It can be argued that the resources spent on keeping Bitcoin running are disproportionately high to the utility it provides. Some would even say that the utility is negative, as it facilitates money-laundering.
He said "one can argue", he did not claim he was 100% right. They are definitely points that you can debate around, they are different from what The Economist was talking about.
Apologies, I was being facetious because I was tired, and I think your previous comment was correct. I did the non-HN thing and misinterpreted (towards negativity) the original to which I first replied.
Let me guess. From the time you are replying you are probably from west Europe, live under a stable democracy and financial system and have very broad interpretation of what constitutes money laundering - that is anything outside the current financial panopticon.
You probably cannot imagine why permissionless currency that can't be controlled by government is a desirable thing. After all you've never lived under tyrannical governments. It's not like there are say 45 countries in this planet where woman are forbidden to manage money, have a company or even a bank account. Pff... preposterous right? Why should allow Mohamed to send money to his mother in Palest... I mean commit money laundering?
I actually am from a country in South America with very weak democratic values. I've been blessed with skills that are marketable. I might or might not commit """money laundering""" every month to feed my mother and brother.
I hope you do realise that while you are saving lets say half of your money from the incompetent government or whatever is the case there, at the same time your South American oligarchs are using the same token system to steal billions from yours country, and from you indirectly.
What you are proposing is eventually devolves to the social darwinism. You have a global aggressor - your government. You have a lot of citizens i nthe country, both rich and poor. All were hurt by aggressor (financially), rich less so, poor - a lot. Now you introduce a new system in the equation - tokens. It works like a private pipe from a shared pool. Now the individuals are are more proactive, smarter, and richer will utilise such pipes earlier and more thoroughly, funneling money to the offshores. And people not utilising such pipes/tokens are left "having fun staying poor". You personally is simply hoping to save your own money faster than aggressor takes them from you.
The problem is that you country will be in the worse position when such "money saving" system will be working at scale.
I hope you do realise that slang names like beta, soy, avocado eaters etc. is predominantly used by conspiracy theorists themselves. All those flatearthers, climate change deniers and so on.
Don't waste time trying to label me as a caricature of the side you don't like. Politic ideology make people say ridiculous things like calling someone sending money to his elderly mother a global aggressor. It doesn't matter if it's left or right.
I called your government aggressor, not yourself, based on your previous comment that said "very weak democratic values". I live in the similar country, so I made a common analogy.
Honestly, I don't get you can live in a country which is (presumably) constantly raided by some sociopaths in power and don't hate them more than anything else. I certainly do hate such people in my own country, because of whom we are in the second hundred of any country rankings. And to combat their financial crimes, the only possible solution is a hard control of all "schemes" of moving funds. Including tokens.
Sure, in some utopian world it would be nice to have something resembling bittokens, only in a scalable and working state. But in reality such system break so many things that it's closed to dystopia than to utopia.
> It's not like there are say 45 countries in this planet where woman are forbidden to manage money, have a company or even a bank account. Pff... preposterous right? Why should allow Mohamed to send money to his mother in Palest... I mean commit money laundering?
I haven't seen much evidence that crypto is actually heavily used for this. Its main use case remains mostly "tech casino" with huge costs.
Ooh yes and the value of bitcoin dropping 2/3 in a year is a wonderful thing for those oppressed countries right?
Are these people getting value for money with crypto or is someone fleecing them an awful lot for the privilege or not using fiat? Always these third person anecdotes without any actual evidence.
The other thing is not being controlled by government seems to imply either not controlled, or controlled by 'good' people, of which neither seems to be turning out true in any case.
Your oh so enlightened west European point of view misses the fact that the fiat in this case is not the dollar or the euro. It's the Turkish Lira, Bolivars or Lebanese points. It's not the money that France controls and prints (its not euro) for their ex-colonies.
Is everyone using bitcoin good people? Definitely no. Is it used by criminals? Yes. Drug dealers are definitely criminals, just as the people protesting for fair elections in Belarus or the feminist coalition fighting to end police brutality in Nigeria. Those are all criminals.
But If you have any idea of how can these people participate in the economy without permission (stables fail here) that isn't volatile please let us hear about your idea.
People commonly use Dollars and Euros in those countries to store their cash. I have seen this first hand, especially in South America and there are advertisements for that everywhere. Where that is illegal, crypto is/can be also illegal.
Paper bills are scarce and pack a premium in these places. Meanwhile someone could learn marketable skills over the internet and receive digital currency. You can argue stables are better but those aren't trustworthy.
My country currently charges me 1%/mo for every USD/EUR account, there is no cash in ATMs for months and no way to take more than a vacation penny with you when you leave.
Where that is illegal, crypto is/can be also illegal
There’s a big difference between illegal and physically seizable.
With the possible exception of Afghanistan (although the Taliban can't seem to get even their own policy straight), I don't believe there are any countries where "woman are forbidden to manage money, have a company or even a bank account". For example, all those are not just possible but common in Saudi Arabia.
And you also haven't addressed how blockchain would improve women's lot, compared to, say, a stack of US$100 bills.
Countries score a zero on that survey if "women do not have the same rights as
men to open a bank account at a formal financial institution." The word "same" is doing an awful lot of heavy lifting there, and does not equate to your assertion that they're entirely unable to open accounts: for example, historically in Saudi they had to use separate bank branches run by women for women.
And oh, Western Union is more than happy to send your stack of filthy fiat to Palestine:
My trouble with the argument that crypto will liberate underprivileged classes in general is that it seems to miss key holistic issues I'm enumerating below. Perhaps I'm wrong, and I'd appreciate knowing the way I'm wrong.
1. Crypto wealth only translates into real wealth if there is either (a) vendors who accept native crypto as tender or (b) there are exchanges that convert from crypto to authorized legal tender in a country.
However, it seems (a) has not happened in a meaningful scale without (b), and (b) has been frustrated because of underlying price volatility, high fees, low transaction processing compared to traditional finance, etc. There's the problem of "too many cryptocurrencies" which frustrates user choice.
(I'm aware independent proposals to "fix" all of this have been proposed, but there don't seem to be any clear winners e.g. stablecoins should have "fix"ed price volatility, but the leading stablecoin - TerraCoin - collapsed.)
The net impact of this is that people are cut off from real-world markets they live in. Someone who has no access to traditional finance will not have an easier time purchasing goods and essentials with crypto wealth, and this their ability to participate is only marginally improved.
2. Crypto has higher barrier to entry than traditional finance because it requires higher than usual technical literacy, which people in these classes don't have. Wallets need protection, smart contracts need auditing, and so on. I would struggle getting people to use (say) hardware tokens.
3. There's nothing ultimately stopping governments from banning crypto exchanges or crypto vendors or more if they really want to prevent the disenfranchised from getting some. They might not eliminate the network, but they can certainly go after people for suspicion of participation in it (such as vendors). The crypto model requires governments to be foiled by technical limitations, but this is rarely the technique they need.
