It’s a store of value that regularly goes down double-digits, a digital currency that costs well over $10 for a single transaction, and an inflation hedge that swings wildly. Like does one BTC buy me a Tesla, a Pinto, or a bicycle in 12 months? I can be quite certain what $50000 USD gets me, despite all the claims that fiat is unstable and inflatory
That's the problem with saying bubbles = inflation. They can go up and down. There is an underlying trend that keeps increasing the value and a small chunk of it is indeed $USD inflation but the rest could just as well be growth of the user base.
Any state's central bank issuing global digital currency would have made a killer app. No mining. Just buy and sell the the coin in exchange of your cash when you have to.
One difference that I'm aware of (I know people in this situation), is some people cannot open a bank account, but everyone with a computer and a network can open a crypto account.
Constraints differ around the world. The term to search for is "unbanked". There are a lot of people unbanked worldwide.
In the UK where I live, "hostile environment" policies make it illegal for some people to obtain any bank account. It is illegal for a bank to open an account without a person providing documentation to prove the "right to banking". (There is a similar law preventing people from obtaining shelter, "right to rent").
Anyone who knows what happened to the Windrush generation, or to many people who transitioned from "legal" to "illegal" while in the country lawfully, due to arbitrary and capricious Kafka-esque processes, relationship breakdowns, or surprise letters you couldn't have anticipated, knows how harsh the hostile environment can be - some of them died due to critical medical care halted.
As you can imagine, such people desparately need the cash system to continue to exist, if only so their friends can support them with cash so they can continue to purchase life essentials.
How does an “unbanked” person convert their fiat currency into crypto? Is there someone taking in reasonably large sums of untracked cash and sending crypto to wallets? (I genuinely am unaware)
The unbanked tend to have small amounts, and what they have isn't always in the form of cash.
I expect there actually are people providing in-person small cash<->crypto exchange services, just like there are e.g. unregulated loan sharks, unofficial "family" banking, etc. for people who cannot use the regular system.
However I was originally addressing the "digital currency" aspect, specifically how "$USD at my bank account" is not universal currency the same way cash is, as many people assume banking is open to all.
This is not to say crypto is the solution either, rather there is no universally usable digital currency at the moment. As far as I know crypto isn't currently particularly _useful_ for friends (who are banked) to give friends who are not small amounts of crypto-cash to spend on useful things like food and shelter.
There are obvious obstacles, such as transaction costs, times, and excessive transparency for that kind of use. People want small transactions between close associates to be private.[1]
But those obstacles cannot be assumed to be permanent. The mathematical developments in zero-knowledge crypto recently have been quite remarkable. Scalability is not a fundamental problem; transactions times are being worked on. Costs are complicated because of economic incentives to keep them high but they could reduce to near-zero. If your unregulated landlord wants to buy a Tesla with crypto next year, perhaps they will accept some amount of crypto for rent now - probably a higher amount than they'd accept in cash.
[1] (I personally prefer large transactions to be traceable while small ones remain private - so that "follow the money" works for accountability on large things.)
A bank deposit is just that, a deposit. Your bank owes you x amount of $USD but it doesn't mean it actually has that many $USD in reserve. There is nothing wrong with it because lending is a valuable service to society but it is not the same.
A CBDC is electronic cash. The CBDC $USD in your account are real $USD the same way $USD bills in your wallet are real $USD.
It's just pure speculation. No one is in Bitcoin for Bitcoins, everyone I've ever spoken to with Bitcoin is in it to make more USD which really says it all. Arguebly anyone who's holding Bitcoin and is more concerned about the risk inflation than the risk of Elon tweeting something stupid doesn't understand the investment they've made. To me it seems like the inflation hedge arguement is little more than mental gynastics to justify their gambling.
Disagree. Equities, specifically index funds, are marketed as an asset that will increase in USD price over time. There is an entire movement founded on this belief (FIRE).
Even special cases like Venezuela where people are fleeing from hyperinflation, they mostly benefiting from the exposure to the USD. The only benefit is evading capital controls and price is irrelevant for that usecase.
Capital controls (blocking foreign exchange) are stupid because for every person selling a hyperinflationary currency, there is someone on the other side paying with a stable currency who is partially relieving some of the inflation pressure.
There are Venezuelans in Miami that send their paychecks back home to support the local economy yet capital controls prevent something like this from happening.
Capital controls, evading economic sanctions, as well as draconian KYC/AML measures that for Venezuelans can be very difficult to fulfill as you're asked for things like existing bank accounts (there's only a tiny handful of international banks that allow Venezuelans to open accounts with them at the moment) or a valid passport (can go upwards to hundreds of dollars and with waiting times in months and sometimes years) not to mention the chance you're just silently dropped only because you are Venezuelan. True, having USD would be vastly preferred for most, but it's just plainly not possible in some cases as local cash supply is very restricted and risky.
Just because most people in first world countries only see cryptocurrencies as speculative toys it doesn't mean they're without uses for the rest of the world, even if those uses can be seen as immoral or against the spirit of the law from a western point of view.
Most alt-coins created these days are designed as pure pyramid schemes (coin burned to artificially reduce the supply, n% of every transaction is spread among existing wallets etc...). Blatant scams like SafeMoon have hundreds of thousand of "holders". Beyond that one of the most successful cryptocurrencies over the past few months was DogeCoin, which has absolutely no value proposition besides using a meme dog as a mascot.
This shows pretty clearly that behind all the posturing and deflecting we've seen over the past decade, the crypto world is really embracing its profound pyramid scheme nature. Any supposed "tech" is only valuable if it can be used to pump the price. Projects like Monero or Ethereum that actually attempted to improve the tech fare no better than LiteCoin clone #25156. Projects like Iota and Nano who once aimed to revolutionize cryptocurrencies have faded into irrelevancy and are now largely ignored.
At this point there's usually somebody who replies "but I actually use Bitcoin for grocery shopping, it works" and I'm sure that you do, but you have to be aware that you're part of a vanishingly small minority.
“Digital gold” is just a euphemism for speculative store of value. Unlike most altcoins including several of the ones you mentioned, Bitcoin never (mis)represented itself as anything but that. Bitcoin never tried to say its use case was anything but the safest safe haven asset. Every other coin had to invent a reason for its existence which without fail never differs from “speculative store of value” underneath all the sophistry and buzzwords.
Just because “good” crypto isn’t the most successful today doesn’t mean it’s not successful.
XMR for example already gets plenty of use on Darknet markets.
Widespread adoption takes time. In the meantime you have volatility and people trying to cash in on volatility. It’s not a big deal, just ignore it, what matters is the tech - which, as XMR has proven, is what matters when push comes to shove.
I think US banking is the outlier here. I've never paid anything like this anywhere in Europe, the vast majority of transactions (for example SEPA) are free, or very close to free.
I’ve found SEPA to be highly overrated. Upon further investigation I learned that Europeans have little experience with cross-border SEPA.
Its free but not anywhere near instant (although your conversation was not about speed). The instant version of SEPA exists in a thin patchwork, which might solve the most common use cases of people in the same country using that country’s largest banks. Everything else is pretty much the same as ACH in the US in that it also takes several business days, and is also free.
I've never had cross border SEPA take longer than a business day. Don't doubt it can happen, but if you submit before the cutoff and it's not there by end of next business day your bank or the recipient bank are violating the rules.
I'm not in the US, but it seems like you, as a nation, need to get your retail banking system in order. You're behind (by the sounds of things) all of Europe, much of the far east, India, Aus/NZ and a bunch of other places.
Yes. Most of us know this. We're not exactly complete idiots.
There's this thing called lobbying over here. It means if you have a lot of money, you make the laws. Apparently, those with the money making the laws don't particularly care to do what you've advised. Thank you for your understanding.
Btc is an environmental disaster and a trash currency. But Don't let the btc/doge/elon fanatics scare you away from exploring the other (real) technologically impressive cryptos.
Crypto is an evolving technology. Why is HN so bitter towards it? I find it strange that everyone here simply dismisses it as a worthless concept. What brand-new, experimental technologies with open-source development have ever been perfect from the get-go?
What other technology today provides rapid exchange of unlimited amounts of value, instantly? What other technology today can do so in a censorship-resistant manner?
ACH and wire transfer take way longer to settle. The same goes for PayPal, Venmo, and CashApp to hit your bank. Zelle works, only sometimes. All solutions are centralized, proprietary, and KYC. There is no way for the average person or small community to exchange value without being at the mercy of a big bank.
What we have with crypto is a way to exchange actual value in a decentralized, democratic manner in anywhere from <5 seconds to just a few minutes (depending on your currency). We also have a way to recreate many financial concepts with smart contracts. This could be a huge win for humanity - the democratization of finance, banking the unbanked, and bringing financial privacy and power back to the individual.
And sure, crypto has an energy problem today. A lot of cryptos are solving this. This is a temporary, intermediate problem. In the meantime, I guarantee you that plenty of things that provide less benefit to humanity but consume more energy.
Again, I don’t know where everyone suddenly decided that crypto has to be perfect today. Rome wasn’t built in a day. Crypto is very much in its infancy and a ton of work is being done at the protocol level across all cryptocurrencies every day.
