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Bitcoin |
Traditional Currency |
Tangibility |
It is a virtual currency and can only be used in its digital form |
It is a physical currency in the form of notes and coins. However, we can use it in both physical and digital forms |
Regulation |
Issued through mining and controlled by a decentralized distributed network of computers |
Issued and controlled by central government authorities, i.e., central banks. Owing to this, the traditional currency is the legal tender in the country governed by the issuing authority. |
Governance |
Governed by a consensus mechanism in which the majority rules |
Purely governed by the central bank |
Value |
Value is backed by the trust of its users. The more users are willing to transact with Bitcoin, the more stable it becomes. |
Value is determined by forces of supply and demand and is thus vulnerable to inflation |
Supply |
Capped at 21 million bitcoin |
Fiat currency has no supply limit |
Validation of transactions |
Bitcoin transactions are validated using blockchain technology and so do not require an intermediary for validation |
Transactions involve an intermediary such as a bank or a payment provider |
Transaction fees |
Minimal or no associated fees as intermediaries have been eliminated |
Transactions attract considerable charges |
Transaction time and speed |
The transaction is almost always instantaneous or greatly depends on the network speed |
Transactions may take time before verification or before they reflect on the system |
Security |
The concepts of decentralization, cryptography, and consensus guarantee a secure network and security of bitcoin transactions |
Less secure as it can be negatively affected by fluctuations in government policies |
Reversals |
Bitcoin transactions cannot be charged back, reversed, or canceled |
Chargebacks, reversals, and cancellations are commonplace with traditional currency transactions |