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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

The Cryptocurrency Industry is 'On the Brink of an Implosion', Research Says (bloomberg.com) 187

Echoing sentiments of mainstream economists, Juniper Research is warning that many of the metrics in the cryptocurrency world are pointing to a market implosion. From a report: Industry bellwether Bitcoin had seen its daily transaction volumes fall from an average of around 360,000 a day in late 2017 to just 230,000 in September 2018. Meanwhile, daily transaction values were down from more than $3.7 billion to less than $670 million in the same period, Juniper said in the study, The Future of Cryptocurrency: Bitcoin & Altcoin Trends & Challenges 2018-2023. The market as a whole has contracted quickly as well. In the first quarter, cryptocurrency transactions totaled just over $1.4 trillion, compared with less than $1.7 trillion for 2017 as a whole, Juniper said. However, by the second quarter, transaction values had plummeted by 75 percent, with total market capitalization falling to just under $355 billion. "Based on activity during the first half of Q3, Juniper estimates a further 47 percent quarter-on-quarter drop in transaction values in that quarter," the researcher said in an accompanying white paper.
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The Cryptocurrency Industry is 'On the Brink of an Implosion', Research Says

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  • by sa666_666 ( 924613 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @01:49PM (#57462668)

    Let me start playing the worlds smallest violin.

    • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @01:59PM (#57462746)
      Not only the smallest one, but continuously shrinking to boot?
    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      But is the violin on the blockchain?
    • Let me start playing the worlds smallest violin.

      The real implosion comes 2022-2025, when quantum computers reach the point they can crack Shor's algorithm and hapless Bitcoin shills realize en mass that it's too late to make the cutover to post-quantum protocols. You can tell the whole thing is a scam because the post-quantum cutover needs to happen years in advance, must be initiated individually by each wallet owner, and the protocols which would allow for it are on the order of 30+kB PER transaction signature (as in, not just per block, per every ind

      • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

        There is not enough information on the blockchain to crack a bitcoin wallet using Quantum methods until after funds have *already been spent*.

        • There is not enough information on the blockchain to crack a bitcoin wallet using Quantum methods until after funds have *already been spent*.

          This is just flat out wrong. The security of blockchain transactions comes from the published signatures. No signatures and it's no longer a blockchain. All you have to do is crack the key behind the signature for a given wallet to "own" that wallet and be able to spend it as desired. This is why quantum computers put a hard limit of 2022-2025 (given current growth rates) before Bitcoin is worthless, AND it's why you need to initiate the cutover years before that (it doesn't work as just "upgrading" eve

          • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

            The public key isn't published until an address spends the money; the Quantum Computer would have to break it in under 10-20 minutes, and get it into a block first.

            That's not gonna be possible for a VERY long time.

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          There is more than enough information on the blockchain, things like tracking down IP addresses, to find the owner of the wallet and well, basically crack their bones until they crack their crypto wallet for you.

          The collapse of unbacked crypto will not follow normal economic patterns because it is tightly tied to organised crime, money laundering and other criminal activities. In the normal market it will slowly die off and the authorities will become involved and seek to ban it, as it's users start dying

      • There are already solutions to that problem, but Bitcoin tends towards protocol stability. There is little reason to doubt this issue will be completely resolved by the time quantum comuters become powerful enough to "break" the protocol.

        • Yes, there's a resolution. It involves switching everyone over to 30KB+ signatures prior to the time quantum computers come, so starting around 2019 at the latest. The issue is that those signature sizes result in an unmanageable blockchain size - by the time the quantum computers arrive the notion of a blockchain will already be worthless because nobody will actually be able to verify anything on it due to the size of the thing and storage space required to do so.
    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @03:26PM (#57463384) Homepage Journal

      Unfortunately, it's not just people who should know better who get sucked into something like this. You also get people who are just trying to do what they ought to, which is to put some of their surplus income into savings.

      Saving isn't rocket science, but most people don't learn how to do it in schools. Nor do schools equipment them with a functioning understanding of economics, or technology. So in the absence of any educational foundation that would enable them to evaluate speculation in cryptocurrency critically, they turn to the information sources at hand, and that's actually worse than just being completely ignorant.

