Bitcoin Plummets Under $6,000 To a New Low For the Year (cnbc.com) 132
Bitcoin's moment of relative stability ended abruptly Wednesday. The world's largest cryptocurrency hit its lowest level of the year, falling as much as 9 percent to a low of $5,640.36, according to CoinDesk. From a report: Bitcoin had been trading comfortably around the $6,400 range for the majority of the fall, a stark contrast from its volatile trading year. Other cryptocurrencies fared even worse on Wednesday. Ether fell as much as 13 percent while XRP, the third largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, dropped 15 percent, according to CoinMarketCap.com. The rout is likely being spurred by uncertainty around bitcoin cash, according to founder and CEO of BKCM, Brian Kelly.
Funny bitcoin names (Score:3, Interesting)
Buttcoins
Dunning krugerrand
Autism kroners
Currency of the future
Re:Funny bitcoin names (Score:4, Funny)
Dunning krugerrand
This one's my favorite.
The hard limit on Bitcoin money supply will be the temperature at which ASICs melt.
Re: They thought they were being clever (Score:2)
Re: They thought they were being clever (Score:2)
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D-wave is a complete scam. They are just regular digital computers. No wonder you think that.
Lol, no they aren't.
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It doesn't need to be within reach of everyone. The first practical quantum computers will belong to to universities, governments, and large corporations - but eventually someone is going to start renting processor time on one to anyone who can pay. Probably Amazon.
Bitcoin is software, it can change as necessary (Score:2)
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For those wanting a full node, when quantum computers are here, 32TB of data a year will likely be not a big deal.
Quantum computers in a few years, yep, those flying cars in our driveways too.
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Post quantum doesn't mean you need a quantum computer to run it.
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The point is cryptocurrencies have a singular selling point: they are distributed.
Not every user needs to be a full node. You merely need *enough* nodes with *enough* diversity.
The practical considerations of quantum computers ensure that even if switched to post quantum algorithms, they become centralized.
Centralization, now were are getting into the politics of crypto not the technical details. With *enough* diversity we can still have security but perhaps not political purity.
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Not every user needs to be a full node. You merely need *enough* nodes with *enough* diversity.
To be distributed, yeah they do. What you're describing is no different from the modern banking system, only slower.
Centralization, now were are getting into the politics of crypto not the technical details. With *enough* diversity we can still have security but perhaps not political purity.
That's the whole point, cryptocurrencies only have the one selling point: distributed architecture. You can achieve everything else they offer (and in fact, it already exists) with the modern banking system.
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No, "distributed" is not the only selling point. No, banking can not achieve everything crypto can. For example I can transfer money globally, including exchange from one fiat to another, with lower fees and possibly faster access to the transferred funds.
They achieved that with the ACH systems in the 70's. Distributed architecture is the ONLY advantage cryptocurrencies have. As soon as it becomes centralized you'll see higher fees just like with existing ACH systems. The cheap transaction cost is a result of the distributed nature (lots of people competing to drive down the rate efficiently,) not some magical feature of cryptocurrencies.
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Again, you confuse completely decentralized and decentralized *enough*. Not everyone needs the full data set, only *enough* people.
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It has 5 years (at best) before quantum computing destroys it.
You are severely overestimating both the rate of advancement in quantum computing. I give it around 15 years.
Realistically, Bitcoin will probably be functionally extinct for other reasons before then. Presumably replaced by something that doesn't use so much damn power.
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You are severely overestimating both the rate of advancement in quantum computing. I give it around 15 years.
Nope, just taking growth in qubits-per-machine over the last 5 years. They're roughly following Moore's law at this point, are already in the hundreds of qubits range, and it only takes ~1,100 qubits to run Shor's algorithm.
Re: Finally, I might be able to buy again... (Score:3)
Re: Finally, I might be able to buy again... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Now's your time. There's a lot of graphics cards on the second hand market. Heck the other day I found a listing from someone selling 20 used 1080s, though admittedly he wasn't entertaining unit sales.
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I second that motion. I refuse to even look or consider a new build on principle. Bitcoin and the like need to hurry up and finally die, we all know it is coming, so just die already!
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It's the worlds most obvious pump and dump scheme, geez.
Bitcoin has no value, none, zip, nada. There is no physical backing material (eg actual gold, which has industrial uses, not just jewelry) so there is never anything that can be cashed out. Whoever holds all the bit coins in the end is the one who was stupid enough to buy them in the first place.
Bitcoin has some measure of usefulness if, and only if, it's used as an intermediary with no conversion fees. However that hasn't been the case since BTC was w
Fadcoin (Score:5, Insightful)
Next bubble will be Pokemon Futures.
