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This article should not be speedily deleted for lack of asserted importance, because the company had over 1% of the global hashrate of bitcoins already back in 2016. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 09:05, 2 December 2017 (UTC)
The third-party sources are two pieces of press release churnalism, and one Bloomberg article that isn't even about the topic of the article. What is the evidence of notability? - David Gerard ( talk) 13:42, 10 September 2019 (UTC)
I'll add some sources here. Feel free to add more. Jtbobwaysf ( talk) 21:48, 15 November 2019 (UTC)
Dear Wikipedians,
First off, I'd like to declare my conflict of interest, as I work for Bitcoin.com. I understand that Wikipedia is not to be used as a platform for businesses to promote themselves. Secondly, I've been reading up on best practices and other Wikipedia protocols, but please be lenient as this is my first attempt at interacting in Wikipedia. I'd greatly appreciate any tips as to how best to make edit requests or otherwise interact going forward. With that out of the way, I'd like to humbly suggest some changes to this article.
As anyone with more than cursory knowledge of the crypto space can attest, the Bitcoin.com domain is a sensitive (controversial?) topic. This is largely due to the fact that Bitcoin the cryptocurrency is a very different thing from Bitcoin.com the domain, which in turn is different from Bitcoin.com the company. Having reviewed the news sources that mention "bitcoin.com" over the last decade, it would seem that the history of the Bitcoin.com domain can, without a doubt, be considered notable -- and therefore Wikipedia readers would benefit from a quality article on the subject. In that regard, I took the liberty of a writing up a "History" section which, in my opinion, outlines the notable events relating to bitcoin.com since it was registered as a domain. I've created the draft in a user page so that it can be easily reviewed and edited as needed (please note that my Sandbox also contains a more complete version of suggested revisions to the Bitcoin.com article (Since the Bitcoin.com domain is inextricably linked to Bitcoin.com the company, the company can itself also be considered notable), but perhaps it's better to start with this History section on its own. Anyway, to help with reviewing, I've also included the draft content for the suggested History section below. Looking forward to feedback and sincerely appreciate your time.
The Bitcoin.com domain name was registered in January of 2008, [1] a year before the Bitcoin network was launched by its pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
In 2011, the domain was briefly managed by Trade Hill Exchange (Tradehill), the first U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchange, handling a fifth of all global Bitcoin exchanges at the time. [2] Tradehill closed its doors in 2012, citing regulatory issues and a dispute with payment processor Dwolla. [3] Tradehill also had its own domain (Tradehill.com) and never launched Bitcoin trading services on the Bitcoin.com domain. [4] [5]
Roger Ver gained control of the Bitcoin.com domain name in April 2014 where he leased it to Blockchain.info (now Blockchain.com). [6] [7] Starting in December 2014, [8] then prominent Chinese cryptocurrency exchange OKCoin [9] took over management of the site under a lease agreement made with site owner Roger Ver. [10] In May 2015, the 5-year agreement was terminated by OKCoin who issued a statement [11] claiming the agreement regarding the domain was invalid due to the entity named in the documents not being representative of the actual company. Ver sued OKCoin’s Hong Kong entity over contract breaches [12] and was awarded a $570,000 judgement by a Hong Kong court in November 2017. [13]
In June 2015, Roger Ver re-launched Bitcoin.com, dedicating it to helping grow the Bitcoin network by providing educational resources and reliable tools for interacting with the network. He served as CEO of the company until 1 August 2019, at which point he transitioned to Executive Chairman.
In April 2018, Bitcoin.com was denounced by critics over the naming and positioning of two different cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash in various parts of the site. [14] The allegation was that then Bitcoin.com CEO Roger Ver was using the site to misleadingly promote Bitcoin Cash. A lawsuit was threatened [15] but never materialized, likely because the site’s page for buying cryptocurrency did, in fact, clearly distinguish between Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash. [16] In May 2018, Bitcoin.com updated its block explorer page to remove potentially misleading language. [17]
In September 2019, Taiwanese consumer electronics giant HTC entered into a partnership with Bitcoin.com where all of HTC’s Exodus 1 phones came preloaded with Bitcoin.com’s wallet software. [18] [19]
In May 2020, former Apple and Rakuten senior manager Dennis Jarvis was appointed CEO of Bitcoin.com. [20] Jarvis redefined Bitcoin.com's vision to more broadly support the concept of ‘economic freedom’ rather than promote a specific cryptocurrency.
