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Bitcoin vs Chainlink

BTC vs LINK

Two of crypto’s most-discussed assets, side-by-side. Key differences, recent coverage from TheChainPost, and an FAQ for both — no investment advice, no price predictions.

Layer 1

Bitcoin (BTC)

Sound-money Layer 1. 21-million supply cap. Proof-of-work.

Launched
2009
Consensus
Proof-of-Work (SHA-256)

DeFi

Chainlink (LINK)

Largest decentralised oracle network. CCIP cross-chain + data feeds.

Launched
2017
Consensus
Oracle network (not a blockchain)

At a glance

 Bitcoin (BTC)Chainlink (LINK)
Launched20092017
ConsensusProof-of-Work (SHA-256)Oracle network (not a blockchain)
CategoryLayer 1DeFi

Latest BTC + LINK coverage

Bitcoin vs Chainlink FAQ

What is Bitcoin?
Bitcoin (BTC) is the first decentralised cryptocurrency, launched in 2009 by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto. It uses a proof-of-work consensus to settle transactions without a central issuer, and its supply is capped at 21 million coins.
Who controls Bitcoin?
No single entity controls Bitcoin. A distributed network of miners secures the ledger, node operators enforce the rules, and developers propose protocol changes through Bitcoin Improvement Proposals (BIPs) that must reach rough consensus to ship.
What is Chainlink?
Chainlink (LINK) is the largest decentralised oracle network, launched in 2017. Oracles feed real-world data (prices, weather, match scores, cross-chain state) into smart contracts, since blockchains cannot fetch external data natively.
What is LINK used for?
LINK pays node operators for oracle reports, secures stake on nodes via Chainlink Staking, and is the unit of account for Chainlink Services (CCIP cross-chain, Proof of Reserve, VRF randomness, and Data Feeds).
How do Bitcoin and Chainlink compare?
Bitcoin (BTC): Sound-money Layer 1. 21-million supply cap. Proof-of-work. Launched 2009, runs Proof-of-Work (SHA-256). Chainlink (LINK): Largest decentralised oracle network. CCIP cross-chain + data feeds. Launched 2017, runs Oracle network (not a blockchain). These are two structurally different designs — read the news feed above for recent developments on each, and consult a qualified advisor before making any financial decision.

General information, not investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are volatile — do your own research and consult a qualified advisor before making decisions.