It has been "evolving" for 12 years. iPhones have been around for about as long as cryptocurrency has.
This is a million years in tech. They are still absolute unusable junk with a million problems. It's not early days, it's the twilight of a failing technology.
In each of those 12 years there has been significant work at the protocol level. You forget that these are mostly volunteers working on these projects.
> It's not early days, it's the twilight of a failing technology.
This would be true if there was no active development, but development has only been increasing in pace year by year.
Clearly there have been massive strides in twelve years. Crypto of twelve years ago was nothing like crypto today. Today, you have anonymity, you have fast and feeless transactions, etc.
You haven’t made your expectations for crypto clear, to be honest, so it’s difficult to understand why you think it has failed when it is rapidly improving even today.
11 years of evolution and counting, and still nothing to show for it besides the now habitual pump-and-dump cycle.
If cryptocurrencies are so good at transferring money what's stopping them from replacing existing solutions? Literal billions have been poured in the tech and it still fails to reach any significant adoption outside of get-rich-quick schemes.
In 2017 during the previous bubble I asked people on this forum how long it'd be before cryptocurrencies actually delivered on that mythical "tech" and we'd get actual mainstream real world applications. A couple of people replied that it would take a year or two. Can I get an update on that?
> 11 years of evolution and counting, and still nothing to show for it besides the now habitual pump-and-dump cycle
What, precisely, are you looking for cryptocurrencies to “show” you?
Transactions work today. Plenty of people use them for exchanging actual value, quickly and anonymously (or pseudonymously) across the world.
> If cryptocurrencies are so good at transferring money what's stopping them from replacing existing solutions?
Why would the financial industry do anything to encourage the adoption of crypto? It strips them of their power. They rely on you keeping and sending money with them - the democratized platform of cryptocurrencies are a potential threat.
> Literal billions have been poured in the tech
Sorry, billions have been poured into a worthless speculative market. The developers are not receiving billions, they are still volunteers. And yet there has been a massive amount of development in the crypto space over the past 12 years. NANO enabling instant transactions, XMR allowing for privacy, etc.
> how long it'd be before cryptocurrencies actually delivered on that mythical "tech" and we'd get actual mainstream real world applications […] Can I get an update on that?
I ask again, what exactly are you looking for?
In terms of real-world usage, well, crypto has been used for years. Drug/Darknet markets, for one. Ransomware for another. These are stress-tests for any currency and prove that crypto can work to exchange value in a real market setting.
Further adoption is really up to people, and it will likely happen anyways as the technology improves. A lot of work has been done, but there is a long way to go.
I really suppose it depends on the crypto you are talking about. Still, most cryptocurrencies are undergoing rapid development today, so I don’t see why people are complaining and calling it dead.
> Drug/Darknet markets, for one. Ransomware for another. These are stress-tests for any currency and prove that crypto can work to exchange value in a real market setting.
Those aren't real market environments by a long shot and far from stress tests. These markets have transactions that are low-volume but high-value. Me, what I'm looking for is something along the lines of "How many grocery transactions globally can crypto do per second?", i.e., high-volume, low-value. Now _that's_ a stress test.
Quick Google survey tells me that BTC can do 10 transactions per second _tops_. That's far from a workable state of affairs. It's not even "promising tech".
> Those aren't real market environments by a long shot and far from stress tests.
They are definitely real markets. You buy something at a free market price and get something in return.
They are definitely stress tests in that they prove that crypto can be used as digital cash. You can not buy drugs safely with a PayPal, Zelle, wire transfer, or ACH, but you can with Monero. This fulfills the original vision of cryptocurrency: decentralized, uncensored exchange of value without being at the mercy of another.
There is not really a more difficult stress test that tests the ideal and purpose of cryptocurrency.
> Me, what I'm looking for is something along the lines of "How many grocery transactions globally can crypto do per second?"
Again, why does HN expect crypto to be perfect today? It will improve over time. For what it’s worth, today,
- NANO transactions confirm instantly. The network can handle over 7000 TPS, more than Visa’s peak of 4000 TPS. Nano TPS scales with the size of the network.
- XMR transactions confirm in <2 minutes. XMR can max out at about 1700 TPS, which is much more than what is actually needed. XMR TPS will scale with the capabilities of XMR nodes (mainly network speed).
In the coming years,
- ETH2 with Optimistic Rollups can scale to 100,000 TPS.
- Lightning on BTC will enable millions of TPS.
Again, this is a technology in its infancy. I do not understand the disappointment - Rome wasn’t built in a day.
Replicating the concept of exchange of cash digitally, in a global, decentralized, trustless manner is no small feat. If it works, we free will users of digital currency from the mercy of banks, and give them back their financial privacy.
> ETH2 with Optimistic Rollups can scale to 100,000 TPS.
Do you have figures for how much compute power they need for those too?
I could write an ACID-compliant DB that could do 1M TPS but if to achieve that I had to buy a gaming rig or two, run it at basically full capacity, then it all sounds less impressive.
> Again, this is a technology in its infancy.
But when will it stop being in its infancy? At what point do we cut our losses and say this approach isn't working (if I may add, a question every scientific experiment should reckon with)?
> I do not understand the disappointment - Rome wasn’t built in a day.
But we move at a faster pace than the Romans now and if a technology hasn't matured after 11 years, then that's reasonable grounds for disappointment don't you think?
> Do you have figures for how much compute power they need for those too?
NANO uses around 0.112 Wh. Barely any energy at all. At its peak, NANO might consume about as much as energy as a single shopping mall.
XMR is about 60 Gwh. Such is the price of truly anonymous electronic payments, at least until more cryptographers work on XMR to figure out how we can increase efficiency.
Energy consumption is an issue, but it’s overblown. There are trivial things that have a far greater climate impact than crypto, but provide less potential value to humanity. If people spent half as much time worrying about the climate impact of their own choices, our crisis would be all but solved. Finger-pointing is easy, changing yourself is hard.
Still, most cryptos are rapidly moving to reducing their energy consumption by a factor of 100-1000 by moving to proof of stake.
> I could write an ACID-compliant DB that could do 1M TPS
Your system is neither distributed nor trustless. Users will be at your mercy. Hardly the ideal system for humanity.
Try designing a similar system that works across hundreds of thousands of disparate nodes, many of which may be malicious or differently configured and in poor network environments. You will very quickly arrive at a similar model to modern cryptocurrencies.
> At what point do we cut our losses and say this approach isn't working
Certainly not when development speed has been rapidly increasing over time?
These are early stage projects. A few years for a volunteer-designed global electronic financial system that frees humanity from the mercy of banks and financial censorship is not bad.
Especially when you can’t take an Agile “move fast and break things” approach.
> But we move at a faster pace than the Romans now and if a technology hasn't matured after 11 years
Why do you keep saying the technology hasn’t matured after 11 years? I feel like you barely read my reply - how are NANO, XMR, and ETH/ETH2 not massive indicators of the improvement in the crypto sphere? Each alone represents a significant generational stride beyond BTC as it was originally defined. NANO brought us fast transactions, XMR brought us anonymity and censorship resistance, and ETH brought us smart contracts.
> At its peak, NANO might consume about as much as energy as a single shopping mall.
That's not a comforting analogy. A shopping mall processes payments that confirm almost instantly too, even on exchange, on top of running lights, security, maybe a movie theater, some music over PA, running escalators, cooking food, etc.
And that's just energy consumption. NANO also has hardware costs that scale linearly with the size of a network.
> XMR is about 60 Gwh...at least until more cryptographers work on XMR to figure out how we can increase efficiency.
Educate me if there's an approach I'm missing here but computing experience so far suggests that there will be little improvement in these figures for a damn long time. As it seems to me, P will have to equal NP before significant strides are made in this domain, at which point of course we've opened a Pandora's box that renders most crypto (not just -currency) insecure.
> There are trivial things that consume far more energy than crypto
Of secondary importance to me but I'm really curious what you think these things are.
> Why do you keep saying the technology hasn’t matured after 11 years?
For the record, you are the first person in our exchange to suggest that this tech is still in its infancy. To quote your previous reply:
Actually, in your very post that I am replying to, you say that,
> These are early stage projects.
My point is, they may be massive improvements, generational strides from BTC, but if after 11 years there are still roadblocks to wider rollout (like, as you concede, efficiency), it's just rational to second-guess the approach.
(Footnote: I feel like the purpose of my ACID DB analogy flew over your head. The whole point of it is not to impress but rather to show why raw throughput without specifying the hardware offers little insight. But that's a moot point here.)
A decentralized world financial system with the transaction capacity double that of VISA consuming as much energy as a shopping mall during peak load is perfectly fine. Our current financial system consumes more. It is literally a negligible cost.
> there will be little improvement in these figures for a damn long time
Some preliminary explorations have shown that it may be possible to adopt anonymity on a Nano-like protocol.
Regardless, it won’t be fixed for a long time but that doesn’t matter. I would support Tor if it used 60 Gwh, and so the same go for XMR. Both are essential in guarding people from censorship and authoritarianism.
