To put this into perspective US manufacturing used 4.69e12[3] Kwh where crypto mining used 0.05e12 Kwh.
Even more interesting is the comparison to the US dollar which ostensibly is backed by all US Energy consumption less maybe residential consumption which was 2.86e13[2] kwh less residential at ~21% = 2.28e13. Now let's compare the USD energy consumption to bitcoin which was 1.29e11[1] kwh in 2021 which would make Bitcoin ~200x more efficient than the USD in terms of energy required to secure.
The other half of that perspective is that US manufacturing is a critical, productive part of our economy.
The US dollar is backed by a complex of factors, including our willingness to invade or otherwise bring to heel countries that threaten the US dollar. Trying to do math on the "efficiency" of bitcoin versus the US dollar is a category error.
It very well could be a category error to claim bitcoin is 200x more efficient than the USD. I did the comparison for my own purposes to try to bring some sort of perspective to the number 50 billion kwh because it's so large it doesn't mean much to me without meaningful comparisons.
It's also worth noting that most mining power consumption happens where & when energy is cheap. Bitcoin as a whole uses more renewable energy than the US economy by a factor of 2x @ 58.9%[1] vs Total US usage from renewables @ 23%[2]
The "unit" of value backing the US dollar has dimensions that you can't factor into a meaningful comparison here; any comparison you do make is going to result in nonsense answers, regardless of your opinion of Bitcoin's value.
Bitcoin does indeed use power where it's cheap[1]. The argument that justifies Bitcoin's use of renewables needs to account for Bitcoin's concurrent prolongment of nonreneweables.
> To put this into perspective US manufacturing used 4.69e12 Kwh where crypto mining used 0.05e12 Kwh.
The perspective being that crypto is so small because it's 1/100th of manufacturing? Or the perspective being that crypto is so big because it's 1/100th of manufacturing?
The way I see it is that US manufacturing produces a massive amount of highly complicated and sophisticated goods which make a complete nontrivial difference in the quality of life for a massive amount of people.
Whereas (as I see it) crypto does nothing but provide a way for a small number of people to be scammed out of money by a smaller number of people.
> Even more interesting is the comparison to the US dollar which ostensibly is backed by all US Energy consumption less maybe residential consumption which was 2.86e13[2] kwh less residential at ~21% = 2.28e13. Now let's compare the USD energy consumption to bitcoin which was 1.29e11[1] kwh in 2021 which would make Bitcoin ~200x more efficient than the USD in terms of energy required to secure.
If you can find a way to also provide all the goods and services that were provided with that energy while using your energy to mine bitcoin, then I will accept your comparison.
To be fair to AustinDev's comparison, I knew that crypto was massively wasteful. However, hearing that it's 1/100th of US manufacturing does put things into perspective.
I once toured an automotive plant. The idea that crypto could possibly be 1/100th of just that one plant would have been terrifying. The idea that crypto has reached 1/100th of ALL US manufacturing ...
EDIT: It sounds like automotive plants measure their output in something like thousands of cars per week. Imagine the energy required to move just a single car through a factory. And all of the work that goes into assembling it. And lighting and hvac for the factory. Then multiply it by 10000, then by 50 (~weeks in year), then by total number of automotive factories in US, then do the same for all of the other manufacturing industries in the US. Finally divide all that by 100. Yeah ... I consider myself not to have an environmentalist bone in my body, but I'm suddenly not feeling so well.
All of food, metals, minerals, and paper are each single-digit percentage consumers of energy (all US food manufacturing is 6%). The largest US manufacturing subsector, chemicals, is just ~35%. 1% of manufacturing is an enormous number.
Nothing really, though I'd argue it's not built to move the heat around well, but there's good odds that that home heater is going to be fighting with the AC units that are being used to keep the home cool for the months it's not winter and in locations where there is little to no winter.
It's wasteful compared to using hardware that is purpose built for climate control. Also, what do you do in the summer, turn off the miner or increase the AC? (which is more expensive than heating)
No miner of any scale is nor should be using air conditioning.
If a home miner is foolishly using air conditioning, they are lighting money on fire. These folks represent an infinitesimal minority of all mining-related energy consumption.
Sub-ambient cooling is for human comfort: machines are happy working in 100F ambient. If you can recycle the heat in the winter, that's great, but you certainly shouldn't be trying to cool sub-ambient in the summer.
First US manufacturing actually results in making a lot of stuff. Second, your US dollar comparison is flat out wrong. If you want to compare the energy usage of the dollar to bitcoin, you should calculate the energy it takes to manufacture new banknotes and coins, the energy it takes banks and financial institutions to run the databases where they store people's accounts, the energy it takes to run credit card transactions etc. It will be tricky calculation but it is far less energy than the total energy consumption of the US and I am sure it is far less than the bitcoin energy consumption.
I would be interested to see this calculation but, I'd argue that you'd also have to include the energy usage of the federal government, federal reserve and US military. The military is an easy one to calculate and they use about 0.75 quadrillion btu's per year in fuel alone according the 2021 federal budget. Which is about 219.5 billion kwh to compare to crypto's 50 billion which is surprisingly close.
At the end of the day, it is impossible to quantify the amount of energy required to keep the USD as the global reserve currency and preserve its value.
You are thinking about this entirely wrong. And quite frankly you seem to be doing everything you can to make crypto look favorable in this comparison.
The only "fair" comparison, would be to estimate how much energy bitcoin/crypto would consume if it replaced the US dollar. In that scenario, the government would still exist, the military would still exist, most of our existing financial infrastructure would still exist (crypto has done nothing to squash financialization, if anything it encourages it).
In the above scenario, the only thing that would probably disappear is the federal mint. Crypto mining already uses way more energy than that. And crypto mining would almost certainly increase exponentially if it was adopted globally as miners are incentivized to mine right up to the edge of probability, and the value of tokens in the above scenario would increase dramatically (because most tokens are deflationary) thus resulting in a massive surge in mining.
At the end of the day, there is just no way to rationalize away the absurd waste of energy that is crypto mining. They are increasing the cost of energy for everybody and they are increasing global energy demand when we desperately need to be reducing consumption to save the climate. Proof of stake exists, any crypto currency that does not use it should be outlawed in my opinion.
To compare efficiency you probably need to include some factor that scales the 2 against each other.
Like now you are saying that securing 1 Bitcoin blockchain is 200x more efficient than securing 1 US economy.
But I expect if you ask, most people, if forced to choose only 1, would select the US economy.
With a scale factor, you could do something like say you would choose 10% more blockchain over whatever the equivalent amount of US economic activity would be.
You can't talk about efficiency without talking about the productive output. If I spend 200x as much to get 200x as much value, the efficiency is the same.
The productive output of the USA includes keeping about 330 million people alive with a decently high standard of living. The productive output of bitcoin is enabling speculation, money laundering, and crimes such as ransomware. There is no rational world where the two levels of output are even remotely in the same ballpark.
What is secured by bitcoin mining is the existence of bitcoin. Which currently has a market cap of a bit under $600 billion.
This values the US economy at 200x bitcoin. So if the US economy takes 200x the energy, that's THE SAME level of efficiency.
But it gets worse. As others have noted, it is widely believed that bitcoin is a speculative bubble which rounds to "the largest Ponzi scheme in history". To get bitcoin mining to be equal in efficiency to US manufacturing, you have to accept an almost certainly fake valuation for bitcoin at face value. If you don't accept the paper valuation as being real, then bitcoin's efficiency drops dramatically.
All the computers? Aren't smart TVs actually dumb home theater PCs these days? Don't cars have several computers in them these days? Watches and smartphones?
I thought the stat about how crypto is using nearly as much power as lighting more meaningful and surprising.
It's just residential lighting which isn't all that much energy usage. What makes all these numbers surprising is if you look at the yearly output of a nuclear powerplant which is ~8 billion kwh / year. We should probably build a bunch more nuclear plants to replace all of our fossil fuel plants.
That is where it gets blurry. What are we defining as a computer? Some coffee machines run Debian, do they count as a computer? Smart TVs pretty much are computers. Or are we only counting computers as something that runs Windows, MacOS or Desktop linux?
Sounds like it's time to stop hyperventilating over the biggest nuclear non-disaster in American history and build more reactors.
Fun fact: in 1962, the Atomic Energy Commission projected there would be almost ten times as much available energy in 2060 as there was at the time. Today, I understand we consume just about two times as much. Anyone think we'll get across that finish line thirty years from now with the status quo?
I think the consensus on HN is generally pro-nuclear.
Building nuclear plants because of pointlessly induced demand, however, is ridiculous: we should build nuclear capacity to replace existing capacities that we'd like to phase out. In addition to pointlessly raising the US's energy profile, Bitcoin has also made that aspect of the US's long-term power profile worse than it needs to be[1].
We should expand energy production where there is extra demand for energy. That new energy should likely be nuclear. To pass judgement on what the energy use should be is ridiculous, and very counter to the behavior of this country that let it grow.
