Lecturer Argues Cryptocurrency Should 'Die in a Fire', Predicts Implosion (currentaffairs.org) 327
Nicholas Weaver is a senior staff researcher at the International Computer Science Institute and lecturer in the computer science department at UC Berkeley. But he's also a raging cryptocurrency skeptic, arguing that cryptocurrency is useless and destructive, and should "die in a fire."
In a recent interview in Current Affairs he promulgates what he calls Weaver's Iron Law of Blockchain. "When somebody says you can solve X with blockchain, they don't understand X, and you can ignore them." So for those pushing cryptocurrency for "Banking the unbanked," Weaver points to M-Pesa, a payment system Vodafone started in Kenya in 2007 "about the same time as Bitcoin..." It has eaten the Third World. It's huge. Because it just basically attaches a balance to your phone account. And you can text to somebody else to transfer money that way.... So even with the most basic dumb phone you have easy-to-use electronic money. And this has taken over multiple countries and become a huge primary payment system. [Whereas] the cryptocurrency doesn't work."
Weaver also contends that when companies say they accept payments in Bitcoin, "They're lying." (They're using a service which pays them in "actual money" after performing conversions on any Bitcoin proferred-up by a customer.) He believes cryptocurrency is only seriously used for payments for ransomware and drug deals — the things that non-decentralized currencies are legally obligated to block. The reason I've gotten so sour on the cryptocurrency space is the ransomware. It's doing tens to hundreds of billions of dollars worth of damage to the global economy. And it only exists because people can pay in Bitcoin.
Weaver also believes cryptocurrency lets venture capitalists "carry out securities fraud as a business model" when they sell one of their startup's tokens to retail investors. This is blatantly an unlicensed security. This is blatant securities fraud, but they didn't commit the securities fraud. It was just the companies they invested in that did the securities fraud, and the SEC has not been proactively enforcing this. They only retroactively enforce against the initial coin offerings after they fail.... and when things fail, the only people to prosecute are the companies, not Andreessen Horowitz itself. So they've been able to make securities fraud a business in such a way that they are legally remote, so you will not be able to throw them in jail....
The SEC has the authority to stop those proactively rather than reactively. They choose not to.... Basically, there's a fear among regulators — that I think started in the '80s — of being accused of "stifling innovation." There's no innovation to stifle. So regulate away.
He's also skeptical of cryptocurrency's other supposed advantages. Weaver argues cryptocurrency incentivizes green power "the same way that a whole bunch of random shootings would incentivize bulletproof vests." And even as an investment vehicle, Weaver sees it as "a self-created pyramid scheme." [Y]ou have to keep getting new suckers in. As soon as the number of suckers dries up, it collapses. And because it's not zero-sum, but deeply negative-sum, there are actually a lot of mechanisms that can cause it to collapse suddenly to zero. We saw this just the other day with the Terra stablecoin and the Luna side token.
So when asked for the future of cryptocurrency, Weaver predicts "It will implode spectacularly." (By which he means it will "collapse greatly.") The only question is when. I thought it would have actually imploded a year ago. But basically, what we saw with Terra and Luna, where it collapsed suddenly due to these downward positive feedback loops — situations where basically the system is designed to collapse utterly and quickly — those will happen to the larger cryptocurrency space....
[T]he Washington Nationals just the other day started doing a lot of tweets for their business relationship with Terra. That was $5 million for five years prepaid in advance in cash. So for the next five years, the Washington Nationals are obliged to hype a cryptocurrency that failed spectacularly already.
Thanks to Slashdot reader sdinfoserv for sharing the article...
In a recent interview in Current Affairs he promulgates what he calls Weaver's Iron Law of Blockchain. "When somebody says you can solve X with blockchain, they don't understand X, and you can ignore them." So for those pushing cryptocurrency for "Banking the unbanked," Weaver points to M-Pesa, a payment system Vodafone started in Kenya in 2007 "about the same time as Bitcoin..." It has eaten the Third World. It's huge. Because it just basically attaches a balance to your phone account. And you can text to somebody else to transfer money that way.... So even with the most basic dumb phone you have easy-to-use electronic money. And this has taken over multiple countries and become a huge primary payment system. [Whereas] the cryptocurrency doesn't work."
Weaver also contends that when companies say they accept payments in Bitcoin, "They're lying." (They're using a service which pays them in "actual money" after performing conversions on any Bitcoin proferred-up by a customer.) He believes cryptocurrency is only seriously used for payments for ransomware and drug deals — the things that non-decentralized currencies are legally obligated to block. The reason I've gotten so sour on the cryptocurrency space is the ransomware. It's doing tens to hundreds of billions of dollars worth of damage to the global economy. And it only exists because people can pay in Bitcoin.
Weaver also believes cryptocurrency lets venture capitalists "carry out securities fraud as a business model" when they sell one of their startup's tokens to retail investors. This is blatantly an unlicensed security. This is blatant securities fraud, but they didn't commit the securities fraud. It was just the companies they invested in that did the securities fraud, and the SEC has not been proactively enforcing this. They only retroactively enforce against the initial coin offerings after they fail.... and when things fail, the only people to prosecute are the companies, not Andreessen Horowitz itself. So they've been able to make securities fraud a business in such a way that they are legally remote, so you will not be able to throw them in jail....
