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The Almighty Buck

Getting a Crypto Refund Can Be Very Expensive (bbc.com) 132

Long-time Slashdot reader smooth wombat writes: Recently, Slashdot posted a story about a group trying to purchase one of the few copies of the U.S. Constitution in the public domain. The idea was to use pool donations by people via Ethereum to get the winning bid. Alas, Citadel CEO Ken Griffin outbid the group and took possession of the copy.

Now the group, ConsitutionDAO, is in the process of refunding the donations, the BBC reports, and the people getting their money back are finding it can be quite expensive...

The BBC writes: That is because the Ethereum network records its transactions on the blockchain, the same basic technology idea that powers other cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin. And like Bitcoin mining, it requires computational power to run. "Gas" is the fee paid to those who run the computer systems to facilitate transactions. And it changes price based on supply and demand. That means that at times, it can be much more expensive to make any kind of transaction, depending on how busy the Ethereum network is. And the network has recently seen high usage — and high gas prices.

On its official Discord — the chat app which allows anyone to create rooms and discussion channels for enthusiasts on almost any topic — the group said it had 17,437 donors with a median donation of $206.26. High gas fees mean that "small" donations could be severely hit by the transaction charge.

One user on the Discord said that in order to get $400 refunded, they would have to pay $168 in gas. Others complained of the fees being higher than the relatively small amount of their refund.

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Getting a Crypto Refund Can Be Very Expensive

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  • Taxes (Score:5, Funny)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:11PM (#62026371)

    Cryptocurrency usage comes with cryptotaxes which need to be paid.

    • Its really not about an alternative to banking as much as it is about becoming the banker.

      • Re:Taxes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @07:30PM (#62026533)

        Bankers would love to be able to charge fees like that.

        • More Funny mod points needed in the thread, but I think it's more a matter of externalities from stupid levels of greed. Of course "the bank" can't cover the real transaction costs if that would make the bank lose money. Scare quoted because the definition of "bank" has to be seriously stretched to cover these cases where there is no intrinsic value at all for the "assets" being deposited. Since the bank isn't going to pay for the wasted electricity, then you, "the customer", are going to pay for it.

          Having

          • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

            Does Ethereum also work with an electricity-driven lottery ticket system?

            Yes. It's a slightly different problem than bitcoin uses, chosen to be resistant to ASICs, which is why Ethereum is the favourite of GPU miners.

            The innovation behind cryptocurrencies is a distributed trust model. It's not the blockchain, which is just a hash tree with all but one of the branches pruned off. The trust model bitcoin and ethereum use is "proof of work", i.e. whoever can prove that they've (statistically) done a certain am

            • by shanen ( 462549 )

              Thanks for the details, but mostly I regard it as additional evidence of the insanity of the "crypto bros".

              My take (focusing on Bitcoin) remains that it's a kind of lottery. There is no good reason to base the lottery tickets on insane waste such as "proof of work". They could simply pick periodic winners at random from the eligible players and the blockchain would work in exactly the same way--but that would violate the psychological pitch to the gold miners looking for the mother lode. They NEED that fake

              • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                It's sort of like a lottery, aside from the weird moral issues Americans have with gambling. If I buy one lottery ticket and you buy a thousand, you expect your odds of winning are better than mine, right? And if the tickets are free, I can just say "give me one billion googolplex trillion tickets" and win for sure. So you have to keep track of how many tickets each person "buys" and there has to be a cost to prevent someone from just buying them all.

                The proof of work system proposed by Satoshi uses hashes

                • by shanen ( 462549 )

                  We seem to be in agreement about the technical side, but I feel like you are missing the psychological dimension. But maybe I'm confused by your insertion of "moral" in there?

                  On the technical side, imagine that the next checksum was simply calculated by any random participant who was qualified. No proof of work would be required, and it would work exactly the same way. There would be one winner who would sign the next block, but with no wasted electricity. (I'm assuming the same communication costs, but tha

                  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                    On the technical side, imagine that the next checksum was simply calculated by any random participant who was qualified.

                    Sure. You defined qualified, which is usually pretty easy. Now define "random."