In April 2021, the Bitcoin.com domain was erroneously listed for sale on Godaddy. This prompted site owner Roger Ver to demand the domain registrar and web hosting company remove the $100 million listing, which it did without providing further explanation. [21] [22]
-- GS for Bitcoincom ( talk) 02:31, 9 November 2021 (UTC)
![]() | |
Type of site | Private |
---|---|
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
CEO | Dennis Jarvis |
Industry | Cryptocurrency |
Products | Cryptocurrency wallet, news, exchange, games |
Services | Cryptocurrency sales, trading |
Employees | 113 (November 2021) |
URL | www.bitcoin.com |
Commercial | Yes |
Current status | Active |
Native client(s) on | iOS, Android, web |
Bitcoin.com is a Bitcoin and cryptocurrency-related web portal, news outlet, cryptocurrency wallet developer, and financial services company.
The Bitcoin.com domain name was registered in January of 2008, a year before the Bitcoin network was launched by its pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
Roger Ver, gained control of the Bitcoin.com domain name in April 2014 [23] where he leased it to Blockchain.info, [24] and then later to OKCoin. [25] In May 2015, the 5-year agreement was terminated by OKCoin who issued a statement [26] claiming the agreement regarding the domain was invalid due to the entity named in the documents not being representative of the actual company. Ver sued OKCoin’s Hong Kong entity over contract breaches [27] and was awarded a $570,000 judgement by a Hong Kong court in November 2017.
In June 2015, Roger Ver re-launched Bitcoin.com, dedicating it to helping grow the Bitcoin network by providing educational resources and reliable tools for interacting with the network. He served as CEO of the company until 1 August 2019, at which point he transitioned to Executive Chairman.
In May 2020, former Apple and Rakuten senior manager Dennis Jarvis was appointed CEO of Bitcoin.com. Jarvis redefined Bitcoin.com's vision to more broadly support the concept of ‘economic freedom’ rather than promote a specific cryptocurrency.
In April 2021, the Bitcoin.com domain was erroneously listed for sale on Godaddy. This prompted site owner Roger Ver to demand the domain registrar and web hosting company remove the $100 million listing, which it did without providing further explanation. [28]
As a cryptocurrency company, Bitcoin.com provides products, services, and information related to the purchasing, selling, storing, and using of cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin.com's flagship product is the Bitcoin.com Wallet, a platform for buying, selling, trading, holding, using, and managing cryptocurrencies. The Bitcoin.com Wallet was launched in June 2017 as a mobile app. It is a software cryptocurrency wallet that manages and stores users' public and private keys and offers the functionality of encrypting and signing the information needed to interact with public blockchains. It is a 'self-hosted' (non-custodial) wallet, meaning users retain full control over their public and private keys, and Bitcoin.com itself does not have access to the wallet's data.
Initially supporting only Bitcoin, the wallet soon added support for Bitcoin Cash. In 2021, the wallet added support for Ethereum and ERC-20 tokens, launched a web browser version of the app, and integrated the open-source WalletConnect protocol, enabling users to interact with decentralized applications.
Bitcoin.com provides educational and news content on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The company also offers a map which tracks merchants globally who accept payment via cryptocurrencies.
The founder of Trade Hill Exchange, Jered Kenna, has claimed that at its height, the exchange had 20% of the market in bitcoin trades.
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
Started in 2011, TradeHill closed its doors in 2012, citing a need to get money-transmitter licenses and because of difficulty of finding a bank willing to work with it, among a host of reasons, he said.
From December 2014 until May 2015 OKCoin managed the domain bitcoin.com, and stopped due to a dispute with the domain-owner, Roger Ver.
Chinese bitcoin exchanges Huobi and OKCoin – two of the country's "Big Three" markets –
the two sides struck a five-year deal last December to control the property.
On 17th November, the court handed down a final and interlocutory judgment awarding the $570,000 to Ver.
the page clearly distinguishes between bitcoin cash and bitcoin core; there is no option to purchase just "bitcoin."
