Gold and Bitcoin demystifies two monetary assets with data. You’ll learn how bitcoin works—blockchains, hashing, mining, keys, and transactions—and why decentralization matters. Then we compare gold and bitcoin where they are similar—scarcity, low inflation, high production cost, and absent cash flows—and where they diverge: custody, divisibility, auditability, settlement, censorship resistance, volatility, market size, and institutional adoption. We connect market structure to portfolio design, showing when each asset helps during equity drawdowns or inflation shocks. You’ll also understand today’s price drivers: financialization (ETFs, tokenized gold), central-bank accumulation, de-dollarization, and reserve-currency politics, plus a policy wildcard—potential Basel III treatment of gold as a high-quality liquid asset. Finally, we confront tail risks: bitcoin’s 51% and quantum threats and gold’s technological supply shocks (advanced extraction, modern alchemy, and off-world sources). Throughout, we use the golden-constant and Golden Dilemma frameworks to anchor valuation and build scenarios. Leave with clear, evidence-based answers and practical allocation tools you can apply immediately.
This module presents the first-principles intuition for bitcoin by unpacking the technology stack that makes it work. We begin with blockchains as append-only, distributed ledgers that remove single points of failure and allow many parties to share a synchronized record without pre-existing trust. You’ll see how cryptographic hashing (SHA-256) links blocks, why “one-way” functions matter, and how proof-of-work turns security into an open, global competition. We then follow a transaction end-to-end: private keys create public addresses, digital signatures authorize spending, and miners bundle validated transactions into blocks roughly every ten minutes. With that foundation, we examine mining mechanics (nonces, difficulty, incentives) and why decentralization—anyone can run a node or mine—is a design feature, not an accident. Finally, we zoom out to decentralized finance: what problems bitcoin and its successors try to solve (inefficiency, limited access, opacity, centralized control, and poor interoperability) and how “layer 2” systems aim to improve speed and cost. The goal: translate buzzwords into working knowledge so you can evaluate bitcoin’s capabilities and limits with rigor.
涵盖的内容
7个视频2篇阅读材料1个作业
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7个视频•总计106分钟
Course Introduction •5分钟
What is Blockchain?•14分钟
Introduction to Hashing •13分钟
Mining Mechanics •24分钟
Mechanics of Adding a Block/Origins of Bitcoin•20分钟
Private Keys and Bitcoin Transactions•13分钟
The Problems Decentralized Finance Tries to Solve•16分钟
2篇阅读材料•总计20分钟
Course Overview•10分钟
Report a problem with the course •10分钟
1个作业•总计30分钟
Module 1 Graded Quiz •30分钟
Similarity to Gold
第 2 单元•小时 后完成
单元详情
This module compares bitcoin and gold on the dimensions that make them “monetary commodities.” Both are scarce, hard to counterfeit, expensive to produce, and decentralized in supply. We quantify inflation from the source: for gold, mine output relative to above-ground stock; for bitcoin, the protocol’s halving schedule and the practical effect of lost coins on effective supply. Neither asset generates cash flows on its own, yet both can be “financialized” (ETFs, tokenized forms, or lending) to create yield-like streams with attendant risks. We analyze production economics: high, persistent energy and capital costs; location flexibility for bitcoin miners versus geology-bound gold producers; and why electricity is a first-order driver for bitcoin but one among several for gold (labor, maintenance, exploration). Finally, we emphasize decentralization: no single entity controls issuance, and concentration risks are lower than in fiat regimes. This section equips you to separate narratives from mechanics when judging scarcity, inflation, and cost—core inputs to valuation and portfolio design.
涵盖的内容
4个视频1个作业
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4个视频•总计21分钟
Scarcity/Inflation Rates•6分钟
Mining Costs: Bitcoin•5分钟
Mining Costs: Gold •7分钟
Decentralization of Production •3分钟
1个作业•总计30分钟
Module 2 Graded Quiz•30分钟
Differences Between Gold and Bitcoin
第 3 单元•小时 后完成
单元详情
This module shows how similarities fade when we examine intrinsic nature, market structure, and trust models. Gold is physical: it requires custody, purity testing, and logistics; it is heavy to move and awkward to subdivide. Bitcoin is digital: instantly auditable on a public ledger, natively divisible into 100 million “sats,” and globally portable with a key. We compare monetary characteristics (seizure and counterparty risk for bank-held gold versus key-management risk for self-custodied bitcoin), settlement (multi-party supply chains for bullion versus on-chain finality), and censorship resistance (low for cross-border gold, high for bitcoin). Markets differ too: gold’s capitalization is much larger, with deep official-sector adoption (central-bank reserves), while bitcoin’s liquidity and volatility profiles are distinct and more extreme. We conclude with regulatory and geopolitical contrasts—legal-tender status, bans, sanctions evasion channels—and the practical implications for portfolio construction, rebalancing, and stress scenarios. The upshot: not substitutes, but different instruments with diverse use cases and risk vectors.
涵盖的内容
8个视频1个作业
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8个视频•总计33分钟
Intrinsic Nature•2分钟
Production and Cost Structure•3分钟
Monetary Characteristics•8分钟
Market Structure•2分钟
Trust and Security•7分钟
Geopolitical and Regulatory•6分钟
Risks•4分钟
Roles •2分钟
1个作业•总计30分钟
Module 3 Graded Quiz•30分钟
Unique Threats to Bitcoin and Gold
第 4 单元•小时 后完成
单元详情
This module tackles asset-specific tail risks. For bitcoin, we analyze a 51% attack—how the majority hash power could reorder transactions—and estimate the capital, energy, and infrastructure requirements to launch an attack. The analysis suggests that the cost of a 51% attack is modest compared to the potential profit when bitcoin is shorted. We then separate two quantum vectors: Shor’s threat to elliptic-curve keys (mitigable via post-quantum migration) versus Grover’s far less practical impact on SHA-256 mining. For gold, we examine technological supply shocks that bitcoin does not face: “modern alchemy” (nuclear transmutation pathways), new on-Earth sources (oceans, with daunting economics), and off-Earth sources (metal-rich, near-Earth asteroids) that could, in time, expand supply and pressure real prices. Historical analogies (e.g., New World inflows) show how sudden supply can reset monetary metals. We close by arguing that the thinking of bitcoin as “digital gold” is an oversimplification. Bitcoin is not a substitute for gold. Both assets have a role in diversified portfolios.
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I especially liked the final module. Where it talked about quantum computing to break encryption of Bitcoin. And talked about mining gold from near earth asteroids. All in the near future.
A
AA
5·
已于 Jan 17, 2026审阅
gave a high level understanding of bitcoin and blockchain technology
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