Based on all of this, it seems like basically you need to solve the problem of vendors really caring enough about crypto for regular folks to get an advantage when the advantage is not clear. Is this not the case? What have I missed?
“Facilitates money laundering” is another way of saying “preserves freedom”, they are two sides of the same bitcoin.
The argument of whether governments and payment processors should have the power of prior restraint on all transactions (e.g. by going cashless) or not is older than cryptocurrency.
The question is - are benefits of token systems outweigh the negatives? Since the purpose of all these systems is law avoidance (both "legitimate" and "oppressive", all of laws), then in my opinion negatives are much much bigger than benefits. And I say this as a person who can benefit from tokens, i.e. send my money cross border without any legal oversight. But in reality for a the few grey private transaction, the majority of this system usage will be utilised by corporations, billionaires, shady governments, mafia etc. Tokens in the current state are net negative for humans. And hypothetically tokens with control and oversight and protections are just overall worse and more limited digital "money".
And the US dollar punches well above its weight in "preserving freedom", despite all the rules, all the enforcement, all the regulation, all the threat of violence, all the drug wars.
Since the only possible real use case of tokens is law avoidance, then it is logical that we collectively as humanity are worse off while select tokenbros are legalising stolen money or skipping paying taxes/fees and profiting from this scheme. It's a tragedy of commons case.
Sure. The thing is, tokens provide a solution for ANY law avoidance and can be used by ANY person. That's the problem. As soon as the very short period of nerds inventing and using the system passes, then big sharks come. All the billionares washing their stolen and almost stolen money are very fond of tokens, some are actually making money in that space, people like Alex, Sam, Giancarlo, Paolo, Zhao etc.
Since fiat is mostly just used to enable war, and most all war, especially in modern history, is senseless slaughter: we should do everything we can to subvert fiat.
First - I think you are wrong about "war" part. I'm reasonably sure that global military industrial complex mostly uses digital money transfers. I think what you were talking about was a small scale rebel or terrorist armed operations, but those are rounding errors in the scale of proper war industry.
Second - you are quite right that cash is used for that and without it such activities will greatly diminish. Though I suspect that they will switch to barter economy.
Third - that will happen soon. Some governments are already restricting cash, though mostly the ones that are doing so are fighting not against wars or cartels, but against their local oligarchs funneling money from the country (the same problem I described in other comments). Many countries have already restricted moving cash across the border, so there it's not used for this a lot.
> I'm reasonably sure that global military industrial complex mostly uses digital money transfers.
It seems like your concept of fiat might be wrong. Fiat isn't synonymous with physical tender. Fiat is just sovereign money in whatever form it takes, digital or otherwise.
Governments enforce fiat as money because it allows them to finance whatever war and other endeavor they want with an endless supply of money that they conjure out of thin air. Whereas taxes are at least paid by people, fiat is a way to steal money from ordinary people by debasing their money.
> I think the entire crypto portfolio is not just completely worthless, but actually has a negative value. It’s worth less than nothing.
If this is the case, then I would like to propose the following:
Following the axiom that "It's worth less than nothing" & "crypto has negative value", that would mean that you'd be willing to pay other people to own crypto, since it's deemed to be negative value.
To prove this claim, a payment of $100 made out to me would suffice.
Obviously not. If something has a negative value for society, it doesn't make sense to incentivize its ownership or use. I also think methamphetamine has a net negative value (perhaps outside of certain narrow medical uses), but I won't pay you $100 to take meth.
But if you manage to abolish cryptocurrency, or meth for that matter, then I will gladly pay you $100.
The media is trying _so hard_ to push the narrative that these exchanges matter. They just don't.
They only matter to people who are obsessed with making cryptocurrency into traditional regulated finance.
That would be cryptocurrency dying, because then it would simply be a very inefficient system for bank transfers. Just as a road legal Formula 1 car would be something else entirely.
Does Z library going under mean that book piracy is going to zero? Does it prove that buying books is the future?
Does Twitter going through struggles mean that online messaging is going to zero?
Does a tech hiring downturn mean that programmers are worthless and going to zero?
I commented elsewhere using an analogy I quite liked:
You don't say that sausages are worthless just because the dog ate a couple that were left on the kitchen counter.
The problem may be the dog, or the lack of discipline by the owner, or whoever left the sausages out on the counter, but the one thing free from any accusation of blame is the fucking sausages.
That's a good argument for continuing to explore cryptocurrency-adjacent tech (or simply programming, if you like), but not necessarily purchasing and promoting the use of cryptocurrencies.
There is a confusing entanglement between the thoughts about the technology vs the thoughts about actually doing financial transactions with it. I have admiration for the developers and awe at the websites, games and services that were spawned, the technology. As a financial construct it's a perfect storm for exploitation; human nature + unregulated hyper-capitalism = bad.
Not even going to the level of promoting or purchasing, just not "now it should no longer exist".
Regulation is required, As much as for banking because consumer funds are being stored and / or transferred.
FTX was just grossly, fraudulently mismanaged and I'm not actually sure the exact machinations of regulation that could ensure that kind of thing doesn't happen - regular reporting of figures, independent audits, etc, but then with the money FTX had been throwing around it would have been easy to fake reports and pay for clean audits (in my layman view of a very complex landscape).
This is a silly take. Bitcoin's value depends on the leverage and wash-trading generated on the exchanges, and on the exchanges to generate a steady supply of "greater fools" to buy Bitcoin. Fundamentally, Bitcoin has failed as both a store of value and as a medium of exchange-- the cost to run the mining network is greater than the value created.
No doubt the ponzi schemers will reboot the casino, and Bitcoin in some form will live forever, and ETH proof of stake holds real promise. But FTX signals the next leg down for Bitcoin, likely the collapse of Tether, and a return to 2016 valuations.
Over a million people lost billions of dollars in the FTX collapse/apparent fraud. This is the most important financial story in a generation, nothing "boring" about it!
> the cost to run the mining network is greater than the value created
No evidence is offered about this at all. But even so mining should be a pretty low-margin and relatively risky endeavor. You don't want mining to be profitable.
The worst part of fiat is that rent-seekers are chasing after the money spigot and devising ways to profit off how fiat is "mined." It's the Cantillon effect.
Most negative comments about Bitcoin are from oh so enlightened west Americans or west europeans who are incapable of realizing their financial privilege achieved from having born in the right country.
And most response comments like these come from people speaking on some 'other poor peoples' behalf without evidence of this actual service being in heavy use.
Let's not ad-hominem the commenters and instead focus on the claims themselves rather than counter-hypotheticals.
And why would the Economist be particularly biased on this? Even the article concludes that its own headline is likely untrue and crypto is not going to zero.
The one interesting thing about all the rehashed boring arguments is that, despite being 13 years old, it's still so, so new that even smart, technically minded people like the HN readership will still bag it for not being whatever they heard it was attempting to be when it started.
Bitcoin is a new thing, sitting on the shoulders of the giant technologies we're otherwise so proud of - all us highly paid software industry folks.