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Re: Fadcoin (Score:2)
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Next bubble will be Pokemon Futures.
Gotta Mine Them All!
surprise (Score:2)
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people begin to not believe in hugely hyped vaporware currency. what a surprise... not.
Even at $6000- that's a huge mark up in value for someone who, say, got in 2 years ago. Few people would have done so well in the stock market. For those people who bought in at close to $20k- yeah... sucks to be them.
And stay down (Score:5, Insightful)
Almost fixed (Score:3)
Just a few more dozen forks and it will be there, right?
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Jabbed into the right eye sockets, yes.
Sold my house and bought at $19K (Score:2, Interesting)
I was told that this time it was different and the average joe would win :(
Not a surprise - 75% drops after past exp run ups (Score:2)
Of course there is one very different thing this time. In the past three occurrences we had ownership by techie speculators. Now we have a ton of wall street and ordinary person speculators. Be interesting to see how they react, if they have the long term faith most techie speculators had.
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No True Downturn.
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No True Downturn.
I'm leaning towards the wall street and average person speculators not changing the downside very much, but limiting the upside a whole lot. In other words plateauing at $4-5K for a year a two, possibly. Having another 65x run up in a matter of months, very unlikely ever again.
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People said the same thing when it was at $10k.
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People said the same thing when it was at $10k.
Not me. I was aware of the previous 75% drops and have expected a return to the current levels. The point I'm try to make is that the downside may be similar to past downsides but I doubt the upsides will ever be comparable. The demographics of the holders have changed too much, there will likely be much more, and saner level of, cashing out any gains. $5K, $4K, $3K bottoms - 75%, 80% and 85% drops, I don't think any of those levels will have much different level of cashing out.
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People said the same thing when it was at $10k.
The sucker train has ended. Unless space aliens start buying Bitcoin, this ride is over.
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Bitcoin is intrinsincally unfit for its intended purpose. The cost of validating transactions within the network, while based on really cool ideas, just doesn't scale. It is fundamentally limited to a handful of transactions per second, which is absolutely insufficient for the global monetary system it purports to be.
I thought bitcoin was super cool when I read the whitepaper in 2012, aside from a few fatal flaws, it is a thing of beauty. But I recognized its inherent flaws and so I could not get excited
I'm in! (Score:2)
I'm in! All I have to do is sell my tulip futures an I'll be ready to buy some cheap, cheap bitcoin!
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I am holding put options on tulips.
Good (Score:2)
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May it continue to sink and (hopefully) sink fast!
As long as Bitcoin is valued above zero, it is experiencing a bubble inconsistent with the fundamentals of reality.
Not Bitcoin Cash (Score:5, Interesting)
No uncertainty about BCH (Score:2)
The rout is likely being spurred by uncertainty around bitcoin cash
There's really no uncertainty; just some folks deluding themselves..... Bitcoin cash is a failed hard fork that was dead on arrival,
and such a small portion of the crypto market there's no way this is a likely explanation.
Prices are volatile.... less buying interest more selling interest in BTC, simple as that.
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Bitcoin was the first successful cryptocurrency, if not the first cryptocurrency entirely - and like many things in tech, the first one has staying power even though the technology is inferior to products that try and fail to displace it. Bitcoin is running into scaling and resource use issues.
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Chaum's DigiCash was the first "widespread" cryptocurrency. It is primitive by today's standards, but hell... there wasn't even AES out then, and the best out was maybe MD4 for hashes and at best, triple DES for encryption. Keys might be 384 to 512 bit RSA if that.
The currency is well designed, especially with the anonymity built in.
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>Bitcoin was the first successful cryptocurrency
Bitcoin has degenerated to the point where it is no longer being used for the purpose for which it was designed.
Doesn't sound like success to me.
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Bitcoin is running into scaling and resource use issues.
The Bitcoin blockchain has SegWit and the Lightning Network technology addressing the scaling issues.
BCH ultimately doesn't fix the scaling issues; BCH has security issues since SegWit was not introduced transaction
malleability was never fixed and the Covert ASICBoost bug in the PoW algorithm was never fixed, and BCH requires
greater resource consumption on the chain than BTC transactions using second layer scaling with Lightning wallets.
As far as T
I love the idea, but ... (Score:2)
A currency, free of government control, supported by solid crypto, sounds ideal
But, a real currency needs to be used frequently and commonly in legitimate, business
Unfortunately, the main uses of bitcoin seem to be speculation, fraud and the purchase of black market stuff
The crypto junkies I know sold recently (Score:3)
You Suffer by Napalm Death (Score:2)
Bitcoin sure is volatile today!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
What good is bitcoin? (Score:2)