Actually I think the idea of forcing crypto miners to use nuclear is brilliant. My proposal would require that they pay the full cost that nuclear charges to the grid, and also that they aren’t allowed to purchase power from any fossil sources or grid-connected renewables. I’m not sure this idea would be long-term economically sound but it would remove the major objection to crypto mining (carbon emissions) and if the crypto miners go out of business due to proof-of-stake becoming more common, they’ll hopefully have funded the construction of new nuclear plants for the rest of us.
Thabk you for your contribution of a The Granuid article, the information that the United States is actually run by the Priestly Council of Bay Area /g/, and a second, not related to the thread reason to save the planet and cut everyone's energy bill by an order of magnitude that becomes a general case of the thread reason by the end.
Not to put words in the posters mouth, but given that metabolism is necessary to maintain life and running server farms to generate imaginary lottery numbers at scale is not, the point is: Don’t waste time and energy on crypto nonsense.
And entities which conversationally consume resources are normally seen as pests, plagues and similar with a tendency for their environment trying to eradicate them.
The moon has no atmosphere to spread the heat generated by the sunlight.
But if we take the earth's atmosphere with its already existing temperature because of sunlight and greenhouse effect and add additional heat sources it becomes warmer or what do you think happens with the additional energy put into the atmosphere?
Ah yes. Because if thete's one future that worries the IPCC more than any other, it's the one where humans step-increase their heat output while dropping their gas output to zero.
Again, please do some investigating on this subject. I'm not even super familiar with it, but you're flippantly and casually equating a linear factor to an exponential one and it's paining me to hear.
Do we need computers? Do we need indoor plumbing connected to active sewage treatment? Do we need heating out of anything more sophisticated than a wood-burning hearth of handmade bricks?
Cutting the energy bill of the bottom half of the country by an order of magnitude seems to me a self-evident justification, and that's only the first-order effect. Manufactories of producer goods and specialty parts in Germany are shuttering right now because of newly-unmanageable energy cost fluctuations. That puts German workers on the curb, prices consumer goods for all of Germany's sub-median class higher while their wages fall from the labor glut and cratered investor/entrepreneur confidence, and bleeds the ability of producers still above water to maintain a healthy sales base through competitive international products and prices.
With all these people in mind, I've started wondering something about your plea for frugality; what's your delta from the US median compensation, and do you tell it to people in politically-worrying husks like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, or Ohio after you're done reminding them they really could keep their heart beating without cheap energy if they just try a little harder?
We don’t use 10x the energy because that guess from the 1960s entirely missed the technological revolution that is small, energy efficient computing.
(And other similar advances. The 1960s never anticipated, say, how energy efficient a 787 could be. It was instead the era that thought you might slap a nuclear reactor in an aircraft. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convair_NB-36H)
It’s not an appeal to frugality. It’s “raw energy usage alone is a goofy metric for a goal to increase”. Do we (including my relatives in the wasteland that is Ohio) need heating? Yep! But we don’t need 10x the energy to do it; my 97% efficient gas furnace replaced a 60% efficient one from the 1980s.
Flogging a pet peeve[1] won't actually help in this case, no matter how popular it is in the local demographic. Mining is scale invariant, the value of the coins tends to the value of the energy, not the quantity. Make electricity cheaper and mining will just use more of it.
[1] Standard response, which again isn't relevant to mining: Nuclear is simply way too expensive and by far the #1 reason it's not being built is because no one wants to write the checks to build it when solar is more than an order of magnitude cheaper. Fix that problem first, then start yelling about regulation.
>Mining is scale invariant, the value of the coins tends to the value of the energy, not the quantity. Make electricity cheaper and mining will just use more of it.
Isn't the value of mining really a function of the higher of both energy and computational availability, and, to my amateur understanding, don't most cryptocurrencies self-adjust their computational difficulty in response to more mining, which the return-value of each new miner less than the one before it? I'd wager that means the combination of time and silicon availability will cap the expansion long before it eats four-fifths of 2060 US' energy generation.
>Nuclear is simply way too expensive and by far the #1 reason it's not being built is because no one wants to write the checks to build it when solar is more than an order of magnitude cheaper. Fix that problem first, then start yelling about regulation.
You don't think there's a possibility the unjustifiable cost might come from the regulation more than the lack of value in displacing almost the entire electricity market?
It does take a lot of resources to protect a cryptocurrency from attack by corporations and nation states. Typically the resources have to be significant enough that those entities don't find it a worthy trade to perform the attack. That's what proof of work does. It performs the same role as a standing army except it does it non-violently. And that's amazing. Well worth it.
The only thing that matters is how the system performs under a sustained attack. Any "cryptocurrency" system which depends on the lack of such an attack could be relpaced with a federated system and instantly be thousands of times more efficient.
Coins like tether cannot continue to exist unless they are allowed to continue.
The real metric here is how many people are buying and selling things (not coins themselves) with a cryptocurrency. For actually using it as a currency bitcoin is still unchallenged. Markets and traders are just an unfortunate side effect that now are more associated with the word "cryptocurrency" than the actual use of cryptocurrencies in the public mind.
It's not "worth it" until the "currencies" can demonstrate some value. What can I buy and sell with them, today? And how is it superior to doing the same thing with my Visa? (Assume for now I am not buying anything illegal).
I can move my assets across borders instantaneously and exchange them for local currency whenever I need it. There is value in digital assets that are not bound to any jurisdiction.
I assume you're going to whip out another currency that doesn't or suggest that the user complicate their experience by using a third party as an intermediary, but don't bitcoin transactions take over an hour to clear? And your use case is the exact same thing I can do instantly with my MasterCard.
A bitcoin block is mined every 10min and 1-2 blocks is usually enough for the transaction to be considered settled (6 blocks used to be the convention, but with today’s hash rates it is very unlikely 2 blocks will be reversed). The confirmation time is different depending on the network, for example, Algorand has ~4s transaction finality.
And yeah, you can use MasterCard until you hit your daily withdrawal limit, or your account is frozen, or your transactions are flagged and reversed and you have to explain why you want to spend your own money a certain way.
20 minutes is still an inconveniently long time. 4s is much faster, but now we're on a proof of stake coin.
Mastercard doesn't have a daily withdrawal limit. Bitcoin requires access to both your wallet and whatever security paraphernalia you have set up around accessing it. If you lose access or it's compromised you're out all that coin unlike a credit card, and you're burning massive amounts of fossil fuels for these "conveniences".
You conveniently skipped over the "your account is frozen" and "your transactions are flagged and reversed" parts, and you are splitting hairs now. If you're not concerned by the problems addressed by cryptocurrency, nobody is forcing you to use it. Cryptocurrency users aren't lobbying the government and attempting to ban MasterCard last time I checked.
Bitcoin is a great storage of value for now. Mastercard is also very useful for transactions. The US military burns more fossil fuels than any entity on earth, and that's how your USD is protected.
The US military protects the US; if the US dropped the dollar for any other currency, be that bitcoins or the Euro or gold or antimatter, the military in particular would still have to burn exactly as much energy.
Conversely, bitcoin and other similar cryptocurrencies, whichever collective burns more than half of all computational resources, gets to wage economic war on anyone else.
By extension this also includes them getting the ability to undo transactions they don't like, which is actually a genuinely useful thing, despite being used as totemic example by pro-crypto people against fiat currencies.
But there is no upper bound to this connected to any underlying asset, so a K2 Dyson swarm does exactly the same number of BTC transactions as the current network, and that number isn't enough for even just the daily fast food purchases in Berlin.
Conversely, the US military cost is basically "how much do we want to spend to defend our country and way of life?" to which the answer is "lots, but not too much".
Bitcoin is 14 years old. There are many alternatives in wide-use by now, that can settle in seconds, for sub-penny tx fees regardless of transfer amount.
Where credit card transactions are reversible even to 60 days later, crypto txn's are final.
There are many pro's and con's on both sides. Crypto's unique and fills a niche it built for itself. People have mocked it, attacked it, misrepresented it and underestimated it for over a decade now. It's still here, and it's still growing hugely.
What is Crypto's unique niche? It seems to be more possible privacy (assuming someone doesn't determine your wallet) at the expense of a huge amount of fossil fuels and no way to protect yourself. It also seems to be used a speculative asset by the vast majority of users, but I don't think that's its intended niche.
I think you need to back up the claim that it's growing hugely. Both Ethereum and Bitcoin are down a great deal from their recent highs, that seems contra-indicative of growth. If the argument here is that there are tons of new types of coins being constantly created then sure, I believe that, but I don't know the value of all those new coins that are at the moment used primarily for speculation and will never have the momentum required to break into any sort of mainstream adoption.
I guess it has many, but to me the overall niche is as a potential replacement for the existing financial system, which is a grand mess held together by early 20th century economic theory, mid systems architecture, and... COBOL.
The first of those is the most important and impactful, in that economic theory has not, to date, been adequately updated for a world where labour markets can suddenly be replaced in their entirety by a few lines of python.
Or a world where manual labour can be downloaded, printed-out and assembled autonomously. It isn't here yet, but is not too far away, all the various bits are being created as we speak.
The shift has to be away from a labour-based economy.