But no, it's worthless, it shouldn't exist, it's not worth any further time or effort or research, fuck it off my fucking planet.
It is one of the saddest aspects of my interest in crypto that I cannot share it with anyone in HN, because somehow the hive mind here has decided that it is beyond worthless. So I stick to reddit.
I'm no Bitcoin maxi or "crypto will kill traditional finance in 5 years" type, or even really a get rich quick chaser (it'd be nice, but I've lived in reality for too long to expect anything like that) but I'm smart enough and humble enough to recognise it's a brand new thing (even 13 years later) that will grow and evolve to find its own niche or niches and then they will grow and evolve and fragment as all things do.
Cryptocurrency isn't going away, and Bitcoin has the 'original' going for it, the Veblen good association unrelated to any other pro or con argument. Ethereum is the 'original' smart contract version of Bitcoin, already an evolution of function, and has an ecosystem of vast proportions that any other smart contract platforms are a long way away from reaching (although getting closer faster than Ethereum is moving away).
It's interesting to watch and there are a lot of smart developers working on difficult problems in the space.
I'll also admit that I'm not smart enough to understand the intricacies of things like ZK proofs, but I somewhat understand their applicability in the space and look forward with interest to seeing whats possible when such technologies are applied to cryptocurrencies in practise.
I'm rambling, but I want you to feel comfortable sharing here. I want to harvest the down votes on behalf of all those chilled.
I agree with you. I actually think most of it is fraud, there are huge problems. But not being excited in it the least is so weird to me! This is exciting! This is tech!
Well, I can't see the value of wasting so much energy for something looking for problems to solve.
The idea is nice, but has no applications, esp. in Finance. Also the idea of replacing monetary systems built since the beginning of written history in a decade with cryptocurrencies is a bit naive.
I'm a bit tired from discussing same things over and over, but at the end, banks gonna bank.
OTOH, I'll not downvote/flag/harass/gatekeep for anyone sharing their views. Discussion is always good. This is how things move forward. So, go ahead, share on :)
> Well, I can't see the value of wasting so much energy for something looking for problems to solve.
The energy is being paid for though, so it's competing in the same energy market as everything else. "Waste" becomes entirely subjective at that point.
Also, Ethereum is now proof of stake, reducing it's power usage by something like 95%. PoS has its own pros and cons though.
> Also the idea of replacing monetary systems built since the beginning of written history in a decade with cryptocurrencies is a bit naive.
That's why I say it's still new despite being 13 years old. It's naive to think it's already failed when it's barely learnt to walk.
Happy to be either totally ignored or told where I'm wrong.
> The energy is being paid for though, so it's competing in the same energy market as everything else. "Waste" becomes entirely subjective at that point.
Actually, "I can do whatever do with electricity, because I pay for it", is a wrong perspective, esp. in today's energy climate.
Let's put the fact that Bitcoin and Proof of Work systems are very energy inefficient as of today, and paying for it doesn't make this inefficiencies right.
Today, supercomputer centers discuss about reducing capacity, or add downtimes. CERN is discussing about temporarily shutting down some experiments, incl. accelerator ring. Hotels in Europe is fixing (locking in fact) their rooms to 18 degrees Celcius, and turning off heating the second events/conferences end. Last, but not the least storefronts are turning off their extremely efficient LED lighting at nights, after stores close.
In this climate, running a very inefficient network which uses equivalent energy to a small-mid European country "just because we pay for it" is wrong on many levels.
I'm normally very lassiez-faire person, but in the face of this energy crisis, climate change and other existential threats looming, saying that "we can do that because we pay for it", really grinds my gears. It's just carelessness. I don't know when we have detached from ethics this far, and this is disturbing (AI has the same problem for different reasons, but let's not digress).
Ethereum's Proof of Stake migration is something I support. I still don't believe in cryptocurrencies and all utopia surrounding it, but at least one step in a right direction.
> It's naive to think it's already failed when it's barely learnt to walk.
I don't think it's failed, but it has not won any battles either (yet alone the war). It's just another instrument which will be normalized under banks at most. I'm saying that it won't arrive where people dream, but somewhere else, and that place will be boring, if it ever arrives.
Any people evangelizing cryptocurrencies are excited for small money (personal finance), any people evangelizing it for medium-sized money (hedge funds, etc.) are running Ponzi schemes. This is not a good outlook from my perspective.
I don't disagree, but with politicians pointing out Bitcoin is a waste of energy whilst also doing nothing about climate change is the world we live in. As gross and demotivating and radicalising as that fact is, they're the boundaries society has chosen to judge: 1kw paid for is no better or worse than any other 1kw paid for.
Anything beyond that and you're literally picking winners and losers - which wouldn't necessarily be wrong either, but it's politically suicidal and so it will not happen.
Make non-renewable power prices higher. I'm for that, but Bitcoin and proof of work cryptocurrency mining will adapt to whatever new rules are put in place, and people will still complain that it's a waste because there's no direct benefit to them individually.
I agree, however, that the popular understanding of the end result of cryptocurrencies could be something incredibly boring and potential anathema to the core reason for existence of Bitcoin such as central bank digital currencies.
However, there will always be groups working against the interests of the establishment, creating new avenues of alternatives (here, direct proof of me being utopian).
Putting my words to the same bucket with politicians and the establishment, just because they somehow align is enough for me to leave this discussion here.
I'm neither near to them, nor have the same perspective on climate change & the energy crisis, because of my vantage point, most probably.
Most of the stores I've worked with leave their LED lights on at night because they want it to be apparent from the street when someone is in there robbing the store. They pay for it, so I guess it is their prerogative. Apparently the profit they make from sales is enough to offset this cost.
I think the energy people spend on cryptocurrencies comes from a similar logic. If you want to stop people from externalizing the costs of energy waste you will have to increase the price of energy until the costs are covered, or else we will continue to run at a deficit at the expense of the planet.
On the flip side of this coin, energy expansion has driven all known human (and evolutionary) progress to date, so it's a delicate ecosystem to mess with.
> Most of the stores I've worked with leave their LED lights on at night because they want it to be apparent from the street when someone is in there robbing the store.
Unless it’s prohibited by law, which is in effect in Germany and France (if I remember correctly).
Energy prices are on the rise in every form, at least in Europe, and people feel the pressure profoundly.
The problem here is, we don’t have unlimited energy as of now. So, we need to at least use it a bit more carefully until we clear this bottleneck.
Cryptocurrencies’ energy waste problem also still needs to be addressed, because if they can do this more efficiently, we can use the energy for more production.
However, this doesn’t mean that I believe cryptocurrencies are solving anything. I’m firm on that view.
At what point would you stop calling this 13 year old tech thing "new"? Is there some point at which that's a silly thing to say? Or is it only once everyone's thoughts on it agree with yours?
Data has been transferable by electric means for 184 years, since 1838, an entire order of magnitude longer than transferable value (Bitcoin). It took nearly all of those 184 years to get to a point where a majority of people had a regular use for telecommunications.