> Of secondary importance to me but I'm really curious what you think these things are.
In terms of raw environmental impact? The factory farm industry. But, that’s another discussion entirely.
> if after 11 years there are still roadblocks to wider rollout, it's just rational to second-guess the approach.
Designing a decentralized exchange of currency is a hard problem to solve. 11 years doesn’t seem concerning to me with the improvements we have seen in the time span. Especially given that these projects are mostly developed by volunteers.
There are improvements to be made, mainly around usability. But, those can come later, when the networks and protocols have matured.
There never was any real world application to cryptocurrency beyond what Satoshi invented in 2009 with Bitcoin — a global currency of fixed supply controlled by computer algorithms.
Every coin launched subsequent to Bitcoin has been a money grab dressed up in heaps of ludicrous marketing lingo, defended by paid-off law firms and celebrity VCs on the take, obscured via technobabble, and powered exclusively by FOMO and greed.
> There never was any real world application to cryptocurrency beyond what Satoshi invented in 2009 with Bitcoin
All this shows is that you haven’t spent even 5 minutes trying to understand crypto, and yet you judge it regardless.
- The introduction of true anonymity (as opposed to mere pseudonymity) with XMR has been significant.
- The introduction of rapid, feeless transactions with NANO has been significant.
- The introduction of smart contracts with Ethereum has been significant.
Each of these solutions completely change the crypto sphere and significantly expand its potential use case. Each of these provide something at the protocol layer that Bitcoin does not. And there have been plenty of significant developments beyond these. But bitterness is blinding.
I would be fascinated to hear your evidence for why these are “a money grab dressed up in heaps of ludicrous marketing lingo, defended by paid-off law firms.”
I'm frankly excited about Helium and did go ahead and buy a 'miner' access point.
Will it pan out? IDK. But the use case and implementation (For those not aware, a Helium 'miner' is providing a low data rate wireless access point, and you get coins for providing coverage over an area) seem far more feasible from a conceptual standpoint.
Hacker news is extremely anti crypto. I wonder if many folks actually made a peer to peer crypto transaction without an exchange, sat down, and thought about the implications. It didn't click for me until I did it. Once you think about the implications of that it is fucking amazing.We need it.
Generate a bank account with code, no bs paperwork or going through bank clerk. Then immediately send store of value to that account, or anyone in the world. Check it on a node(you can host the checker YOURSELF, or anyone you trust) within the hour, and the transaction is set in stone. Irreversible.
If I want to give cash to my favorite niece, I don't need to go get permission from a bank. I hand it to her. So why is it so hard to understand that as a citizen of the information age, we all need to have the equivalent option of direct transfers with minimal meddling?
Many arguments against cryptocurrencies are weak - they're not unsolvable problems.
Slow transaction times arguments could be analogous to slow computer times in the 90s. Better tech and algorithms will patch it.
Volatility in the long term can be solved with higher adoption since the supply is tiny relative to the dollar. Or a clever incentive scheme like dai.
Security screw ups are due to people not being educated and not having separate devices. Intuitive devices for security have not been made and it will take time.
Transaction irreversibly can be solved when stores build on top of the blockchain platforms. Or escrows.Satoshi hints at this on the FIRST page of the bitcoin white paper.
Smart contracts requiring good faith from people to run it? Sure, but it's still better and more automated compared to the systems we have now.
At the end of the day, robots in the future are not going to interface with multiple shitty bank apis that take 5 business days to settle entrenched by tech debt running shitty Java code. They're going to go through one of new universal platforms that have attributes like Ethereum.
> Generate a bank account with code, no bs paperwork or going through bank clerk.
Not useful to most people
> the transaction is set in stone. Irreversible.
An anti-feature.
> we all need to have the equivalent option of direct transfers with minimal meddling?
We have direct transfers, and nobody has ever stopped one of mine.
You're trying to find a revolution in things most people don't care about, at all. Non-solutions for non-problems.
> Better tech and algorithms will patch it.
Demonstrably untrue - BTC is still king, and the market follows it slavishly. The BTC community (miners, big exchanges and developers, not users) has demonstrated that they aren't interested in change, by continuing to limit transaction throughput, sticking with PoW etc. The users have demonstrated they don't care either, by continuing to support BTC over others. It's speculation and brand recognition, not tech, that people are interested in.
> Security screw ups are due to people not being educated
Which they never will be en-mass, making a system with irreversible transactions a poor choice for widespread use.
Smart contracts are a joke, and have unsolvable problems when it comes to interfacing with anything that happens outside of a blockchain. They are effectively database triggers, not a revolution.
At the end of the day, robots in the future are more likely to talk to standardised central bank APIs or standardised retail bank APIs.
You are missing the point. It decentralizes a centralized system that IS useful to most people.
Furthermore, 31% of the world population is unbanked. Maybe “most” people don’t need crypto but a lot of people could use it, should it improve over time.
> We have direct transfers, and nobody has ever stopped one of mine.
Your “direct transfers” take days to settle. And again, a centralized solution. I can’t understand how someone on HN doesn’t see how decentralizing digital finance is not a big deal.
People on HN will understand the need for about decentralized computing, sing songs about it, and self-host what they can - but as soon as it comes to finance it’s “we don’t need that” and “the big players do it for us with their proprietary, KYC solutions.”
Do you really not see the need for being able to send someone money electronically without being at the mercy of a big bank?
> Demonstrably untrue - BTC is still king, and the market follows it slavishly. The users have demonstrated they don't care either, by continuing to support BTC over others. It's speculation and brand recognition, not tech, that people are interested in.
Again, you haven’t done any research. Darknet markets and ransomware alike prefer XMR over BTC and have for some time.
> Which they never will be [educated] en-mass
Good thing we have developers working on simplifying the technology and making it idiot-proof?
> a system with irreversible transactions a poor choice for widespread use.
There is a system like this that already has “widespread use” - cash. If you hand someone cash you can’t take it back either. The immutability of the blockchain is a good thing.
Businesses are legally required to provide refunds if you pay with cash. It would be no different with crypto.
> Smart contracts are a joke, and have unsolvable problems when it comes to interfacing with anything that happens outside of a blockchain
Demonstrably incorrect. DAI is an algorithmic stablecoin worth $1 (+/- $0.01) on the Ethereum network with a market cap of over $4.1 billion. It controls its price by understanding the price of Ethereum, which necessarily happens “outside of the blockchain.”
It is a trustless way to convert ETH to a USD equivalent, requiring no reserves and no auditing. I don’t know how anyone here can’t look at DAI on ETH and see the power of and potential of cryptocurrency - a decentralized, bank-less, trust-less, reserve-less algorithmic currency exchange that anyone can use pseudonymously. It’s incredible.
> You are missing the point. It decentralizes a centralized system that IS useful to most people.
You still haven't told me why it's interesting or good to decentralise getting a bank account, you're just asserting it.
> Your “direct transfers” take days to settle.
No, they transfer pretty instantly and the funds can be used instantly, and whether there is some background process that takes longer is not really relevant to me or the people I transfer to.
> And again, a centralized solution.
Again, why should I care?
> “the big players do it for us with their proprietary, KYC solutions.”
KYC/AML is a good thing. It is good to be able to keep an eye on, and regulate, the flow of cash. It is an important set of tools in combatting all manner of crimes.
FYI there is a vibrant fintech startup ecosystem, that works with and within these regs. There are even a number of startup (challenger) banks these days.
> Do you really not see the need for being able to send someone electronically without being at the mercy of a big bank?
I genuinely, 100%, do not care a single iota, no. Being "at the mercy" of a bank provides me with all manner of insurance, assurance, protection and regulation.
> Darknet markets and ransomware
And I should support those things? They are a great argument for KYC/AML in themselves. And even so, these are niche compared to the speculative market.
> Good thing we have developers working on simplifying the technology and making it idiot-proof?
Irreversible transactions are not idiot-proof by nature.
> Finally, if you hand someone cash you can’t take it back either.
Sure, but you don't keep cash in a file on an easily compromised computer, and you don't keep all of your cash with you all the time, you keep it in a bank where someone else is responsible for custody, can reverse things out etc.
> Demonstrably incorrect. DAI is ...
Running on a system of 'trusted' oracles, which is not trustless.
> a decentralized, bank-less, ..., reserve-less algorithmic currency exchange that anyone can use pseudonymously. It’s incredible.
And entirely superfluous to any need I can think of.
(Plus, you know, unregulated financial products and services, doesn't that just scream "bad idea!" to you?)
> You still haven't told me why it's interesting or good to decentralise getting a bank account, you're just asserting it.
Not being financially censored by the government or banks? Not having to be at their mercy for your money? The benefits seem pretty clear.
> and whether there is some background process that takes longer is not really relevant to me or the people I transfer to.
Clearly you have never had a low balance and had to wait for your money to settle in your bank. A reality most people deal with every day.
> And I should support those things? They are a great argument for KYC/AML in themselves.
You asked for a real-world example of crypto being used for goods and services. I gave one.
Feel free to let the government decide what you’re allowed to buy and ingest. A lot of people want freedom from that. It goes further - assume a malicious government, as all governments historically fail their citizens - only cash and cryptocurrency will be reasonable exchanges of value.