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
References
![]() | This article was nominated for deletion on 9 October 2021. The result of the discussion was keep. |
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This article should not be speedily deleted for lack of asserted importance, because the company had over 1% of the global hashrate of bitcoins already back in 2016. Mikael Häggström ( talk) 09:05, 2 December 2017 (UTC)
The third-party sources are two pieces of press release churnalism, and one Bloomberg article that isn't even about the topic of the article. What is the evidence of notability? - David Gerard ( talk) 13:42, 10 September 2019 (UTC)
I'll add some sources here. Feel free to add more. Jtbobwaysf ( talk) 21:48, 15 November 2019 (UTC)
Dear Wikipedians,
First off, I'd like to declare my conflict of interest, as I work for Bitcoin.com. I understand that Wikipedia is not to be used as a platform for businesses to promote themselves. Secondly, I've been reading up on best practices and other Wikipedia protocols, but please be lenient as this is my first attempt at interacting in Wikipedia. I'd greatly appreciate any tips as to how best to make edit requests or otherwise interact going forward. With that out of the way, I'd like to humbly suggest some changes to this article.
As anyone with more than cursory knowledge of the crypto space can attest, the Bitcoin.com domain is a sensitive (controversial?) topic. This is largely due to the fact that Bitcoin the cryptocurrency is a very different thing from Bitcoin.com the domain, which in turn is different from Bitcoin.com the company. Having reviewed the news sources that mention "bitcoin.com" over the last decade, it would seem that the history of the Bitcoin.com domain can, without a doubt, be considered notable -- and therefore Wikipedia readers would benefit from a quality article on the subject. In that regard, I took the liberty of a writing up a "History" section which, in my opinion, outlines the notable events relating to bitcoin.com since it was registered as a domain. I've created the draft in a user page so that it can be easily reviewed and edited as needed (please note that my Sandbox also contains a more complete version of suggested revisions to the Bitcoin.com article (Since the Bitcoin.com domain is inextricably linked to Bitcoin.com the company, the company can itself also be considered notable), but perhaps it's better to start with this History section on its own. Anyway, to help with reviewing, I've also included the draft content for the suggested History section below. Looking forward to feedback and sincerely appreciate your time.
The Bitcoin.com domain name was registered in January of 2008, [1] a year before the Bitcoin network was launched by its pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
In 2011, the domain was briefly managed by Trade Hill Exchange (Tradehill), the first U.S.-based cryptocurrency exchange, handling a fifth of all global Bitcoin exchanges at the time. [2] Tradehill closed its doors in 2012, citing regulatory issues and a dispute with payment processor Dwolla. [3] Tradehill also had its own domain (Tradehill.com) and never launched Bitcoin trading services on the Bitcoin.com domain. [4] [5]
Roger Ver gained control of the Bitcoin.com domain name in April 2014 where he leased it to Blockchain.info (now Blockchain.com). [6] [7] Starting in December 2014, [8] then prominent Chinese cryptocurrency exchange OKCoin [9] took over management of the site under a lease agreement made with site owner Roger Ver. [10] In May 2015, the 5-year agreement was terminated by OKCoin who issued a statement [11] claiming the agreement regarding the domain was invalid due to the entity named in the documents not being representative of the actual company. Ver sued OKCoin’s Hong Kong entity over contract breaches [12] and was awarded a $570,000 judgement by a Hong Kong court in November 2017. [13]
In June 2015, Roger Ver re-launched Bitcoin.com, dedicating it to helping grow the Bitcoin network by providing educational resources and reliable tools for interacting with the network. He served as CEO of the company until 1 August 2019, at which point he transitioned to Executive Chairman.
In April 2018, Bitcoin.com was denounced by critics over the naming and positioning of two different cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash in various parts of the site. [14] The allegation was that then Bitcoin.com CEO Roger Ver was using the site to misleadingly promote Bitcoin Cash. A lawsuit was threatened [15] but never materialized, likely because the site’s page for buying cryptocurrency did, in fact, clearly distinguish between Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash. [16] In May 2018, Bitcoin.com updated its block explorer page to remove potentially misleading language. [17]
In September 2019, Taiwanese consumer electronics giant HTC entered into a partnership with Bitcoin.com where all of HTC’s Exodus 1 phones came preloaded with Bitcoin.com’s wallet software. [18] [19]
In May 2020, former Apple and Rakuten senior manager Dennis Jarvis was appointed CEO of Bitcoin.com. [20] Jarvis redefined Bitcoin.com's vision to more broadly support the concept of ‘economic freedom’ rather than promote a specific cryptocurrency.