                    A lottery (typically) works with this definition:
                    A set number of draws from the uniform distribution over the tickets sold or printed. Since the distribution is uniform, each *ticket* has an equal chance of winning, but since each *person's* chance of winning is proportional to the number of tickets they hold; i

                    • by shanen ( 462549 )

                      I smell a Bitcoin speculator who didn't even read my replies in this thread. And I am not interested in your straw man interpretations. It will suffice to respond "That is NOT what I wrote."

                      If you cannot understand what I said and want to, then you should ask a question focused on where you lost the thread.

                      I would apologize for my poor writing, but I am not at all persuaded of your intellectual integrity and sincerity. In that case the apology would be wasted.

                    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                      I think you've slammed into a wall and don't want to admit that you're wrong.

                      To address your ad hominem, you can have a look at my posting history on cryptocurrencies. I don't think they're a good idea, nor viable in the long term. That's because I understand the *unavoidable cost* of having a decentralized trust model and recognize that such a system is not only not worth that cost, but is very likely undesirable at any cost.

                      You're arguing that proof of work is just some kind of suboptimal algorithm that c

                    • by shanen ( 462549 )

                      No. Plenty of things wrong with me, but if anything I'm too quick to admit when I'm wrong. Rather often it later turns out that I was wrong about admitting to being wrong. Ditto the apologies.

                      Based on your recent comments, notwithstanding traces of reading comprehension, I can't decide if you are proudly ignorant ior sincerely stupid ior love rude flamewars xor are paid to fake it. And I don't care which.

                      From another perspective, insofar as your UID is low, I could speculate you've gone senile xor it's a do

                  • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                    PS: there's also the issue of who's doing the drawing. Your solution seems to require some authority to perform the random draw. EVE Online actually had this issue, and the solution was a character who everyone trusted based on reputation who set up a fair random number generator that he vouched for. Lotteries have a lottery authority.

                    The point of cryptocurrencies is to not have a central authority. Proof of work uses the asymmetry of the hash problem to generate a random selection: you get to write the blo

                    • by shanen ( 462549 )

                      I think the natural decider of the next winner is the last winner, with fallback to earlier winners. The "pool of arbiters" I mentioned could be defined or extended in that way. For example, the last winner may go offline or lose connectivity, so you can't just assume that machine is available to pick the next random winner.

                      However, it can actually become fairly complicated. Are you familiar with the Byzantine Generals' Problem and related algorithms and security protocols? In cases like this, you absolutel

                    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

                      I think the natural decider of the next winner is the last winner

                      Ah, excellent. I choose me. Then I choose me again. And again. Also, I don't like shanen, so I will never register any of his transactions. And I *do* like me, and all of the bazillion accounts associated with me, so I will allow them to do things like double spend.

                      Blockchain with proof of work is a solution to the Byzantine fault problem, yes.

                    • by shanen ( 462549 )

                      NAK

        • Bankers would love being as unregulated and opaque as crypto exchanges.

      • :) LOL

        Am noticing that using words is too difficult and such a commitment. When u dont have emojis I mean

        Maybe these ascii emojis will work. Routinely see half page ascii art on slashdot so this shouldn't get blocked

        â¥.â¥

        Â\_(ãf)_/Â

    • You forgot "cryptoneed" and "cryptopaid".
    • The difference between cryptotaxes and real taxes is that cyrptotaxes aren't used to drop bombs on children.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        They just go to rich people who campaign for more laws gutting taxes and social infrastructures to ensure the children starve to death, and we move to a Charles Dickens style of rich/poor.

        Given a choice between a government with a military, or being ruled by a kleptocracy/kakistocracy where many people starve to death, I'll take the one that actually does something with terrorists and ensures its citizens have a lifestyle of something other than groaning, brutal poverty.

      • cyrpto can just dump smog from dirty power

      • by DrXym ( 126579 )
        Nor are they used to pay for schools, hospitals, law enforcement, street lights, parks, prisons, civil engineering projects etc. Your crypto transaction fees are basically pissed down the drain as far as your welfare is concerned.
      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        There is no assurance of that. Also no assurance it isn't funding strapping bombs ON children. It's all a matter of what anonymous person or people are running the mining rig that happens to process your transaction.