The SEC has the authority to stop those proactively rather than reactively. They choose not to.... Basically, there's a fear among regulators — that I think started in the '80s — of being accused of "stifling innovation." There's no innovation to stifle. So regulate away.
He's also skeptical of cryptocurrency's other supposed advantages. Weaver argues cryptocurrency incentivizes green power "the same way that a whole bunch of random shootings would incentivize bulletproof vests." And even as an investment vehicle, Weaver sees it as "a self-created pyramid scheme." [Y]ou have to keep getting new suckers in. As soon as the number of suckers dries up, it collapses. And because it's not zero-sum, but deeply negative-sum, there are actually a lot of mechanisms that can cause it to collapse suddenly to zero. We saw this just the other day with the Terra stablecoin and the Luna side token.
So when asked for the future of cryptocurrency, Weaver predicts "It will implode spectacularly." (By which he means it will "collapse greatly.") The only question is when. I thought it would have actually imploded a year ago. But basically, what we saw with Terra and Luna, where it collapsed suddenly due to these downward positive feedback loops — situations where basically the system is designed to collapse utterly and quickly — those will happen to the larger cryptocurrency space....
[T]he Washington Nationals just the other day started doing a lot of tweets for their business relationship with Terra. That was $5 million for five years prepaid in advance in cash. So for the next five years, the Washington Nationals are obliged to hype a cryptocurrency that failed spectacularly already.
Thanks to Slashdot reader sdinfoserv for sharing the article...
Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Interesting)
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If I buy an acre of farm land and I figure out how to grow a more profitable crop the growth did not come at the expense of the previous owner or the next one. I built value and will continue to produce value.
Re:Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Insightful)
Errm, what does the acre of farmland story have to do with crypto? Crypto produces nothing, it just goes up in value when the ratio of suckers getting in, to people cashing out is greater than 1.0 at any given moment.
Re: Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:2)
Stop thinking about the value of crypto in the US or Europe and start thinking about itâ(TM)s value in Venezuela, Cuba or Argentina. Then youâ(TM)ll get it.
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It looks equally worthless in every country.
Full disclosure: I have a 'steak' in Doge coin.
Re: Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:2)
It does not.
Youâ(TM)re just seeing it with the eyes of (privilege) someone who never had to save in a high inflation currency in a country that prohibits buying foreign currencies. If you had lived in such a situation youâ(TM)d know cryptos offer a way out of being killed by inflation.
Thereâ(TM)s a reason why cryptos have been embraced more heavily in countries where the state is more oppressive.
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And your point would be what? The value of stocks is based on some fundamental reality. The value of crypto has no such underlying reality.
Re: Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Informative)
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I used to think stocks are valued by fundamental reality. I was wrong.
I have to agree with you on that- the stock market is not tethered to reality.
There was a time when it was (mostly) but that time is long past.
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It's tethered to reality, the problem is that if you have a bunch of cash there isn't really any other place to put it that gives good returns (that is, the stock market likely won't give you good returns either depending on luck, but there aren't a lot of options).
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It's tethered to reality
In what way? The market goes up when many analysts say there are "clear indicators" that it should go down, and vice versa.
It's irrational in that no one can tell you where the market will be in an hour, a day, or a week. Any honest stock trader will tell you that there's no way to tell for sure what the market will do in response to any given event.
One example: when 9/11 hit, Oracle stock plunged through the floor for the next few years, even though more Oracle software was being purchased than ever before
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I used to think stocks are valued by fundamental reality. I was wrong.
They still are underpinned by something fundamental. Regardless of what people are willing to offer based on perceived value, there is still an underpinned value of the assets a business holds.
It's one of the reasons large oil companies don't get sunk by a hostile takeover when their share price tanks following a major environmental catastrophe. In several cases the share price dropped below the value of assets held by the companies meaning that even if people *think* they can offer a low bid on shares, the
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I have explained this many times on Slashdot.
The intrinsic value of Bitcoin is:
- Being a decentralized ledger. But what does that mean?
- You can transfer value from one person to another without a middleman using only the Internet. And what is the benefit in that?
- There is no entity that can block you, censor you, sanction you, seize your funds. There is no entity that can go bankrupt or experience technical difficulties or just decide to stop continuing the service. The decentralized nature of Bitcoin mea
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The price of crypto is built upon speculators and advertising like mad to new morons down at the bottom of the pyramid to throw as much money into it as possible to ensure the speculator's gains.
Re:Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Interesting)
- There is no entity that can block you, censor you, sanction you, seize your funds.
Ah another one of the many broken promises of BitCoin and friends.
Right now prosecutions are happening for people using bitcoin to evade banking sanctions; its not a hypothetical. The FBI has managed to seize funds in the past; also not a hypothetical. No I don't suppose they can recover them from your offline wallet if you refuse to give it up; but they can hold you in contempt and toss you in solitary until you do..
