Bitcoin White Paper for Canadians
What the White Paper Actually Says
The white paper solves a specific problem: double-spending digital money without a trusted third party.
Before Bitcoin, digital money required a bank or payment processor to verify that you hadn't already spent the same money twice.
Satoshi's solution: a public ledger (blockchain) maintained by a distributed network of computers (miners) who are incentivized with newly created Bitcoin.
The core innovation: A timestamp server that proves transactions existed at a specific time, chained together so that altering any record requires re-doing all subsequent work — making fraud computationally impractical.
Key Concepts from the White Paper
Peer-to-Peer
Transactions happen directly between parties, without a bank as intermediary.
Proof-of-Work
Miners compete to solve mathematical problems. The winner adds the next block and earns Bitcoin.
This secures the network.
Longest Chain Rule
The valid version of the ledger is the one with the most computational work behind it.
Attackers would need to outpace the entire honest network.
Pseudonymity
Transactions are public, but users are identified by addresses — not names.
Why It Matters
The white paper is 15+ years old and Bitcoin has operated exactly as described since genesis block (January 3, 2009).
- No one has hacked the protocol
- No one has inflated the supply beyond the schedule
- The network has remained operational continuously
Satoshi's design has been tested by the largest adversarial environment in the world and has not failed.
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See also: Bitcoin Blockchain Explained Canada | Bitcoin for Beginners Canada | Bitcoin Explained Canada
