What is the Bitcoin (BTC) Crypto Token?

Bitcoin (BTC) is the world’s first and most well-known cryptocurrency. Launched in 2009, it was designed as a decentralized alternative to traditional currencies (like the US Dollar or Euro) and banking systems.

Unlike traditional money, Bitcoin isn't printed by governments or held by banks; it exists entirely on a digital network powered by its users.

Bitcoin’s unique value comes from several core characteristics defined in its original “White Paper” by its anonymous creator:

Bitcoin operates through a process called Mining, which uses a mechanism known as Proof of Work (PoW).

To understand Bitcoin mining, it helps to move past the term “mining” and think of it as competitive bookkeeping. Mining is the process of updating the Bitcoin ledger (the blockchain) while ensuring everyone agrees on the current state of that ledger. Because there is no bank in charge, the network uses a mechanism called Proof of Work (PoW) to keep things secure.

Here is exactly what happens every 10 minutes in the Bitcoin network:

In the early days, you could mine Bitcoin on a home laptop. Today, the math is so difficult that you need specialized hardware called ASICs (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits). These are machines designed for one purpose only: guessing Bitcoin hashes as fast as possible.

Because the odds of an individual miner finding a block are extremely low (like winning a global lottery), most miners join Mining Pools. They combine their computing power and split the rewards proportionally based on how much work they contributed.

The high energy consumption is a feature, not a bug. It is what makes Bitcoin unhackable.

Every 210,000 blocks (roughly every 4 years), the reward given to miners is cut in half. This is called The Halving. It ensures that Bitcoin’s total supply of 21 million is released slowly over time, ending around the year 2140.