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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

MIT May Help Lead Bitcoin Standards Effort 67

gthuang88 writes: With everyone from PayPal merchants to Rand Paul starting to accept Bitcoins as payment, the race is on to develop technical standards for the virtual currency. Now MIT Media Lab director Joi Ito is getting ready to unveil a plan for MIT to become an independent, neutral home for standards development. Ito is enlisting cryptographer Ron Rivest and economist Simon Johnson to help with the effort, which could provide an academic alternative to the Bitcoin Foundation for conversations about the currency's future. Ito says, "I’m not pushing it, but I’m offering MIT as a neutral academic home for some of the conversations and the technical coordination. Which I think will give a lot more stability to Bitcoin, which right now is a little bit fragile."
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MIT May Help Lead Bitcoin Standards Effort

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  • 1) I'm a "Paypal merchant" and I'm not accepting them;

    2) Of course Rand Paul accepts them. He's just the kind of clueless that would. Yay let's go back to C18 banking! everyone was so rich and everything so stable.

    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @01:01PM (#49453849)
      I see Bitcoin having a twofold problem. First, a Bitcoin in of itself has no real-world value. Certainly it costs money and/or resources to create, but once created it has no worth of its own, its only worth is that of exchange. Second, it doesn't have any strong central backer with an authority to reinforce it like national currencies do.

      All other currencies have at least one of these characteristics satisfied. Fiat currency is supported by a government. Not-government-supported currency like gold has value besides its means as an exchange rate. Bitcoin has neither. Right now it has some vigorous supporters, but those are truly very, very few in number, and my guess is that large entities that have chosen to accept Bitcoin do so for the purposes of engaging that community, and are well aware that there's risk that Bitcoin could come completely crashing down and the fees they've collected in Bitcoin could be completely worthless at any time.

      Bitcoin is a nice experiment, but given all of the highly publicized thefts with the only prosecution seeming to be for government officials that got caught using their offices to get access to do the stealing, I don't think that Bitcoin as it is now will be the future. It might help direct us to where to go, but it is not the end result.
      • by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @01:31PM (#49453981)

        Fiat money also has no real value. Just like bitcoin it is based on trust, not on authority or enforcement.

        Not-government-supported currency like gold has value besides its means as an exchange rate

        Gold doesn't have much real value either.

        Fiat currency is supported by a government

        Didn't work well for Zimbabwe, or Weimar republic. Ultimately, fiat currency is simply based on trust that it will be accepted by others tomorrow like you accept it today. The government can help to provide stability, but the trust comes from the bottom, and can't be enforced when it's failing.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )
          Gold is used in a lot of different ways.

          http://geology.com/minerals/go... [geology.com]

          Some are artistic. A lot of gold goes into finished products though.
          • by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @02:02PM (#49454117)

            The industrial use of gold is fairly small on the total gold market. Most of the value comes from people's desire to possess it, and people like to possess it because it's valuable.

            If it was just for the industrial use, the price of gold would be a lot lower.

            • People also like to possess it because it is rare and you can make beautiful jewelry from it, some of which is traditionally made from gold.

              • by Lennie ( 16154 )

                "people also like to possess it because it is rare"

                That is what Bitcoin also garantees, it's rare.

                You can precisely known how many Bitcoins there were, are or will be at a certain time.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by CaptBubba ( 696284 )

          Dollars have the value of being able to pay off your US Govt (and state) tax/tarriff/whatever obligations. Even if you barter bits of string in exchange for a chicken the chicken seller will need to convert some of that string into dollars to pay off their tax bill. Even if everyone switched to using something else day to day they would have to convert a whopping $3 trillion a year to pay off their government debts. So as long at there exists economic activity in the US which requires taxes the dollar wi

        • You need fiat money to pay taxes, there are people with guns who make you pay taxes.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          Fiat money also has no real value. Just like bitcoin it is based on trust, not on authority or enforcement.

          It has value in its jurisdiction. Try refusing to accept settlement of a debt in your local currency and see what happens.