This is because labour value will drop to zero eventually. So we need another way to distribute generated value. It's a bit of a mess and large experimentation is going on - but crypto is at least in there touching those things.
As for growing hugely:
Crypto is reliably volatile, and also reliably exponential in its general growth. The linear charts look horrific, but the logarithmic versions are quite stable. This is the only way - historically - to measure its growth accurately:
Given the final point on the chart represents about $1.2 trillion, you can see there's a large amount of exponential momentum there. ("Technically" it could go to zero overnight, but it seems unlikely... the NASDAQ technically could too.)
> So we need another way to distribute generated value.
But who is generating what value? In a world where the value of labour drops to zero what is the value? Crypto's value is pure speculation. How does it actually solve that issue better than any other value when there's no value? The implication here is that somehow crypto will become a means to its own end, but why is that? Again, it doesn't solve the problem of labour having no value. What makes it a better fit?
If you look at that coin gecko graph and look over the last two years there has been no growth, regardless of the scale.
You're too entrenched in a labour-centric model to be able to see these problems have solutions at all, let alone that crypto might be able to provide them.
When there's no labour to drive the economy, something else will be driving the economy. An economy, in it's purest form may be: a system that exchanges things, and also provides a store for latency in those events.
Note I'm saying "may be". We're talking about rewriting theory here. That is, we need to theorise, and hope we get it right, or at least come up with something useful.
Assuming that, what would be the value generated in a labour-less economy? Again, we can only guess at this stage, just as we could in the 90's about what impact the internet might have. Nobody predicted where we are exactly now.
The fundamental thing many can't seem to get past with crypto is that people involved in it seem to want to, and often-times succeed, in generating value for themselves, out of what's tantamount to nothing.
How people cope with this apparently alien concept (from the point of view of labour's value being an essential dogma), is to focus on all of the times that value was in fact generated out of others misfortune. (As happens also.)
But, it's not the whole story, and, misses the forest for the trees. You can type a sentence and create a beautiful work of art, or ask a question and get an answer that condenses years of knowledge into a reply. The same way an NFT creates money.
It's not necessarily always a "scam" that labour-less endeavour can create value now. It's where society and technology has been heading for decades. But it's a huge cultural, social, political and economic shift.
It is inevitable that such changes provoke visceral averse responses, suspicion, failure to understand, etc. This will likely go on for some time before the future emerges. Crypto pushing all these buttons is a good sign.
Doesn't mean it's definitely the future - but, is there another contender with similar disruptive characteristics in all the necessary areas? Only AI but as yet it doesn't have a transactional exchange or latency store for generated value as crypto does.
> If you look at that coin gecko graph and look over the last two years there has been no growth, regardless of the scale.
Look over it again, it does that regularly.
It's expected behaviour for a highly volatile asset to retrace its previous levels. The important aspect is that despite this, its linear and logarithmic trend are both constantly increasing across the time series.
No, they take under 10 minutes, a business will often wait for a large amount of confirmations of the block your tx is included in to ensure they aren't vulnerable to a double spend, but if you're sending to a trusted party then this delay is not required.
Can you use your MasterCard to pay a Russian person?
For 5 cents you can send any amount of monero anywhere around the world and have it settle in 25 minutes. The transaction is irreversible and obfuscated - sender, receiver and quantity. I’m not going to throw away my privacy just because you made it illegal.
Why would we make an assumption like that? Also, who decides what is illegal?
The entire point of decentralized currency is that it isn't controlled by a national government, and is not subject to any particular country's laws or any corporation's policies.
The benefits go beyond just buying drugs, though. Cryptocurrency helps people to circumvent a wide variety of restrictions - from tariffs, to taxes, to labor laws, governments create all sorts of ridiculous barriers that disrupt the free market and make it difficult for people to do business.
If you're happy with your country's government though and are willing to follow whatever rules they happen to make, then of course it would just be easier to use the national currency. Nobody ever claimed otherwise.
The US army happens to be very violent even as a standing army since energy waste is an alternative to a much larger less trained army. But practically speaking the genocide of everyone is the worst possible violence and its most likely cause will be continued market for fossil fuels. Murdering every soldier on the planet with a reusable knife could only slow that down a decade or two.
(If at all.. Prices would drop, reducing some supply but also driving private sector usage up.)
> It performs the same role as a standing army except it does it non-violently.
It does so at the cost of enormous amounts of pollution. Sure it's non-violent, but it's still disastrously wasteful and after well more than a decade hasn't proven to really be anything more than a way for speculators to get rich off other speculators.
> That's what proof of work does. It performs the same role as a standing army
So if I invent a token where I can prove to you that I burned electricity to mint it, will you accept it in return for some of your possessions or your labour?
Why stop there? Why not regard online forums that speak about it as terrorism too, and round up everyone who's participated in any discussion about crypto online, on the basis of having aided proliferation of terror, and throw them in the slammer?
Further proof that most people would support the patriot act if it was worded differently. Just sprinkle in a little “to prevent tax evasion”, “to prevent domestic terrorism”, “to stop the spread of misinformation” and the Democrats would be tripping over each other to get it into law.
Mine runs 24x7 except for the screens, they sleep after 10 minutes of idle time. CPU sleep is too much of a crapshoot, I'd rather spend a few dollars on power than have to spend time getting my work environment restarted and back into a productive state.
Not long, maybe a minute including POST and all the pre-boot stuff. But sitting down and having everything exactly the way I left it gets me back into "flow" much quicker than having to start up all my applications and get them back to where I left off. Yes in theory hibernate/sleep does this and it usually does but sometimes there are weird quirks, in particular ssh sessions, remote filesystem mounts, and other types of stateful connections are usually borked, and I'd rather not worry about any of it.
Yeah...that's how I've usually done things, too. I'm starting to reconsider, and trying to flip off a power strip with PC/TV/etc before bed.
It is inconvenient to lose state. Web browsers can happily spring back up with previously-opened tabs, but you lose a sense of continuity with other apps, shell history, etc.
General question to the community, what's the state of window manager snapshotting these days? I've been able to snapshot/restore non-GUI process trees with CRIU, but I haven't been able to make it work with an X11|Wayland server. I don't think it snapshots GPU state.
Maybe it'd be a better idea to do everything in VMs, and save/load them across reboots?
This title is hilarious.
S is a subset of U.
Also headline: |S| > |U|.
Incredible.
But I suppose this pedantic point doesn't matter since HN hates cryptocurrency so much they lose their minds and start hating cryptography just out of spite as well.
Energy graph omits all of the biggest household energy consumers: EV chargers, electric HVAC (including heat pumps), electric water heaters, clothes dryers, ovens, ranges, and other kitchen appliances.
Turning every single light on in my house at once is < 200W. So are all the other items in the list. Running all of them 24/7 is < 5kWh, not that you would ever do that. A single clothes dryer run is 5 kWh. A mid-size heat pump is about 8 kW.
Rising prices increases energy used, as miners are primarily constrained by energy costs, and higher prices allows them to use more energy and still be profitable. Higher BTC prices are bad for the environment.
Not necessarily true. There is limited power to go around and finding spaces is also difficult. At scale, this becomes a limiting issue. Just because the price goes up, does not mean that a company can take on the risk of allocating multi-year contracts to expand.
Bro tell me what are you planning to buy when your magic token hits a bazillion worthless dollars? Hope you continue to DCA so the whales can have liquidity or are you a whale yourself? Salute in any case.
Right. The coin that went from from 60K to 20K is a perfect hedge against inflation. Cool man. You control own money, who are we to say if you want to hand it over to a bunch of scammers selling you fairy dust.
Reminder: good estimates place the number of people in the cryptocoin system in the 100,000s. BTC can support c. 7 transactions/sec. Ethereum c. 20.
This is a scam. It's a self-organizing pyramid scheme. There is no "there" there -- the vitamins really arent a cure for cancer, and your friend telling you to buy a warehouse full is part of a cult of pushers who are desperate that their warehouses of vitamin pills (ie., tokens) doesn't become entirely unsellable.
All the numbers reported by the cryptocoin system are made up: these are manipulated markets with almost no buyers. "Market cap"s are inventions. The amount of actual liquidity in the system is tiny: people are looking for the exists. These exits are mugs called "hodlers", ideally, You, who'll buy their vitamins from them.
Usually, HN comments ought be somewhat more sober -- but I think this is now out of line. Sobriety in this matter is enabling a system of exploitation which should not be entertained by decent people.
Regarding number of people actually using the system, do you have any good estimates in mind by chance? I'm seeing claims of 7% of Indians for example, which would be in the millions by itself.
Keep in mind that all the major source on crypto, including the top dozen popular textbooks I could find on amazon -- and many "academic" looking papers -- are written by people profoundly invested in selling crypto.
All crypto news is press releases from crypto companies. All crypto ideas are rehearsed sales pitches with no arguments or evidence. You should assume anything written on crypto which hypes it is a lie. You should investigate the site/author, and -- I'd predict -- you'll find that every single time it links back to people with profound economic incentives to lie to you.