Ultimately they will be able to effectively lock you out of any exchanges and payment processors as well; just as surely as they do banks. Since bitcoin is anything but decentralized, you can't do real world transactions for the most part without middlemen, as the TFA points out. So if the 'they' don't like you; you will find yourself just as unbanked as ever. "but but but - you can still do peer-to-peer transactions if you really have to!" yeah - ok - and you can still put a pallet of cash in the back of U-Haul fairly anonymously; I as fairly because obtaining a pallet of cash quietly is difficult but by no means impossible; as is converting it after the fact. Now here is the cold water part.. Tumblers or no Tumblers traffic analysis pretty much means 'they' can see what you are up to on the block chain. Maybe not with enough certainty to convict you in court based on the transactions alone but absolutely enough to collar you the moment you try and trade it for tangible property of any significance. They can do all that for minimal and in terms of real cost decreasing effort as compared with following cash. Remember these are guys that already hoover most of the worlds netflow, intercept a tons of e-mail, OCR ever letter going through the Post, you really think a little ML and pattern analysis is hard for them where the data is available to acquire/query directly by API? -LOL
Re:Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Insightful)
More importantly, we know we can't trust governments, banks or humans.
In 2008, the bank that held most of my liquid assets failed.
2 of those 3 conspired to make sure I lost a whole lot of money.
The one that made sure I didn't? The government.
Now, I'm not saying you can trust the government in all things, but like all things, a more nuanced evaluation is warranted.
The Government isn't explicitly out to fuck you. Banks and a lot of humans are.
Governments are composed of humans, with some percentage of them woefully misguided, some enlightened, and most just meh.
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"The Government" isn't inherently out to do anything except self-perpetuate.
The Government is people.
It doesn't self perpetuate, we perpetuate it.
But people in it or in control of it are wielding it to do a whole lot of things, and some of them absolutely are to fuck you.
That's the beauty of democracy and bureaucracy. Sure, it's slower. But the de-concentration of power and accountability of the power makes it so it's quite rare for someone who's out to fuck people to really do much.
I suspect most problems you have with government are things actually done with the support of a majority of Americans.
Ever since time was time, money has been able to buy influence of all kinds, and it is certainly influencing government strongly in this country. Wealthy people literally instruct corporate lawyers to draft legislation, then pay lobbyists to have it introduced and supported by effectively paid politicians. Those wealthy people, the same people running the corporations that want to fuck you, are also using the government for this purpose.
You won't get an argument from me that there's soft corruption in the legislative process.
However, still,
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It's both. Bureaucracies in general self-perpetuate. And people are generally easy to lead.
I think you misunderstood. The Government perpetuates because we have commanded it to do so. It is people. It does not exist separate of us. We can wax philosophical about bureaucracy being some kind of Deep State, but ultimately, public institutions can and have been abolished. Their job can change. In no way are they empowered to prevent a change in government.
The US has changed form of government before. Peacefully. The Department of the Interior did not refuse to make it happen in the name of its own
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The tail wags the dog. People do what they are convinced is in their best interest even if it's a cynical ploy because they are uneducated.
Your alleging a massive Illuminati conspiracy within "The Government" to mislead voters into doing what "The Government" wants them to do?
Corporations don't own the damn government. They have an outsized influence in it- for sure, but just ask Disney how it's going.
Convincing yourself that The People still have any kind of meaningful voice is a nice way to push the blame off on them.
To say otherwise is fucking unhinged. You're arguing that elections don't have consequences, in 2022. It's pretty silly.
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You can't trust humans, yet you'll trust crypto, a product of untrustable humans?
Give me a break.
Why they are "willing" is where the difference is (Score:2)
The value of something is what people are willing to pay.
Yes, with caveats, but value can be based on realistic expectations from a business plan, actual recent performance, or it can be independent of business performance and just be based on trading patterns. When its the latter, just betting that some trading trend will continue without an underlying business justification, its speculation. One person trying to time the market and not be the last person holding the stock before a collapse. There is a greater fool that will buy my foolish purchase at a high pri
That is very much not the value of something (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Interesting)
The whole proposition behind bitcoin was that it couldn't be controlled, regulated or manipulated by any government. It was touted as some sort of utopian libertarian freedom currency.
Only it's bullshit. What it is is tax evasion - which, admittedly, is what "freedom from government tyranny" means for many libertarians - and if the government really wants to, they can tell exactly who transferred how much on the blockchain, so the promise isn't fulfilled anyway.
My personal reason for always believing it was unsustainable is very simple: it's a systam that adds vast amounts of records to an ever-expanding ledger. You know what happens when your computer runs of or RAM? It swaps and becomes unusable. What do you think happens if enough people koin the network and start making the ledger balloon out of proportion before technology has a chance to catch up and make it manageable again?
Even my most basic cusory assessment of its technological working has always told me the whoe idea is basically unsustainable. I've known it from day one.
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The whole proposition behind bitcoin was that it couldn't be controlled
And it failed in that regard. The mining community did not give a crap about maintain the integrity of the bitcoin security model, they we're just pump and dump where the pump was "manufacturing" new coins rather than inflating the price of existing coins. So how did it fail?