          Fiat currency is supported by a government

          Didn't work well for Zimbabwe, or Weimar republic.

          Neither did elections. Doesn't mean that they are a bad idea.

          Ultimately, fiat currency is simply based on trust

          Nope. Bitcoin supporters frequently make the mistake that all something needs to be a currency is trust. This is not true. It needs a sovereign government backed by men with guns who will force you to pay your bills only in that currency or face punishment. That is what ultimately makes a currency. Not trust. Since the inventio

          • by diamondmagic ( 877411 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @03:46PM (#49454485) Homepage

            Since the invention of coinage there has never ever, not even once, been a currency based on trust.

            This is absolutely not the case.

            As little as 200 years ago, there were many competing currencies, typically backed in gold. There was even merchant's associations and regular publications on how much you should discount certain bank's currency because the redeeming bank was far away, or not as trustworthy. Wikipedia has a whole catalog of these notes. [wikimedia.org]

            • Since the invention of coinage there has never ever, not even once, been a currency based on trust.

              This is absolutely not the case.

              As little as 200 years ago, there were many competing currencies, typically backed in gold. There was even merchant's associations and regular publications on how much you should discount certain bank's currency because the redeeming bank was far away, or not as trustworthy. Wikipedia has a whole catalog of these notes. [wikimedia.org]

              These are all bills/scrips backed by banks/companies, further backed by gold... how do you figure they were based on trust? Seems to me that a currency based on gold is not based on trust.

              • There's a chance that the bank wouldn't be able to redeem the note, because of fractional reserve banking.

                Besides other reasons for discounting notes at purchase time, like fake notes, or loss, or the bank being very far away.

                • There's a chance that the bank wouldn't be able to redeem the note, because of fractional reserve banking.

                  Besides other reasons for discounting notes at purchase time, like fake notes, or loss, or the bank being very far away.

                  That's trusting that the bank has your gold/commodity. Like the bitcoin supporters keep saying - mtgox is not bitcoin and bitcoin is not mtgox. In the same way, the bank is not gold and gold is not the bank. A currency based on gold is one based on MIStrust, because you don't trust the issuers bill and insist that their bill is backed by gold.

                  Currencies backed ultimately by gold by some bank are most definitely NOT backed by "trust". If you trusted them you wouldn't need the gold. Once again, I reiterate -

                  • by sanvila ( 659083 )
                    Indeed. We have been inadequately teaching economics. Fiat money is mostly backed by a debt of the same amount. For every $ I have at the bank, somebody owes 1$ to the bank. So, my money at the bank is as "real" as the debt backing it. I trust that my bank will be able to recover the value of an unpaid debt, and this is the reason why our banking system mostly works. By contrast, the value of 1 BTC is backed by nothing, because nobody "owes" me its value, and that's the reason its value may be $500 one da
                    • by Anonymous Coward

                      I agree, inadequate teaching. Hence, you confusing "fiat money" and "reserve banking".

                      Governments issuing currency, and banks giving/taking bills as part of fractional reserve banking, are two different things. So no, fiat money is not mostly backed by a debt.

                  • Currencies backed ultimately by gold by some bank are most definitely NOT backed by "trust".

                    Apparently we're misunderstanding the meaning of "trust". Trust is never something you can literally "back" a currency by. You can't walk up to a teller, hand them a note, and say "I'd like to redeem my 4 utils of trust, please."

                    Trust is one of the components that determines the value of a money - all money. It can be measured as a probability. Especially money backed by a commodity, since it's effectively an IOU: the value of the note is going to be roughly the same as the value of the debt listed on the n

        • "Fiat money also has no real value"

          Even in the worst case, the value of fiat money is backed by a) the willingness of the issuing government to accept payments in that currency in lieu of using their monopoly of force to take your possessions, b) the willingness of the issuing government to prosecute as a criminal theft the appropriation of another's fiat money, and c) the effort individuals are willing to expend in stealing.