For BTC, you have 400,000 addresses used daily transacting about 300,000 transactions. This is trivial to obtain as a public record. How many of those addresses are associated with only one individual?
If i wanted to simulate millions of users I could do so only with a trivial amount of money. What is a "user"? It's just an address. There are no "users" on the chain.
There are 70mil addresses on BTC, I believe. How fast could an interested party double that? Pretty quick.
These numbers, absent hard-hitting empirical data, should be regarded as fraud. They're made up, either at the level of the press release, or by technical manipulation. Eg., by moving lots of money around a few accounts to manipulate figures.
This is a system which maps, at least provably and publicly, to the entire daily economy of a small town. And it's energy usage is measured in 10^12
Even in a steel man argument I think someone would have to concede that BTC itself can not be the base layer most people, with a layer 2 like Lightning being necessary for scale which has it's own problems.
Unfortunately as you say it is hard to tell how much genuine usage there is. The only thing I would add is that while crypto is worse, I feel the same concern regarding misaligned incentives in regular finance.
In terms of address count, they're also as I understand intended to be use once[1]. On the other hand there's many people using the same wallet and transacting without ever leaving a exchange and causing a real transaction, though I probably wouldn't consider that as "counting" personally.
> Keep in mind that all the major source on crypto, including the top dozen popular textbooks I could find on amazon -- and many "academic" looking papers -- are written by people profoundly invested in selling crypto
> All crypto news is press releases from crypto companies
Again, you could say the same thing about people trying to prop up the capitalist system as they are heavily invested in it and own property, etc..
I could argue that people arguing against crypto are mainly people who are upset that they missed the boat on the biggest price gains. But you could also make that argument about the stock market/capitalism. So it's not a valid point.
Economics textbooks are not written by people trying to hype an asset.
> you could say the same thing about people trying to prop up the capitalist system
Sure, and the heavily manipulated housing market, propped up by QE which dramatically inflated asset prices, is a major issue facing several large economies (eg., AU, UK esp.).
However homes, at the end of the day, are homes. If you're conned into overpaying 100,000 on a home whose value will drop 150k at some point because of obvious on-coming market corrections -- well, you still have a home.
Crypto's market correction is "to about zero". And there's no home left.
Crypto is a scam. These ideas are part of the scam. These whatabouts and fasle equivocations.
It's as much a homeopath saying, "what about big pharma?"
> Economics textbooks are not written by people trying to hype an asset
Even if economics textbooks are not written by the doomsayers for whatever reason, do you think banks and private companies are not doing PR blitzes for assets right before dumping them on us?
> If you're conned into overpaying 100,000 on a home whose value will drop 150k at some point because of obvious on-coming market corrections -- well, you still have a home
Well, at the end of the day you still have your ETH whether the price is $2k, 30 cents or $24k and you can use it to do public decentralized work across the L1 network. On which things like
You can also trade it or buy the VitaDAO token and vote on funding for translational research proposals
I tried to dig a little into how these numbers are being calculated. Most are based on surveys of Indian Internet users, which caters to selection bias of "internet users in India who want to earn money using surveys". Additionally, India has a 47% internet penetration, which most reports (citing the surveys) don't seem to be accounting for.
The-Ken[c] did a report about how the number of Crypto users in India seems to be over-reported, on two counts - Users have accounts at multiple exchanges (Double Counting) and Users who are in it for the Free Crypto:
> Estimates peak at an overly enthusiastic 100 million crypto owners, as claimed by broker discovery and comparison platform BrokerChooser, but the true number is likely a more conservative 10 to 15 million, according to three industry executives The Ken spoke with.
> “We work with an internal estimate of about 4 to 5 million regular users in India,” said an executive at crypto exchange ZebPay. [...] Notably, the exchange takes into account not just individuals who made trades in the last 30 days, but also app opens while calculating the number of regular users.
> The situation is further exacerbated by exchanges offering joining bonuses and crypto rewards for signing up, like the Rs 100 worth of free bitcoin offered by crypto exchange CoinDCX.
> This lures users into creating an account—irrespective of whether they engage with it in the future or not—and helps the exchange pad up its user numbers.
A better source to consider is the Reserve Bank of India, which has made 2 interesting statements about the number of crypto investors in India.
1. RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, Nov 2021: "With a reasonable amount of confidence, I can say the number of investors in the crypto market seems to be exaggerated. Adding that most of the buyers of cryptos in those platforms have anyway invested just between Rs 1,000 and Rs 3,000. (12-36USD). [a]
2. RBI Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar, Feb 2022: "there is no data to justify how many investors have invested in these instruments and what is the amount of investment. Data informally gathered in November seems to indicate that crypto investments by Indians is nowhere near to being significant (although the pace of growth could make it a concern in future). This data showed that four out of five investor accounts held investments of less than ₹10,000 (122USD), with an average holding size of ₹1,566 (20USD). Wealth loss, if at all it is a possibility, is likely to affect only a small fraction of these investors." [b]
I also tried to dig into the original number from Triple-A (Which seems to have gotten a lot of traction because it was quoted in a policy-brief from UN-CTAD[5])
Here's where the number is coming from:
1. Triple-A, Crypto Firm, 2023 Figure[1] is 97.5M / 7.1% of India. The citation for this is their 2022 Report[4] (now deleted).
2. Finder.com, Stats Firm, latest figure is 29% based on a survey of 31k Indians[2]. 29% figure is based on self-selected participants, which are "internet, smartphone and Google AdMob users or Qualtrics research panel participants.".
3. Triple-A, Crypto Firm, 2022 Report[4], claims "over 100 million people, 7.30% of India" and cites HootSuite's Digital 2020 report along with Statista.
4. HootSuite numbers (survey backed), % of Internet Users aged 16 to 64 who own any form of cryptocurrency:
4.1 Digital 2023 - 16.8% [6]. Cites GWI-Q3-2022
4.2 Digital 2022 - 12.6% [7]. Cites GWI-Q3-2021
4.3 Digital 2023 - 7.1% [8] - *this seems to be the figure being used by Triple-A*, which ought to have an upper bound of 2.1% or so (63% of India is aged 15-64, with a 47% internet penetration). Cites GWI=Q3-2019.
HootSuite in turn cites GlobalWebIndex, which is again survey backed, and I couldn't find any clarity about the methodology.
5. Statista, Stats Firm, Paywalled[9]. This is again survey backed: "Which of these financial products and investments do you currently use/own? (...
Thanks for doing the digging! It seems like whenever a static is dug into there are often a few asterisks necessary. "Lies, damned lies, and statistics" as they say. I wonder why Triple-A wouldn't use the 16.8% figure, which bounded would be 4.97%, other than negligence.
the Keynote in [b] is definitely an interesting read though it's a bit unfortunate more statistics regarding holding sizes aren't shared.
The perspective expressed of crypto as (reading between the lines) a tool of foreign governments to dollarize EMs is an interesting one. I would be curious if the average person would rather have the individual option of being able to hold other currencies risk and all or if they would prefer to collectively have restrictions for the health of their banking infrastructure as a whole, and how much interest there was in crypto as a means to hold dollars or something else other than rupees, or hoping for extremely high returns in order to then convert back to rupees.
"This could be actual dollarization if stablecoins linked to the US Dollar become widely used, and there is good reason to believe that that they would be popular if permitted."
"Most cryptocurrencies are owned by businesses of AEs; therefore, better adoption of cryptocurrencies would add to their growth and employment. Significantly, it might be of advantage to the AEs if cryptocurrencies replace emerging market (EM) currencies as that would give AEs a better strategic control on the EMEs."
"With one or more private currencies being allowed, there would be parallel currency system(s) in the country. Thus, increased acceptance of cryptocurrencies would result in effective ‘Dollarization’ of our economy."
"They threaten the financial sovereignty of a country and make it susceptible to strategic manipulation by private corporates creating these currencies or Governments that control them."
"Almost all cryptocurrencies are priced in terms of Dollars (or potentially any of the freely convertible currencies). Wider adoption would actually result in wider use of these currencies. So cryptocurrencies are not a threat to convertible currencies as they are to the Rupee, which is not an international currency." (I believe the Rupee has since started to be used for international settlements[1])
Cannot upvote it enough. This charade had gone on for far too long. The liquidity is coming from the poor, desperate people who have been sold a dream of eternal riches by the criminal scammers. Governments and law enforcement agencies must step in and put a stop to this planet destroying fraud.
One look at the Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency subs on Reddit and it is clear, many of the people still putting in money regularly in the crypto ponzi are the ones who can least afford to lose it.
Well indeed, crypto fanatics are stock touts for penny stocks.
The biggest liquidity scam here is tether -- that's where you accept one real dollar from a pigeon and turn it into 100s by creating a row in an excel spreadsheet called lol-wewillallbeinjail-soon.xlsx
That's the big real money pump into the system. Hopefully when tether fails, we can see past these manipulated numbers. ie., when people realise the 200bn+ they thought was there was 20bn, we may be able to estimate the actual amount of money being put in.
Casino chips. Actually worse than casino chips because at the end of the day you can't even redeem them for real money and go home.