Until recently 70% of mining hardware was located in a single jurisdiction. That made a government 50% attack feasible. The security model in crypto is that such an action is not possible.
Today such an attack is not feasible. Is t
Actually a 51% attack is even easier (Score:2, Informative)
Cryptocurrency relies on the concept that the mining pools wouldn't want to undermine the investor confidence, but that's where the exchanges break everything. See you the mining pools need the exchanges to move their currency reliably. Otherwise they've got to find
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That makes Tesla a Ponzi scheme. You’re telling me it’s worth a trillion dollars?
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Not any more. It has lost about $500 billion in market cap since April 4.
Tesla's a very different kind of scam (Score:2)
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It's not really a question of if it's a question of when and who's
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One more thing I want to add it's remarkable that people on this forum are so young or so forgetful they forgotten that every major car company in America has collapsed and been bailed out by the government multiple times.
Incorrect, but also laughably silly.
You're comparing it to companies that are 100 years old.
Either way, Ford Motor Company hasn't managed to sink itself yet.
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Ford was bailed out in 2009. This "fact check" tries to sugar-coat it, but read the whole thing:
https://www.factcheck.org/2011... [factcheck.org]
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Either way, Ford Motor Company hasn't managed to sink itself yet.
Ford may not have gotten a "bailout" but they did get a big fucking government loan and hasn't finished paying it back [freep.com] although Nissan and Tesla (both of which borrowed money under the same program) have done so. Let's not get too starry-eyed about Ford's alleged fiscal responsibility. Maybe the F150 Lightning will get them back in the black.
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. Other than laundering criminally obtained funds, what utility does crypto offer?.
That's enough for it to survive the asset bubble crashes. If tulip bulbs were good for money laundering, we'd be up to our ears in them still.
Is the "greater fool" model (Score:5, Informative)
Any growth is at the cost of another buyer, isn't that a Ponzi scheme?
No. A Ponzi scheme generally involves some sort of dividend payments, not simply price appreciation. With Ponzi there is no real business generating income to pay that dividend. There is some wort of pyramid scheme where earlier investors are paid dividends with money from the capital investment of more recent investors.
Crypto more closely fits the "greater fool" model. In this model the buyer recognizes that the investment has no real intrinsic value, or a value that s ridiculously oversized compared to whatever minor income there is. That the price is pretty much base on speculation and that you would have to be a fool to buy it. In this case the buyer is trying to time their buying and selling so that they can cash out before the price collapses. In other words I am a fool for buying this but I strongly believe that an even greater fool is around the corner and I can cash out before it collapses.
In short, Ponzi is more about an income stream that is payed out to owners. Greater Fool is about rising asset prices that are not really justified by anything, not even some credible new business plan, nothing, the prices is just speculation based on trading observations.
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How does that differ from buying art? Is there any intrinsic value in portrait of Marilyn Monroe from Andy Warhol sold recently for $195M ?
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Is there any intrinsic value in portrait of Marilyn Monroe from Andy Warhol
Yes. That remains true even if it's being put to nefarious use.
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Re:Any growth is at the cost of another buyer... (Score:5, Insightful)
Everything that isn't based on a tangible good is a ponzi scheme. That includes fiat currencies like the US dollar because the government can just print themselves to zero.
You’re trying to redefine up as down. Not only is the example you gave not a Ponzi scheme, your example would have the exact opposite result of a Ponzi scheme.
In a Ponzi scheme, the profits enjoyed by investors exceed the value produced by the system, which isn’t possible without cheating. In the case of a Ponzi scheme, the cheat is that those profits come at the expense of later investors, who will only see profits of their own if the system survives long enough for later investors to fund their profits. The inevitable result of that funneling from later investors to earlier investors is that the mechanism for expansion is outside anyone’s control: eventually it’ll collapse when it runs out of suckers.
Not so with printing money. For one, you recognized that printing money devalues earlier currency, but you failed to note that the profits flow in the opposite direction of a Ponzi scheme as a result. Earlier holders of currency see their “investment” lose value due to inflation as more money gets minted. And while too much inflation may cause a fiat currency to collapse, that’d make it a failed economy, not a Ponzi scheme. Importantly, however, the US has control over when and how much they print; while it could print itself to zero, well-functioning economies tend to exercise their ability not to do so. Ponzi schemes collapse when they fail to grow continuously by finding more suckers ad infinitum, but a fiat currency can tap the brakes and has numerous other levers it can use to control for the various risks, allowing it to persist indefinitely through periods of both growth and decline.
In the case of crypto, we’re seeing inflationary pressure in the form of ongoing mining, tremendous value being destroyed in the form of energy, and a system that is by default devoid of any “fundamentals”, so anyone sitting on their funds should by all accounts be losing value hand-over-fist. But they aren’t. They’re profiting (at least on paper). Profits don’t just appear ex nihilo—they have to come from something—and in the case of crypto they’re coming from the cash infusions of newfound suckers.
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Everything that isn't based on a tangible good is a ponzi scheme. That includes fiat currencies like the US dollar because the government can just print themselves to zero.
