Ethereum, Bitcoin’s Biggest Rival Could Become the Worlds Most Expensive Cryptocurrency
Author: Myles Lansdown
What is ethereum? How bitcoin’s biggest rival could become
the world’s most valuable cryptocurrency.
The booming price of bitcoin over the last year has
created a buzz around cryptocurrency that goes far beyond technology
enthusiasts and free market libertarians. It has also helped draw attention to
a number of other virtual currencies looming in its shadow, most notably
ethereum.
Ethereum was created in 2013 by a 19-year-old Russian
programmer and launched in 2015.
For the first two years its price remained below $10.
Then, in 2017, it exploded. In the space
of 12 months, one unit of the cryptocurrency – called an
ether – surged in value to be worth
around $1,400 at its peak in January 2018.
While its price has since fallen back down to around
$700, many still see it as the most promising of all cryptocurrency platforms,
and therefore the one that holds the most potential for future price gains.
Some even believe it could one day surpass bitcoin.
“Ethereum has the possibility to overtake the market
capitalisation, and thus value, of bitcoin,” Hubert Olszewski, director of
business development at Blockchain Board of Derivatives, tells The Independent.
“This is because from the get-go it was a more versatile tool.”
When bitcoin became the world’s first decentralised
digital currency upon its release in 2009, the world was reeling from the worst
financial crisis in decades. So-called crypto-anarchists and others who were
disillusioned by the recession hailed bitcoin for its ability to facilitate
payments without the need for a bank. Essentially, they thought, it held the
potential to revolutionise the global financial system.
Since bitcoin’s inception, more than 1,500 other
cryptocurrencies have appeared in its wake. Each one has attempted to offer
something that bitcoin can’t, with the argument being that bitcoin’s core
technology contains a number a fundamental flaws that are being exposed as its
network grows.
Some, like litecoin and bitcoin cash, have improved
transaction times and lowered transaction costs. Ethereum’s aim, by contrast,
is far more ambitious than simply improving upon bitcoin’s credentials as a
payment system and store of value.
“Bitcoin is a virtual currency, but also a store of value
similar to gold. It’s limited to this function by its own design,” says
Alessandra Sollberger, an early investor in bitcoin who has since diversified
her cryptocurrency portfolio to include ethereum.
“That’s different with ethereum. Beyond being a virtual
currency, it’s been designed as a software platform that enables applications
such as smart contracts – which are self-executing, secure contracts – to be
built and to run without the need of a third party.”
Ethereum is therefore designed to not just decentralise
traditional banks – as bitcoin sets out to do – but decentralise the entire
internet. It does this by expanding upon bitcoin’s core technology called the
blockchain, which is the online public ledger that permanently records the
transactions made across the network.
Using ethereum’s more versatile and advanced blockchain
technology, anyone is able to create their own decentralised applications…
Full Article – Independent 30th April – Anthony
Cuthbertson
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