The game is simple - create magic tokens, create "stable" magic chips. Wash trade tokens with magic chips, pump the price to moon. Lure naive idiots and unload magic tokens for real money. Laugh all the way to the bank while telling suckers to keep holding till eternity.
And just like casinos, you don't have to participate.. It seems to me that main difference between crypto and stocks is that crypto is on 24/7 and doesn't have built-in breaks when the market drops by 10%.
We wouldn't care a fig's leaf if it wasn't for the huge carbon footprint of the POW ponzis. If it was just a bunch of gamblers scamming each other over make believe internet bytes without setting the world on fire, we wouldn't mind. But when your little ponzi wastes energy equivalent to a small industrialized nation, the world has to do something about it.
Ok but BTC + ETH make up ~68% of the total crypto market cap, not these penny stocks. And yes, I realize that market cap means less and less as you go down the list of coins but that's kind of my point. It is a choice to go for the smaller ones (high risk, higher potential reward).
There's a scale from "there are buyers at this market cap" (eg., suprisingly, twitter)... to "there are no buyers at this market cap".
Consider if you and I start a business which sells shares in the business (and nothing else), and we sell 1/1000 shares for $1000 -- that makes our business $1m on paper.
But is there a buyer for that $1m? Well sure, there was for SBF. Until jail, of course -- but many bought his shares in his business which sells shares in his business.
This isnt unique to crypto... crypto is just the latest incarnation whose "productive valuation dial" is close to 0%.
It sounds like the only difference is scale. I have not experienced liquidity issues in practice, because I have avoided the tiny players in crypto.
Have you had liquidity issues selling ETH or BTC?
Regarding hodling, again I don't see how this is different than the stock market. You can try to time the market or you can just hold AAPL for 30 years, understanding that any point it could all come crashing down when you're looking away.
In my experience though, every time I have sold ETH (including at the local peak in Jan 2018) it would have always been more profitable to hold it for longer (since I didn't have an immediate use for the cash).
The reason the stock market grows is because businesses on that market grow. A factory opens another warehouse; apple invents a new phone. The reason to hold stock is just to wait until your ownership stake (stock) in the business is worth more because the business is more economically productive.
A crypto token cannot be economically more productive. The only means by which its value can increase is ponzi-economics, ie., by more people entering the system increasing the *apparent* future demand for that token.
When people stop entering the system, tomorrow -- or in a decade -- the whole thing collapses.
Unless you are arguing that the whole network is worthless, so upgrading something worthless is still worthless? Is that what you're saying?
Regarding "The reason the stock market grows is because businesses on that market grow" isn't there also an opposite scenario, where more investments (into factories, etc..) get made by companies/individuals with cash reserves during a recession because prices have come down? https://www.businessofapps.com/data/apple-data/
Using AAPL as an example, company revenue has steadily been going up since at least 2005 (with Q1 2008 being a record quarter), so why wasn't it spared during the 2008 recession? Is it not because of meme-nomics in the stock market?
Similarly, why do people say "buy on the rumor, sell on the news" if stock market reflects business reality?
> When people stop entering the system, tomorrow -- or in a decade -- the whole thing collapses
Isn't that exactly what Marx predicted of the capitalist system as a whole? I again fail to see the difference between crypto and the rest of finance. If anything, crypto, seems like a more extreme version of the traditional system (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerationism)
Also, I don't think BTC/ETH would cease to function if the prices went down. You seem to be confusing the promises made by certain charlatans with the actual utility of these assets, which is that they are inherently traceable and can be used to avoid things like this: https://www.yahoo.com/video/pentagon-35-trillion-accounting-...
And I am aware that they are not the ONLY solution to this problem, but I don't see how you can argue that they have no utility at all.
Stock markets are poor indicators of the economic reality of underlying businesses because they're subject to some of the same issues crypto is -- but it has one "ruthless honesty mechanism" -- the need, over the medium term -- for businesses to actually grow & compete.
Insofar as private interests can manipulate these conditions, the numbers arent reliable either. Eg., many regard private equity as half-a-scam for these reasons: those numbers are also made up.
However, crypto is one of the most extreme cases of this pathology. It's a pure fiction: no t-shirts are being made; no apps being sold. My time today is as productive as it is tomorrow; no crypto will change that for me, or anyone.
Indeed, crypto is negative sum: money is being burned to run the mining. So, we're actually worse off. Crypto isnt zero value, in most cases, it's value is negative. Sell everything off, and some people will be owed money (mostly, the energy companies).
This is egregious. It's hard to overstate how dangerously stupid this is -- it's economic homeopathy.
The reason a BTC might be worth tomorrow is the same reason a beanie babby mightve been, or a misprinted stamp: just the belief that some other people want it.
Not that they do want it -- no, there arent enough people to sustain this belief. Just the appearance that enough people want it.
If i have 1,000,000 coffee beans and the first bean goes for a dollar, I can imagine myself a millionaire... until i try to sell the rest.
A significant reason that the hodl cultishness is pushed is precisely so people wont do this.
The T-shirt being made is that the transactions are traceable, verifiable, and the system is hard for one (state) actor to shut down or control. Again, I'm not arguing that crypto is the only way to get these benefits, but the idea that there is zero utility seems ludicrous.
I tried to find an estimate of how many dollars have gone into crypto mining so far, but was unable to find it. However, I would bet that it's less than 35 trillion dollars
NFTs are similar to art pieces. Why does a JPEG monkey cost millions? Why does a banana taped to a wall cost hundreds of thousands of dollars[1]? Why do paintings, which look like work of a 4 year old, sell for millions?
The NFT “phenomenon”? It’s a code template and API called the ERC721 standard, which can be used to secure, verify and transfer digital ownership on a distributed ledger.
There’s been so much done (and often right here on HN) to explain how crypto and NFTs are innovative, to link educational resources and list real world examples of legitimate use. As well as to resolve the various ideological controversies. Maybe it’s not quite common knowledge yet, but there’s no excuse in 2023 for being so clueless and, yet, assertive.
I'm well aware of all that has been done to explain the ideas behind crypto, NFTs, and the rest of the ecosystem. I know what the boosters say and can do a decent job of explaining it in a pinch. I've been hearing about it here and elsewhere since 2009.
I also believe that the entire crypto ecosystem is a wasteful solution in search of a problem. And the biggest players in the space, over and over again have been proven to be criminal frauds trying to generate the next hype wave. Often through wash trading to make it appear that there is more of a market than there is.
The current wave of legal problems for Celsius, FTX, Binance and so on have started to reveal the lies that many expected all along. For example we've found out in court that the "attestations" long used by many were faked. (Not that this was a surprise given that, for example, Tether was revealed previously to have been faking its numbers.) To the extent that there actually was money, a lot of it was in now failed banks like Signature Bank. Or it is connected to money laundering, as happened with Tether. (See https://protos.com/did-tether-falsify-documents-to-fool-caut... for one of many places where that is reported.)
The sky-high valuations for cryptocurrencies these days are not believable. Yes, people trade that many tethers for a bitcoin, but good luck getting tethers redeemed. And most consumers had their money in fraudulent exchanges like FTX and Binance. They are learning the hard way the truth of, "Not your keys, not your crypto."
You say that there is no excuse in 2023 for being so clueless and, yet, assertive. I say that there is no excuse in 2023 for you being so dismissive about a field filled with Ponzi schemes, some of which have collapsed and others of which are still able to pretend to a solvency that they clearly don't have.
> I also believe that the entire crypto ecosystem is a wasteful solution in search of a problem.
It’s just embarrassing to write this when there are so many real world examples of solutions being solved right now by crypto, as well as many active users of crypto who couldn’t care less whether it solves a problem you, personally, have.
The fact that you see Celsius, FTX and binance as a paragon of crypto and decentralised finance shows just how little you’ve been paying attention. They are centralised, crypto-adjacent companies. Please look at Yearn, Aave, Curve, Uniswap, GMX, Gearbox, NFTfi, Illuvium, countless NFT gated communities, and news reports of people in the third world using blockchains to make emergency, life saving transactions. And then afterwards maybe your beliefs about crypto might be worth posting in public forums.
Good luck with your defi obsession, and we'll see which of the two of us is more embarrassed in a decade. You've offered no concrete evidence that there is any "there" there in crypto. But you can rattle off a bunch of projects. Yay, I guess?
Since you offered no evidence to counter what I said, I'll give an argument as low quality. Namely an argument from authority. I have about 200x the reputation that you do. I also have a background as a mathematician, a quarter century as a programmer, and used to work on Wall St.
Unless you provide actual EXAMPLES of real world examples of solutions ACTUALLY being solved by crypto, as well as reason to believe that the crypto ecosystem upon which those solutions rest is sustainable, I'm going to believe my knowledge, experience, and professional background over your fly by night content free crypto boosterism.
First, the most basic role of money is to be a medium of exchange. With reasonable overhead and in acceptable time, people need to be able to exchange money for goods and services. Crypto fails this in every practical way. If I want to buy pizza with bitcoin, my overhead exceeds the value of the pizza, the average time to make the purchase is longer than the average time to order, have it made, delivered, and get eaten by my family. (Have you ever SEEN hungry teenagers tear into pizza.) Also if people started trying to buy pizza with bitcoin, you'd quickly run into the problem that the maximum number of transactions per second on the bitcoin network is a fraction of the number of pizzas sold per second.
