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Bitcoin The Almighty Buck Technology

Bitcoin Falls Below $5,000 For First Time Since October 2017 (bbc.com) 180

The value of Bitcoin has hit a new low of $4,951, bringing the total value of all Bitcoin in existence to below $87 billion. Much of the turmoil can be attributed to the split of Bitcoin Cash on November 15th. The Bitcoin offshoot has been split into two different cryptocurrencies, which are now in competition with each other. The BBC reports: Bitcoin exchange Kraken said in a blog post that it regarded one of the two new Bitcoin Cash crypto-currencies -- Bitcoin SV -- as "an extremely risky investment." At its peak, in November 2017, it briefly hit $19,783 - which means the price has fallen by about 75%. After the excitements of last year when the price soared to nearly $20,000 and then tumbled, Bitcoin has been rather dull and stable for much of 2018, settling between $6,000 and $7,000.
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Bitcoin Falls Below $5,000 For First Time Since October 2017

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  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @04:23PM (#57670186)
    And then it'll be time to move on to the next speculative craze. My money is on collectable emojis.
    • Bitcoin was the (technologically) best currency at the time it launched.

      These days there are better.

      For example, Monero's better in some ways.

      People shouldn't stay married to the old technology when the better comes around. These currencies (with no actual value) aren't long-term investments. They're payment vehicles. And with better ones around (more private, cheaper transactions, etc) it's no surprise people leave bitcoin.

      • by melted ( 227442 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @05:06PM (#57670444) Homepage

        The problem is, dollar is better than all of them combined. It's literally too big to fail.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Contrary... it is the biggest behemoth ready to topple over of its own gluttony.
          All it will take is a little coordinated push... faster, harder.
          Global p2p private cryptocurrency is the only way out of the centuries of mess created by Fiat Governments Bankers and Corporations upon you the sheeple.
          You are the ones who must charitably educate and lift the masses from the grasp of Fiat control.
          You must help not only yourselves, but them, help humanity.

          Grow up... become free, independant, responsible, charitable

          • by jythie ( 914043 )
            I love how the most prosperous and free time in human history is a 'mess', and somehow returning to failed historical norms is prefered.
      • "Best"!?! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 19, 2018 @05:27PM (#57670568)

        How is a currency that's created by wasting energy at all valuable? If it stored energy, or stored some valuable work output, then you'd have a point. However, bitcoin is inherently turning coal into hashes that can't be used for anything else. It's the best of Ponzi schemes.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        It may be better, but it remains a vehicle for speculators and money laundering, and little (if anything) else.
      • There's no post-quantum cryptocurrency, the storage costs to make a post-quantum cryptocurrency are untenable for any transaction load approaching Bitcoin's, and quantum computers are developing at a pace which following the last decade's trends linearly places them at 2023 at the latest before pre-quantum algorithms become worthless. There's no way to make the post-quantum cutover without centralization due to storage requirements, thereby killing the only selling point of cryptocurrencies. Everyone with
        • I would tentatively confine discussion of post-quantum problems until we have actually had quantum problems.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          PQC algorithms are readily available, and don't take up that much more space.

          More importantly, it is NOT necessary to store entire blockchains forever!!!
          The only thing needed is confirmation of, and reference to, the UTXO set.
          There are a few ways to do that.
          Seek them out.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          That is one of the major weaknesses of creating a deflationary system, the currency becomes an investment since there is an incentive to NOT use it since its value is intended to always be going up.
      • Oh, my. Please excuse my cynicism, but I saw precisely what we heard as the dotcom bubble topped out.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Tulips all the way.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      And then it'll be time to move on to the next speculative craze. My money is on collectable emojis.

      It's called Tesla - TSLA. It's STILL way overpriced - unless it becomes as big as Toyota in January 2019.

  • No intrinsic value (Score:5, Insightful)

    by melted ( 227442 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @04:26PM (#57670214) Homepage

    Bitcoin had faith and mindshare. With faith evaporating, there's no intrinsic value to it, so it could go down to 0. This realization further spooks the "investors". It's kind of like a bank run against an extremely over-leveraged bank with no FDIC to prop anything up.

    • I don't disagree, just curious where the estimate of the value of electricity spent to mine the current bitcoin so far is, so it can be compared to the $87B.

    • TOO bad it did not have the technology.

      The fact that bitcoin is 100% tractable by governments for every single transaction makes it totally useless as cash replacement. No one wants the government tracking them when they make a small transaction over Craigslist for some lawn furniture, or have to calculate their capital gains when they trade pokemon cards at a flea market. That combined with very slow wait times to make a successful transaction and ensure you are not being ripped off, pretty much make bitc
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • bf (Score:5, Funny)

    by blackomegax ( 807080 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @04:29PM (#57670240) Journal
    This is the black friday discount before going to the moon. get in while you can or be poor.
    • Or don't speculate on such a volatile commodity. Sure, it might see some corrections, but, I see no reason to believe it will not just continue going down over time.

  • Intrinsic value (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 19, 2018 @04:41PM (#57670310)

    Knife - Can be used for dozens or hundreds of useful situations especially in survival scenarios.

    Apple - Can be eaten as a nutritious snack.

