pull in Uncle Tommy (whoâs a famous judge) to sit with us on the bench and confirm that the apple went from me to you.
The appleâs yours! I canât give you another apple because I donât have any left. I canât control it anymore. The apple left my possession completely. You have full control over that apple now. You can give it to your friend if you want, and then that friend can give it to his friend, and so on.
So thatâs what an in-person exchange looks like. I guess itâs really the same, whether Iâm giving you a banana, a book, a quarter, or a dollar bill â¦
But Iâm getting ahead of myself.
Now, letâs say I have one digital apple. Here, Iâll give you my digital apple. Ah! Now it gets interesting.
How do you know that digital apple which used to be mine, is now yours, and only yours? Think about it for a second. Itâs more complicated, right? How do you know that I didnât send that apple to Uncle Tommy as an email attachment first? Or your friend Joe? Or my friend Lisa too?
Maybe I made a couple of copies of that digital apple on my computer. Maybe I put it up on the internet and one million people downloaded it.
As you see, this digital exchange is a bit of a problem. Sending digital apples doesnât look like sending physical apples.
Some brainy computer scientists actually have a name for this problem: itâs called the double-spending problem. But donât worry about it. All you need to know is that itâs confused them for quite some time and theyâve never solved it. Until now.
But letâs try to think of a solution on our own.
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Maybe these digital apples need to be tracked in a ledger. Itâs basically a book where you track all transactionsâ â âan accounting book.
This ledger, since itâs digital, needs to live in its own world and have someone in charge of it.
Just like World of Warcraft, say. Blizzard, the guys who created the online game, have a âdigital ledgerâ of all the rare flaming fire swords that exist in their system. So, cool, someone like them could keep track of our digital apples. Awesomeâ â âwe solved it!
Thereâs a bit of a problem though:
1) What if some guy over at Blizzard created more? He could just add a couple of digital apples to his balance whenever he wants!
2) Itâs not the same as when we were on the bench that day. It was just you and me then. Going through Blizzard is like pulling in Uncle Tommy (a third-party) out of court (did I mention heâs a famous judge?) for all our park bench transactions. How can I just hand over my digital apple to you in the usual way?
Is there any way to closely replicate our park bench transaction digitally? Seems kinda tough â¦
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What if we gave this ledger âto everybody? Instead of the ledger living on a Blizzard computer, itâll live in everybodyâs computers. All the transactions that have ever happened, from all time, in digital apples, will be recorded in it.
You canât cheat it. I canât send you digital apples I donât have, because then it wouldnât sync up with everybody else in the system. Itâd be a tough system to beat. Especially if it got really big.
Plus, itâs not controlled by one person, so I know thereâs no one that can just decide to give himself more digital apples. The rules of the system were already defined at the beginning.
And the code and rules are open source â kinda like the software used in your momâs Android phone. Or kinda like Wikipedia. Itâs there for smart people to maintain, secure, improve, and check.
You could participate in this network too â updating the ledger and making sure it all checks out. For the trouble, you could get like 25 digital apples as a reward. In fact, thatâs the only way to create more digital apples in the system.
I simplified quite a bit ⦠But that system I explained exists. Itâs called the Bitcoin protocol. And those digital apples are the bitcoins within the system. Fancy! So, did you see what happened?
Read more: Bitcoin 101: How do Bitcoin Transactions Work?
1) Itâs open source, remember? The total number of apples was defined in the public ledger at the beginning. I know the exact amount that exists. Within the system, I know they are limited (scarce).
2) When I make an exchange I now know that digital apple certifiably left my possession and is now completely yours. I used to not be able to say that about digital things. It will be updated and verified by the public ledger.
3) Because itâs a public ledger, I didnât need Uncle Tommy (third-party) to make sure I didnât cheat, or make extra copies for myself, or send apples twice, or thriceâ¦
Within the system, the exchange of a digital apple is now just like the exchange of a physical one. Itâs now as good as seeing a physical apple leave my hand and drop into your pocket. Just like on the park bench, the exchange involved two people only. You and meâ, we didnât need Uncle Tommy there to make it valid.
In other words, it behaves like a physical object.
But you know whatâs cool? Itâs still digital.
We can now deal with 1,000 apples, or 1 million apples, or even .0000001 apples. I can send it with a click of a button, and I can still drop it in your digital pocket if I was in Nicaragua and you were all the way in New York.
I can even make other digital things ride on top of these digital apples! Itâs digital after all. Maybe I can attach some text on itââ a digital note. Or maybe I can attach more important things; like say a contract, or a stock certificate, or an ID card â¦
So this is great! How should we treat or value these âdigital applesâ? Theyâre quite useful arenât they?
Well, a lot of people are arguing over it now. Thereâs debate between this and that economic school, between politicians, between programmers. Donât listen to all of them though. Some people are smart; some are misinformed. Some say the system is worth a lot; some say itâs actually worth zero. Some guy actually put a hard number on it: $1,300 per apple. Some say itâs digital gold; some say itâs a currency. Others say theyâre just like tulips. Some people say itâll change the world; some say itâs just a fad.
I have my own opinion about it, but thatâs a story for another time.
Hey kid, you now know more about Bitcoin than most.