Calling it "tech" misleadingly groups it with a category of things which largely tie into existing "tech" in every obvious and specific ways; most of which were created very recently.
This is the wrong way to think about "tech" as fundamental as one which gives every person 'the ability to transfer real world value over photons in the form of IP packets', which is the essence of Bitcoin (and cryptocurrency generally). A better comparison for Bitcoin is something like telecommunications.
Banking on regular use cases in the near term is probably a bad idea. But what is far worse is dismissing, much less prematurely regulating or banning, something fundamentally comparable to the advent of telecommunications.
Not exactly. Credit creation creates an asset and a liability. The creation of credit facilitates the ability to create liabilities in excess of the underlying asset (e.g fractional reserve banking).
By introducing the ability to transfer a scarce asset globally you resolve the requirement for credit, as no one ever needs to redeem.
You could entrust a messenger to deliver a message long before electronic telecommunications.
But a trusted mail carrier and direct end-to-end encrypted video calls from/to anywhere on the planet are not even in the same ballpark. Trusted wire transfers and trustless peer-to-peer value settlement are potentially just as dissimilar.
I don't think it will take nearly 200 years for the scale of the difference to be as substantial as the difference pre-victorian mail and modern video calls. But it will take substantially longer than 13 years, that is pretty clear.
Even still, it is obvious to me (and many others) that this eventual future is inevitable-- and no amount of price fluctuation, scamming, or environmental concerns can shake that belief because these things simply don't even remotely address the core of what a foundational change this "tech" is in any way.
> You could entrust a messenger to deliver a message long before electronic telecommunications.
That is not what a wire transfer is.
> I don't think it will take nearly 200 years for the scale of the difference to be as substantial as the difference pre-victorian mail and modern video calls. But it will take substantially longer than 13 years, that is pretty clear.
The first electronic value transfer happened somewhere around 1872 so it is already at 150 years which is far nearer to 200 than to 13.
> Even still, it is obvious to me (and many others) that this eventual future is inevitable-- and no amount of price fluctuation, scamming, or environmental concerns can shake that belief because these things simply don't even remotely address the core of what a foundational change this "tech" is in any way.
It would be nice to hear arguments on this topic than proclamations of belief.
EDIT:
Just noticed that in your first post you said:
> It took nearly all of those 184 years to get to a point where a majority of people had a regular use for telecommunications.
At first I read it as it took 184 years for telecommunications to become widely available, which would be a reasonable comment. Your claim isn't reasonable since even far before 1832 majority of people had a regular use for telecommunications but the technology wasn't there. Bitcoin technology is here but majority of people have no use for it.
I didn't say it was a wire transfer. I said it was a mail carrier and made an analogy. You seem to have misread this part and misinterpreted my entire reply, as the rest of your comment makes little sense as a response.
> The first electronic value transfer happened somewhere around 1872
No, wire transfers are data, not value, transfers. The humans and institutions on either end of the data transfered "over the wire" are then entrusted to transfer yet more data to a central bank which eventually completes a physical value transfer of assets to perform settlement of the balance.
Central banks move around ships filled with gold and other precious assets-- that is the value transfer. Direct non-physical electronic value transfer, i.e. settlement, did not happen until 2013.
Many HN'ers like myself were crypto enthusiasts in the early days, because there were so many promising things it seemed like it could be used for.
Over the last 13 years, every last use case with the arguable exception of Ponzi schemes and ransomware scams has turned to shit. Payments, store of value, distributed computing, NFTs, nope all across the board. You can't even buy drugs with Bitcoin anymore!
Payments, store of value, and NFTs I don't think has turned to shit.
Distributed computing I don't know much about, but if you're talking smart contracts that seems to be pretty healthy and well, but if you're talking decentralized AWS then I think there's a ways to go before that's a realistic expectation.
Payments, can work well in certain scenarios and better / worse for different cryptocurrencies. Cross border large value transfers Bitcoin can still be a cheaper and faster option than some (countries) banks.
Store of value is an interesting one, more so because we're (maybe?) near a local bottom down 80-odd percent from all time highs, but on a single line from inception to now, it's outperformed much of the stock market (I have no direct citation for this, but have heard it from a number of not necessarily trustworthy sources).
The whole stock market being down a large percentage takes some of the stink off Bitcoin's store of value argument as well.
Gold seems fairly consistent; boring, but boring can be good as an investment or store of value.
NFTs, that's all just in fashion mode at the moment, the new application of cryptocurrency / blockchain. Better applications of NFTs will surely appear.
Lol, the good old crypto-bro attitude that uses the "you don't know what you're talking about, stop bashing the technology".
Except you are mixing the technology (blockchain) and the usage (crypto).
On HN the consensus is that every current usage is either worthless, utopic or scammy. Nobody denies the technology.
A recent post on HN about AWS and blockchain ended with the following sentence : "the blockchain is a solution looking for a problem"
Those things that claim to use blockchain but don't have the crypto are marketing technologies that could be better served by other and better solutions. Blockchain and crypto are intertwined and one without the other doesn't exist.
As a distributed database technology, the blockchain and its mediocre transactions per second are quite unimpressive.
Now High-Frequency Trading is technically impressive, the ridiculous lengths they go to to shave microseconds are awe-inspiring. Too bad it's for a purpose that is almost as devoid of redeeming value to society as cryptocurrencies.
It seems to be the people / groups starting companies offering cryptocurrency services that don't understand that stuff and fall into well-signposted-by-history traps.
People then fall into the (equally?) well-signposted-by-history trap of thinking that any company is trustworthy.
If you want a quick rundown of what might be happening...
People have a very finely tuned sense of who is winning status games. It is clear that some people in crypto are winning by several billion dollars. Add to that a (fairly reasonable) argument that there is cheating afoot in this status game and you get people arcing up trying to do get something done about it. Very natural response - people don't like cheaters and do play status games.
I think they're mistaken though - I'm put in mind of Utopia, Limited (a classic 1893 production) lampooning the obvious stupidity of a limited liability corporation. Turned out limited liability corporations were a game changer and extremely beneficial to society.
I mean, it could also be happening because people are genuinely evaluating the technology and deciding it's not worthwhile, right? It could just be status games that's making people say things, but it could also be... reality.
Crypto is regularly turning up on HN with tides of negative comments, including people calling for it to be banned. We've got this article theorising how it will go to zero, including calls for it to be banned. This isn't a usual response for people who just think that a technology is not worthwhile.
I'm sure people are genuine in their beliefs, but the aggregate response is unusually ferocious.
