2013 was a pivotal year in the crypto world. At the beginning of the year, Bitcoin's price first broke the $1 mark, and market enthusiasm continued to rise. By November, programmer Vitalik Buterin released the Ethereum white paper, which for the first time systematically proposed the concept of smart contracts, envisioning the creation of a Turing-complete blockchain platform — meaning developers could run almost any computational logic on the chain.
In the same month, the People's Bank of China, in conjunction with five other ministries, issued the "Notice on Preventing Bitcoin Risks," which instantly triggered market excitement. Regulatory voices materialized, leading to price fluctuations, and the market experienced a period of intense volatility. During this time, the stories of Bitcoin and Ethereum were just beginning to intertwine — one exploring digital gold, the other dreaming of a programmable blockchain. Looking back, the innovations and policy battles of that year laid the groundwork for the subsequent development of the entire industry.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 8h ago
To be honest, looking back at the wave in 2013, I finally understand what a true historic moment is. Unfortunately, I didn't all in back then.
Oh my God, V神's move directly changed the entire game rules.
When the central bank stepped in, how many people got cut... But on the other hand, this wave of regulation actually filtered out the true believers.
If anyone had held on back then, they would have been free by now.
It feels like 2013 was a watershed moment; there hasn't been such a pure bull market since then.
Vitalik is truly a genius; the idea of smart contracts directly ushered in a new era.
It would have been great if we could have predicted today's market back then.
The story of Bitcoin and ETH truly begins here, and that's when it gets really interesting.
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LoneValidator
· 8h ago
Vitalik was only nineteen that year when he created Ethereum... Truly amazing, but who could have imagined back then that these two would become so competitive later on?
When the central bank intervenes, the market trembles; regulation and innovation are like that, opposing each other.
2013 was really a watershed moment; it feels like all stories started from there.
That wave of regulation scared many people out of the market... but in the end, they missed out on even bigger gains.
White papers, when well-written, can really change the world.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 8h ago
I should have gone all in back then; now it's too late to regret.
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LiquidityHunter
· 8h ago
If I had known earlier, I would have jumped on board in 2013. Now it's too late to regret.
Vitalik was so young back then; a white paper changed the entire ecosystem.
That wave from the central bank was truly a knockout, but it also sparked more people's enthusiasm—it's a contradiction.
The concept of smart contracts at that time was indeed an innovation at a whole new level.
Regulation and innovation are happening simultaneously; the script is quite well-written.
Turing completeness carries the entire ambition of Ethereum.
Missing 2013 isn't a big deal, but the ideas from 2013 still guide us today.
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ZKProofEnthusiast
· 8h ago
Vitalik was only 19 years old when he came up with such an impressive white paper, truly impressive.
A single document from the central bank caused the entire market to crash instantly. Back then, regulation really could determine everything.
Those who bought in 2013 have all become wealthy, but unfortunately I didn't know what blockchain was at that time.
Turing completeness sounds powerful, but there are very few projects that actually utilize it.
The stories of these two were actually destined to diverge from the very beginning.
The regulatory stick and the dream of innovation clashed in the same month—what a cruel irony.
2013 was a pivotal year in the crypto world. At the beginning of the year, Bitcoin's price first broke the $1 mark, and market enthusiasm continued to rise. By November, programmer Vitalik Buterin released the Ethereum white paper, which for the first time systematically proposed the concept of smart contracts, envisioning the creation of a Turing-complete blockchain platform — meaning developers could run almost any computational logic on the chain.
In the same month, the People's Bank of China, in conjunction with five other ministries, issued the "Notice on Preventing Bitcoin Risks," which instantly triggered market excitement. Regulatory voices materialized, leading to price fluctuations, and the market experienced a period of intense volatility. During this time, the stories of Bitcoin and Ethereum were just beginning to intertwine — one exploring digital gold, the other dreaming of a programmable blockchain. Looking back, the innovations and policy battles of that year laid the groundwork for the subsequent development of the entire industry.