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I'm trying to understand how difficulty works in bitcoin mining. I understand that as there are less and less bitcoins left to be mined, the amount you get for each new block is lowered.
The bit I don't get is how a block is mined every 10 minutes. The miners aren't connected to a single network and talking about how much mining power they have so how would the system itself be able to regulate itself to only spit out a new block every 10 minutes?
Also, does this mean that difficulty is really not only a function of how many bitcoins are left, but also how many miners are there in total? So say, if 90% of the miners decided to not mine bitcoins anymore, then would bitcoins be 90% easier to mine for the 10% of miners left? Likewise if bitcoin miners doubled, it would be 100% more difficult to mine? Simply due to the fact they would need to sustain the quota of a block per 10 minutes?
Ok so I take it what you're saying then is that it is true - if 90% of miners left, it would be 90% easier to mine coins. It would just take 2 weeks for the system to re-calculate the difficulty. – Diskdrive – 2018-01-16T22:02:33.267
No, it would take however long it takes to mine the 2016 blocks. The retarget is every 2016 blocks, not every 2 weeks. The goal is to make the 2016 blocks take 2 weeks to mine. – Andrew Chow – 2018-01-16T22:26:24.060
yep yep understood. I asked this question cause I wanted to ask myself what would happen if the price of bitcoin ever fell below the cost of creating a bitcoin. But it looks like the cost of creating a bitcoin is actually dependent on market factors - it doesn't just get more and more difficult. – Diskdrive – 2018-01-16T22:37:47.193