Thirteen years is a very long time in technology. The "problem" with HN is that many of us have been around since the start of cryptocurrency, and have a very deep rather than superficial understanding of the technology. That means we have seen how the cycles work out (start out with something reasonable, e.g. a system for "small casual transactions" in Bitcoin's case, fail to deliver, change promises, fail to deliver, and rinse and repeat, each time with a new generation of greater fools) and understand that each new wave of promises are impossible to deliver for various technical and in some cases non-technical reasons. Unfortunately the current generation of proponents just don't have the depth of experience to understand this, and are blinded by false hope that this is their generation's breakthrough technology, so are doomed to repeat the mistakes of their forebears. FWIW I don't think it'll go to zero or disappear - it satisfies a niche in some human's psyche to try to "get rich quick" with little effort - just like we've had Multi Level Marketing schemes like Mary Kay for decades, and casinos and various forms of gambling for centuries.
It's a long time in technology, but that's just the foundation upon which it's built. The industry it's placing itself alongside to compete with is one of the pillars of society, and as such 13 years is a long time to survive in competition, but also a short time in which to create a defendable position.
It took 20 years to go from the car phone suitcase in Lethal Weapon to the first release iPhone.
By the mid-1990s, tens—if not hundreds—of million of people had mobile phone subscriptions, and those who didn’t clearly understood the tech offered humanity a profoundly new ability: communicate anywhere, all the time.
> The one interesting thing about all the rehashed boring arguments is that, despite being 13 years old, it's still so, so new that even smart, technically minded people like the HN readership will still bag it for not being whatever they heard it was attempting to be when it started.
That's not really what people are "bagging" it for. Or at least, not why I'm "against" crypto.
> But no, it's worthless, it shouldn't exist, it's not worth any further time or effort or research, fuck it off my fucking planet.
I think the technology is super interesting as a technology (I'm talking of blockchains here). I think there is currently one solid, known use case for that technology - cryptocurrencies. I'm not sure how "beneficial" they are overall, but I'm not so sure how beneficial Facebook is either. They are for sure providing some value to some people.
My big problem is that for the last 8 years, I've been hearing about how the Blockchain technology will solve other problems, revolutionize other fields. And as of now, that just isn't the case. There are no other problems that blockchain solves that can't be solved better with other technologies.
I'm not saying that no further time or effort to research this should be done, not at all. I'm just saying that people claiming there currently are use cases for it are wrong, and pushing back against them.
I remember what people in 90s were talking about the future of internet. All the crazy ideas and how it will solve everything in a crazy way. But yet we are here, using internet in a completely different way (I mean, nobody were talking about Tiktok back then, right?). But even more people were saying that internet have no use case and no future. That's normal for every disrupting technology, it doesn't just directly applies to the existing things, but brings something new instead.
You are incorrect twice. First internet usage really didn't change much from the 90s, the fact that we have wider pipes, didn't change content types at all. Second - NOBODY was saying that internet has no use case or no future in the 90s. Tokenbros are just retconning the history saying such bullshit.
> Big businesses have been built on top of this world, including exchanges, investment funds and lending platforms
This is an important data point about the nature of the emerging digital society - whether we like it or not. It would be swell if somebody competent (and not captured in any way) investigated and drew conclusions about what all this means and what kind of risks it is seeding for our collective future.
The arbitrary confiscation of concepts such as "value", "business", "asset", "investment" and "use", coupled with the unfairness and rent-seeking nature of the official system and the increasing ease of bootstraping alternative "financial systems" (FSaaS) suggests that the crypto phenomenon is not a one-of aberration but potentially a recurring malaise. If there was any chance that digital technology can lead to a better financial system it seems to be as remote as ever.
I'd rather pay with Bitcoin/ETH/xx than using Mastercard. Currently 1-2 big US companies have ALL my payment data, they know everything about my life. Is this good?
Privacy is the killer feature for crypto. Or is there another non-crypto solution to this problem?
I'd rather use shady and corrupt Visa/MC, than exchanges of literal criminals, some even already convicted for fraud in the dotcoms or housing crises, operating from unregulated offshores with zero oversight.
The fundamental purpose of Bitcoin is the separation of money and state. It's a very powerful idea that won't ever die. It's not a new idea, and has been proposed a long time ago by prominent economists such as F.A. Hayek [0]. Hayek believed that a government monopoly on money issuance has always caused more harm than good. Bitcoin is the first practical implementation of non-state money, and the successor to Hayek's ideas.
People come to Bitcoin for their greed, but they stay for the revolution.
A lot of people make the argument that the value proposition for crypto is backed by the low barrier of entry and the ability to perform "private" transactions.
On the contrary, I'd argue the true value of cryptocurrencies lies in the extremely transparent and publicly auditable nature of the blockchain.
Even a lot of the recent scams and rugpulls fall apart with some basic blockchain analysis.
In the current environment a lack of regulation leads to lots of scams and sketchy business, but these aren't fundamental problems with the technology.
The fundamental problem is that most of these cryptoassets are backed by sunk costs, dreams, and hype. Ethereum makes a good stab at solving this problem by supplying real-world utility to the underlying coin, but unfortunately most of this demand is still driven by scams and speculation.
I don't believe any cryptocurrency will be able to achieve real underlying value until one or more successful countries require it to pay taxes. (The dream of increasingly privatizing the world until the entire financial system is 100% backed by the word of random business owners is downright frightening to me so I hope the huddled masses keep some independent voice in the matter.)
There seems little reason why this eventual country should legitimize an existing cryptoasset, though, since spinning up their own will be just as easy.
As sovereign-backed crypto-currencies spread I expect KYC regulations to catch up fast so while it will still be possible to spin up your own coins and run your funds through shady mixers, eventually it will become harder and harder to operate without a clean wallet.
In this future world of government-managed crypto I expect the existing unbacked cryptoassets to eventually fall to zero or thereabouts. This is why I am not financially invested in bitcoin et al, but still very bullish on the technology.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 209 ms ] threadYou probably cannot imagine why permissionless currency that can't be controlled by government is a desirable thing. After all you've never lived under tyrannical governments. It's not like there are say 45 countries in this planet where woman are forbidden to manage money, have a company or even a bank account. Pff... preposterous right? Why should allow Mohamed to send money to his mother in Palest... I mean commit money laundering?
No, your interest is most likely the same as almost everyone else in crypto - seeing the line go up.
What you are proposing is eventually devolves to the social darwinism. You have a global aggressor - your government. You have a lot of citizens i nthe country, both rich and poor. All were hurt by aggressor (financially), rich less so, poor - a lot. Now you introduce a new system in the equation - tokens. It works like a private pipe from a shared pool. Now the individuals are are more proactive, smarter, and richer will utilise such pipes earlier and more thoroughly, funneling money to the offshores. And people not utilising such pipes/tokens are left "having fun staying poor". You personally is simply hoping to save your own money faster than aggressor takes them from you.
The problem is that you country will be in the worse position when such "money saving" system will be working at scale.
I hope you do realise that slang names like beta, soy, avocado eaters etc. is predominantly used by conspiracy theorists themselves. All those flatearthers, climate change deniers and so on.
I called your government aggressor, not yourself, based on your previous comment that said "very weak democratic values". I live in the similar country, so I made a common analogy.