PayPal and Zelle might work for you, today, but to suggest that they’re a viable long- or even medium-term solution for digital currency amongst humanity is ludicrous.
> Sure, but you don't keep cash in a file on an easily compromised computer,
Neither do you with crypto. The vast majority of your savings would be in a hardware wallet, presumably easier to use by the time crypto is mainstream.
> Irreversible transactions are not idiot-proof by nature.
The concept is as idiot-proof as cash, which has clearly proven enough for humanity for thousands of years.
> doesn't that just scream "bad idea!" to you?
Nope. It reduces trust, reliance, and censorship on or by entities that don’t have your best interests at heart.
I suppose we simply have different priors. You trust banks and the government. You are okay with forfeiting your financial privacy. I am not.
> Not being financially censored by the government or banks? Not having to be at their mercy for your money? The benefits seem pretty clear.
This is of no interest to me whatsoever. The 'benefits' are not being able to recall money from rogue merchants, not being insured against thefts and fraud, all sorts of "benefits" that look to most people like lunacy and huge steps backwards. I have never felt at the mercy of big banks, they are heavily regulated and work well, and if I don't like their services I can switch to another.
> Clearly you have never had a low balance and had to wait for your money to settle in your bank
This is not something that happens, bank transfers are instant here.
> Feel free to let the government decide what you’re allowed to buy and ingest.
Oh I definitely think it's a good thing that governments can keep an eye on transactions, for stopping fraud and other financial crimes, and that's just a start. Like I said before, this is a positive of the banking system, not a drawback.
> PayPal and Zelle might work for you, today, but to suggest that they’re a viable long- or even medium-term solution for digital currency amongst humanity is ludicrous.
I don't use those for transfers, but you haven't said why using banks or these sort of services is ludicrous, just asserted it.
> The vast majority of your savings would be in a hardware wallet, presumably easier to use by the time crypto is mainstream.
And when you lose it? As many, many people will? This is no solution to widespread use by people not versed in computer security. And they shouldn't have to be versed in computer security to keep their money safe
> The concept is as idiot-proof as cash
Except it's not, because it involves key files and computer security.
> It reduces trust
It certainly does, I wouldn't ever put my trust in unregulated financial instruments. And I said before, I have no issue with financial "censorship", it's an important mechanism to fight crime, limit cash flows to rogue nations, terrorist groups and despots etc. It's a good thing.
> You trust banks and the government.
More than cryptocurrency miners and developers, yes. Hell yes. More than sellers in any given marketplace, where we have thousands of years of evidence that people will be ripped off at every turn? Yes. More than my own computer security skills? Still yes by a long way.
> You are okay with forfeiting your financial privacy. I am not.
And you are OK enabling ransomware, widespread fraud, and ordinary users losing everything because they are not equipped to manage their own affairs (they really, really are not). I still have financial privacy, and what's more I have a ton of financial protections, if something goes wrong then things can be reversed, tracked, traced and compensated. These benefits are real rather than idealogical, and I don't buy into your ideology. Democratic government is far from perfect, but it's generally better than the alternatives.
xvector - thank you for trying to explain crypto and its main pros here. I think some people won't still be convinced...
We will have to see what happens 10 years from now. There are equally good defenders from both sides. Buffett and co are either trained on old data, or are trained on large amounts of data(through reading). We will find out!
What xvector misses is that to a lot of people, those aren't pros.
It's not a case of not being convinced - I am quite convinced cryptocurrency can deliver some of those things like immutable transactions and lack of government ability to monitor or block cashflows - but I am also quite convinced they are backward steps.
> Why is HN so bitter towards it? I find it strange that everyone here simply dismisses it as a worthless concept. What brand-new, experimental technologies with open-source development have ever been perfect from the get-go?
I don't know personally, but burning time on the internet just to type out words and try to convince other people of your opinions - this does not speak to me. I put my money in play and that speaks volumes.
When money is involved seeing millionaires pop up on every bubble, people lose being honest and just lick the wound of missing it out on their own by finding out the worse side of things.
The technology has a future and more applications may come out from more evolved concepts and so far the security seems to be holding well and there's very little to be bitter about.
There are three people in this fictional economy. You get a paycheck and you decide to save it. The other guy stays unemployed. 3 years later the second guy got hired by the third. You decide to spend your savings. The second guy says he already has a job, you should have asked while he was unemployed over the last 3 years. You raise your offered salary until he is willing to work part time for you. Bang, inflation. Therefore, "saving" is impossible.
What really happens when you save your money is that you stopped consuming. There are products sitting on a store shelf that do not get purchased. If those products spoil then they are gone, not saved. If the vendor doesn't get customers then his shop will shut down and his labor will be wasted for those 3 years. You cannot get those 3 years back, ever. Saving is impossible full stop.
However, investing is not. If you can invest your money and let that unemployed person build a house, that house will last 50 years and it will generate rental income and rent prices in the future are greater thanks to inflation, having a future income stream will defend against inflation.
Edit: Deflation lets you pretend that the labor has not disappeared and therefore the second guy has to work twice as hard to catch up with his unemployed years all. To make things worse the person that decided to not spend their money caused his unemployment but still demands him to work twice as hard in the future.
I don't follow your logic at all. Prices are determined by supply and demand and have nothing to do with inflation or deflation. Without central bank control, there would be a natural balance of inflation / deflation.
People would spend more when prices are low, which would cause prices to rise. People would save when prices are high, which would cause prices to decrease. This is a naturally self-correcting mechanism.
Central bank induced inflation is caused by creating more money, and giving the money to those who spend it. It moves wealth away from those who are efficient, and giving it to those who are inefficient. This causes wasteful spending and misallocation of capital, and is harmful to economy and environment.
That's because it has no inherent value. Gold has inherent value because it's used in jewellery and as a conductor. If a new use was to be found for gold, it would go up in value. Similarly if someone discovered another metal which could trump gold for shine, the value of gold would go down. There is nothing that BTC can do which altcoins can't.
Gold's utility value is such a small fraction of its reserve value, that it's moot. And gold has had 1000s of years to find an alternative utility. Even if we did, it's unlikely that that utility would be worth more than gold's market price. I.e. high prices deter utility (this applies to BTC too).
Bitcoin (or potentially Ethereum) in particular are a much more efficient reserve than gold; being a reserve unit doesn't require any physical characteristics, but security, pseudo anonymity, and portability can be significant driving features in adoption.
[Opinion and speculation alert:]
It's clear at this point that Bitcoin's original currency goals are mostly lost, but Ethereum has a good chance of actually meeting them with ETH2. Bitcoin has become a significant reserve unit though, and it's energy costs is the only major risk against it (hence a potential flight to ETH). Although people who invest billions (including indirect investors via ETFs) don't particularly seem to care.
Other specific-utility cryptos might also succeed, though I expect most of them to be built on top of ETH.
You're spoiled by USD stability. There are plenty of unstable currencies all over the world and USD exchanges are not always legal in those countries. Bitcoin looks like an interesting asset in those circumstances.
I'm looking forward to this. Tired of Chinese monetary policy effecting crypto markets. If they want to sit out the development of this new tech it just gives everyone else the advantage.
Any news of other Central Banks "contemplating" digital currencies is just their way of suppressing weeds (competition) it can be worked out how to do such without killing the golden goose that is the established banking system.
I don't understand what a centralized digital currency even means. All I can think of is "it's the same as the regular currency, except we don't issue cash because we hate cash because we can't track it as easily".
Exactly this. Who cares if you have a digital currency if you control everything about it. At that point it's just fiat with extra steps.
Meanwhile they sit out the development of new tech like the 5G network being built by the Helium Network which uses HNT as the motivational driver to create a distributed decentralized network run by average people. These types of systems will become the norm in the next crypto wave.
- China controls the rate of issuance of coins, like a central bank, except it may be easier to mint coins as needed and direct them to a particular person or purpose.
- China has significant control over the exchange rate to other currencies, because it can limit activity of other exchanges.
- China controls the logic encoded in the coins, because digital coins are not like cash. For example, they are planning to program some coins to expire if not spent within a time limit.
- China can govern who is allowed an account and who is not, and can remove an account from someone if they choose.
- Above applies to business accounts as much as personal.
I think there's a good potential in "designed money", in particular with logic attached to the coins to influence how they are used and behave. But of all the governments in the world to deploy such a thing at scale, China is not high on my list of countries to trust, with their heavy emphasis on surveillance, control and worse if you're in the wrong group. Money is really central to people's lives.
That's a highly optimistic read of it. China move fast and brutally when they decide to move, but often their motivations are approximately identical to what applies in the west, we just take a more gentle approach to changes in our extremely fragile financial system.
They will always find a reason to scare the market for short term short profits. It doesn't matter what the reason is. It's been repeated and it will again.
Yes, all the AMMs on Ethereum, EVMs and even Cosmos environments (Secret Network)
So Uniswap, Sushiswap, Pancakeswap, Quickswap, etc.
All bitcoin traded there is wrapped, with the bitcoin itself having varying degrees of trusted or trustless custody.
