

In October 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto published the famous whitepaper entitled "Bitcoin: A Peer to Peer Electronic Cash System". In 2009, he released the first bitcoin software that powered the network, and it operated smoothly for several years with low fees, and fast, reliable transactions. Unfortunately, from 2016 to 2017, Bitcoin became increasingly unreliable and expensive. This was because the community could not reach consensus on increasing the network capacity. Some of the developers did not understand and agree with Satoshi's plan. Instead, they preferred Bitcoin become a settlement layer. By 2017, Bitcoin dominance had plummeted from 95% to as low as 40% as a direct result of the usability problems. Fortunately, a large portion of the Bitcoin community, including developers, investors, users, and businesses, still believed in the original vision of Bitcoin - a low fee, peer to peer electronic cash system that could be used by all the people of the world.

The GBULL protocol ensures there will never be more than 10 million coins in existence. Governments constantly print money out of thin air, endlessly inflating the supply and devaluing everyone's savings. GBULL has a fixed supply and therefore represents sound money. Privacy GBULL offers more privacy and anonymity than traditional payment systems like bank transfers and credit card payments, since it's normally impossible to know who controls a Bitcoin address. GBULL offers various levels of privacy depending on how it is used. It's important to educate yourself thoroughly before using "GBULL" for privacy purposes.

With GBULL, you can send money to anyone, anywhere in the world, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Like the Internet itself, the network is always on. No transaction is too big or too small. And you never need anyone's permission or approval. Control The seizing of capital from account holders that occurred in Cyprus and nearly in Greece, demonstrated that bank deposits are only as safe as political leaders decide. Even under the best of conditions, banks can make mistakes, hold funds, freeze accounts, and otherwise prevent you from accessing your own money. Banks can also decide to block your transactions, charge you fees, or close your account without warning. GBULL gives you full, sovereign control over your funds, which you can access from anywhere in the world.