Sure, in some utopian world it would be nice to have something resembling bittokens, only in a scalable and working state. But in reality such system break so many things that it's closed to dystopia than to utopia.
I haven't seen much evidence that crypto is actually heavily used for this. Its main use case remains mostly "tech casino" with huge costs.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/afghan-women-embracing-financ...
So 5000 girls set up the crypto wallet and used it at least once.
I haven't found a lot of specifics/numbers in relation to EndSARS.
Are these people getting value for money with crypto or is someone fleecing them an awful lot for the privilege or not using fiat? Always these third person anecdotes without any actual evidence.
The other thing is not being controlled by government seems to imply either not controlled, or controlled by 'good' people, of which neither seems to be turning out true in any case.
Is everyone using bitcoin good people? Definitely no. Is it used by criminals? Yes. Drug dealers are definitely criminals, just as the people protesting for fair elections in Belarus or the feminist coalition fighting to end police brutality in Nigeria. Those are all criminals.
But If you have any idea of how can these people participate in the economy without permission (stables fail here) that isn't volatile please let us hear about your idea.
Where that is illegal, crypto is/can be also illegal
There’s a big difference between illegal and physically seizable.
And you also haven't addressed how blockchain would improve women's lot, compared to, say, a stack of US$100 bills.
> And you also haven't addressed how blockchain would improve women's lot, compared to, say, a stack of US$100 bills
Good luck shipping a stack of $100 bills to Palestine.
And oh, Western Union is more than happy to send your stack of filthy fiat to Palestine:
https://location.westernunion.com/ps
1. Crypto wealth only translates into real wealth if there is either (a) vendors who accept native crypto as tender or (b) there are exchanges that convert from crypto to authorized legal tender in a country.
However, it seems (a) has not happened in a meaningful scale without (b), and (b) has been frustrated because of underlying price volatility, high fees, low transaction processing compared to traditional finance, etc. There's the problem of "too many cryptocurrencies" which frustrates user choice.
(I'm aware independent proposals to "fix" all of this have been proposed, but there don't seem to be any clear winners e.g. stablecoins should have "fix"ed price volatility, but the leading stablecoin - TerraCoin - collapsed.)
The net impact of this is that people are cut off from real-world markets they live in. Someone who has no access to traditional finance will not have an easier time purchasing goods and essentials with crypto wealth, and this their ability to participate is only marginally improved.
2. Crypto has higher barrier to entry than traditional finance because it requires higher than usual technical literacy, which people in these classes don't have. Wallets need protection, smart contracts need auditing, and so on. I would struggle getting people to use (say) hardware tokens.
3. There's nothing ultimately stopping governments from banning crypto exchanges or crypto vendors or more if they really want to prevent the disenfranchised from getting some. They might not eliminate the network, but they can certainly go after people for suspicion of participation in it (such as vendors). The crypto model requires governments to be foiled by technical limitations, but this is rarely the technique they need.
Based on all of this, it seems like basically you need to solve the problem of vendors really caring enough about crypto for regular folks to get an advantage when the advantage is not clear. Is this not the case? What have I missed?
The argument of whether governments and payment processors should have the power of prior restraint on all transactions (e.g. by going cashless) or not is older than cryptocurrency.
Theatre.
Second - you are quite right that cash is used for that and without it such activities will greatly diminish. Though I suspect that they will switch to barter economy.
Third - that will happen soon. Some governments are already restricting cash, though mostly the ones that are doing so are fighting not against wars or cartels, but against their local oligarchs funneling money from the country (the same problem I described in other comments). Many countries have already restricted moving cash across the border, so there it's not used for this a lot.
It seems like your concept of fiat might be wrong. Fiat isn't synonymous with physical tender. Fiat is just sovereign money in whatever form it takes, digital or otherwise.
Governments enforce fiat as money because it allows them to finance whatever war and other endeavor they want with an endless supply of money that they conjure out of thin air. Whereas taxes are at least paid by people, fiat is a way to steal money from ordinary people by debasing their money.
If this is the case, then I would like to propose the following:
Following the axiom that "It's worth less than nothing" & "crypto has negative value", that would mean that you'd be willing to pay other people to own crypto, since it's deemed to be negative value.
To prove this claim, a payment of $100 made out to me would suffice.
But if you manage to abolish cryptocurrency, or meth for that matter, then I will gladly pay you $100.
The media is trying _so hard_ to push the narrative that these exchanges matter. They just don't.
They only matter to people who are obsessed with making cryptocurrency into traditional regulated finance.
That would be cryptocurrency dying, because then it would simply be a very inefficient system for bank transfers. Just as a road legal Formula 1 car would be something else entirely.
Does Z library going under mean that book piracy is going to zero? Does it prove that buying books is the future?
Does Twitter going through struggles mean that online messaging is going to zero?
Does a tech hiring downturn mean that programmers are worthless and going to zero?
You don't say that sausages are worthless just because the dog ate a couple that were left on the kitchen counter.
The problem may be the dog, or the lack of discipline by the owner, or whoever left the sausages out on the counter, but the one thing free from any accusation of blame is the fucking sausages.
There is a confusing entanglement between the thoughts about the technology vs the thoughts about actually doing financial transactions with it. I have admiration for the developers and awe at the websites, games and services that were spawned, the technology. As a financial construct it's a perfect storm for exploitation; human nature + unregulated hyper-capitalism = bad.
Regulation is required, As much as for banking because consumer funds are being stored and / or transferred.
FTX was just grossly, fraudulently mismanaged and I'm not actually sure the exact machinations of regulation that could ensure that kind of thing doesn't happen - regular reporting of figures, independent audits, etc, but then with the money FTX had been throwing around it would have been easy to fake reports and pay for clean audits (in my layman view of a very complex landscape).
But that won't happen because money laundering is a religious belief. Instead we'll just get more stupid attempts to watch the watchmen.
No doubt the ponzi schemers will reboot the casino, and Bitcoin in some form will live forever, and ETH proof of stake holds real promise. But FTX signals the next leg down for Bitcoin, likely the collapse of Tether, and a return to 2016 valuations.
Over a million people lost billions of dollars in the FTX collapse/apparent fraud. This is the most important financial story in a generation, nothing "boring" about it!
No evidence is offered about this at all. But even so mining should be a pretty low-margin and relatively risky endeavor. You don't want mining to be profitable.
The worst part of fiat is that rent-seekers are chasing after the money spigot and devising ways to profit off how fiat is "mined." It's the Cantillon effect.
Let's not ad-hominem the commenters and instead focus on the claims themselves rather than counter-hypotheticals.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncPyMUfNyVM
Bitcoin is a new thing, sitting on the shoulders of the giant technologies we're otherwise so proud of - all us highly paid software industry folks.
But no, it's worthless, it shouldn't exist, it's not worth any further time or effort or research, fuck it off my fucking planet.
It's so weird this attitude so prevalent on HN.