Even if you are triggered by the concept of using other chains, Its no different than depositing on exchange, or trading against other deposits on an exchange. A “one time it wasn't immutable 6 years ago” network and even a “21 - 100 validator” network is still better than a centralized exchange’s cold storage.
Ah, thanks. I tried to use one of those (I think Uniswap) but I remember having to pay for gas and the fees were something like $20? Not worth it for a $100 transaction, but I might be misremembering.
Hashing power moving out of China is good for Bitcoin. There's also conflicting reports about the mining bans. The consensus seems to be that China wants to ban mining with fossil fuels, which is also good news.
- Reduces the alleged hold on China's bitcoin dominance to either attack the network or weaponize it.
- Reduces the network reliance on china subsided coal power.
The network will still function after the Chinese miner turn off their machines. Although its going to be a bit slower until next difficulty adjustment.
From a PR standpoint, yes. Public opinion will deteriorate. Bitcoin is being criticized for using China's energy grid which heavily relies on coal.
People should look into the root of the problem instead and I do hope this change suggests that China might be looking into better energy production methods.
Actually it's not how manufacturing works according to Wright's law: the more panels that are manufactured, the more prices of the panels per panel are going down. Of course there are temporary supply/demand issues, but they correct themselves after a few years.
> Of course there are temporary supply/demand issues, but they correct themselves after a few years.
That's the point. Right there.
There is not a surplus of clean energy, in fact there's still a mass reliance on coal power. If it's going to take a few years to 'correct' the market here, then that's not good enough.
Power is really difficult to store. There is not a constant surplus of clean energy but there are definitely bursts of surplus where energy is wasted (both renewable and non-renewable).
Imagine cryptos being the mayor currency used. Everyone needs to adapt their lifestyle to that of a gambler. Every month you need to convert your income coins to other coins. The amount of extreme poverty would be staggering. A few large pump and dump moments a year. Organized by powerful individuals becoming extremely rich and making thousands poor.
Imagine if Bill Gates or Jeff Bezos put all his money into Bitcoin. There is no way anyone else would catch up and they don't even have to create the second Microsoft, Amazon or do anything innovative, just "HODL" for all eternity and become rich from doing nothing.
Gold was volatile when it was initially introduced as a store of value too. Look up the historical charts when compared to silver (the primary store of value at that point in history)
You could store your money in stablecoins, tied to the price of USD, wheat, energy, whatever you like. Decentralized USD stablecoins not actually backed by USD already exist.
As usual, there are a lot of negative comments here on what seems like a good news given how bitcoin is criticized for using chinese coal-based energy for mining. Let me respond to the most popular ones I've read in this thread and hopefully, I'm able to at least get some rational skeptics to at least re-assess their priors
Too Volatile To Be a Store of Value: Volatility alone doesn't make something not a good store of value. Gold, a popular store of value is much more volatile than the US dollars but if you held gold from 50 years ago, you'd be up 37X against the dollar [0]. What makes something a good store of value is how scarce and easy to transfer both across space and time it is. Bitcoin can't be blamed for the casino mentality, it's up to market actors to use bitcoin as a store of value and from what I've observed, that's going to be the long term outcome.
Bitcoin is slow: The argument that bitcoin is slow and expensive is a fallacy. Bitcoin is a settlement layer and when evaluating the speed of a settlement layer, the emphasis should be on speed of settlement assurances and transaction finality[1]. Bitcoin being an open decentralized settlement layer makes this even more important. Comparing bitcoin to visa or sepa which don't settle instantly is disingenuous at best and ignorant at worst. If you want faster transactions, use a layer 2 solution like the lightening network which is orders of magnitude faster and cheaper than visa [2].
Bitcoin is ponzi scheme: This is a complete fallacy both in theory and in practice and it's pretty offensive to suggest that well-meaning people working hard to make finance open and globally accessible are a cabal of scammers looking to steal money from unsuspecting investors. Surely there are bad actors but that's the case in any industry.
Don't believe me? Bitcoin chainanalysis shows emphatically that the vast majority of coins that moved in this crash were new spends in the past months which shows that it's the new buyers that are selling[3], where then is the pyramid scheme? In fact, The early adopters of bitcoin are the least likely to sell. I hold bitcoin not to sell and many in my network are like me(although I can't speak for them). MSTR as an example hasn't sold a single coin, in fact they bought more.
I could go on but it's very exhausting that a technical forum is so negative towards an emerging technology with a lot of promise, it's even more disturbing that a lot of the criticisms are uninformed. We can do better.
122 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 170 ms ] thread$USD at my bank account is state-issued digital currency, and I’m holding it in a bank account in Canada.
In the UK where I live, "hostile environment" policies make it illegal for some people to obtain any bank account. It is illegal for a bank to open an account without a person providing documentation to prove the "right to banking". (There is a similar law preventing people from obtaining shelter, "right to rent").
Anyone who knows what happened to the Windrush generation, or to many people who transitioned from "legal" to "illegal" while in the country lawfully, due to arbitrary and capricious Kafka-esque processes, relationship breakdowns, or surprise letters you couldn't have anticipated, knows how harsh the hostile environment can be - some of them died due to critical medical care halted.
As you can imagine, such people desparately need the cash system to continue to exist, if only so their friends can support them with cash so they can continue to purchase life essentials.
I expect there actually are people providing in-person small cash<->crypto exchange services, just like there are e.g. unregulated loan sharks, unofficial "family" banking, etc. for people who cannot use the regular system.
However I was originally addressing the "digital currency" aspect, specifically how "$USD at my bank account" is not universal currency the same way cash is, as many people assume banking is open to all.
This is not to say crypto is the solution either, rather there is no universally usable digital currency at the moment. As far as I know crypto isn't currently particularly _useful_ for friends (who are banked) to give friends who are not small amounts of crypto-cash to spend on useful things like food and shelter.
There are obvious obstacles, such as transaction costs, times, and excessive transparency for that kind of use. People want small transactions between close associates to be private.[1]
But those obstacles cannot be assumed to be permanent. The mathematical developments in zero-knowledge crypto recently have been quite remarkable. Scalability is not a fundamental problem; transactions times are being worked on. Costs are complicated because of economic incentives to keep them high but they could reduce to near-zero. If your unregulated landlord wants to buy a Tesla with crypto next year, perhaps they will accept some amount of crypto for rent now - probably a higher amount than they'd accept in cash.
[1] (I personally prefer large transactions to be traceable while small ones remain private - so that "follow the money" works for accountability on large things.)
A CBDC is electronic cash. The CBDC $USD in your account are real $USD the same way $USD bills in your wallet are real $USD.
Capital controls (blocking foreign exchange) are stupid because for every person selling a hyperinflationary currency, there is someone on the other side paying with a stable currency who is partially relieving some of the inflation pressure.
There are Venezuelans in Miami that send their paychecks back home to support the local economy yet capital controls prevent something like this from happening.
Just because most people in first world countries only see cryptocurrencies as speculative toys it doesn't mean they're without uses for the rest of the world, even if those uses can be seen as immoral or against the spirit of the law from a western point of view.
This shows pretty clearly that behind all the posturing and deflecting we've seen over the past decade, the crypto world is really embracing its profound pyramid scheme nature. Any supposed "tech" is only valuable if it can be used to pump the price. Projects like Monero or Ethereum that actually attempted to improve the tech fare no better than LiteCoin clone #25156. Projects like Iota and Nano who once aimed to revolutionize cryptocurrencies have faded into irrelevancy and are now largely ignored.
At this point there's usually somebody who replies "but I actually use Bitcoin for grocery shopping, it works" and I'm sure that you do, but you have to be aware that you're part of a vanishingly small minority.
XMR for example already gets plenty of use on Darknet markets.
Widespread adoption takes time. In the meantime you have volatility and people trying to cash in on volatility. It’s not a big deal, just ignore it, what matters is the tech - which, as XMR has proven, is what matters when push comes to shove.
Its free but not anywhere near instant (although your conversation was not about speed). The instant version of SEPA exists in a thin patchwork, which might solve the most common use cases of people in the same country using that country’s largest banks. Everything else is pretty much the same as ACH in the US in that it also takes several business days, and is also free.
There's this thing called lobbying over here. It means if you have a lot of money, you make the laws. Apparently, those with the money making the laws don't particularly care to do what you've advised. Thank you for your understanding.
$25.000.000+ …
[0] https://elonsperm.com/en
What other technology today provides rapid exchange of unlimited amounts of value, instantly? What other technology today can do so in a censorship-resistant manner?
ACH and wire transfer take way longer to settle. The same goes for PayPal, Venmo, and CashApp to hit your bank. Zelle works, only sometimes. All solutions are centralized, proprietary, and KYC. There is no way for the average person or small community to exchange value without being at the mercy of a big bank.
What we have with crypto is a way to exchange actual value in a decentralized, democratic manner in anywhere from <5 seconds to just a few minutes (depending on your currency). We also have a way to recreate many financial concepts with smart contracts. This could be a huge win for humanity - the democratization of finance, banking the unbanked, and bringing financial privacy and power back to the individual.