It most certainly cannot. The US Government does not print its money.
The US government is funded by bonds sold on the public market.
Note: There is a caveat here, in that when the Fed does QE, they tend to purchase Government bonds, some percentage of which may involve the creation of new money to do so, depending on their inflation target.
The Federal Reserve (composed of private individuals) has a few statutory obligations- but funding the US Government is not one of them.
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With crypto you own your money and nobody, no matter how strong, can take it away no matter how powerful (scams aside, they're a user-layer issue not a flaw in the system).
1. Calling it a user-layer issue does not mean that it isn't a flaw. I mean, we have to account for the human factor in security all the time. It's actually our biggest issue, generally speaking. Any approach that demands all users(or effectively all) to be super-knowledgeable super-paranoid ubers isn't going to work.
2. From what I understand, the common systems today have the following problems(some don't have all of them):
2a. Massive transaction cost. Either in time out outright money in the form o
Re: Useless (Score:2)
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I always assumed it was a universal thing, maybe it's just an Australian thing, charging exorbitant fees just to transfer money from one account to a different account overseas at a different bank. Either way banks are a scam, they make way more money off their customers than they deserve for what they provide
Nope, also an American and Canadian thing. International bank transfers are a giant screw. First you pay the fee, something like $50, then you pay the exchange rate that they scrape another 1.5 or 2% off. It’s even worse for those pseudo crowd exchanges like Wise where the exchange just churns the money without it leaving any country. 50 dollars you might be OK, but any large amount and they will scam you. Wise held my money for over three weeks, asking me questions about it that are illegal unde
The problem is with the current monetary system. (Score:2)
Money is printed as debt, to make it correspond to real wealth, and avoid deflation. However, when real wealth is crypto, and blows up as predicted here, its like tens of millions of home vanish, leaving the printed money behind. Huge inflation comes.
But honestly, I believe the idea behind crypto, or non-copyable tokens, is the tech future, but as the conceptual foundation for a new sustainable society based on improvement but not copies and growth. Im talking about software programs and advanced systems th
Re:The problem is with the current monetary system (Score:5, Insightful)
"No copy" is how physical objects work. One cannot duplicate a carrot. You can grow more carrots at the cost of more time labor and resources, but the carrot in your hand cannot itself be copied for free. Same goes for metal bullion. And cars. And everything physical. I could see the argument that cheap 3d printed plastic trinkets are close enough to "copyable" that we may as well say they are, and I offer that this is precisely why they are cheap.
What makes data truly unique and amazing is that it does not follow the "no copy" principle. It is incredibly useful in every domain, AND it can be freely shared by everyone! A new solution to a hard problem can be instantly distributed world wide and the benefits utilized immediately by everyone. Nothing in the history of the human race has been so abundant and useful at the same time. It is so novel, in fact, that even those of use who were born into a world of ubiquitous cell phones are still having a hard time really grasping the nature of this treasure.
And here we are, trying our darndest to break the primary feature of computers, and institute data that reliably enforces "no-copy." We think that THIS is how we really make computers valuable. We limit the supply, because whenever you do that, competition kicks in and value goes up, and the haves get to dominate the have-nots just like in the good old days. And THAT is going to build a vibrant economy?
The only reason we need this "no-copy" business is because we are still living in the past. Problems of human psychology are pushing us to that end, not problems of reality. I am not advocating for an elimination of money or capitalism or anything stupid like that. But I AM pointing out that "no copy" is not some revolutionary new thing that will shatter economic inequality. No-copy is old-school, and if it hasn't created utopia by now, it sure isn't gonna.
Our time would be better spent figuring out how to better integrate "abundantly copy" into our electronic economy. If anything can provide better economic equality and widespread benefits across social classes, it's that.
Re: The problem is with the current monetary syste (Score:3)
First, yes copying is what made this classical information revolution, as well as its problems. Are you old enough to remember Napster and the P2P fun? The power of copy caught industries off guard. Of course all of classic computation is based on copy and erase.
And lets give props to the copy principle in nature, reproduction, and the evolution by natural selection that created is, by copying successful genes.
But there is a yin to this yang in our upward spiral, and so a second tech revolution is coming.
In
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I think your cultivated capacity for abstract thought has absconded with your grasp of reality.
It can easily happen to people who work in a field where they do a lot of abstract thinking. One's neurons spend all their time processing along those lines, and it alters how one sees the world. Makes one see parallels that aren't actually meaningful, and connections that aren't actually there. Some of the most brilliant people int he world can wind up believing patently absurd things like "mathematical entiti [wikipedia.org]
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This isn't an emerging expression of some basic principle of reality that needs to exist in every context in order for useful things to happen
Not in every context, no.
But you could argue that any system can only keep its composure if it doesn't take up or release too much information. That is a hard reality. Information management is one of the most important features of being a system.
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Our time would be better spent figuring out how to better integrate "abundantly copy" into our electronic economy. If anything can provide better economic equality and widespread benefits across social classes, it's that.
One big problem with 'abundant copy' is that it removes a lot of the incentives that drive innovation.