I'm no Bitcoin maxi or "crypto will kill traditional finance in 5 years" type, or even really a get rich quick chaser (it'd be nice, but I've lived in reality for too long to expect anything like that) but I'm smart enough and humble enough to recognise it's a brand new thing (even 13 years later) that will grow and evolve to find its own niche or niches and then they will grow and evolve and fragment as all things do.
Cryptocurrency isn't going away, and Bitcoin has the 'original' going for it, the Veblen good association unrelated to any other pro or con argument. Ethereum is the 'original' smart contract version of Bitcoin, already an evolution of function, and has an ecosystem of vast proportions that any other smart contract platforms are a long way away from reaching (although getting closer faster than Ethereum is moving away).
It's interesting to watch and there are a lot of smart developers working on difficult problems in the space.
I'll also admit that I'm not smart enough to understand the intricacies of things like ZK proofs, but I somewhat understand their applicability in the space and look forward with interest to seeing whats possible when such technologies are applied to cryptocurrencies in practise.
I'm rambling, but I want you to feel comfortable sharing here. I want to harvest the down votes on behalf of all those chilled.
The idea is nice, but has no applications, esp. in Finance. Also the idea of replacing monetary systems built since the beginning of written history in a decade with cryptocurrencies is a bit naive.
I'm a bit tired from discussing same things over and over, but at the end, banks gonna bank.
OTOH, I'll not downvote/flag/harass/gatekeep for anyone sharing their views. Discussion is always good. This is how things move forward. So, go ahead, share on :)
The energy is being paid for though, so it's competing in the same energy market as everything else. "Waste" becomes entirely subjective at that point.
Also, Ethereum is now proof of stake, reducing it's power usage by something like 95%. PoS has its own pros and cons though.
> Also the idea of replacing monetary systems built since the beginning of written history in a decade with cryptocurrencies is a bit naive.
That's why I say it's still new despite being 13 years old. It's naive to think it's already failed when it's barely learnt to walk.
Happy to be either totally ignored or told where I'm wrong.
Actually, "I can do whatever do with electricity, because I pay for it", is a wrong perspective, esp. in today's energy climate.
Let's put the fact that Bitcoin and Proof of Work systems are very energy inefficient as of today, and paying for it doesn't make this inefficiencies right.
Today, supercomputer centers discuss about reducing capacity, or add downtimes. CERN is discussing about temporarily shutting down some experiments, incl. accelerator ring. Hotels in Europe is fixing (locking in fact) their rooms to 18 degrees Celcius, and turning off heating the second events/conferences end. Last, but not the least storefronts are turning off their extremely efficient LED lighting at nights, after stores close.
In this climate, running a very inefficient network which uses equivalent energy to a small-mid European country "just because we pay for it" is wrong on many levels.
I'm normally very lassiez-faire person, but in the face of this energy crisis, climate change and other existential threats looming, saying that "we can do that because we pay for it", really grinds my gears. It's just carelessness. I don't know when we have detached from ethics this far, and this is disturbing (AI has the same problem for different reasons, but let's not digress).
Ethereum's Proof of Stake migration is something I support. I still don't believe in cryptocurrencies and all utopia surrounding it, but at least one step in a right direction.
> It's naive to think it's already failed when it's barely learnt to walk.
I don't think it's failed, but it has not won any battles either (yet alone the war). It's just another instrument which will be normalized under banks at most. I'm saying that it won't arrive where people dream, but somewhere else, and that place will be boring, if it ever arrives.
Any people evangelizing cryptocurrencies are excited for small money (personal finance), any people evangelizing it for medium-sized money (hedge funds, etc.) are running Ponzi schemes. This is not a good outlook from my perspective.
Anything beyond that and you're literally picking winners and losers - which wouldn't necessarily be wrong either, but it's politically suicidal and so it will not happen.
Make non-renewable power prices higher. I'm for that, but Bitcoin and proof of work cryptocurrency mining will adapt to whatever new rules are put in place, and people will still complain that it's a waste because there's no direct benefit to them individually.
I agree, however, that the popular understanding of the end result of cryptocurrencies could be something incredibly boring and potential anathema to the core reason for existence of Bitcoin such as central bank digital currencies.
However, there will always be groups working against the interests of the establishment, creating new avenues of alternatives (here, direct proof of me being utopian).
I'm neither near to them, nor have the same perspective on climate change & the energy crisis, because of my vantage point, most probably.
Have a nice day.
I think the energy people spend on cryptocurrencies comes from a similar logic. If you want to stop people from externalizing the costs of energy waste you will have to increase the price of energy until the costs are covered, or else we will continue to run at a deficit at the expense of the planet.
On the flip side of this coin, energy expansion has driven all known human (and evolutionary) progress to date, so it's a delicate ecosystem to mess with.
Unless it’s prohibited by law, which is in effect in Germany and France (if I remember correctly).
Energy prices are on the rise in every form, at least in Europe, and people feel the pressure profoundly.
The problem here is, we don’t have unlimited energy as of now. So, we need to at least use it a bit more carefully until we clear this bottleneck.
Cryptocurrencies’ energy waste problem also still needs to be addressed, because if they can do this more efficiently, we can use the energy for more production.
However, this doesn’t mean that I believe cryptocurrencies are solving anything. I’m firm on that view.
Bless you. That made me laugh out loud.
Calling it "tech" misleadingly groups it with a category of things which largely tie into existing "tech" in every obvious and specific ways; most of which were created very recently.
This is the wrong way to think about "tech" as fundamental as one which gives every person 'the ability to transfer real world value over photons in the form of IP packets', which is the essence of Bitcoin (and cryptocurrency generally). A better comparison for Bitcoin is something like telecommunications.
Banking on regular use cases in the near term is probably a bad idea. But what is far worse is dismissing, much less prematurely regulating or banning, something fundamentally comparable to the advent of telecommunications.
Western Union started doing wire transfers in 1872.
By introducing the ability to transfer a scarce asset globally you resolve the requirement for credit, as no one ever needs to redeem.
Credit is a hack, Bitcoin is the fix.
But a trusted mail carrier and direct end-to-end encrypted video calls from/to anywhere on the planet are not even in the same ballpark. Trusted wire transfers and trustless peer-to-peer value settlement are potentially just as dissimilar.
I don't think it will take nearly 200 years for the scale of the difference to be as substantial as the difference pre-victorian mail and modern video calls. But it will take substantially longer than 13 years, that is pretty clear.
Even still, it is obvious to me (and many others) that this eventual future is inevitable-- and no amount of price fluctuation, scamming, or environmental concerns can shake that belief because these things simply don't even remotely address the core of what a foundational change this "tech" is in any way.
That is not what a wire transfer is.
> I don't think it will take nearly 200 years for the scale of the difference to be as substantial as the difference pre-victorian mail and modern video calls. But it will take substantially longer than 13 years, that is pretty clear.
The first electronic value transfer happened somewhere around 1872 so it is already at 150 years which is far nearer to 200 than to 13.