Yes, yes. This is all improvable. I've heard that for years. But these issues are not new, and haven't gone away.
OK, what next? You are making a big deal out of the fact that there are poor people in horrible third world countries who want to use crypto to escape authoritarian oversight. At best this is a red herring, I lean towards calling it disingenuous. A far more important use case for crypto is crooks trying to get paid for their ransomware attacks without themselves being caught by law enforcement. And the third world has benefitted far more from payment networks like M-PESA than all of crypto.
Besides, the single best way to help the poor people in horrible third world countries is to continue the worldwide economic progress of the last couple of centuries. Few understand how astonishing the improvement in human life is. Watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo for a 5 minute video demonstrating how dramatic it is.
Moving on, crypto is nowhere near as decentralized as boosters claim. A handful of central players are responsible for owning most crypto, doing most mining, and so on. Moxie, the lead developer behind Signal (great app, BTW), decided to experiment with NFTs. What he found was shocking. First, we are one website hack away from, say, all bored apes turning into pictures of shit. Second, his experiment verifying accidentally pissed off a couple of companies that everyone else uses to get their view of the blockchain. The result? The contents of the blockchain notwithstanding, his NFT disappeared! See https://moxie.org/2022/01/07/web3-first-impressions.html for more details of his experiments.
Moving on, all of the defi platforms that you named have something big in common. They are riding on the back of a bubble inflated by fraudulent Ponzi schemes, controlled by a handful of people. They use all sorts of phrases like "arbitrage" and "yield farming". But all those are simply euphemisms that round to "Ponzi". Without the fraud, the whole ecosystem implodes. Because it rests on nothing real.
Oh, sure. Defi offers automated trading protocols to allow you to do things like hedge risks. Automated trading strategies have an important role in our world. But they have limits. For example when everyone tries to hedge the same risks with the same trading strategy, it doesn't work. The traditional finance world learned that the hard way on Monday, October 19, 1987, and has had periodic reminders since. It won't work better in the defi world.
Another limitation of automation is that if someone figures out how to exploit it, your money disappears arbitrarily fast. Crypto enthusiasts treat the regular heists of large amounts of crypto as teething pains. But actually they are an intrinsic part of the platform that can't be eliminated. Once you eliminate the Ponzi underpinning, crypto trading strategies do what you don't want it to, and don't do what you do want it to. You lose both ways.
I'm not sure at what point in life, someone with your HN score ends up dismissing reality (examples of people making real use of blockchains) in favour of contrived logic (inventing absurd scenarios like buying pizza with layer 1 blockchains, preaching the upsides of a taliban regime and bringing up the industrial revolution in order to move the goal post), but I sure hope it won't happen to me.
> the opinion that this Kool-Aid is poisonous
my opinion is that it's a certain type of person who is the poison
You've shown no evidence of being willing to engage in thinking about reality. Instead you always look for the most facile dismissal possible of the received party line for your brand of crypto enthusiasm.
So you don't have to worry about becoming a person who winds up dismissing reality. You're already there. Enjoy feeling rich from the Ponzi schemes that you're part of, right until the reality that you're ignoring slaps you in the face.
And that ends this attempt at conversation. Feel free to have the last word. I'm not engaging further.
They hated mjburgess because He told them the truth.
The amount of actual goods and non-crypto-related actual services purchased with crypto in the last year probably wouldn't fill a high school basketball court.
People who get paid in crypto immediately turn it into real money because the only thing it's used for is building virtual pyramidal constructs.
The sock puppet liquidity argument, which I have agreed with for almost the entire time that I've been around crypto, now unfortunately well past 10 years, may finally get its first no BS test due to pending liquidation action by the Mt.Gox government trustee.
This individual appears to be largely outside the influence of the cartel, at most couple hundred people with a further concentric core of four dozen or so, who control all the liquidity levers and self-reported "usage" and "transaction" metrics in the whole system. These would be the large, long-established and highly publicity-averse miners and the pools they (pretend not to) control, the only group that can afford to burn transaction fees the prop up usage metrics, because they are actually paying a substantial share of those fees to themselves.
Obviously the payout to the people impacted by the gox hack has been perpetually delayed, and there's no guarantee it will happen anytime soon, but certain legal milestones have been reached that will make it quite difficult to delay past this year. When it does happen, we'll see a genuine liquidity event - something north of 120,000 Bitcoins - happen over a very short time, although the trustee has not disclosed how they will manage to do this without completely tanking the market or otherwise introducing slippage that privileges the earliest recipients of the payout over later recipients. This isn't tge same as a in-on-the-game joker like Musk talking about buying and selling a billion dollars in crypto in the past tense, where there is no way to measure his words against the market. The addresses that hold the gox coins are known and monitored.
> BTC can support c. 7 transactions/sec. Ethereum c. 20. This is a scam.
In 2022, US mined only 5.4gram of Gold per sec[1]. This is a scam.
Or not. Weighing BTC's utility based on how many transactions it supports per second is as pointless as measuring Gold's utility based on how much of it is mined per second.
Go away. Crypto chuds have been pushing the "currency" angle for a decade. But whenever you point out it doesn't work as a currency, the goalposts move and now its a store of value. But it's not even good at that.
I don't know any serious crypto user pushing BTC as a "currency" anymore, apart from Satoshi's original whitepaper. And I have been in crypto for many years. Everyone views BTC as digital Gold - an asset immune to government censorship.
The original Bitcoin Whitepaper laid out multiple use cases:
* digital cash
* peer to peer transactions
* digital gold
* censorship resistant transactions
* hard money with fixed monetery policy and capped supply
* highly-decentralized with no single point of failure
Never did it promise to be a high throughput alternative to Visa for buying coffee
Nevertheless the Lightning Network has innovated in the space such that buying a coffee is now trivial using Bitcoin.
I am a crypto “chud” and I believe eventually Bitcoin will become a viable currency and a stable unit of account.
It isn’t that today as it is still a highly volatile asset class with rapidly growing adoption but we are still early.
For now it provides dissidents a viable option that is apolitical and cannot be easily censored.
It offers a hard-money alternative to fiat-money which can be arbitrarily inflated/diluted in value by centralized powers.
It offers a digital asset that is highly liquid, difficult to confiscate, and easy to access for the billions of unbanked throughout the world.
You may not see the use case for Bitcoin but that speaks more to your individual privilege as a citizen of a first world nation than it does for Bitcoin’s usefulness to millions or potentially billions of people around the world.
Gold is valuable when mined at 0 grams/second. Is Bitcoin valuable at 0 transactions/second? If not, how much slower than 7 transactions/second is acceptable? Why?
I don't entirely buy the "no liquidity" argument. I can sell 10,000 ETH on-chain right now and have a 0.28% price impact. That settles in 12 seconds with finality in six minutes.
Guess how much Apple stock I can sell right now? Zero. Stock markets are currently closed and Apple cannot be traded. When they are open, I'm looking at a T+2 settlement window. That's not very liquid. One might even call it market manipulation to only open for trading 18% of the time, and of course to shut off trading at any other time on a whim.
The alleged "market cap" of ETH is presently: $236,692,623,586 .
Consider an IPO for a company which sells shares, there is no question "at what point does the share price collapse to zero" -- it has a price. The company is worth something: it has profit/loss, assets, etc.
Consider selling all ETH for USD -- the obvious question, to me, is: at what point does the price collapse to zero? 10% of them? 15%? 25.00000001%?
This is an extremely non-linear effect, after 20bn is sold it might just be the next dollar afterwards. Or 50bn. Or 15bn.
I suspect there's about 20-50bn of "real money" in the system, radically double (-double-double) counted by many participants (esp, eg., via tether).
If any coins on any chain were sold off at a high enough rate, perhaps so the total across the entire ecosystem were a trivial 10-20% of ETHs alleged "market cap" -- i think the whole thing goes to zero. At 18.9111123% there'll be no buyers at any price, everyone will realise, and bang goes the whole show.
You can't say that about apple; or any stock whose value derives from owning a business that has *actual assets.
ie., I think the fragility here, of this system and this posted numbers, is radically extreme in percentage terms. Yes, your $1m USD here or there will make no difference.
I imagine you aren't joking... but this might well be a joke.
The ethereum network has no use, right? Nothing is priced in ethereum, no one needs ETH, nor will they ever.
Magic beans might be required to play the magic bean game -- casino chips are required by the casino, sure. But people enjoy gambling, there's an exchange of value -- a reason a person will work a day to make $100 and then trade it for an evening gambling.
But cryptocurrency networks do not have any reason to use them: nothing is priced in them, no govs tax in them, no businesses hold them, and so on.
There's smallish number of criminal gangs (and the like) who do have a use: a lot of crime today is priced in crypto. This gives highly anonymous networks an actual exchange value for their tokens. I suspect this minimal value will be targeted by relevant govs eventually, and disappear.
