RPOW
Electronic cash system precursor to Bitcoin, created by Hal Finney in 2004.
Acronym for "Reusable Proofs Of Work". It is a system for electronic money through the transfer of tokens established on proofs of work, developed and implemented by Hal Finney in 2004. RPoW was positioned as an improvement over the theoretical concepts of b-money and bit gold. Unlike these, RPoW was actually realized and launched. RPoW could have taken the place that Bitcoin occupies today. It was the most advanced electronic currency project before Satoshi's invention. However, Bitcoin surpassed RPoW by solving two critical issues. First, Bitcoin introduced an automatic mining difficulty adjustment, a mechanism that was absent in RPoW, thus avoiding inflation due to increased mining capabilities and the growing number of miners. Second, unlike RPoW's reliance on central servers, Bitcoin established a distributed consensus mechanism. This mechanism is based on the principle that nodes synchronize on the chain with the most work accumulated, thereby eliminating the need for known servers. RPoW never received the necessary support to emerge and be adopted by the general public. Unlike b-money and bit gold, Satoshi Nakamoto never cited RPoW, even though this system was arguably the closest to his invention.
TermDefinition
51% attack
An attack where a malicious actor controls more than half of the mining hash power, allowing them to manipulate transactions, notably by performing double spends.
Account
In an HD wallet, a derivation level (depth 3) allowing hierarchical organization of keys and addresses.
Activation method
The process by which the Bitcoin community decides to activate a soft fork, seeking consensus among miners and users to avoid a blockchain split.
Adaptor signature
A cryptographic technique linking a signature to a secret, such that publishing the signature reveals the secret. Useful for atomic swaps without a trusted intermediary.
Addr
An old Bitcoin network message that allowed communicating IP addresses of nodes accepting connections. Replaced by addrv2 (BIP155) to support longer address formats.
Addr.dat
An old file in Bitcoin Core that stored information about network peers. Replaced by peers.dat since version 0.7.0.
Address reuse
A discouraged practice of using the same Bitcoin address multiple times to receive payments, which harms privacy by allowing funds to be traced.
Address spoofing
An attack where a malicious actor creates an address closely resembling the victim's to deceive them and divert their payments.
Addrv2
A new network message format (BIP155) allowing the broadcasting of Bitcoin node addresses. Supports longer addresses such as Tor v3 or I2P.
Agorism
A libertarian political philosophy advocating economic action outside of state control (counter-economy) to progressively undermine state power.
Air cooling
A cooling system for mining machines using fans to dissipate heat. The most widespread and least expensive method.
Altcoin
Designates any cryptocurrency other than Bitcoin. A contraction of alternative and coin.
Aluvm
A virtual machine designed for deterministic execution of smart contracts, notably within the context of the RGB protocol on Bitcoin.
Analysis heuristic
An empirical method used to trace Bitcoin flows on the blockchain based on observable characteristics within transactions.
Ancestor mining
A principle whereby a miner selects transactions taking into account the fees of parent transactions, not only their own fees. Also called CPFP.
Anchor
In the RGB protocol, a set of data proving the inclusion of a commitment in a Bitcoin transaction, without publicly revealing its content.
Anchor outputs
A mechanism on Lightning allowing adjustment of the fees of a commitment transaction after its creation, to ensure quick channel closure.
Anchors.dat
A Bitcoin Core file storing IP addresses of nodes the client was connected to before shutdown, to facilitate reconnection on restart.
Anonsets (anonymity sets)
Indicators measuring the degree of privacy of a UTXO by counting the number of indistinguishable UTXOs in a set, typically after a coinjoin.
Anyprevout (apo)
A proposal (BIP118) adding new SigHash flags allowing the creation of signatures that do not cover any specific input of the transaction.
51% attack
An attack where a malicious actor controls more than half of the mining hash power, allowing them to manipulate transactions, notably by performing double spends.
Account
In an HD wallet, a derivation level (depth 3) allowing hierarchical organization of keys and addresses.
Activation method
The process by which the Bitcoin community decides to activate a soft fork, seeking consensus among miners and users to avoid a blockchain split.
Adaptor signature
A cryptographic technique linking a signature to a secret, such that publishing the signature reveals the secret. Useful for atomic swaps without a trusted intermediary.
Addr
An old Bitcoin network message that allowed communicating IP addresses of nodes accepting connections. Replaced by addrv2 (BIP155) to support longer address formats.
Addr.dat
An old file in Bitcoin Core that stored information about network peers. Replaced by peers.dat since version 0.7.0.
Address reuse
A discouraged practice of using the same Bitcoin address multiple times to receive payments, which harms privacy by allowing funds to be traced.
Address spoofing
An attack where a malicious actor creates an address closely resembling the victim's to deceive them and divert their payments.
Addrv2
A new network message format (BIP155) allowing the broadcasting of Bitcoin node addresses. Supports longer addresses such as Tor v3 or I2P.
Agorism
A libertarian political philosophy advocating economic action outside of state control (counter-economy) to progressively undermine state power.
Air cooling
A cooling system for mining machines using fans to dissipate heat. The most widespread and least expensive method.
Altcoin
Designates any cryptocurrency other than Bitcoin. A contraction of alternative and coin.
Aluvm
A virtual machine designed for deterministic execution of smart contracts, notably within the context of the RGB protocol on Bitcoin.
Analysis heuristic
An empirical method used to trace Bitcoin flows on the blockchain based on observable characteristics within transactions.
Ancestor mining
A principle whereby a miner selects transactions taking into account the fees of parent transactions, not only their own fees. Also called CPFP.
Anchor
In the RGB protocol, a set of data proving the inclusion of a commitment in a Bitcoin transaction, without publicly revealing its content.
Anchor outputs
A mechanism on Lightning allowing adjustment of the fees of a commitment transaction after its creation, to ensure quick channel closure.
Anchors.dat
A Bitcoin Core file storing IP addresses of nodes the client was connected to before shutdown, to facilitate reconnection on restart.
Anonsets (anonymity sets)
Indicators measuring the degree of privacy of a UTXO by counting the number of indistinguishable UTXOs in a set, typically after a coinjoin.
Anyprevout (apo)
A proposal (BIP118) adding new SigHash flags allowing the creation of signatures that do not cover any specific input of the transaction.