> Even still, it is obvious to me (and many others) that this eventual future is inevitable-- and no amount of price fluctuation, scamming, or environmental concerns can shake that belief because these things simply don't even remotely address the core of what a foundational change this "tech" is in any way.
It would be nice to hear arguments on this topic than proclamations of belief.
EDIT:
Just noticed that in your first post you said:
> It took nearly all of those 184 years to get to a point where a majority of people had a regular use for telecommunications.
At first I read it as it took 184 years for telecommunications to become widely available, which would be a reasonable comment. Your claim isn't reasonable since even far before 1832 majority of people had a regular use for telecommunications but the technology wasn't there. Bitcoin technology is here but majority of people have no use for it.
I didn't say it was a wire transfer. I said it was a mail carrier and made an analogy. You seem to have misread this part and misinterpreted my entire reply, as the rest of your comment makes little sense as a response.
> The first electronic value transfer happened somewhere around 1872
No, wire transfers are data, not value, transfers. The humans and institutions on either end of the data transfered "over the wire" are then entrusted to transfer yet more data to a central bank which eventually completes a physical value transfer of assets to perform settlement of the balance.
Central banks move around ships filled with gold and other precious assets-- that is the value transfer. Direct non-physical electronic value transfer, i.e. settlement, did not happen until 2013.
Over the last 13 years, every last use case with the arguable exception of Ponzi schemes and ransomware scams has turned to shit. Payments, store of value, distributed computing, NFTs, nope all across the board. You can't even buy drugs with Bitcoin anymore!
Distributed computing I don't know much about, but if you're talking smart contracts that seems to be pretty healthy and well, but if you're talking decentralized AWS then I think there's a ways to go before that's a realistic expectation.
Payments, can work well in certain scenarios and better / worse for different cryptocurrencies. Cross border large value transfers Bitcoin can still be a cheaper and faster option than some (countries) banks.
Store of value is an interesting one, more so because we're (maybe?) near a local bottom down 80-odd percent from all time highs, but on a single line from inception to now, it's outperformed much of the stock market (I have no direct citation for this, but have heard it from a number of not necessarily trustworthy sources).
The whole stock market being down a large percentage takes some of the stink off Bitcoin's store of value argument as well.
Gold seems fairly consistent; boring, but boring can be good as an investment or store of value.
NFTs, that's all just in fashion mode at the moment, the new application of cryptocurrency / blockchain. Better applications of NFTs will surely appear.
On HN the consensus is that every current usage is either worthless, utopic or scammy. Nobody denies the technology. A recent post on HN about AWS and blockchain ended with the following sentence : "the blockchain is a solution looking for a problem"
https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/202x/2022/11/19/AWS-Block...
Now High-Frequency Trading is technically impressive, the ridiculous lengths they go to to shave microseconds are awe-inspiring. Too bad it's for a purpose that is almost as devoid of redeeming value to society as cryptocurrencies.
It would be nice if any of them understood finance or just bank panics and financial contagion.
People then fall into the (equally?) well-signposted-by-history trap of thinking that any company is trustworthy.
If you want a quick rundown of what might be happening...
People have a very finely tuned sense of who is winning status games. It is clear that some people in crypto are winning by several billion dollars. Add to that a (fairly reasonable) argument that there is cheating afoot in this status game and you get people arcing up trying to do get something done about it. Very natural response - people don't like cheaters and do play status games.
I think they're mistaken though - I'm put in mind of Utopia, Limited (a classic 1893 production) lampooning the obvious stupidity of a limited liability corporation. Turned out limited liability corporations were a game changer and extremely beneficial to society.
I'm sure people are genuine in their beliefs, but the aggregate response is unusually ferocious.
It took 20 years to go from the car phone suitcase in Lethal Weapon to the first release iPhone.
What’s the crypto equivalent?
https://peterdavidconley.com/crypto-vs-internet-adoption/
That's not really what people are "bagging" it for. Or at least, not why I'm "against" crypto.
> But no, it's worthless, it shouldn't exist, it's not worth any further time or effort or research, fuck it off my fucking planet.
I think the technology is super interesting as a technology (I'm talking of blockchains here). I think there is currently one solid, known use case for that technology - cryptocurrencies. I'm not sure how "beneficial" they are overall, but I'm not so sure how beneficial Facebook is either. They are for sure providing some value to some people.
My big problem is that for the last 8 years, I've been hearing about how the Blockchain technology will solve other problems, revolutionize other fields. And as of now, that just isn't the case. There are no other problems that blockchain solves that can't be solved better with other technologies.
I'm not saying that no further time or effort to research this should be done, not at all. I'm just saying that people claiming there currently are use cases for it are wrong, and pushing back against them.
If people don't even care about the privacy of their personal data, they're already two layers away from caring about decentralisation.
This is an important data point about the nature of the emerging digital society - whether we like it or not. It would be swell if somebody competent (and not captured in any way) investigated and drew conclusions about what all this means and what kind of risks it is seeding for our collective future.
The arbitrary confiscation of concepts such as "value", "business", "asset", "investment" and "use", coupled with the unfairness and rent-seeking nature of the official system and the increasing ease of bootstraping alternative "financial systems" (FSaaS) suggests that the crypto phenomenon is not a one-of aberration but potentially a recurring malaise. If there was any chance that digital technology can lead to a better financial system it seems to be as remote as ever.
Btw the first name of the author is Satoshi...
"Bitcoin has died 466 times"
https://99bitcoins.com/bitcoin-obituaries/
Privacy is the killer feature for crypto. Or is there another non-crypto solution to this problem?
People come to Bitcoin for their greed, but they stay for the revolution.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Denationalization_of_Money
On the contrary, I'd argue the true value of cryptocurrencies lies in the extremely transparent and publicly auditable nature of the blockchain.
Even a lot of the recent scams and rugpulls fall apart with some basic blockchain analysis.
In the current environment a lack of regulation leads to lots of scams and sketchy business, but these aren't fundamental problems with the technology.
The fundamental problem is that most of these cryptoassets are backed by sunk costs, dreams, and hype. Ethereum makes a good stab at solving this problem by supplying real-world utility to the underlying coin, but unfortunately most of this demand is still driven by scams and speculation.
I don't believe any cryptocurrency will be able to achieve real underlying value until one or more successful countries require it to pay taxes. (The dream of increasingly privatizing the world until the entire financial system is 100% backed by the word of random business owners is downright frightening to me so I hope the huddled masses keep some independent voice in the matter.)
There seems little reason why this eventual country should legitimize an existing cryptoasset, though, since spinning up their own will be just as easy.
As sovereign-backed crypto-currencies spread I expect KYC regulations to catch up fast so while it will still be possible to spin up your own coins and run your funds through shady mixers, eventually it will become harder and harder to operate without a clean wallet.
In this future world of government-managed crypto I expect the existing unbacked cryptoassets to eventually fall to zero or thereabouts. This is why I am not financially invested in bitcoin et al, but still very bullish on the technology.