        Of course, considering that banks have been caught (and not really punished) laundering money for terrorists and drug cartels, the same can be said for bank fees.

      • True, no bomb dropping on children.

        Instead they finance drug cartels' murder of children in various third world countries and the spread of fentanyl

    • Can we please blame the parties that need to be blamed? NFT and decentralized trading dapps. Also, you can set your gas fee to a lower amount. Most people are just idiots who don't know how stuff works. Don't pay over what is fair. Don't pay a high gas fee if you don't care how fast the transaction gets executed.
      https://etherscan.io/gastracke... [etherscan.io]

    • Oh, these aren't the taxes, you'll pay those too, these are just the processing fees. Makes CCs look better, eh?

  • by ShimoNoSeki ( 940867 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:12PM (#62026375)
    "Say it ain't so" /sarcasm
  • cryptocurrencies fees are to high for day to day useage.

    • by Alwin Henseler ( 640539 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:33PM (#62026411)

      Don't generalize when speaking about a specific cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency A != cryptocurrency B.

      But in this case, yes... $168 transaction costs for a $400 transfer? That is... a 42% fee? That's INSANE, period. Is that raw transaction fees for this particular cryptocurrency? If so, it's broken. Even if a temporary thing, then that cryptocurrency is broken from time to time. Which imho, also means broken.

      Or is there something else going on here? Like the exchange used, or extra fees / conditions the organizers of this action slapped onto it?

      • And why does the fee only come up when they need to refund it? Some guy sends them $400, presumably with low fee or no fee (?) and then they need to refund it, suddenly $168 fee to send the same amount the other way? That doesn't sound right.

        • And why does the fee only come up when they need to refund it? Some guy sends them $400, presumably with low fee or no fee (?) and then they need to refund it, suddenly $168 fee to send the same amount the other way? That doesn't sound right.

          No; in the original story a while back it was mentioned that it was suggested to "donors" to donate more then their actual donation (so say, $150 instead of just $100) to cover the ("gas") fees as the money transacted the various exchanges.

          And once there was talk of getting refunds after the failed bid, there were complaints that the extra fees for getting the money refunded back would wipe out the entire donated amount (with some getting effectively negative refunds if they actually went through with it).

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          It's a market rate. It is conceivable that it was more expensive at the time for refunds than it was when the donations were made.

        • Perhaps there could be a way to record a pledge gas-free and only process the actual transaction when the time comes.
      • by AvitarX ( 172628 ) <me&brandywinehundred,org> on Saturday November 27, 2021 @07:02PM (#62026469) Journal

        Seems really high.

        I wrote off BTC a while ago when transactions were in the 2 digit numbers to get closed in a reasonable time.

        • The transaction fee for bitcoin is very volatile. But it has been like 3 bucks plus or minus a buck since July. It was briefly over 60 bucks in late april. I couldn't find a chart for ethereum gas denominated in dollars so I am not too sure hoe much it is/was.
          • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

            That all sounds likely true.

            But it doesn't change the fact that I wrote it off a few years ago when it was around the hi side of your range since April.

            3 bucks puts it in the range of a $125.00 credit card transaction.

            The 2 main "currencies" in my life are cash ($0) and credit card ($0.50 + 2%). Bitcoin is far more, ranging from dramatically higher ($3) than an average transaction to so fucking high it's insane (in April and years ago when I wrote it off).

            The speed is stupid long too. I wrote off BTC when I

            • by Megane ( 129182 )

              The 2 main "currencies" in my life are cash ($0)

              For a brick-and-mortar business, cash is not free. You have to deal with armored car companies for safely getting your deposits to the bank, and you have to deal with banks charging you to get change, which the armored car delivers too. And you have to deal with the chance of employee theft. That's why credit card companies can get away with 3% merchant fees.

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                Small businesses do NOT use an armored car. They just drop a deposit bag into the night depository or take it to a teller's window during banking hours and just ask the teller for change if needed.

              • Where I live quite a few gas stations (petrol stations) charge a lot less if you pay with cash. I think that tells you all you need to know about the cost of dealing with cash vs credit cards as a vendor.
            • That all sounds likely true.

              But it doesn't change the fact that I wrote it off a few years ago when it was around the hi side of your range since April.