      The Internet has infected civilization with what may be a fatal bug: engagement metrics equal profit. The system that delivers the bulk of everyone's awareness of the world is not focused on delivering information that they need, but on provoking measurable reactions. Pushing people's emotional buttons, in other words.

      Apply this principle to creating content on something like cryptocurrencies, and you'll quickly see that informing people of the downsides of speculation isn't going to generate profit. Since most people aren't speculating in cryptocurrencies yet, you can't engage them with information about the risks. You can, however, engage those people with this message: you are missing out. Media coverage of cryptocurrencies did a poor or non-existent job of explaining the risks of speculation, and played up stories of people just like you getting rich overnight.

      To an informed point of view the idea of putting money you will actually need into cryptocurrency was extremely stupid; but to a mind pickled in clickbait that actually looks economically rational, because of opportunity costs. If, hypothetically speaking, you could be getting rich quick in an investment which was perfectly safe, then dollar cost averaging into a mutual fund with low risk and moderate return would be the stupid thing to do.

      • Warren Buffett's simple advice is to invest in index funds. Keeps the fees low and it's great for long-term. The best thing for the average person to do is go to a local financial management office and open an IRA.
    • Yup, And nothing of value was lost.

  • by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @01:53PM (#57462692)

    Good thing Tulips and Beanie Babys are safe investments....

    • unless the major gov'ts legalize drugs and crack down on the money laundering. Until then it's got a floor from the utility of using it to buy illegal services.
      • A drug seller doesn't value Bitcoins, they can't pay their rent with it and someone down the line needs to pay taxes with boring old fiat currency. Someone has to facilitate the transaction between fiat to bitcoin and back to fiat. That person is your weak point which can be targeted by governments.

        If cryptocurrency's entire utility is reduced to money laundering, tax evasion, and similar illegal activities, it is in the governments' interest to eliminate it. Any business operating or transferring financial

    • Yeah, because 17th century futures contracts that bubbled for a season before complete collapse is exactly like a 21st century distributed payment network which has been growing for a decade.

  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @01:56PM (#57462722)
    I know it's an overused saying but it applies perfectly here.
    • by pr0t0 ( 216378 )

      Ha, that's what you think! The $20 in Doge I bought is finally going to be at the same level as the big boys! Champagne wishes and caviar dreams, suckers!

  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @02:01PM (#57462766)
    Seriously, governments should make it illegal to blatantly waste electricity. People cry about net neutrality, but electricity neutrality should be discussed too. In any other industry, wasting resources for no reason but to print electronic tokens would be cracked down on. It's is coming up to the 10th anniversary of the bailouts of the financial crisis that was caused by funny money mortgages, we need to arrest the designers of asics for environmental terrorism. I hope 100 years from now when our great grandchildren have to suffer in a climate changed world to ask that why didn't our generation stop the bitminers.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Satoshi was really a consortium of power companies.

    • Why don't we crack down on people watching sports on TV ?

    • In any other industry, wasting resources for no reason but to print electronic tokens would be cracked down on.

      We could require that they shoot other people in a "battle royale" of sorts in order to earn those tokens, at which point their activity would be indistinguishable from the way that tens of millions of other people are already wasting time and electricity in a socially acceptable manner.

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      You just outlawed computer games.

      Well done.

    • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

      > Seriously, governments should make it illegal to blatantly waste electricity.

      Are you referring to slashdot servers?

    • How many delicious 16 oz. steaks have been wasted on crypto-mining?

    • I'm paying for the electricity. Who are you to tell me what I can do with it?

    • Seriously, governments should make it illegal to blatantly waste electricity.

      Once that train starts, you can't stop it anymore. As a matter of fact, it is not just a train, but a huge railway station.