And sure, crypto has an energy problem today. A lot of cryptos are solving this. This is a temporary, intermediate problem. In the meantime, I guarantee you that plenty of things that provide less benefit to humanity but consume more energy.
Again, I don’t know where everyone suddenly decided that crypto has to be perfect today. Rome wasn’t built in a day. Crypto is very much in its infancy and a ton of work is being done at the protocol level across all cryptocurrencies every day.
Both are rather tiresome.
This is a million years in tech. They are still absolute unusable junk with a million problems. It's not early days, it's the twilight of a failing technology.
> It's not early days, it's the twilight of a failing technology.
This would be true if there was no active development, but development has only been increasing in pace year by year.
You haven’t made your expectations for crypto clear, to be honest, so it’s difficult to understand why you think it has failed when it is rapidly improving even today.
If cryptocurrencies are so good at transferring money what's stopping them from replacing existing solutions? Literal billions have been poured in the tech and it still fails to reach any significant adoption outside of get-rich-quick schemes.
In 2017 during the previous bubble I asked people on this forum how long it'd be before cryptocurrencies actually delivered on that mythical "tech" and we'd get actual mainstream real world applications. A couple of people replied that it would take a year or two. Can I get an update on that?
What, precisely, are you looking for cryptocurrencies to “show” you?
Transactions work today. Plenty of people use them for exchanging actual value, quickly and anonymously (or pseudonymously) across the world.
> If cryptocurrencies are so good at transferring money what's stopping them from replacing existing solutions?
Why would the financial industry do anything to encourage the adoption of crypto? It strips them of their power. They rely on you keeping and sending money with them - the democratized platform of cryptocurrencies are a potential threat.
> Literal billions have been poured in the tech
Sorry, billions have been poured into a worthless speculative market. The developers are not receiving billions, they are still volunteers. And yet there has been a massive amount of development in the crypto space over the past 12 years. NANO enabling instant transactions, XMR allowing for privacy, etc.
> how long it'd be before cryptocurrencies actually delivered on that mythical "tech" and we'd get actual mainstream real world applications […] Can I get an update on that?
I ask again, what exactly are you looking for?
In terms of real-world usage, well, crypto has been used for years. Drug/Darknet markets, for one. Ransomware for another. These are stress-tests for any currency and prove that crypto can work to exchange value in a real market setting.
Further adoption is really up to people, and it will likely happen anyways as the technology improves. A lot of work has been done, but there is a long way to go.
This has not been true for some years. There's been a lot of ICO money, and some of it is used to pay full time developers.
Those aren't real market environments by a long shot and far from stress tests. These markets have transactions that are low-volume but high-value. Me, what I'm looking for is something along the lines of "How many grocery transactions globally can crypto do per second?", i.e., high-volume, low-value. Now _that's_ a stress test.
Quick Google survey tells me that BTC can do 10 transactions per second _tops_. That's far from a workable state of affairs. It's not even "promising tech".
They are definitely real markets. You buy something at a free market price and get something in return.
They are definitely stress tests in that they prove that crypto can be used as digital cash. You can not buy drugs safely with a PayPal, Zelle, wire transfer, or ACH, but you can with Monero. This fulfills the original vision of cryptocurrency: decentralized, uncensored exchange of value without being at the mercy of another.
There is not really a more difficult stress test that tests the ideal and purpose of cryptocurrency.
> Me, what I'm looking for is something along the lines of "How many grocery transactions globally can crypto do per second?"
Again, why does HN expect crypto to be perfect today? It will improve over time. For what it’s worth, today,
- NANO transactions confirm instantly. The network can handle over 7000 TPS, more than Visa’s peak of 4000 TPS. Nano TPS scales with the size of the network.
- XMR transactions confirm in <2 minutes. XMR can max out at about 1700 TPS, which is much more than what is actually needed. XMR TPS will scale with the capabilities of XMR nodes (mainly network speed).
In the coming years,
- ETH2 with Optimistic Rollups can scale to 100,000 TPS.
- Lightning on BTC will enable millions of TPS.
Again, this is a technology in its infancy. I do not understand the disappointment - Rome wasn’t built in a day.
Replicating the concept of exchange of cash digitally, in a global, decentralized, trustless manner is no small feat. If it works, we free will users of digital currency from the mercy of banks, and give them back their financial privacy.
> XMR transactions confirm in <2 minutes.
> ETH2 with Optimistic Rollups can scale to 100,000 TPS.
Do you have figures for how much compute power they need for those too?
I could write an ACID-compliant DB that could do 1M TPS but if to achieve that I had to buy a gaming rig or two, run it at basically full capacity, then it all sounds less impressive.
> Again, this is a technology in its infancy.
But when will it stop being in its infancy? At what point do we cut our losses and say this approach isn't working (if I may add, a question every scientific experiment should reckon with)?
> I do not understand the disappointment - Rome wasn’t built in a day.
But we move at a faster pace than the Romans now and if a technology hasn't matured after 11 years, then that's reasonable grounds for disappointment don't you think?
NANO uses around 0.112 Wh. Barely any energy at all. At its peak, NANO might consume about as much as energy as a single shopping mall.
XMR is about 60 Gwh. Such is the price of truly anonymous electronic payments, at least until more cryptographers work on XMR to figure out how we can increase efficiency.
Energy consumption is an issue, but it’s overblown. There are trivial things that have a far greater climate impact than crypto, but provide less potential value to humanity. If people spent half as much time worrying about the climate impact of their own choices, our crisis would be all but solved. Finger-pointing is easy, changing yourself is hard.
Still, most cryptos are rapidly moving to reducing their energy consumption by a factor of 100-1000 by moving to proof of stake.
> I could write an ACID-compliant DB that could do 1M TPS
Your system is neither distributed nor trustless. Users will be at your mercy. Hardly the ideal system for humanity.
Try designing a similar system that works across hundreds of thousands of disparate nodes, many of which may be malicious or differently configured and in poor network environments. You will very quickly arrive at a similar model to modern cryptocurrencies.
> At what point do we cut our losses and say this approach isn't working
Certainly not when development speed has been rapidly increasing over time?
These are early stage projects. A few years for a volunteer-designed global electronic financial system that frees humanity from the mercy of banks and financial censorship is not bad.
Especially when you can’t take an Agile “move fast and break things” approach.
> But we move at a faster pace than the Romans now and if a technology hasn't matured after 11 years
Why do you keep saying the technology hasn’t matured after 11 years? I feel like you barely read my reply - how are NANO, XMR, and ETH/ETH2 not massive indicators of the improvement in the crypto sphere? Each alone represents a significant generational stride beyond BTC as it was originally defined. NANO brought us fast transactions, XMR brought us anonymity and censorship resistance, and ETH brought us smart contracts.
That's not a comforting analogy. A shopping mall processes payments that confirm almost instantly too, even on exchange, on top of running lights, security, maybe a movie theater, some music over PA, running escalators, cooking food, etc.
And that's just energy consumption. NANO also has hardware costs that scale linearly with the size of a network.
> XMR is about 60 Gwh...at least until more cryptographers work on XMR to figure out how we can increase efficiency.
Educate me if there's an approach I'm missing here but computing experience so far suggests that there will be little improvement in these figures for a damn long time. As it seems to me, P will have to equal NP before significant strides are made in this domain, at which point of course we've opened a Pandora's box that renders most crypto (not just -currency) insecure.
> There are trivial things that consume far more energy than crypto
Of secondary importance to me but I'm really curious what you think these things are.
> Why do you keep saying the technology hasn’t matured after 11 years?
For the record, you are the first person in our exchange to suggest that this tech is still in its infancy. To quote your previous reply:
> Again, this is a technology in its infancy. [https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27262914]
Actually, in your very post that I am replying to, you say that,
> These are early stage projects.
My point is, they may be massive improvements, generational strides from BTC, but if after 11 years there are still roadblocks to wider rollout (like, as you concede, efficiency), it's just rational to second-guess the approach.
(Footnote: I feel like the purpose of my ACID DB analogy flew over your head. The whole point of it is not to impress but rather to show why raw throughput without specifying the hardware offers little insight. But that's a moot point here.)
A decentralized world financial system with the transaction capacity double that of VISA consuming as much energy as a shopping mall during peak load is perfectly fine. Our current financial system consumes more. It is literally a negligible cost.
> there will be little improvement in these figures for a damn long time
Some preliminary explorations have shown that it may be possible to adopt anonymity on a Nano-like protocol.
Regardless, it won’t be fixed for a long time but that doesn’t matter. I would support Tor if it used 60 Gwh, and so the same go for XMR. Both are essential in guarding people from censorship and authoritarianism.
> Of secondary importance to me but I'm really curious what you think these things are.
In terms of raw environmental impact? The factory farm industry. But, that’s another discussion entirely.
> if after 11 years there are still roadblocks to wider rollout, it's just rational to second-guess the approach.
Designing a decentralized exchange of currency is a hard problem to solve. 11 years doesn’t seem concerning to me with the improvements we have seen in the time span. Especially given that these projects are mostly developed by volunteers.