If you were to work out the solution to a difficult problem and it cost you 20 years of your life, you'd want a reasonable compensation for your work.
With "abundant copy" the whole world would profit from your life's work, but you would die a poor man.
Now, the question is, will you still embark on your 20 year long journey to find the solution to this difficult problem after you realize you won't get anythi
If would say let the crypto dorks play, if not for (Score:3)
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If not for the fact that they're generating ever-increasing amounts of atmospheric pollution for literally nothing.
Not for nothing. Every so often, there's a lucrative ransomware deal.
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While this is undeniably true, and blockchain is useless, we should also look at gold and diamond mining. The majority of both of these supposedly precious items is stored in vaults, unused. Society doesn't need more gold or diamonds.
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Neither diamonds, nor gold are particularly scarce. If they were truly scarce, the majority of gold and diamonds ever found would not be sitting in bank vaults.
Yes, they have uses, but, as a society, we have already dug up more gold and diamonds than will be used in industry and other areas for a long time.
https://novitadiamonds.com/blo... [novitadiamonds.com]
https://thecuriouseconomist.co... [thecuriouseconomist.com]
https://www.forbes.com/sites/n... [forbes.com]
https://www.theatlantic.com/fa... [theatlantic.com]
https://www.wsj.com/articles/B... [wsj.com]
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If they were truly scarce, the majority of gold and diamonds ever found would not be sitting in bank vaults.
Only about a fifth of it, actually. The rest sits on peoples fingers, in their nightstands, returned to the dirt in a Viking burial, etc.
But ya, anyone who uses the word "industrial" when attempting to explain why gold or diamonds are worth so much is a fucking idiot.
Industrial demand is less than 1/5th of supply. There's a glut, and price goes up. Industrial is not a factor.
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Diamonds and Gold are ridiculously abundant when gauged at industrial use scales.
The value of gold is based upon speculation by humans, and jewelry. Industrial use is less than 20% of its market.
Agreed for Some--Not All (Score:2)
Obviously, Bitcoin and any cryptocurrency that uses huge amounts of energy should be eliminated as soon as they can be. Maybe one day they'll be the illegal black market currencies.
However, I wouldn't want to sour the reputation of all cryptocurrencies or, worse, all digital currencies. Reasonably light digital currencies can serve a purpose. I, myself, have an experimental digital currency designed with a mesh network that maintains an entire economy--not just currency transactions. It includes an iden
Bitcoin still has some chance (Score:3)
That is why I own a small amount of bitcoin. It is the ultimate tail risk hedge.
But all the guy's criticisms seem to be on point. Nobody accepts bitcoin or treats it like money. Prices are actually denominated in dollars and converted to bitcoin at time of purchase (to minimize exposure to bitcoin's price volatility).
In order for bitcoin to become money, some entity would need to actually offer some good or service priced in bitcoin, and that good or service would need to be sufficiently important to the world economy that it could act like a floor under the price of bitcoin. Like if Venezuela, Iran and Russia got together and started selling oil futures denominated in bitcoin. Something of that nature. Then if bitcoin ever got below a certain level, an arbitrage operation would be possible to buy bitcoin and then sell oil futures or whatever and make money.
It is foolish to think that the US dollar will remain the world reserve currency forever, but nobody knows just when it will be dethroned or what the successor will be. Being right on what will happen but wrong on the timing doesn't really help you when it comes to investing. You have to get the timing right, too.
One thing I will point out is that bitcoin could succeed as a reserve currency without forcing everyone to start using wallets and private keys themselves. On-chain transfers would remain akin to wire transfers. Most people would not hold bitcoin in a private wallet but in a bank. The banks (and credit card companies) would have private wallets. And would continue to operate as trusted third parties in most transfers which would be off-chain. Banks and credit card companies would settle up with each other periodically using on-chain transfers.
In this way, bitcoin could end up essentially cancelling the ability of every country to do monetary policy. The money supply would be fixed and outside the control of the federal reserve and other similar institutions.
Small probability. Non-zero probability. Will only happen if the US totally screws up its fiscal and monetary policy (which the US is well on the way to doing).
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Bitcoin failed as a currency ages ago. LN isn't going to fix the problem. Bitcoin is just a red herring, anyway. Most of the world's development on blockchain and blockchain-related projects is focused on other projects.
Not Interested in Something So Easily Stolen (Score:2)
Ever other article I read about cryptocurrency has been about somebody STEALING it or having it stolen from them. I'm not interested. At least if somebody manages to steal my credit card, the bank has to fix it; with crypto, there's nobody ready to help me get my money back.
Some apparently very smart people have been robbed, or managed to lose the credentials to their crypto wallet, and I don't need that kind of hassle.
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Maybe you should be a little skeptical about the reporting?
Yes, on a public blockchain, nobody is going to roll back transactions if they steal your shit. But it's a lot harder to steal your shit. People get conned/scammed/wiped out all the time using traditional banking systems; just look at all the folks who have had bogus cards taken out in their name, home equity loans taken out against their property, etc.
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But it's a lot harder to steal your shit.