      • by PRMan ( 959735 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @01:31PM (#49453983)

        I disagree. Bitcoin has major value in sending money worldwide without fees. Also, it can be used with only a cellphone and an account. Bitcoin could revolutionize 3rd world involvement in the world economy without the blockades that banks have traditionally put in their way.

        Right now, Bitcoin is the only way to send money to Wikileaks or mega.co.nz. If you believe in free speech without the government bankrupting foreigners even before a trial just because the banking industry or the MAFIAA doesn't like them, then you should be pro-bitcoin.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Uh I don't know what backwater banking system you have, but I can transfer funds internationally for free. It's harder to convert currencies for "free", but the bitcoin spread is non-zero too.

          Don't know what the fuck you're on about with Wikileaks - there are many ways to send money to it. As for mega, why the fuck would I be sending multimillionaire Kim Schmitz anything?

        • Bitcoin has major value in sending money worldwide without fees.

          Bitcoin's lack of fees is temporary. As the awards for mining become less and less miners will need to make more and more off of transaction fees. Miners are essential to the Bitcoin ecosystem, they don't just generate new coins, they also create and validate the block chain. Without sufficient miners the block chain becomes untrustworthy and the system collapses.

          As block awards diminish and mining hardware and overhead costs increase fees will have to increase.

      • by gox ( 1595435 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @01:45PM (#49454039)

        Bitcoin is an experiment in getting people to agree on something (be it notarization, settlement or just exchange value) without the need for a central enforcer.

        It's not a bug, it's a feature, i.e. you won't see Bitcoin bombing children to "reinforce" the position of its currency. No one should be surprised that this brings many limitations with it.

        So no matter what the majority of Bitcoin community thinks, it's a collective experiment and will always depend on actions that are just for the sake of it succeeding. Network effect just won't cut it. Fortunately, there is a lot that makes sense in leaving behind central enforcers and decision makers.

        Another problem I find in your analysis is, publicized thefts and the mechanics of Bitcoin are completely separate. There is plenty of way to go, but the currently lacking advancements in these areas are naturally complementary.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )
          At one point, Spanish "pieces of eight" was the de-facto world currency, even though they were not really controlled by the Spanish at all. You still saw wholesale slaughter if not outright genocide when that was the standard.

          Fact of the matter is, if a group wants something that another group has badly enough, they'll engage in violence to get it. The particular medium of exchange won't make a damn bit of difference.
          • by gox ( 1595435 )

            What I said does not have anything to with people using Bitcoin in their morally questionable endeavors.

            I however said that Bitcoin does not require a centralized power's backing. Not only that, it is allergic to that sort of thing.

            You can buy a gun with Bitcoin and kill a man. However, using it by itself does not require guns or killing.

        • Bitcoin doesn't need centralized power, but it does allow it ... and has created it.

          You use bitcoin at the mercy of the majority miner.

      • by kipsate ( 314423 )

        Bitcoin in of itself has no real-world value

        Some economists such as Carl Menger make a compelling argument that there is no such thing as "intrinsic value":

        Principles of Economics by Menger, 1871
        "Value is thus nothing inherent in goods, no property of them, nor an independent thing existing only by itself. It is a judgement economizing men make about the importance of goods at their disposal for the maintenance of their lives and well-being. Hence value does not exist outside the consciousness of men."

        A crude way of interpreting this is coming

      • by DanielRavenNest ( 107550 ) on Saturday April 11, 2015 @05:59PM (#49454999)

        > First, a Bitcoin in of itself has no real-world value.

        Neither does a UPS shipping label. It's the network of trucks and distribution centers that give the shipping token (the label) value. They are what enable moving a package from one place to another. That's a useful service, and hence people are willing to pay for the label.

        Similarly, a bitcoin is merely an entry of 1.0000 units in a big distributed ledger (the block chain). It's the network of relay nodes and miners that give the bitcoin token value. They are what enable moving monetary value from one place to another. That's a useful service, and hence people are willing to pay for the tokens. Other parts of the ecosystem add more usefulness, and thus more value. Websites, wallet software, custom hardware, smartphone apps, exchanges, merchants who accept bitcoin, etc.