There are improvements to be made, mainly around usability. But, those can come later, when the networks and protocols have matured.
Every coin launched subsequent to Bitcoin has been a money grab dressed up in heaps of ludicrous marketing lingo, defended by paid-off law firms and celebrity VCs on the take, obscured via technobabble, and powered exclusively by FOMO and greed.
All this shows is that you haven’t spent even 5 minutes trying to understand crypto, and yet you judge it regardless.
- The introduction of true anonymity (as opposed to mere pseudonymity) with XMR has been significant.
- The introduction of rapid, feeless transactions with NANO has been significant.
- The introduction of smart contracts with Ethereum has been significant.
Each of these solutions completely change the crypto sphere and significantly expand its potential use case. Each of these provide something at the protocol layer that Bitcoin does not. And there have been plenty of significant developments beyond these. But bitterness is blinding.
I would be fascinated to hear your evidence for why these are “a money grab dressed up in heaps of ludicrous marketing lingo, defended by paid-off law firms.”
Will it pan out? IDK. But the use case and implementation (For those not aware, a Helium 'miner' is providing a low data rate wireless access point, and you get coins for providing coverage over an area) seem far more feasible from a conceptual standpoint.
Generate a bank account with code, no bs paperwork or going through bank clerk. Then immediately send store of value to that account, or anyone in the world. Check it on a node(you can host the checker YOURSELF, or anyone you trust) within the hour, and the transaction is set in stone. Irreversible.
If I want to give cash to my favorite niece, I don't need to go get permission from a bank. I hand it to her. So why is it so hard to understand that as a citizen of the information age, we all need to have the equivalent option of direct transfers with minimal meddling?
Many arguments against cryptocurrencies are weak - they're not unsolvable problems.
Slow transaction times arguments could be analogous to slow computer times in the 90s. Better tech and algorithms will patch it.
Volatility in the long term can be solved with higher adoption since the supply is tiny relative to the dollar. Or a clever incentive scheme like dai.
Security screw ups are due to people not being educated and not having separate devices. Intuitive devices for security have not been made and it will take time.
Transaction irreversibly can be solved when stores build on top of the blockchain platforms. Or escrows.Satoshi hints at this on the FIRST page of the bitcoin white paper.
Smart contracts requiring good faith from people to run it? Sure, but it's still better and more automated compared to the systems we have now.
At the end of the day, robots in the future are not going to interface with multiple shitty bank apis that take 5 business days to settle entrenched by tech debt running shitty Java code. They're going to go through one of new universal platforms that have attributes like Ethereum.
So the question is - which horse do we back???
Not useful to most people
> the transaction is set in stone. Irreversible.
An anti-feature.
> we all need to have the equivalent option of direct transfers with minimal meddling?
We have direct transfers, and nobody has ever stopped one of mine.
You're trying to find a revolution in things most people don't care about, at all. Non-solutions for non-problems.
> Better tech and algorithms will patch it.
Demonstrably untrue - BTC is still king, and the market follows it slavishly. The BTC community (miners, big exchanges and developers, not users) has demonstrated that they aren't interested in change, by continuing to limit transaction throughput, sticking with PoW etc. The users have demonstrated they don't care either, by continuing to support BTC over others. It's speculation and brand recognition, not tech, that people are interested in.
> Security screw ups are due to people not being educated
Which they never will be en-mass, making a system with irreversible transactions a poor choice for widespread use.
Smart contracts are a joke, and have unsolvable problems when it comes to interfacing with anything that happens outside of a blockchain. They are effectively database triggers, not a revolution.
At the end of the day, robots in the future are more likely to talk to standardised central bank APIs or standardised retail bank APIs.
You are missing the point. It decentralizes a centralized system that IS useful to most people.
Furthermore, 31% of the world population is unbanked. Maybe “most” people don’t need crypto but a lot of people could use it, should it improve over time.
> We have direct transfers, and nobody has ever stopped one of mine.
Your “direct transfers” take days to settle. And again, a centralized solution. I can’t understand how someone on HN doesn’t see how decentralizing digital finance is not a big deal.
People on HN will understand the need for about decentralized computing, sing songs about it, and self-host what they can - but as soon as it comes to finance it’s “we don’t need that” and “the big players do it for us with their proprietary, KYC solutions.”
Do you really not see the need for being able to send someone money electronically without being at the mercy of a big bank?
> Demonstrably untrue - BTC is still king, and the market follows it slavishly. The users have demonstrated they don't care either, by continuing to support BTC over others. It's speculation and brand recognition, not tech, that people are interested in.
Again, you haven’t done any research. Darknet markets and ransomware alike prefer XMR over BTC and have for some time.
> Which they never will be [educated] en-mass
Good thing we have developers working on simplifying the technology and making it idiot-proof?
> a system with irreversible transactions a poor choice for widespread use.
There is a system like this that already has “widespread use” - cash. If you hand someone cash you can’t take it back either. The immutability of the blockchain is a good thing.
Businesses are legally required to provide refunds if you pay with cash. It would be no different with crypto.
> Smart contracts are a joke, and have unsolvable problems when it comes to interfacing with anything that happens outside of a blockchain
Demonstrably incorrect. DAI is an algorithmic stablecoin worth $1 (+/- $0.01) on the Ethereum network with a market cap of over $4.1 billion. It controls its price by understanding the price of Ethereum, which necessarily happens “outside of the blockchain.”
It is a trustless way to convert ETH to a USD equivalent, requiring no reserves and no auditing. I don’t know how anyone here can’t look at DAI on ETH and see the power of and potential of cryptocurrency - a decentralized, bank-less, trust-less, reserve-less algorithmic currency exchange that anyone can use pseudonymously. It’s incredible.
You still haven't told me why it's interesting or good to decentralise getting a bank account, you're just asserting it.
> Your “direct transfers” take days to settle.
No, they transfer pretty instantly and the funds can be used instantly, and whether there is some background process that takes longer is not really relevant to me or the people I transfer to.
> And again, a centralized solution.
Again, why should I care?
> “the big players do it for us with their proprietary, KYC solutions.”
KYC/AML is a good thing. It is good to be able to keep an eye on, and regulate, the flow of cash. It is an important set of tools in combatting all manner of crimes.
FYI there is a vibrant fintech startup ecosystem, that works with and within these regs. There are even a number of startup (challenger) banks these days.
> Do you really not see the need for being able to send someone electronically without being at the mercy of a big bank?
I genuinely, 100%, do not care a single iota, no. Being "at the mercy" of a bank provides me with all manner of insurance, assurance, protection and regulation.
> Darknet markets and ransomware
And I should support those things? They are a great argument for KYC/AML in themselves. And even so, these are niche compared to the speculative market.
> Good thing we have developers working on simplifying the technology and making it idiot-proof?
Irreversible transactions are not idiot-proof by nature.
> Finally, if you hand someone cash you can’t take it back either.
Sure, but you don't keep cash in a file on an easily compromised computer, and you don't keep all of your cash with you all the time, you keep it in a bank where someone else is responsible for custody, can reverse things out etc.
> Demonstrably incorrect. DAI is ...
Running on a system of 'trusted' oracles, which is not trustless.
> a decentralized, bank-less, ..., reserve-less algorithmic currency exchange that anyone can use pseudonymously. It’s incredible.
And entirely superfluous to any need I can think of.
(Plus, you know, unregulated financial products and services, doesn't that just scream "bad idea!" to you?)
Not being financially censored by the government or banks? Not having to be at their mercy for your money? The benefits seem pretty clear.
> and whether there is some background process that takes longer is not really relevant to me or the people I transfer to.
Clearly you have never had a low balance and had to wait for your money to settle in your bank. A reality most people deal with every day.
> And I should support those things? They are a great argument for KYC/AML in themselves.
You asked for a real-world example of crypto being used for goods and services. I gave one.
Feel free to let the government decide what you’re allowed to buy and ingest. A lot of people want freedom from that. It goes further - assume a malicious government, as all governments historically fail their citizens - only cash and cryptocurrency will be reasonable exchanges of value.
PayPal and Zelle might work for you, today, but to suggest that they’re a viable long- or even medium-term solution for digital currency amongst humanity is ludicrous.
> Sure, but you don't keep cash in a file on an easily compromised computer,
Neither do you with crypto. The vast majority of your savings would be in a hardware wallet, presumably easier to use by the time crypto is mainstream.
> Irreversible transactions are not idiot-proof by nature.
The concept is as idiot-proof as cash, which has clearly proven enough for humanity for thousands of years.
> doesn't that just scream "bad idea!" to you?
Nope. It reduces trust, reliance, and censorship on or by entities that don’t have your best interests at heart.
I suppose we simply have different priors. You trust banks and the government. You are okay with forfeiting your financial privacy. I am not.
This is of no interest to me whatsoever. The 'benefits' are not being able to recall money from rogue merchants, not being insured against thefts and fraud, all sorts of "benefits" that look to most people like lunacy and huge steps backwards. I have never felt at the mercy of big banks, they are heavily regulated and work well, and if I don't like their services I can switch to another.
> Clearly you have never had a low balance and had to wait for your money to settle in your bank
This is not something that happens, bank transfers are instant here.
