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The Almighty Buck Bitcoin

Five predictions for (Bit)coin 179

Contributor Tom Geller writes: "I recently wrote an article about Bitcoin and the law for Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery. In researching it I ran into plenty of wishful thinkers, ridiculous greedheads, and out-and-out nutbags promising a rosy future. I also found the expected blowback from vehement naysayers who think the best way to combat crazy is with more crazy. But despite that, I walked away believing that Bitcoin — or a decentralized cryptocurrency like it (let's call it "Coin") — is here to stay. As an interested outsider to the Coin economy, and a long-time technology commentator, here's what I think its future holds." Read on for Tom's predictions.
Coin's primary use will continue to be in international transactions.

While people wonder "When will I be able to pay for groceries and utilities with Bitcoin?", that use might never come. But Coin already shines in international transactions, where it provides a clear advantage over current systems, which are expensive and complicated hassles. That's why PayPal has become the go-to solution: it just works, albeit with typical fees around 3-5%.

Coin reduces that fee to a small fraction of 1% (when sent directly), and is available in places where PayPal fears to tread (Zimbabwe, Pakistan, etc.). Coin transactions occur instantly, with no intermediary, and — for better or worse — without recourse.

That leads to Coin's second primary use: to store liquid value in places where other stores (such as national currency) are unreliable. For all the cries that Bitcoin is "unstable", it seems to have settled quite nicely after its April spike. Certainly it looks appealing to anyone in an unstable country, and it's even tempting for those in places where the currency's been on a long, slow slide, like Argentina.

Coin's big vulnerability is its interface with national currencies ("real money").

None of this matters if you can't get your money out again. And that's where governments are taking a close look at Coin — with good reason. First, Coin exchanges have a terrible track record; second, such points of exchange are bottlenecks through which financial crimes often flow.

In the U.S., the government's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued guidance asserting its right to regulate "Money Services Businesses", and defining exchanges dealing in virtual currencies (including Bitcoin) as such. That's a problem for many existing Coin exchanges, as the costs for complying with regulations are high. But if there's not a stable and reliable way to get national currency in and out of Coin, its value will plummet.

Conversely, Coin's value is likely to shoot up if this interface gets easier. Right now, it's surprisingly hard to buy Bitcoin (et al.) directly with U.S. dollars. Most methods require bank wires, tricky multi-step workarounds, and high fees. (I found Coinbase to be the most accessible, albeit with long delays and a bank verification procedure similar to PayPal's.) If Coin becomes as easy to buy as a gift card and redeemable at every bank, its practical utility will soar for everyday people.

No government will make Coin illegal.

Despite bloviation by a few politicians and baseless statements in the press, Coin is not per se illegal, and there have been no serious attempts to make it so. The FinCEN guidance mentioned earlier explicitly says that ordinary users — those who buy and sell using Coin — are "not subject to FinCEN's... regulations for MSBs". It's possible that other government agencies will continue to claim authority, but there doesn't seem to be much support for it.

A lot of noise has been made about Coin's use in illegal business, for example on Silk Road (where it's the only currency). But law enforcement is realizing that the currency isn't to blame, much as they've started to say that Craigslist isn't responsible for crimes organized through its ads. I predict that that distraction will continue to surface from time to time, but will essentially die soon.

Even if governments attempt to illegalize Coin, there's only so much they could do to criminalize ordinary users. Again, Coin's real vulnerabilities are higher up the chain. However....

If Coin succeeds, governments will get involved — for the better.

"Noooo!!!" scream the cryptoanarchists who are Coin's pioneers. "Keep the government out of this! Coin can't be controlled! Nobody can take away our freedoms!" What they don't realize is that this attitude doesn't reflect the values of Coin's future users. The benefits of "freedom" matter to the innovators; convenience and safety matter to those who follow.

"Government" in this case could also be a government-size corporation, syndicate, or other entity. The important thing is that it's big enough to administer, back, and enforce initiatives to protect the Coin economy. Whatever that "bully entity" is, Coin adopters will welcome it because of two major flaws currently in (Bit)Coin's design.

First, Coin is ridiculously easy to destroy by accident. If you lose the private cryptographic key that identifies your coin, it's gone. Not just stolen, but removed entirely from the economy, so nobody will ever own it again. Consider these stories on Bitcointalk.org, where within a few messages the cumulative total tops 10,000 BTC — currently valued around a million dollars. A central authority could address this in several ways such as tracking, restitution, etc.. People don't care that their cash is anonymous when the rent money disappears.

Second, the entire system is vulnerable to a brute-force attack. Without getting into the specifics, Coin (well, Bitcoin) works because it assumes that at least 50% of the computer power on the network is held by honest players. But a recent 51% attack on Feathercoin (a Coin with much lower capitalization) showed that it's possible for a single party (or syndicate) to trump that.

Let's do the math for Bitcoin, the Coin with by far the highest capitalization, at just north of USD$1 billion (1 x 10^9). To reliably overwhelm the network, you'd need computing power delivering about 100,000 gigahashes per second. Computers optimized for Bitcoin processing are currently available for about $1,000/gigahash, so sufficient computing power can be bought for $100 million. Electricity cost for the deed would be about $200,000/day.

O.K., it's not something a basement hacker could whip up. But there are over 400 people, and thousands of syndicates with a billion dollars in the U.S. alone. Perhaps at least one of them is crazy enough to drop 1% of the wealth to partially control (or completely destroy) a billion-dollar system. (Hell, one of them recently spent 1/10th of that price tag on his wedding.)

Those are only the two biggest technical concerns. Then there's the galaxy of financial services (such as insurance) that's available for fiat money, but which would be hard or impossible to provision for Coin without a central authority. Time could overcome these barriers; a bully entity would overcome them faster, and with greater public buy-in.

