A bitcoin address is a string of letters and numbers. Your wallet can generate an infinite amount of them and every one is unique
Bip
‘Bitcoin Improvement Proposal’ and is how changes to the protocol are submitted, approved and labelled
bitcoin (small ‘b’)
When expressed using a small ‘b’, the word bitcoin refers to the unit of currency
Block
A set of transactions grouped together and mined successfully by a miner
Blockchain
A chain of successful blocks that are built on top of one-another. Each one linked to its predecessor
Cold Storage
A method of storing bitcoin private keys in an environment that is not connected to the internet
Confirmation
When a transaction is mined part of a block is one confirmation. Every subsequent block is an additional confirmation
Consensus Rules
The set of rules that anyone wanting to participate in the network must follow
Difficulty
An adjustable value that dictates how much computational power is required for miners to mine new blocks.
Fees
The value paid to a miner to include a transaction into a block
Hardware Wallet
A dedicated secure device for storing bitcoin private keys in an offline environment
Hash
The term given to the action of converting data. Hashing is used by miners to process transactions
Hash Rate
The total number of hashes performed by a miner or mining pool expressed in hashes/second
KYC
‘Know Your Customer’ is a regulation that requires businesses selling bitcoin to collect identify info on the purchaser
Lightning Network
An additional layer built on top of Bitcoin that allows users to send/receive small payments with very low fees
Mempool
The group of transactions waiting to be included into a block by a miner
Miner
A network participant who contributes computational power to process transactions in a bid to earn fees and the block reward
Multisig
Multi-Signature is a wallet setup that can require more than one private key to authorise a transaction
Node
A computer connected to the Bitcoin network running software required to broadcast, relay and verify transactions
Paper Wallet
A piece of paper containing the data necessary to store bitcoin offline. This should be kept safe
Private Key
A unique string of letters and numbers required to store and transact bitcoin. You should not share this with anyone
Proof of Work
The method miners strive to achieve to secure the network and include transactions into blocks
Public Key
Derived from the private key, a public key is used when checking signatures in a transactions
Reward
The block reward is given to the first miner to achieve sufficient proof of work. The reward = Block subsidy + all transaction fees for that block. Current block subsidy is 6.25 BTC.
Satoshi or ‘sat’
Named after Bitcoin’s anonymous creator and sometimes abbreviated to ‘sat’, a Satoshi is the smallest unit of a bitcoin. 1 bitcoin = 100 million satoshis
Satoshi Nakamoto
The pseudonym that Bitcoin’s creator (or creators) went by before he disappeared from the internet
SegWit
Segregated Witness is an improvement made in 2017 to increase the network’s scalability
Subsidy
The subsidy is paid to the miner that achieves sufficient proof of work for each block. The current subsidy is 6.25 BTC. This halves every 210,000 blocks (roughly 4 years)
Testnet
A separate network with an almost identical design to Bitcoin for developers to test out improvements
Tor
The Onion Router is an alternative network used by users that want to preserve their online privacy
Txid
Transaction Identifier is a unique string of numbers and letters used to label a transaction
UTXO
An Unspent Transaction Output is the piece of bitcoin spent to a new address which can be used as an input in future transactions