> Feel free to let the government decide what you’re allowed to buy and ingest.
Oh I definitely think it's a good thing that governments can keep an eye on transactions, for stopping fraud and other financial crimes, and that's just a start. Like I said before, this is a positive of the banking system, not a drawback.
> PayPal and Zelle might work for you, today, but to suggest that they’re a viable long- or even medium-term solution for digital currency amongst humanity is ludicrous.
I don't use those for transfers, but you haven't said why using banks or these sort of services is ludicrous, just asserted it.
> The vast majority of your savings would be in a hardware wallet, presumably easier to use by the time crypto is mainstream.
And when you lose it? As many, many people will? This is no solution to widespread use by people not versed in computer security. And they shouldn't have to be versed in computer security to keep their money safe
> The concept is as idiot-proof as cash
Except it's not, because it involves key files and computer security.
> It reduces trust
It certainly does, I wouldn't ever put my trust in unregulated financial instruments. And I said before, I have no issue with financial "censorship", it's an important mechanism to fight crime, limit cash flows to rogue nations, terrorist groups and despots etc. It's a good thing.
> You trust banks and the government.
More than cryptocurrency miners and developers, yes. Hell yes. More than sellers in any given marketplace, where we have thousands of years of evidence that people will be ripped off at every turn? Yes. More than my own computer security skills? Still yes by a long way.
> You are okay with forfeiting your financial privacy. I am not.
And you are OK enabling ransomware, widespread fraud, and ordinary users losing everything because they are not equipped to manage their own affairs (they really, really are not). I still have financial privacy, and what's more I have a ton of financial protections, if something goes wrong then things can be reversed, tracked, traced and compensated. These benefits are real rather than idealogical, and I don't buy into your ideology. Democratic government is far from perfect, but it's generally better than the alternatives.
We will have to see what happens 10 years from now. There are equally good defenders from both sides. Buffett and co are either trained on old data, or are trained on large amounts of data(through reading). We will find out!
It's not a case of not being convinced - I am quite convinced cryptocurrency can deliver some of those things like immutable transactions and lack of government ability to monitor or block cashflows - but I am also quite convinced they are backward steps.
I don't know personally, but burning time on the internet just to type out words and try to convince other people of your opinions - this does not speak to me. I put my money in play and that speaks volumes.
The technology has a future and more applications may come out from more evolved concepts and so far the security seems to be holding well and there's very little to be bitter about.
What really happens when you save your money is that you stopped consuming. There are products sitting on a store shelf that do not get purchased. If those products spoil then they are gone, not saved. If the vendor doesn't get customers then his shop will shut down and his labor will be wasted for those 3 years. You cannot get those 3 years back, ever. Saving is impossible full stop.
However, investing is not. If you can invest your money and let that unemployed person build a house, that house will last 50 years and it will generate rental income and rent prices in the future are greater thanks to inflation, having a future income stream will defend against inflation.
Edit: Deflation lets you pretend that the labor has not disappeared and therefore the second guy has to work twice as hard to catch up with his unemployed years all. To make things worse the person that decided to not spend their money caused his unemployment but still demands him to work twice as hard in the future.
People would spend more when prices are low, which would cause prices to rise. People would save when prices are high, which would cause prices to decrease. This is a naturally self-correcting mechanism.
Central bank induced inflation is caused by creating more money, and giving the money to those who spend it. It moves wealth away from those who are efficient, and giving it to those who are inefficient. This causes wasteful spending and misallocation of capital, and is harmful to economy and environment.
"But the dollar..."
The dollar is not a "store of value" either. It's a currency.
Bitcoin (or potentially Ethereum) in particular are a much more efficient reserve than gold; being a reserve unit doesn't require any physical characteristics, but security, pseudo anonymity, and portability can be significant driving features in adoption.
[Opinion and speculation alert:] It's clear at this point that Bitcoin's original currency goals are mostly lost, but Ethereum has a good chance of actually meeting them with ETH2. Bitcoin has become a significant reserve unit though, and it's energy costs is the only major risk against it (hence a potential flight to ETH). Although people who invest billions (including indirect investors via ETFs) don't particularly seem to care. Other specific-utility cryptos might also succeed, though I expect most of them to be built on top of ETH.
Au contraire-
China is leapfrogging Western Banking with the DECP "digital yuan", and Bitcoin is competition to state-sanctioned currencies (digital or otherwise). https://www.coindesk.com/china-is-opting-out-of-us-run-finan...
Any news of other Central Banks "contemplating" digital currencies is just their way of suppressing weeds (competition) it can be worked out how to do such without killing the golden goose that is the established banking system.
Meanwhile they sit out the development of new tech like the 5G network being built by the Helium Network which uses HNT as the motivational driver to create a distributed decentralized network run by average people. These types of systems will become the norm in the next crypto wave.
- China controls the rate of issuance of coins, like a central bank, except it may be easier to mint coins as needed and direct them to a particular person or purpose.
- China has significant control over the exchange rate to other currencies, because it can limit activity of other exchanges.
- China controls the logic encoded in the coins, because digital coins are not like cash. For example, they are planning to program some coins to expire if not spent within a time limit.
- China can govern who is allowed an account and who is not, and can remove an account from someone if they choose.
- Above applies to business accounts as much as personal.
I think there's a good potential in "designed money", in particular with logic attached to the coins to influence how they are used and behave. But of all the governments in the world to deploy such a thing at scale, China is not high on my list of countries to trust, with their heavy emphasis on surveillance, control and worse if you're in the wrong group. Money is really central to people's lives.
- "HashCow said it would halt buying new bitcoin rigs"
- "BTC.TOP announced the suspension of its China business"
- "Huobi suspended both crypto-mining and trading services to mainland Chinese clients, adding it will instead focus on overseas businesses."
Imagine paying them millions of dollars of “not-listing” fees to have your token listed there
CEX is bad mmmmkay
So Uniswap, Sushiswap, Pancakeswap, Quickswap, etc.
All bitcoin traded there is wrapped, with the bitcoin itself having varying degrees of trusted or trustless custody.
Even if you are triggered by the concept of using other chains, Its no different than depositing on exchange, or trading against other deposits on an exchange. A “one time it wasn't immutable 6 years ago” network and even a “21 - 100 validator” network is still better than a centralized exchange’s cold storage.
All the liquidity and volume is in these AMM systems
- Reduces the alleged hold on China's bitcoin dominance to either attack the network or weaponize it.
- Reduces the network reliance on china subsided coal power.
The network will still function after the Chinese miner turn off their machines. Although its going to be a bit slower until next difficulty adjustment.
People should look into the root of the problem instead and I do hope this change suggests that China might be looking into better energy production methods.
China is the biggest manufacturer of solar panels and batteries, and stoppingBitcoin/Ethereum mining is giving up control over those currencies.
Because those non-renewables are needed elsewhere?
That's the point. Right there.
There is not a surplus of clean energy, in fact there's still a mass reliance on coal power. If it's going to take a few years to 'correct' the market here, then that's not good enough.
:shrug:
Bye bye coal miners
Too Volatile To Be a Store of Value: Volatility alone doesn't make something not a good store of value. Gold, a popular store of value is much more volatile than the US dollars but if you held gold from 50 years ago, you'd be up 37X against the dollar [0]. What makes something a good store of value is how scarce and easy to transfer both across space and time it is. Bitcoin can't be blamed for the casino mentality, it's up to market actors to use bitcoin as a store of value and from what I've observed, that's going to be the long term outcome.
Bitcoin is slow: The argument that bitcoin is slow and expensive is a fallacy. Bitcoin is a settlement layer and when evaluating the speed of a settlement layer, the emphasis should be on speed of settlement assurances and transaction finality[1]. Bitcoin being an open decentralized settlement layer makes this even more important. Comparing bitcoin to visa or sepa which don't settle instantly is disingenuous at best and ignorant at worst. If you want faster transactions, use a layer 2 solution like the lightening network which is orders of magnitude faster and cheaper than visa [2].
Bitcoin is ponzi scheme: This is a complete fallacy both in theory and in practice and it's pretty offensive to suggest that well-meaning people working hard to make finance open and globally accessible are a cabal of scammers looking to steal money from unsuspecting investors. Surely there are bad actors but that's the case in any industry.
Don't believe me? Bitcoin chainanalysis shows emphatically that the vast majority of coins that moved in this crash were new spends in the past months which shows that it's the new buyers that are selling[3], where then is the pyramid scheme? In fact, The early adopters of bitcoin are the least likely to sell. I hold bitcoin not to sell and many in my network are like me(although I can't speak for them). MSTR as an example hasn't sold a single coin, in fact they bought more.
I could go on but it's very exhausting that a technical forum is so negative towards an emerging technology with a lot of promise, it's even more disturbing that a lot of the criticisms are uninformed. We can do better.
0. https://goldprice.org/gold-price-history.html 1. https://medium.com/@nic__carter/its-the-settlement-assurance... 2. https://medium.datadriveninvestor.com/lightning-is-3-7-milli... 3. https://twitter.com/100trillionUSD/status/139660908211150438...