    Gun & Ammo - Can be used to kill enemies or food to feed oneself.

    Wagon - Can be used to haul cargo and various goods around in.

    Rope - Can be used for all sorts of useful purposes.

    Bitcoin - A useless waste of energy and disk space that relies entirely on the greater fool syndrome with no official backing.

    • Knife, Apple, Gun & Ammo, Wagon, Rope, Bitcoin...

      I accuse Col. Mustard who used a poison apple in the wagon AND he was paid in BitCoin.

  • by Draconi ( 38078 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @04:42PM (#57670324) Homepage

    Wait until the bottom falls out of Tether.

  • From buying drugs and child abuse to wrecking the planet. Satoshi disappeared because he knew he would be sentenced for crimes against humanity eventually. I’d say cryptocurrencies and Wikipedia are two worst inventions this century. The price coming down will not be enough because even hyperinflation curencies get novelty value among collectors.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is a bargain price. The only way is UP, UP UP!!!!

  • Magic Beans (Score:4, Funny)

    by martinX ( 672498 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @05:15PM (#57670502)

    Magic beans no longer worth a cow.

  • NB (Score:4, Informative)

    by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @05:44PM (#57670678) Homepage
    Here's a nice read [medium.com] about BitcoinSV and Mr. Craig Wright who desperately wants to be Satoshi Nakamoto but keeps blundering while doing so.
  • This constant stream of insipid blabber about Bitcoin and how it's going to crash soon, that has been going on for years through self-proclaimed experts, is certainly doing much more in terms of money and exposure for those fuckers than they'd get actually investing in cryptocurrencies or in anything else for that matter. I'm inviting anyone to take a look at just how many Youtube channels, just as an example, deal with Bitcoin analysis an predict its crashing, and how many views they get. :)

  • by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Monday November 19, 2018 @06:12PM (#57670840)

    I have wondered now and then, if not Bitcoin isn't actually a secret distributed Chinese Lottery [rfc-editor.org].

    With all these machines out there dedicated to brute-forcing SHA-256 collissions â" which is also the world's most used cryptographic hash algorithm, whenever NSA (or whichever agency created Bitcoin) wants a SHA-256 hash collision it just injects some requests to a bunch of bitcoin nodes, exploiting some vulnerability in the code and protocol.
    And then the suckers will do the work for them.

    It has been done before with Javascript in web pages [slashdot.org], the same as "other" crypto-mining in Javascript on shadier sites more recently.
    But this time the users would be none the wiser because the nodes are just doing whatever they were supposed to in the first place.

    • by yarbo ( 626329 )
      Bitcoin uses SHA-256(SHA-256(nonce+data)) < target value. They don't actually look for collisions.
      • Bitcoin uses SHA-256(SHA-256(nonce+data)) < target value. They don't actually look for collisions.

        And if they did look for collisions, at the peak hash rate thus far achieved (about 2^69 hashes per second) it would still take about 2^161 years to reach a 50% probability of finding one. This would make BTC transactions a bit slower than they are now.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Seems like an immensely risky scheme for a problem they could solve with a few billion dollars. In fact it would be odd if they hadn't spent a few billion on supercomputers that are able to brute force hashes and do massive dictionary attacks against AES etc.

      Aside from anything else they couldn't really use it to brute force anything really interesting, because the public nature of the system would mean that other intelligence agencies would immediately know what they were doing. Plus the way Bitcoin works

  • Let's hope Rei just bought a load.

  • FTFA: "At its peak, in November 2017, it (Bitcoin Cash) briefly hit $19,783 - which means the price has fallen by about 75%." The author of the story is inconsistently referring to BTC and BCH. BCH has NEVER gotten anywhere close to $19k, BTC has. There are other places in the short summary where I had to stop and think if the author was referring to BTC or BCH. EDITORS TAKE NOTE: YOUR JOB IS TO FIX THIS SHIT.
  • The speculative value of BTC was based in its limited supply. Forking the coin doubles the mineable money supply, so the speculative value has to drop by half to adjust for this, besides kicking off a whole new race to waste energy mining the new coin.

    Then we have people touting this or that better new coin. "Investing" in each of these jumps the money supply for each one, further reducing the scarcity value.

  • ... when pyramid schemes reach their saturation point.

    Congratulations to all that made money.

    To those that lost ... suckers! Go try Amway, at least they sell something material instead of pipe dreams.

  • Geez, so what... it fell below $5000? There's nothing special about that... its not notable news --- Slashdot already covered that price was decreasing significantly 6 days ago, And didn't even bring up more important news within the Crypto ecosystem such as the BCH Chain forks and how those are doing; this is basically a duplicate headline within 10 days with 6000 changed to 5000.. A link to the exchange prices is good enough.

    Are we going to get a big writeup again when it falls below $4000 within the

  • What's most interesting here is that while the number of transactions during this crash has risen to levels not seen since January, the transaction fees never went above $0.65. That's strong evidence that improvements like Lightning and SegWit have largely addressed the scaling concerns everyone had around the BTC/BCH split.

There is no opinion so absurd that some philosopher will not express it. -- Marcus Tullius Cicero, "Ad familiares"

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