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I understand you have to download the entire blockchain and sync in the beginning but don't you also have to constantly keep the software on if you want to buy/sell stuff, which means more data being downloaded to my personal comp every instant there is a transaction.
If this is true, what is the average amount of data per month being downloaded so that I can use bitcoin.
Also if this is true, why isn't this point highlighted on bitcoin.org, they say you have to initially download the blockchain but not that its constantly going to be downloading data on your comp, data is expensive!
Note that there are plenty of other, so called "thin" clients which are perfectly fine if you just want to use Bitcoin, e.g. to buy/sell stuff. Both mobile (all mobile clients are lightweight) as well as desktop clients (e.g. Multibit or Electrum). Furthermore you can also use web wallets, such as coinpunk.com or blockchain.info/wallet and others. – Madzi Konjo – 2014-11-10T06:03:50.713
First: "data is not expensive" is not really true. Both harddisk and bandwidth are cheap and getting cheaper. But maybe you are in a situation where it's not cheap for you, so there are several solutions for that. – Jannes – 2014-11-10T10:58:03.823