      First, define "waste electricity". For you, it's cryptominers. For me, it's public street lighting. For others, it would be computers in general. Or TVs. Or pool pumps. Or CERN.
      Then, it expands to "waste". Did you water your lawn? Oh my, you wasted a lot of perfectly good water. To the gallows with you!
      Does your car guzzle more than one gallon per 50 miles? We are providing you with a p

      • by amorsen ( 7485 )

        Then, it expands to "waste". Did you water your lawn? Oh my, you wasted a lot of perfectly good water. To the gallows with you!

        Already illegal in many jurisdictions during droughts (and why would you water it if there was no drought?)

        Does your car guzzle more than one gallon per 50 miles? We are providing you with a perfectly fitting dungeon chamber where you'll spend large amounts of time thinking about how you wasted resources.

        Car taxes (or "fines" if you prefer that word to make it more like a punishment) based on fuel use exist in multiple countries.

        Are you heating your house to temperatures more than 10 degrees Celsius above freezing?

        Insulation standards are common in countries with cold climates.

        Waste is already illegal in many places. The gulags are nowhere to be seen. I think we'll be OK on that train.

    • You are ignorant of how the electricity consumption of the Bitcoin network works. Feel free to search my old comments for an education, but I've given up trying to explain this to people who are willfully ignorant.

    • What about all the doorless fridges and freezers in grocery stores stores?

  • 5+ years ago I looked at starting to run servers and taking bitcoin in my business but even then it seemed like the train had already left the station. I decided to just stick with my market trading accounts.So that is the direction I stuck with. I just wish online trading accounts were around when I was young. Back then you had to deal through a broker.
    Now I am with the get your popcorn ready crowd. And how about yesterdays regular market drop! Not even talking about bitcoin ;) Lets see how all this wor
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Now I am with the get your popcorn ready crowd. And how about yesterdays regular market drop! Not even talking about bitcoin ;) Lets see how all this works out. Just my 2 cents ;)

      It's almost like people are starting to realize that exponential growth quarter after quarter isn't realistic or sustainable and that these valuations built on the expectation of constant growth might as well be built on sand.

      • by Targon ( 17348 )

        You mean like the stock market as a whole, while the overall economy has been stagnant? Growth of the stock market while the economy remains in the toilet should result in a crash at some point.

        • Corporate profits have never been higher. Why shouldn't the stock market? It tracks corporate profits, not the overall economy.
  • by ERJ ( 600451 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @02:06PM (#57462810)
    Let me start with, crypto as an investment is stupid. But, it really is too bad if it fails. It would be nice to have a replacement for cash that has a similar anonymity to cash.

    Look, I'm not looking to do anything illegal or illicit but the situation of today where Visa could conceivably sell my purchase history to Google who would then target advertising to me or be able to provide the number of Snickers bars I ate this past year to health care or insurance providers doesn't sit particularly well with me either. So being able to purchase some groceries, clothes, etc through electronic means but in an anonymous fashion has a certain draw for me.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by AuMatar ( 183847 )

      Buy a giftcard or prepaid visa at a physical store with cash.

    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      the situation of today where Visa could conceivably sell my purchase history to Google

      It's more than conceivable. This and a lot more is happening today.
    • The connection to real currencies exist at the mercy of government, they treated crypto with kid gloves for a while but it was never going to last. Once all the billionaires are out and there's no one lobbying for cryptocurrency it will go the way of e-gold.

      People who pretend cryptocurrency can somehow route around government are deluding themselves. If the EU and the US don't allow banks to cooperate with conversion or transact with any foreign bank which does, cryptocurrency is dead.

    • by mea2214 ( 935585 )

      Visa could conceivably sell my purchase history to Google

      Worse, it can be sold to insurance companies and credit score companies who use predictive algorithms based upon crackpot theories to evaluate you as a risk. i

    • they know where you shop but not what you bought. Since most Snickers bars (and junk food in general) are bought at grocery & convenience stores that information isn't terribly useful. Retailers know better than to give up that data to anyone, let alone payment companies.
    • Why not simply use cash? Safe, simple, private, secure.

    • by xpiotr ( 521809 )
      FYI Mastercard already sold [bloomberg.com] your data to Google.
      I am wondering if the EU GPDR data law could help to force Mastercard to reveal what data they have and how they have shared it.
    • It would be nice to have a replacement for cash that has a similar anonymity to cash.