        The transaction protocol also includes a scripting language, so you can make your money programmable. How useful is that? People have only touched the surface of what you can do with that capability.

      • by Canth7 ( 520476 )
        Bitcoin is indeed a nice experiment - one that has withstood attacks for 6+ years now. As far as vigorous supporters being few, this is true - however it is a slowly increasing number. Despite the negative press covering thefts and a recent decline in price, Bitcoin transactions per day are at a record high.

        http://www.coindesk.com/data/bitcoin-daily-transactions/

        One thing that Bitcoin detractors like to bring up is comparing BTC against USD with the 'you have to pay your taxes in USD' argument. I have no ex
    • Merchants can "accept" bitcoins without ever seeing or touching a bitcoin. Doing all their pricing and accounting in fiat, receiving only fiat.

      They simply contract with a 3rd party bitcoin exchange that provides a payment address to the user, accepts the coins, converts to fiat and pays the merchant. The exchange operates like the credit card companies, processing the buyers payment.
      • > They simply contract with a 3rd party bitcoin exchange that provides a payment address to the user

        And that is where the risk enters. Many of them have already proven untrustworthy.

        http://www.forbes.com/sites/an... [forbes.com]

        http://www.coindesk.com/bitcoi... [coindesk.com]

        http://insidebitcoins.com/news... [insidebitcoins.com]

        It's very difficult to evaluate trustworthy Bitcoin excha

        • You are confusing people trading and using online wallets at exchanges with merchant services at an exchange. They are two very different things.

          To get familiar with the sort of thing I am discussing see https://www.coinbase.com/clien... [coinbase.com]
          • The "merchant services" have turned out to be very difficult to manage without an online wallet, so I'm afraid they've blurred the "distinction" themselves.

            • The "merchant services" have turned out to be very difficult to manage without an online wallet, so I'm afraid they've blurred the "distinction" themselves.

              You seem to misunderstand the merchant services I am referring to. A merchant does not need an online wallet. The merchant never sees or touches a bitcoin, the payment address is the exchange's, the exchange pays out the merchant daily in fiat.

              • I'm afraid I do understand it. The whole point of the "merchant services" apps are to allow the merchants to handle payment in Bitcoin. I'm staring right at 20 or so "merchant services" for precisely such use at https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/How... [bitcoin.it].

                Many of the apps seem to be horrible, and send far too much information to central money exchanges, many including online wallet systems, which should not be trusted. The overlap of such tools with online wallets is as unsurprising as in-store credit cards, and I'm

                • Perhaps you should look at the link I provide and note its a professional operation being used by various large corporations.

                  https://www.coinbase.com/merch... [coinbase.com]
                  • Yes, perhaps you should read the "About" page at https://www.coinbase.com/about [coinbase.com] where they describe themselves as "a bitcoin wallet and platform where merchants and consumers can transact with the new digital currency bitcoin". So they've blurred the lines between a pure 'merchant service' and a bitcoin wallet, just as I described.

                    Being "professional" does not mean a company is legal or ethical, anymore than being rich does. Silk Road and MyCoin were "professoinal", and quite well known, and now are facing

                    • The fact that an exchange offers both online wallets and merchant services means nothing. Two different services, as your own quote points out they provide services to *both* merchants and consumers. What a consumer does on an exchange is irrelevant to a merchant.

                      The fact remains that a merchant does not need a bitcoin wallet, does not need to see or touch a bitcoin, does not need to take on any bitcoin price fluctuation risk, and gets paid out daily in fiat. Which has been my point and stands independen
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I’m offering MIT as a neutral academic home for some of the conversations and the technical coordination.

    Is MIT going to be extending the same "neutral" academic collegiality to the fiercely independent Bitcoin community which it so notably extended to the free-thinking Aaron Schwartz. If the Justice Department or other government agency starts seriously investigating Bitcoin, are we seriously expected to believe that MIT will have the currency's back?

    If this passes without comment, we'll be better of

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Aaron Swartz might have a different opinion.

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