It is? Relatively few people are invested in crypto even today, lots and lots and lots of people are in various currency. It's also a lot easier to lose "everything" with crypto with a breach.
You see, "bogus cards taken out in their name", that's generally fixed by making a report. The credit card company has to eat the loss. Same deal with home equity loans. The loans fall apart once you demand to see the documentation with YOUR signature on it. They have to eat the loss. Etc...
It's more like "they
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Agreed that it should implode, BUT (Score:2, Insightful)
there have been predictions since bitcoins were created that they are worthless / will implode, etc.
Every single time, it has always returned. And now it's bigger then ever (not withstanding the recent downturn and Terra crash, etc).
It's now firmly embedded in the public mind due to all the news stories about it. So I expect even if bitcoin drops to 1 dollar, it will be only a matter of time before people start getting interested again. If there are no stories about crypto currencies, eventually the public
Complex game of humanity. (Score:5, Insightful)
Those who haven't invested in crypto are free to come out with takes like this, as they please.
Those who have invested heavily in crypto would probably be unwise to point out its failings.
It's hard to trust a system when the only people using it have no other choice but to laud it, to get more people using it, to increase the value of their own investment. It feels like a 'scheme' of sorts.
Bruce Schneier says pretty much the same thing (Score:5, Informative)
Bruce Schneier (author of many books on crypto and security - including "Practical Cryptography" and "Secrets and Lies") said a lot of the same things on The Changelog podcast a couple of days ago: https://changelog.com/podcast/... [changelog.com]
In a set of comments starting at 17m 30s : e.g. "the whole blockchain is largely a myth for most users" "the notion that it's private isn't true, bitcoin is built on a whole bunch of lies".
We need energy with a high EROEI. (Score:2)
Every economy needs energy and the economy with the highest average energy return on energy invested (or EROEI) will have an advantage. A higher EROEI means less raw materials put into getting the energy, fewer people working in the energy industry, less land used for energy, and generally anything of value consumed to get energy. We could measure EROEI in any of a number of ways, such as perhaps how much freshwater is produced.
Many of the impacts on EROEI depend on more than just thermodynamic efficiency
The headline says it all (Score:2)
Cryptocurrencies are totally foolish speculation, as in tulip mania, a frightful waste of scarce energy, and a gift to criminals. I once compared bitcoin to digital silver, in the sense that it is a scarce resource. I now think a better analogy is digital cocaine.
If there is (Score:3, Interesting)
real utility for cryptocurrency, I have yet to see it. As far as I can tell, people are drawn to it for two reasons: 1) to increase their personal wealth by "investing" in it, and 2) money laundering.
Unlike the author, however, I don't, see any reason to think it will collapse on its own. It's propped up by kleptocrats like the Russian oligarchs and other corrupt petrostate leaders. If you want cryptocurrency to go away (and you do), you need to go after the kleptocrats. The world needs to stand up to petrostate corruption. Let those guys run free and you end up with Vladimir Putin--and bitcoin. And that's not even considering the environmental impact which of course is terrible. It's such a gratuitous waste to vent so much carbon into the atmosphere for something with zero utility--worse than zero, really, considering the criminal activity.
It doesn't follow, however, that because cryptocurrency is useless that blockchain is also. Blockchain can be deployed in a huge number of ways; currency just happens to be its first application--and a lousy one. It is still an open question whether any of blockchain's other applications will succeed or whether they will be beneficial to society, but those questions are entirely unrelated to cryptocurrency. I think blockchain probably will prove to be useful in other areas, but it will take several years to reach critical mass.
Re:Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)
There is no "crypto currency", it's not currency and fails all the tests of currency. They are gambling tokens only.
Protection against fraud, laundering and need for taxation means government always will eventually become involved.
You want to be anonymous? Certainly don't use bitcoin and similar, they aren't. Use casj. buy gift cards with cash or similar.
If you're going to claim you need to buy a car or house anonymously that's illegal. Those things require government registration and have for more than a century.
Re:Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody wants a currency that volatile.
Also, notice how we value Bitcoin using Dollars? That is because dollars are a currency.
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Today it is $46,000 and dropping like a stone.
Um, a few months ago called, they want their bitcoin price back. Make an effort, dude.
Re:Depends... (Score:4, Informative)
Neither my local money nor your American money has moved anything like that in the same period, and if they did the world would lose their minds collectively.
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Re:For what it's worth Bitcoin seems to have stopp (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: For what it's worth Bitcoin seems to have stop (Score:4, Insightful)
It doesn't have to be a money grab off of everyone.
It just has to have laws in place so that the top 1% will pay a bigger % of what they earn (progressive tax). They will still be richer then the other 99%, but not outrageously so.
So you will still have billionaires. Just not as many.
Of course if the US did this and most of the world did not, the rich may want to consider transfering their ownership / wealth to a "friendly" jurisdiction. Or give up American citizenship. But if being in America with American based assets with a American citizenship is what got them to where they are currently, they may not be too keen to move if they move and end up losing all the advantages.
Progressive inheritance taxes will probably help not to have "dynasties" of the rich. Currently once an ancestor gets rich, it seems like all the descendants for the forseeable generations are set for life.
