Cryptocurrency is digital money secured by cryptography and running on a blockchain rather than through a bank or government. The blockchain acts as a public ledger: every transaction is recorded, verified by network participants (miners or validators), and made effectively permanent. No central authority issues the currency or processes transfers.

Bitcoin, launched in 2009, demonstrated that a decentralized payment network could work. Ethereum extended the idea by adding smart contracts, turning a blockchain into a programmable platform. Thousands of other cryptocurrencies exist, each with different design goals – some optimize for speed, some for privacy, some serve as governance tokens for specific protocols.

Core Properties#

Decentralization – No single entity controls issuance or transaction processing. The network is maintained by distributed nodes that follow a shared consensus protocol.

Transparency – All transactions are recorded on a public ledger. Anyone can verify them, though the identities behind addresses are pseudonymous, not anonymous.

Irreversibility – Once a transaction is confirmed on-chain, it cannot be reversed. There are no chargebacks. This eliminates certain types of fraud but makes mistakes unforgiving.

Self-custody – Users can hold their own private keys, giving them direct control of their funds without relying on a financial institution. Losing those keys means losing the funds permanently.

How Transactions Work#

A user signs a transaction with their private key and broadcasts it to the network. Validators confirm that the sender has sufficient balance and that the signature is valid. The transaction is included in a block, and once the block is added to the chain, the transfer is final.

Transaction fees (called “gas” on Ethereum) compensate validators for processing. Fees fluctuate with network demand – during high-activity periods, they can spike significantly.

Use Cases#

Payments – Peer-to-peer transfers without intermediaries. Particularly useful for cross-border remittances where traditional banking fees are high.

DeFi – Cryptocurrencies are the medium of exchange in decentralized finance – lending, borrowing, trading, and yield farming all run on crypto rails.

TokenizationERC-20 and similar token standards let anyone create new tokens representing assets, governance rights, or access permissions. This is the foundation of the token economy on Ethereum.

DAOsDecentralized autonomous organizations use governance tokens to let holders vote on protocol decisions.

Risks#

Volatility – Crypto prices can move dramatically in short periods. This is true even of large-cap assets like Bitcoin and Ether.

Security – The blockchain itself is secure, but the ecosystem around it – exchanges, wallets, bridges – is a frequent target for exploits. Private key management is the user’s responsibility.

Regulation – Governments are still working out how to classify and regulate cryptocurrencies. Rules vary widely by jurisdiction and change frequently.