InApp course for beginners to learn about bitcoin and earn sats for progress made
- Bitcoin: What is it?
- So what exactly is Bitcoin?
- I just earned a “Sat". What is that?
- Where do the bitcoins exist?
- Who controls Bitcoin?
- If Bitcoin is digital money, can’t someone just copy it — and create free money?
- What is money?
- Why does money have value?
- Which coincidence does money solve?
- What are some items that have been historically used as a unit of money?
- Why were stones, seashells and gold used as units of money?
- What is the primary reason money is important?
- Who can legally print US Dollars, anytime they wish?
- How does money work?
- Who creates fiat money, such as US Dollars or Swiss Francs?
- Why should I care about the government controlling fiat money?
- What does it mean when the government prints money?
- What happens to the value of all fiat money over time?
- What are some other issues that exist with fiat money?
- Bitcoin: Why is it special
- Is the supply of bitcoin limited forever?
- Is bitcoin centralized?
- Can people counterfeit Bitcoin?
- What is the smallest amount of Bitcoin one can own, or use?
- Is the Bitcoin network secure?
- Has Bitcoin ever been hacked?
- The Origins of Money
- The origins of money
- Primitive forms of money
- Anticipating Demand
- The Key to Facilitating Trade
- The Benefits of Converging on a Single Store of Value
- Attributes of a good Store of Value
- Some stores of value are better than others
- Durability is an important attribute for a good store of value
- The good must be easy to transport and store
- One specimen should be interchangeable with another of equal quantity
- The good must be easy to quickly identify and verify as authentic
- The good must be easy to subdivide
- A monetary good must be scarce
- An established history of being valued by society
- No permission required
- The Evolution of Money
- Four Stages of Money: Collectible
- Four Stages of Money: Store of Value
- Four Stages of Money: Medium of Exchange
- Four Stages of Money: Unit of Account
- Partial Monetization
- Bitcoin is in the stage of monetization
- The Evolution of Money II
- Money is not a government creation
- The primary function of money
- Monetary Metals
- Understanding the Stock to Flow Ratio
- Hard Money and Easy Money
- The Evolution of Money III
- Convergence on Gold
- The Origins of Paper Money Backed by Gold
- The Invention of Fractional Reserve Banking
- Problems of Fractional Reserve Banking
- Modern Central Banking
- From Gold to Gold-Backed
- The Bretton Woods System
- The Global Reserve Currency
- The Evolution of Money IV
- The Nixon Shock
- The Fiat Era
- Digital Fiat
- Plastic Credit
- The Double Spending Problem
- Satoshi's Breakthrough
- Purpose-built for the Digital Age
- Central Bank Digital Currencies
- Bitcoin: Why was it created?
- The Root Problem
- Bitcoin's Creator Satoshi Nakamoto
- Fiat Currencies Require Trust
- Money Printing and Credit Expansion
- The Genesis Block
- Bitcoin is the Result of Decades of Research
- Bitcoin: How does it work?
- Peer-to-Peer Network
- What is a blockchain exactly?
- Public Key Cryptography
- Bitcoin Addresses and the Master Public Key
- Mining
- Proof of Work
- Difficulty Adjustment
- The Halving
- Lightning Network
- Drawbacks of Bitcoin
- The Blocksize Wars
- The Lightning Network
- Instant Payments
- Micropayments
- Scalability
- How does Lighning work?
- Routing
- Bitcoin Criticisms & Fallacies I
- Is bitcoin a bubble?
- "It's too volatile!"
- Should money be backed by something?
- Will bitcoin become obsolete one day?
- Is bitcoin's energy consumption excessive?
- Wait, are you telling me that bitcoin can be used to tap into stranded energy?
- Bitcoin Criticisms & Fallacies II
- Bitcoin is too dependent on the Internet
- Bitcoin is for Criminals
- Bitcoin is a Ponzi Scheme
- Bitcoin is too slow
- Bitcoin's Supply Limit Could Be Corrupted
- Governments Will Ban Bitcoin
- Bitcoin Criticisms & Fallacies III
- Bitcoin Ownership Is Concentrated on a Few Users
- Bitcoin Mining Is Centralized
- Bitcoin is too expensive
- Bitcoin transaction costs are prohibitively high
- The Misconception of Bitcoin Hoarding
- Bitcoin is not scarce because there are thousands of cryptocurrencies
- Bitcoin and Economics I
- How limited resources are allocated and competed for
- Monetary Premium
- Gresham's Law
- Thier's Law
- The Cantillon Effect
- Schelling Point
- Bitcoin and Economics II
- Opportunity Cost
- Time Preference
- The Impossible Trinity
- Jevons Paradox
- Power Laws
- Winner-Take-All Effects
- Bitcoin and Economics III
- Unit Bias
- Veblen Good
- Malinvestment
- Asymmetric Payoff
- Ansoff Matrix