It's not just about paying a fair share (Score:3)
Anytime he wants Mr M or Mr b can destroy your life and the only reason they haven't is because you are so belief they're notice there's no reason for them to.
Go ask the guy Mr M accused of pedophilia about the effects of having enough money that you have near absolute power with it. Or any of the other people he's hired private investigators to dig up dirt on.
And
Re: For what it's worth Bitcoin seems to have sto (Score:3)
Re: For what it's worth Bitcoin seems to have sto (Score:4, Informative)
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Now for the OP, what is the alternative? What we have now is money that devalues over time and is tied to whatever the political system decides to do. The Turkish lira lost a lot of value in the past year. The Egyptian pound lost half of its value after the arab spring. Other currencies keep losing value because th
Re:Depends... (Score:4, Informative)
Bitcoin's dropped ~50%, and USD dropped about 10-20% depending on what you were buying.
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and USD dropped about 10-20% depending on what you were buying.
Relative to what? Bitcoin dropped in relation to the USD. What has the USD done in relation to which currency, and was it the USD which dropped or the other currency which increased?
Mind you the only concern the value of the USD has to anyone in the USA is if you're an international trader. Sitting at home and going to the local supermarket it doesn't matter if the USD is 10% higher or lower related to any other currency. What matters is that I get paid in a consistent number of dollars and I buy goods with
Re:Depends... (Score:4, Insightful)
Bitcoin's dropped ~50%, and USD dropped about 10-20% depending on what you were buying.
USD dropped 10-20% - presumably you mean via inflation. (Thats quite a high estimate since last November).
Bitcoin has dropped 50% versus USD. So its dropped another 10-20% against real-world goods.
Re:Depends... (Score:5, Insightful)
Taxation is a form of friction in an economic system. Move money from A to B in exchange for moving some amount of wealth from B to A. Nothing is created. It's simply the reallocation of assets for the most efficient future use in the creation of wealth. Taxes reduce that efficiency and remove wealth from the economy. Not just reallocate it but destroy it. Better find a different system.
How do you expect to pay for public infrastructure without taxes?
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There's nothing artificial about laundering money (Score:5, Insightful)
Your final point is a Dodge. The grandparent is saying you can't buy a house anonymously not that you can't sell it for much less than it's worth. You just created a straw man there.
Re:There's nothing artificial about laundering mon (Score:4, Informative)
You can give away anything you want and sell it at any price you want. But if you sell below fair market price, the difference is considered a gift and you need pay taxes on it. Or the recipient must declare it as income and pay taxes on it.
I bought a couple of properties in the fire sale following 2008 crash. Short sale from the bank, the seller was selling at 50% of the price he paid, lost all the equity he had built including down payment, the bank accepted my bids as the final settlements and waived off all the remaining mortgage. This is the kicker: The amount waived by the bank was deemed income and he owed income taxes on it. All he wanted was a clear conscience, and a clean credit record. Did everything he could, took enormous losses, paid dearly for one simple thing, to hold his head up and say, "I am not a deadbeat". Men and Women like him are the backbone of America, the true source of prosperity.
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Crypto currency outside government control has a purpose.
Of course it does. Illegal businesses need a way to exchange money, be it for the proceeds of actual illegal activities, or simply a lower white collar crime like tax dodging.
There's no other purpose for a currency outside of government control other than the idea that you want to be outside of the laws and regulations imposed by a government.
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Chia burns through hard drives. Also, money. (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a garbage idea that causes storage shortages while burning through 512G SSDs in little over a month. [pcgamer.com]
Tired of using DVDs as coasters? Use dead SSDs instead!
As a bonus, it tanked. Within months it lost 90% of "value" [gagadget.com], now "trading" at about $36.60. [coinmarketcap.com] Used to be "around $1,934".
Also, go fuck yourself you fucking leach. Stop peddling your garbage here.
Re:Destructive? (Score:4, Insightful)
The strongest cryptocurrency detractors are the ones that missed the boat
So, you're basically saying it's only useful if you own a time machine? That makes it useful to pretty much no one.
Re:Destructive? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Destructive? (Score:5, Insightful)
It has valid uses
Yes, as pointed out. It is useful for payments for ransomware and drug deals. Also securities fraud.
Dollars are better for all the other uses.
Re:Destructive? (Score:4, Insightful)
The strongest cryptocurrency detractors are the ones that missed the boat
Of course. That is because cryptocurrency is not a currency but rather a pyramid scheme. If it was a currency then people who "missed the point" wouldn't be detractors.
No one is a detractor of the USD because they were born after the central brank created it, because it serves its purpose as a currency. Unlike crypotrash.
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It does have problems but nothing like it has ever existed before. It has valid uses.
Nobody has found them yet, though.
I've asked several times in several places if anyone knows of a non-bullshit use case for NFTs in computer games (because I'm an indie game dev). So far, nobody has come up with even one.
Same for blockchain. I've been involved in a fairly large local government project around blockchain et al and absolutely everything that came up there doesn't need blockchain technology or rapidly hits its limitations. I'm still giggling from the presentation of one tech company that prese
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