              3 bucks puts it in the range of a $125.00 credit card transaction.

              The 2 main "currencies" in my life are cash ($0) and credit card ($0.50 + 2%). Bitcoin is far more, ranging from dramatically higher ($3) than an average transaction to so fucking high it's insane (in April and years ago when I wrote it off).

              The speed is stupid long too. I wrote off BTC when I was using it on grey market. It's not even good for grey market transactions, only black market, your details that it it's still really bad only support my opinion.

              I am not a bitcoin bro or anything. Actually I try to make most transactions with cash also. But bitcoin has other properties besides just allowing digital transactions between untrusted parties. It also is intended to serve as a currency that is immune from central bank manipulation. Not saying it will work. I am just saying there is more to it than whether transaction fees are higher or lower than VISA and Mastercard.

              • by AvitarX ( 172628 )

                My point is that it doesn't work as a currency at all.

                High and highly volatile transaction fees and very long transaction times make calling a currency at all pretty disingenuous.

      • That's a worst case scenario I guess, I did it recently and it was around $30.
      • $168 transaction costs for a $400 transfer? That is... a 42% fee?

        It's in the same region as I would expect the cost of money laundering to be.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        According to the gas tracker, the gas for a transaction (no matter the amount transferred) is about $27 worth of Ether and will complete your transaction in about 3 minutes. That's too expensive and too long for the old saw of buying your coffee using crypto currency.

        I don't have a source for historical prices, so I can't say if it was or was not much higher at the time TFA was researched.

    • A twentieth of a cent is too high to send over lightning network btc? Of a whole blockchain transaction for less than a penny ok litecoin is that too much?

      This is an issue with an ethereum smart contract. If you don't like it, definitely avoid using ethereum smart contract crap, or even all of defi. Or even all of ethereum.

      But all of crypto is top expensive? Please lol.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:16PM (#62026385)

    If refunding money is too expensive, you'll either find that stores don't take the currency unless they are legally required (and I doubt that any country would make accepting cryptocurrencies a necessity) or unless they can shift the cost to the customer, who in turn will not want to use the currency if any kind of refund basically means that they're better off keeping the defective crap because it's more expensive to get rid of it.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      Simple solution, transact the total amount to a currency with low transaction fees and then refund in that currency, I'm kind of surprised no-one else seems to have though of this.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      It is DOA when anybody actually tries to use it like a currency. These people only found out what was amply clear before to anybody bothering to find out.

  • Wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:17PM (#62026389)

    I was unaware of this. What a stupid system!

    • Re:Wow (Score:5, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @07:46PM (#62026567) Homepage Journal

      I don't know how it works with Eth but with bitcoin you can set the transaction fee yourself. If you set it lower it will take longer to process, maybe days or more.

      But yes, it's a stupid system. Then again I just read a Twitter thread by a guy who took a $187,000 loan to buy an NFT for a picture of a monkey, one of thousands of similar ones. He was complaining that is wife was leaving him with the kids because she didn't understand that his monkey picture was going to be worth 500k one day. Which is a long way of saying that crypto dudes do a lot of stupid things and on the scale this barely registers.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      It's not stupid. It's just the way it works.

      In financial transactions, you have a book-keeper. The book-keeper is responsible for keeping the ledger straight. This applies to all financial transactions - regardless of if it's within a bank, between banks via a banking network, between banks and merchants using payment network (e.g., Visa), or between two entities via blockchain.

      Blockchain's contribution to the world is the distributed ledger system - where transactions are recorded and added to the master

  • Maybe it's just me (Score:2, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
    But this seems to be by design. Almost as if the entire thing was a scam...
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's like the processing fees that banks charge, so yes it is a scam.

    • the fees were small until june. if you waited until midnight, your fee could be less than a dollar.

      then shiba enu got released and appeared on major exchanges, and that got eth fees in the $300 range

      other blockchains like polygon had insanely low (1/10 of a penny) fees. they had to increase fees 30 times a couple of months ago. still very cheap compared to the rest

  • The last paragraph of the article says :

    Signing off, the group said: "The project was a landmark event that showed the entire world that a group of internet friends can use the power of Web3 to face a seemingly insurmountable goal and achieve incredible results on an impossible timeline."

