A brief history of Ethereum
2013
A 19-year-old
computer programmer ( and Bitcoin
Magazine cofounder) named Vitalik Buterin releases a whitepaper proposing a
highly flexible blockchain that could support virtually any kind of
transaction.
Brian Armstrong, our
CEO and co-founder, recently spoke with Vitalik Buterin, creator of Ethereum,
about topics ranging from ETH2 to scaling the cryptoeconomy.
2014
The Toronto-based teenager, along with a team of cofounders including Gavin Wood, crowdfunds the development of the Ethereum protocol with the sale of $ 18 million in pre-launch tokens.
2015
The first public version of the Ethereum blockchain launches in July. Smart contract functionality begins to roll out on the Ethereum blockchain.
2016
Hackers steal around
$ 50 million from a smart-comtract-powered venture fund called the DAO
(Decentralized Autonomous Organization) by exploiting a software bug.
In a divisive vote,
Ethereum’s community chooses to revise the protocol in a way that would restore
the lost funds. This results in the Ethereum blockchain branching off (via a
hard fork) into two separate blockchains, each with its own active community:
Ethereum and Ethereum Classic.
The journey of Cryptocurrencies in India
2017
The ERC-20 standard
is created, making it easier for developers to build compatible applications.
ERC-20 defines a way to create an asset (or token) on top of the Ethereum
blockchain.
The first widely
popular Ethereum-based app arrives in the form of a game called Cryptokitties,
in which users collect and trade digital cats. It becomes a genuine craze; at
the peak, rare digital cats sell for upwards of $200,000.
ETH breaks $100 USD for the first time.
2018
DeFi, which aims to transform the financial-services industry by making transactions faster, cheaper, and more secure, gains momentum with the arrival of leading protocol Compound and decentralized exchange Uniswap.
The USDC stablecoin is launched. Backed by the CENTRE Consortium, a partnership between Coinbase and Circle, it reaches $1 billion in issued coins in the first year.ETH breaks $1,000 USD for the first time in January, before falling back under $100.
2020
The Ethereum 2.0
upgrade begins in December. The complete transition from Ethereum 1.0 to
Ethereum 2.0 is scheduled to take around two years to complete.
As part of Ethereum
2.0’s first phase, Proof of Stake is introduced. ETH 1.0 continues to use Proof
of Work as its consensus mechanism.
2021
ETH hits new all-time
high above $1,700 in February
See the current price
at https://www.coinbase.com/price/ethereum
How do you buy Ethereum?
However you acquire your ETH, you’ll need to understand a few basic concepts. Every address on the Ethereum network is issued a public key and a private key, and you’ll need a wallet to manage your crypto holdings.
Public key: Think of this as the crypto version of an email
address. Your Ethereum public key is where people can send you ETH and
Ethereum-based tokens like USDC and Dai. You can safely give this out to
others.
Wallet: To store and secure your Ether you’ll need a wallet. If you’re just starting out, the easiest option is to make an account via the Coinbase app or coinbase.com – in which case you’ll interact with a “custodial wallet” that stores and secures your private keys for you. As you progress you might want to investigate other wallet options that are built for interacting with decentralized finance (or DeFi) protocols such as Compound (a lending and savings app) or Uniswap (a decentralized exchange that allows you to trade cryptocurrencies).
How does Ethereum have value?
There are a few ways of thinking about the answer to this question. On one level, Ethereum's value is set by markets like any other asset. People buy it with Bitcoin, dollars, euros, yen and other currencies 24 hours a day. Depending on demand, the price can fluctuate from day to day. (Ethereum’s value tends to be volatile compared to currencies such as the US dollar or equities like Fortune 500 stocks because it is still an emerging technology.) But why the market prices it the way it does is a much more complicated question. To many investors Ethereum’s value is based on its flexibility as a platform for issuing stablecoins and running DeFi applications – resulting in a growing user base and growing transaction fees.
What’s next for Ethereum?
As of early 2021,
Ethereum is host to the vast majority of blockchain applications and has a
market cap of just under $200 billion, with over $55 billion locked into tokens
on the blockchain. Popular stablecoins such as USDC and USDT mostly live on
Ethereum today due to its network effects.
But a variety of new
smart contract blockchains are beginning to compete in the space. So while Ethereum
is the dominant market leader today, there is growing pressure for it to
successfully execute the transition to Ethereum 2.0.


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