      Define anonymous. Anonymous in the sense that no one can see what you spend your money on? Or Anonymous in the sense that no one can identify you?

      Cryptocurrencies can't achieve the former.
      Any financial transactions that aren't done in person where all parties are blind folded can't achieve the latter.

  • Meanwhile, daily transaction values were down from more than $3.7 billion to less than $670 million in the same period, Juniper said in the study, The Future of Cryptocurrency: Bitcoin & Altcoin Trends & Challenges 2018-2023. The market as a whole has contracted quickly as well. In the first quarter, cryptocurrency transactions totaled just over $1.4 trillion, compared with less than $1.7 trillion for 2017 as a whole, Juniper said. However, by the second quarter, transaction values had plummeted by

  • by r1348 ( 2567295 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @03:07PM (#57463268)

    Maybe all those obnoxious "Youtube economists" will crawl back to their mom's basements...

  • Short Sighted (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Doc Right ( 4963093 )
    So some folks with more dollars than sense dumped a bunch of money into the cryptocurrency market trying to make a quick buck. Some won, some lost. It's been long accepted that most of the alt-coins available today will eventually disappear, leaving only the strongest and most useful cryptocurrencies. Speculation is what drove the market up to unsustainable levels. I believe it has come back down where it belongs, if not a bit lower, against the U.S. Dollar. But remember, we're talking about currencies, no
  • would have you believe. When it proved to be beyond big businesses ability to control the only thought that occurred to them was that they be destroyed. They can't have a means of monetary movement or compensation beyond their grasp and control. Crypto currency will be valuable for brief quick transfers and compensation, but probably never stable enough for big business to feel comfortable dumping funds into and wholesale raping, but it could always be a quick and dirty way to transfer/launder money with bi

    • When it proved to be beyond big businesses ability to control

      That's cute. IBM and Goldman are the big winners (directly) on cryptocurrenicies, with nVidia and other hardware providers making bank as well. It wasn't a big "fuck you" to business, it was an opportunity for them. I mean, the original people were outsiders, but in the past 5 years...?

  • Who actually uses crypto to make everyday purchases such as toilet paper, food, gasoline, etc., not just for impulse buying Lamborghinis or South Bay real estate. Imho, it's not really a "currency" unless it fulfills the same role as cash, not just in theory, but also in practice.
    • by cshark ( 673578 )

      There are several ways to do it. But with the volatility of bitcoin at any given moment, I wouldn't advise using any of them.

    • Who actually uses stocks to make everyday purchases such as toilet paper, food, gasoline, etc., not just for impulse buying Lamborghinis or South Bay real estate? Same argument.

      • Who actually uses stocks to make everyday purchases such as toilet paper, food, gasoline, etc., not just for impulse buying Lamborghinis or South Bay real estate? Same argument.

        You appear to be in violent agreement that BTC isn't a currency. I'm not sure that that is waht you intended.

        • Yes it's a currency but the "nerds" around here don't see that money is made by treating them as stocks. The buy and hold days are long gone.

    • Who knows? Maybe lots. You can get a debit card that spends Bitcoin, but works over any standard credit/debit network. It's a solid stratey for Bitcoin belivers to put most of their money into Bitcoin until they need it. So, it's hard to say how much is used for everyday transaction, as these transactions are generally off-chain.

  • Maybe now I can afford a new graphics card for my gaming PC!
  • by cshark ( 673578 ) on Thursday October 11, 2018 @04:07PM (#57463648)

    They talk about the market imploding and correcting itself as though that's a bad thing. This happens with Bitcoin every couple of years. The system and the market always comes out stronger at the end of the cycle. This isn't news.

  • It is official; Netcraft now confirms: *BTC is dying

    One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BTC community when IDC confirmed that *BTC market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming close on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BTC has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BTC is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in

  • Wow, since 2012 I've heard this roughly 1337 times. It must be true this time......

This is clearly another case of too many mad scientists, and not enough hunchbacks.

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