    Hilarious.

  • Can't they just sell the whole lot of the 'coins' and transfer the cash to each person? Or does even selling the whole lot involve this sort of absurd charge? Bank transfer fees couldn't possibly be this high. Or are there charges on this scale every time someone cashes out?

    • by redback ( 15527 )

      gas is charged for any transaction, but high fees hit small amounts harder.

      if they had sold the 40mil of eth for 40mil of fiat, then there wouldn't be much gas charged (as a %), assuming they could even find a buyer.

      But then you are stuck with trying to find some kind of payment method to refund all that fiat, which comes with its own set of challenges, you would have to gather everyones paypal address or something.

      • Wire transfers. Those are like $10/pop bank-to-bank. They can take around 4 business days though.

        • Holy jesus, is that what it costs stateside? In my country i can transfer to anyone in EU via bank transfer for free. Some banks still charge their clients a fee for a transfer, but it is 0.16â.

          • ACH is free

            But non-ACH is going to cost you. Western Union can take over $40 for a transfer.

  • by redback ( 15527 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @06:52PM (#62026453)

    Perhaps if they weren't trying to refund $40m worth of ETH then they wouldn't have driven the gas prices up?

    • I'm curious though, somehow they got the money in the first place? Why is the transaction cost higher on the refund than on the initial purchase?

      Is it because they did them all at once (in which case crypto is wholly unusable as a currency if it can't even handle a tiny transaction such as this)? Or is it because the miners can set the fee?

  • Are gas fees just high at the moment, ie, can't they wait a few weeks and get a refund for cheaper?

    What about when they first signed on? Did the gas fees go up that much or is a refund more expensive for some reason?

    Why was everyone surprised? Did something change radically over the course of the bid to make the refund more expensive?

  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @07:13PM (#62026493)

    "Once you have their money, you never give it back."

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @07:39PM (#62026557)
    Cryptocurrency has a liquidity problem. Shocked, anyone?
  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @08:22PM (#62026623) Homepage
    Just get your refund later when the price of gas goes down. Or am I misunderstanding something?
  • by ctilsie242 ( 4841247 ) on Saturday November 27, 2021 @08:28PM (#62026637)

    For this type of stuff, this is what multi-sigs are best at. Say people are bidding for a NFT. It takes the bidder, plus an escrow party to sign the transaction for it to go to the auction house. The winning party has the escrow party "turn their key", completing the transaction. Everyone else, the escrow party rejects the transaction, causing the currency to go back to the owner's wallets. No "gas", no transaction costs, just a simple transaction not completed.

    • Everything that happens on-chain costs gas. Transferring your funds to the contract costs gas. Transferring them back costs more gas.
  • Was implement a way to burn your token and get your balance back. That way everyone can do it when gas comes down (which, realistically will be years from now)
  • Gas fees for moving ETH over the blockchain are typically much lower than the same gas fees for executing a smart contract. That may be one of the reasons why ConstitutionDAO is charging so much to issue refunds. Just guessing since the article is so light on actual information. Examples:

    https://crypto.com/defi/dashbo... [crypto.com]

    Some of these swap contracts are getting stupid-expensive. If ConstitutionDAO has a fee structure similar to these other DeFi contracts, then it should be obvious why the prices are gett

  • Your money system is broken.

  • And to think, if those people trusted each other, or could agree on a person they could trust, or even a big group of unreliable people they could trust to not all work together to screw them...

    Then they could have had their refund without asking thousands of computers to compete to redundantly do the same calculations. Which understandably costs a lot of money.

    But no, they wanted "Byzantine fault tolerance", even though by the nature of the venture (buying a physical object) some people would already have

  • Blockchain commodities are for 'investors' to 'invest' in, watch the prices fluctuate wildly, & get excited about, including how much it costs to buy & sell. Money, on the other hand, is boring. It's everyday, dull, stable utilitarianism isn't all that exciting, just a tool to measure value & get things done. Think of blockchain commodities as more like entertainment than a utility. Some people are getting rich from it in real money but they're not the ones using it as substitute for money. If y
  • Play with crypto, get burned by crypto. I don't feel bad.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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