If you hold common stock in Apple, you have very little right to their assets in a ' collapse to zero' scenario. Preferred stock may have some floor price where the value of a company's assets prop it up, but not the common stock you buy on an exchange.
Ethereum, like Apple, has a dividend. You can stake ETH and earn rewards from the network. Granted, these rewards are accrued in ETH, but they are mostly based on gas fees that users pay the network, which has no dependency on the price of ETH. ETH is bought and sold with dollars so your dividend comes through with a thin layer of abstraction.
However, people don't buy Apple stock for it's asset value or its dividend. They buy it because of the huge TAM of Apple and promise of future growth. Similar to why people buy Ethereum's token.
Let's look at a different stock: DoorDash. They lose money hand over fist every quarter. They have very little assets, and again if you're a common stock holder those shares will be worth $0 when the company is liquidated. However it's still worth a nonzero sum because of speculation and future expectations of growing or turning a profit. Does that makes it a scam? Is their market cap fake because it can collapse to zero say any moment?
BTC protocol can handle transactions off-chain. I cannot take any post that doesn't address that simple fact seriously, since you're just repeating talking points without any research or technical analysis.
This is good for the environment. It encouraged green power like solar and wind, and if energy usage ever becomes a problem we can just turn off the miners.
Sounds more like we spend as much on cryptos, which have provided the tiniest fraction of value, compared to all other computers, which have provided immeasurable value.
Turning off the cryptos is sound environmental policy, that energy will be needed for the electrification of transport.
> "Despite its heavy power needs, cryptocurrency mining offers a potentially beneficial and symbiotic relationship between power usage and power generation. Miners can participate in demand response programs, incentives offered by ERCOT to quickly turn off miners’ power during periods of peak demand. When electricity prices are high or supply is straining to meet demand, miners can reduce their energy use. Supply and demand run in tandem, so if a miner stops using electricity, it’s the equivalent of a power plant producing extra electricity that could assist in meeting grid demand and help with grid stability."
> "simple economic theory suggests that increased mining activity could spur additional energy infrastructure. Mining facilities often are located near wind and solar farms that provide access to cheap electricity prices"
Imagine that I had written my original comment because I had read the article I provided, which I had, how ridiculously condescending your comment would sound.
Maybe you are talking about 'bias' because of my username? It's a joke name from after FTX busted. I think cryptocurrency speculation is some beanie babies stuff.
Proof of work sucks, if the "work" is just running the same hash function over and over and wasting electricity.
At Qbix, back in 2018 we were the first ones to implement Monero mining as an option to pay for an Calendars app that was on 50,000 computers, instead of a monthly recurring fee. But we quickly took it out. Back then it blew up and was all over the news, while I was finally taking a week vacation on a cruise with bad internet LOL:
"We have decided to REMOVE the miner in the app. The next version will remove the option to get free features via mining. This is for three reasons:
1) The company which provided us the miner library did not disclose its source code, and it would take too long for them to fix the root cause of the CPU issue.
2) The rollout had a perfect storm of bugs which made it seem like our company wanted* to mine crypto-currency without people's permission, and that goes against our whole ethos and vision for Qbix.
3) My own personal feeling that Proof of Work has a dangerous set of incentives which can lead to electricity waste on a global scale we've never seen before. We don't want to get sucked into this set of incentives, and hopefully our decision to ultimately remove the miner will set some sort of precedent for other apps as well.
Ultimately, even though we technically could have remedied the situation and continued on benefiting from the pretty large income such a miner generates, we took the above as a sign that we should get out of the "mining business" before we get sucked into the Proof of Work morass of incentives."*
In anything that's NOT proof of work, I would be willing to engage and help the ecosystem. But with proof of work, I'm worried that the Bitcoin blockchain having MORE applications is bad for the world. I've spoken to people whose job it is to defend Bitcoin and they had to admit that, if market forces continue, then Bitcoin will start to cause blackouts for people around the world (in some parts, it already has).
Anyway, I am wondering, maybe helping NFTs on Bitcoin and making degens have a mania and crowd out the Bitcoin transactions will actually make Bitcoin LESS attractive to the HODLers? In that case, I'd do it. I wish Bitcoin price would fall and make it uneconomical to mine it, while non-PoW projects like Polygon break free of it and see a lot more adoption.
Something is not clear, or does not make sense. Do they compare the consumption of crypto mining in the US, with the amount of power consumed by all computers in the US? How can the first be bigger than the second, which is the upper bound for any computing task in the US?
What is this crypto computed on, if not on computers?!
(of course, the energy consumption is outrageous, but this article doesn't make much sense)
Surely one can make the point that crypto mining is high energy, making it potentially contribute to CO2 output and e-waste. But when you do, at least try to do your homework.
Not a single (linked) source is mentioned regarding the energy metric, other than a description that it's a guess with supposedly > 100% margin for error.
Not a word on the energy mix. It draws a direct conclusion between energy consumed and CO2 output as if these are 1:1.
The statement that BTC/ETH contribute nothing of value is surely one many agree with, but not factual. It implies that this author/magazine cares about energy use, which surely they do not. There's 5 million energy sucking ads on the page and it's a magazine that can't wait to tell you about the all-new 3 foot long GPU so that you can play your game at 8K on a 240FPS.
True, it would be difficult to get every country in the world to get together and ban it simultaneously—but if converting cryptocurrencies to USD and EUR were banned, you just watch how fast they would dry up and blow away.
197 comments
[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 261 ms ] threadEven more interesting is the comparison to the US dollar which ostensibly is backed by all US Energy consumption less maybe residential consumption which was 2.86e13[2] kwh less residential at ~21% = 2.28e13. Now let's compare the USD energy consumption to bitcoin which was 1.29e11[1] kwh in 2021 which would make Bitcoin ~200x more efficient than the USD in terms of energy required to secure.
[1]: Bitcoin Energy usage 2021 - https://rmi.org/cryptocurrencys-energy-consumption-problem/#....
[2]: US energy usage 2021 - https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/us-energy-facts/
[3]: US Manufacturing energy usage 2021 - https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained/use-of-energy/industry.p....
The US dollar is backed by a complex of factors, including our willingness to invade or otherwise bring to heel countries that threaten the US dollar. Trying to do math on the "efficiency" of bitcoin versus the US dollar is a category error.
It's also worth noting that most mining power consumption happens where & when energy is cheap. Bitcoin as a whole uses more renewable energy than the US economy by a factor of 2x @ 58.9%[1] vs Total US usage from renewables @ 23%[2]
[1]: https://www.globalxetfs.com/bitcoin-mining-is-set-to-turn-gr....
[2]: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2023/03/01/clean-energy-....
You say that like its a good thing.
Bitcoin does indeed use power where it's cheap[1]. The argument that justifies Bitcoin's use of renewables needs to account for Bitcoin's concurrent prolongment of nonreneweables.
[1]: https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2022-1-spring/notes-here-t...
The perspective being that crypto is so small because it's 1/100th of manufacturing? Or the perspective being that crypto is so big because it's 1/100th of manufacturing?
The way I see it is that US manufacturing produces a massive amount of highly complicated and sophisticated goods which make a complete nontrivial difference in the quality of life for a massive amount of people.
Whereas (as I see it) crypto does nothing but provide a way for a small number of people to be scammed out of money by a smaller number of people.
If you can find a way to also provide all the goods and services that were provided with that energy while using your energy to mine bitcoin, then I will accept your comparison.
Otherwise this comparison is complete bullshit.
I once toured an automotive plant. The idea that crypto could possibly be 1/100th of just that one plant would have been terrifying. The idea that crypto has reached 1/100th of ALL US manufacturing ...
EDIT: It sounds like automotive plants measure their output in something like thousands of cars per week. Imagine the energy required to move just a single car through a factory. And all of the work that goes into assembling it. And lighting and hvac for the factory. Then multiply it by 10000, then by 50 (~weeks in year), then by total number of automotive factories in US, then do the same for all of the other manufacturing industries in the US. Finally divide all that by 100. Yeah ... I consider myself not to have an environmentalist bone in my body, but I'm suddenly not feeling so well.
how long does it take to see an ROI?
No miner of any scale is using air conditioning (compressor.)
If a home miner is foolishly using air conditioning, they are lighting money on fire. These folks represent an infinitesimal minority of all mining-related energy consumption.
Sub-ambient cooling is for human comfort: machines are happy working in 100F ambient. If you can recycle the heat in the winter, that's great, but you certainly shouldn't be trying to cool sub-ambient in the summer.
Can you explain what perspective that adds? I don't see how the two are related.
It's like commenting on an article about U.S. milk production by saying, "To put this into perspective, U.S. orange juice consumption was x."
At the end of the day, it is impossible to quantify the amount of energy required to keep the USD as the global reserve currency and preserve its value.
> Crypto uses 1/4th the energy of the most powerful military ever.
See, I read that and suddenly I feel like I need to sign some petitions and call my congress representatives and ask for anti-crypto legislation.