Bitcoin is not the end game.

Along those lines, I don't believe that Bitcoin will be the ultimate winner in this game. It's the 1.0, and a brilliant first effort at that. But it's not perfect, and several pretenders to the throne already claim to fix some of its bugs. In fact, shifting conditions may require periodic issuance of new Coin as a matter of course. (As I said before, I believe such issuances will involve a central authority.)

These predictions all assume that Coin will grow, and there are many reasons it might not. However, I'm bullish on it for the long-term. It's already proven its value in use; the public is used to handling Coin-like money (viz. Square Wallet); and its first major hurdles are in the past. Now it's ready to enter a fascinating future.



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Tom Geller (tomgeller.com) writes about technology and business. He's best known for Drupal-related work that includes eight video courses for lynda.com, a book for Peachpit Press, and corporate work for Acquia, Commerce Guys, and others. He first became involved in computers as a grade-school student in 1976, playing "Hunt the Wumpus" on a 100-pound monster that spewed tractor-feed paper onto the floor. He lives in Oberlin, Ohio.
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Five predictions for (Bit)coin

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  • by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2013 @03:59PM (#44053449) Homepage Journal

    the entire reason for bitcoin to be the coin is that it is the coin, exactly because of the 51% attack. the popularity is the safety, in both that it's harder to take over and it's more probable you will not end up with so many of the coins that everyone else on the network just decides "fuck it" and leaves you with worthless bits. if one single entity had all the bitcoins in the world nobody would consider them worth anything.

    what puts any credibility into bitcoin clones? wishful early adopters? why would anyone else after them adopt it - just to pay the early greedos?
    was feathercoin tradeable to real currency? who in their right mind put any money into it.

  • by sethotterstad ( 2947867 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2013 @04:21PM (#44053687)
    Bitcoin has a huge smorgasboard of advantages over anything else out there that make it vastly superior: Decentralised and free from control, Always running 24/7, International, No/low fees, New privacy model, Transparent system, Divisible, Secure, Fast transfers, No chargebacks, Environmentally friendly / efficient, Digital It increased in value by 1,750% in 2011, 186% last year, and 1,000% this year, more than any other asset class. Time to load up imo. This is a radically superior money compared to pieces of paper and gold, even if you only count what it can do right now, and this is just the beginning. All kinds of cool stuff is getting built into the protocol. He is right about it being able to destroy them if you handle them yourself though. Many solutions are being worked on for that problem.
  • by sethotterstad ( 2947867 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2013 @07:45PM (#44055661)
    Wow. I have never seen someone who knows that much about bitcoin not be able to admit that it has any advantage over existing systems. What do you think millions of venture capital is pouring into bitcoin for? What exactly is your problem with it that makes you not want to admit that it has ANY improvements on existing systems? Let's take a look again:

    Decentralised and free from control, always running

    There are dozens of exchanges, and thousands of local exchangers on localbitcoins. If the biggest one gets taken out, there are plenty more. It is decentralized. Yes exchanges aren't always running, but they are up a hell of a lot more frequently than 8-5pm on weekdays. And if you want to store bitcoins yourself like cash, they work 100% of the time your internet is up.

    International,

    Try spending your dollars in Europe. Bitcoins work in both places.

    No/low fees,

    The fee is less than 1 cent. If you use an exchange to send, it is free.

    New privacy model, Transparent system,

    Bitcoin has "user-defined" levels of privacy. If you don't care, you are public. If you are careful, you can be anonymous, which is why Silk Road exists

    Divisible,

    Try paying your friend $15 when you only have a $20 bill and he doesn't have change. Try paying someone $5.932. Try paying for a candy bar with a $100 bill. Bitcoin solves this.

    Secure, Fast transfers,

    How long will it take you to send $50,000 to your friend in Europe? How long will it take you to send $100 from your Wells Fargo account to your friend's Chase account? Bitcoin transactions take 10min instead of days. Securing bitcoins is certainly an issue, but most people understand 2-factor authentication. Bitcoin is digital cash. It can get stolen from your wallet just like physical cash. It is not the job of the currency to keep itself from getting stolen. The bitcoin protocol is secure.

    No chargebacks,

    Chargebacks are good when a physical good has been shipped. Where wire transfers and Western Union are used, chargebacks are not desirable, so they are irreversible. The advantage of bitcoin is that escrow services can be built on top of it.

    Environmentally friendly / efficient,

    It is certainly true that mining uses energy to secure the network. But bitcoin is more efficient than digging gold out of the ground, transporting it around, and storing it in vaults, as central banks do.

    Digital

    The USD is digital. Gold is not. This entire list of advantages do not apply to EVERYTHING, but most of them do. Clearly you haven't looked at it very closely since 2 years ago if you think it can only be used to buy drugs. I personally find great value in being able to have a stash of money on a flash drive and do whatever I want with it fast. I can withdraw to either my UK or US bank account fast, instantly deposit it on a poker site and play from inside the US, put it on a sportsbook and make a wager for way lower vig than USD sportsbooks at btcsportsmatch.com, donate $1 to wikileaks or my current favorite charity myrefugehouse, cross a border with over $10,000 worth without declaring it, pass through a metal detector, trade it to someone for cash in most major cities on localbitcoins, remit money in 45 different currencies, and order up stuff from 10,000 stores (or get a huge discount by trading bitcoin for gift cards). I also get paid 5% to cash bitcoins out to my prepaid debit card by buying moneypaks from idiots. I can do this with fees approaching nothing, the IRS doesn't know about it, no one can sue me to take it, my wife doesn't get half of it in a divorce, and I don't have to worry about it being printed away by the government. On top of all this, my money becomes worth 1000% more per year. Accordi

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