In April 2021, the Bitcoin.com domain was erroneously listed for sale on Godaddy. This prompted site owner Roger Ver to demand the domain registrar and web hosting company remove the $100 million listing, which it did without providing further explanation. [21] [22]
-- GS for Bitcoincom ( talk) 02:31, 9 November 2021 (UTC)
![]() | |
Type of site | Private |
---|---|
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
Area served | Worldwide |
CEO | Dennis Jarvis |
Industry | Cryptocurrency |
Products | Cryptocurrency wallet, news, exchange, games |
Services | Cryptocurrency sales, trading |
Employees | 113 (November 2021) |
URL | www.bitcoin.com |
Commercial | Yes |
Current status | Active |
Native client(s) on | iOS, Android, web |
Bitcoin.com is a Bitcoin and cryptocurrency-related web portal, news outlet, cryptocurrency wallet developer, and financial services company.
The Bitcoin.com domain name was registered in January of 2008, a year before the Bitcoin network was launched by its pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
Roger Ver, gained control of the Bitcoin.com domain name in April 2014 [23] where he leased it to Blockchain.info, [24] and then later to OKCoin. [25] In May 2015, the 5-year agreement was terminated by OKCoin who issued a statement [26] claiming the agreement regarding the domain was invalid due to the entity named in the documents not being representative of the actual company. Ver sued OKCoin’s Hong Kong entity over contract breaches [27] and was awarded a $570,000 judgement by a Hong Kong court in November 2017.
In June 2015, Roger Ver re-launched Bitcoin.com, dedicating it to helping grow the Bitcoin network by providing educational resources and reliable tools for interacting with the network. He served as CEO of the company until 1 August 2019, at which point he transitioned to Executive Chairman.
In May 2020, former Apple and Rakuten senior manager Dennis Jarvis was appointed CEO of Bitcoin.com. Jarvis redefined Bitcoin.com's vision to more broadly support the concept of ‘economic freedom’ rather than promote a specific cryptocurrency.
In April 2021, the Bitcoin.com domain was erroneously listed for sale on Godaddy. This prompted site owner Roger Ver to demand the domain registrar and web hosting company remove the $100 million listing, which it did without providing further explanation. [28]
As a cryptocurrency company, Bitcoin.com provides products, services, and information related to the purchasing, selling, storing, and using of cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin.com's flagship product is the Bitcoin.com Wallet, a platform for buying, selling, trading, holding, using, and managing cryptocurrencies. The Bitcoin.com Wallet was launched in June 2017 as a mobile app. It is a software cryptocurrency wallet that manages and stores users' public and private keys and offers the functionality of encrypting and signing the information needed to interact with public blockchains. It is a 'self-hosted' (non-custodial) wallet, meaning users retain full control over their public and private keys, and Bitcoin.com itself does not have access to the wallet's data.
Initially supporting only Bitcoin, the wallet soon added support for Bitcoin Cash. In 2021, the wallet added support for Ethereum and ERC-20 tokens, launched a web browser version of the app, and integrated the open-source WalletConnect protocol, enabling users to interact with decentralized applications.
Bitcoin.com provides educational and news content on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The company also offers a map which tracks merchants globally who accept payment via cryptocurrencies.
The founder of Trade Hill Exchange, Jered Kenna, has claimed that at its height, the exchange had 20% of the market in bitcoin trades.
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
Started in 2011, TradeHill closed its doors in 2012, citing a need to get money-transmitter licenses and because of difficulty of finding a bank willing to work with it, among a host of reasons, he said.
From December 2014 until May 2015 OKCoin managed the domain bitcoin.com, and stopped due to a dispute with the domain-owner, Roger Ver.
Chinese bitcoin exchanges Huobi and OKCoin – two of the country's "Big Three" markets –
the two sides struck a five-year deal last December to control the property.
On 17th November, the court handed down a final and interlocutory judgment awarding the $570,000 to Ver.
the page clearly distinguishes between bitcoin cash and bitcoin core; there is no option to purchase just "bitcoin."
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (
link)
References