What is Digital Money?
What if money couldn’t be printed, couldn’t be frozen, and couldn’t be controlled by any government? What if anyone on Earth could send it to anyone else in 10 minutes, without asking permission? That’s not a thought experiment — it exists.
Bitcoin is a form of digital money — money that exists purely as code on a network of computers, with no physical form and no central authority controlling it. It was created in 2009 by a person (or group) using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto.
Unlike the digits in your bank account — also digital, but controlled by your bank — Bitcoin is controlled by no one and everyone at once. A global network of thousands of independent computers runs Bitcoin, and none of them need to trust each other. They simply follow the rules.
What Makes Bitcoin Different as Money?
- Digital — exists only as code on a network; no printing press, no vault needed
- Decentralised — no bank, company, or government controls it
- Fixed supply — only 21 million Bitcoin will ever exist, enforced by code
- Permissionless — anyone with internet access can use it; no account required
- Borderless — works identically in every country, every time zone
- Censorship-resistant — no authority can block or reverse a valid transaction
Is It Real Money?
Money is simply a tool people agree to use as a store of value, medium of exchange, and unit of account. Bitcoin fulfils all three. And unlike government-issued currencies, it cannot be inflated away by printing more — its supply is mathematically fixed and publicly verifiable by anyone at any time.
Think of Bitcoin as the internet of money: open, global, and available to anyone with a connection — without needing permission from anyone.
Want to go deeper?
Read the original Bitcoin Whitepaper by Satoshi Nakamoto (9 pages, free). For a visual explanation, lopp.net's Getting Started guide curates the best beginner resources on the internet.