The only "fair" comparison, would be to estimate how much energy bitcoin/crypto would consume if it replaced the US dollar. In that scenario, the government would still exist, the military would still exist, most of our existing financial infrastructure would still exist (crypto has done nothing to squash financialization, if anything it encourages it).
In the above scenario, the only thing that would probably disappear is the federal mint. Crypto mining already uses way more energy than that. And crypto mining would almost certainly increase exponentially if it was adopted globally as miners are incentivized to mine right up to the edge of probability, and the value of tokens in the above scenario would increase dramatically (because most tokens are deflationary) thus resulting in a massive surge in mining.
At the end of the day, there is just no way to rationalize away the absurd waste of energy that is crypto mining. They are increasing the cost of energy for everybody and they are increasing global energy demand when we desperately need to be reducing consumption to save the climate. Proof of stake exists, any crypto currency that does not use it should be outlawed in my opinion.
This is a profoundly manipulative comment pushing snake oil.
Like now you are saying that securing 1 Bitcoin blockchain is 200x more efficient than securing 1 US economy.
But I expect if you ask, most people, if forced to choose only 1, would select the US economy.
With a scale factor, you could do something like say you would choose 10% more blockchain over whatever the equivalent amount of US economic activity would be.
You can't talk about efficiency without talking about the productive output. If I spend 200x as much to get 200x as much value, the efficiency is the same.
The productive output of the USA includes keeping about 330 million people alive with a decently high standard of living. The productive output of bitcoin is enabling speculation, money laundering, and crimes such as ransomware. There is no rational world where the two levels of output are even remotely in the same ballpark.
So let's try to compare them properly.
What is secured by US manufacturing is NOT the USD, but the US economy. Which according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_position_of_the_Unit... has a net worth of over $120 trillion.
What is secured by bitcoin mining is the existence of bitcoin. Which currently has a market cap of a bit under $600 billion.
This values the US economy at 200x bitcoin. So if the US economy takes 200x the energy, that's THE SAME level of efficiency.
But it gets worse. As others have noted, it is widely believed that bitcoin is a speculative bubble which rounds to "the largest Ponzi scheme in history". To get bitcoin mining to be equal in efficiency to US manufacturing, you have to accept an almost certainly fake valuation for bitcoin at face value. If you don't accept the paper valuation as being real, then bitcoin's efficiency drops dramatically.
I thought the stat about how crypto is using nearly as much power as lighting more meaningful and surprising.
Fun fact: in 1962, the Atomic Energy Commission projected there would be almost ten times as much available energy in 2060 as there was at the time. Today, I understand we consume just about two times as much. Anyone think we'll get across that finish line thirty years from now with the status quo?
Building nuclear plants because of pointlessly induced demand, however, is ridiculous: we should build nuclear capacity to replace existing capacities that we'd like to phase out. In addition to pointlessly raising the US's energy profile, Bitcoin has also made that aspect of the US's long-term power profile worse than it needs to be[1].
[1]: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/feb/18/bitcoin-m...
Truly we are all much better off.
What’s your point here?
But why is that for you to decide?
Please read this, and then do us all a favor and read much more before trying to contribute to this subject's discussion again: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_effect
But if we take the earth's atmosphere with its already existing temperature because of sunlight and greenhouse effect and add additional heat sources it becomes warmer or what do you think happens with the additional energy put into the atmosphere?
Again, please do some investigating on this subject. I'm not even super familiar with it, but you're flippantly and casually equating a linear factor to an exponential one and it's paining me to hear.
Cutting the energy bill of the bottom half of the country by an order of magnitude seems to me a self-evident justification, and that's only the first-order effect. Manufactories of producer goods and specialty parts in Germany are shuttering right now because of newly-unmanageable energy cost fluctuations. That puts German workers on the curb, prices consumer goods for all of Germany's sub-median class higher while their wages fall from the labor glut and cratered investor/entrepreneur confidence, and bleeds the ability of producers still above water to maintain a healthy sales base through competitive international products and prices.
With all these people in mind, I've started wondering something about your plea for frugality; what's your delta from the US median compensation, and do you tell it to people in politically-worrying husks like Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, or Ohio after you're done reminding them they really could keep their heart beating without cheap energy if they just try a little harder?
We don’t use 10x the energy because that guess from the 1960s entirely missed the technological revolution that is small, energy efficient computing.
(And other similar advances. The 1960s never anticipated, say, how energy efficient a 787 could be. It was instead the era that thought you might slap a nuclear reactor in an aircraft. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convair_NB-36H)
It’s not an appeal to frugality. It’s “raw energy usage alone is a goofy metric for a goal to increase”. Do we (including my relatives in the wasteland that is Ohio) need heating? Yep! But we don’t need 10x the energy to do it; my 97% efficient gas furnace replaced a 60% efficient one from the 1980s.
[1] Standard response, which again isn't relevant to mining: Nuclear is simply way too expensive and by far the #1 reason it's not being built is because no one wants to write the checks to build it when solar is more than an order of magnitude cheaper. Fix that problem first, then start yelling about regulation.
Isn't the value of mining really a function of the higher of both energy and computational availability, and, to my amateur understanding, don't most cryptocurrencies self-adjust their computational difficulty in response to more mining, which the return-value of each new miner less than the one before it? I'd wager that means the combination of time and silicon availability will cap the expansion long before it eats four-fifths of 2060 US' energy generation.
>Nuclear is simply way too expensive and by far the #1 reason it's not being built is because no one wants to write the checks to build it when solar is more than an order of magnitude cheaper. Fix that problem first, then start yelling about regulation.
You don't think there's a possibility the unjustifiable cost might come from the regulation more than the lack of value in displacing almost the entire electricity market?
(https://coinmarketcap.com/; Bitcoin and Dogecoin are the only PoW ones IIRC)
Coins like tether cannot continue to exist unless they are allowed to continue.
And yeah, you can use MasterCard until you hit your daily withdrawal limit, or your account is frozen, or your transactions are flagged and reversed and you have to explain why you want to spend your own money a certain way.
Mastercard doesn't have a daily withdrawal limit. Bitcoin requires access to both your wallet and whatever security paraphernalia you have set up around accessing it. If you lose access or it's compromised you're out all that coin unlike a credit card, and you're burning massive amounts of fossil fuels for these "conveniences".
Conversely, bitcoin and other similar cryptocurrencies, whichever collective burns more than half of all computational resources, gets to wage economic war on anyone else.
By extension this also includes them getting the ability to undo transactions they don't like, which is actually a genuinely useful thing, despite being used as totemic example by pro-crypto people against fiat currencies.
But there is no upper bound to this connected to any underlying asset, so a K2 Dyson swarm does exactly the same number of BTC transactions as the current network, and that number isn't enough for even just the daily fast food purchases in Berlin.
Conversely, the US military cost is basically "how much do we want to spend to defend our country and way of life?" to which the answer is "lots, but not too much".
There are many pro's and con's on both sides. Crypto's unique and fills a niche it built for itself. People have mocked it, attacked it, misrepresented it and underestimated it for over a decade now. It's still here, and it's still growing hugely.
I think you need to back up the claim that it's growing hugely. Both Ethereum and Bitcoin are down a great deal from their recent highs, that seems contra-indicative of growth. If the argument here is that there are tons of new types of coins being constantly created then sure, I believe that, but I don't know the value of all those new coins that are at the moment used primarily for speculation and will never have the momentum required to break into any sort of mainstream adoption.
The first of those is the most important and impactful, in that economic theory has not, to date, been adequately updated for a world where labour markets can suddenly be replaced in their entirety by a few lines of python.
Or a world where manual labour can be downloaded, printed-out and assembled autonomously. It isn't here yet, but is not too far away, all the various bits are being created as we speak. The shift has to be away from a labour-based economy.
This is because labour value will drop to zero eventually. So we need another way to distribute generated value. It's a bit of a mess and large experimentation is going on - but crypto is at least in there touching those things.
As for growing hugely:
Crypto is reliably volatile, and also reliably exponential in its general growth. The linear charts look horrific, but the logarithmic versions are quite stable. This is the only way - historically - to measure its growth accurately:
https://www.coingecko.com/en/global-charts (select logarithmic)
Given the final point on the chart represents about $1.2 trillion, you can see there's a large amount of exponential momentum there. ("Technically" it could go to zero overnight, but it seems unlikely... the NASDAQ technically could too.)
But who is generating what value? In a world where the value of labour drops to zero what is the value? Crypto's value is pure speculation. How does it actually solve that issue better than any other value when there's no value? The implication here is that somehow crypto will become a means to its own end, but why is that? Again, it doesn't solve the problem of labour having no value. What makes it a better fit?
If you look at that coin gecko graph and look over the last two years there has been no growth, regardless of the scale.
When there's no labour to drive the economy, something else will be driving the economy. An economy, in it's purest form may be: a system that exchanges things, and also provides a store for latency in those events.
Note I'm saying "may be". We're talking about rewriting theory here. That is, we need to theorise, and hope we get it right, or at least come up with something useful.
Assuming that, what would be the value generated in a labour-less economy? Again, we can only guess at this stage, just as we could in the 90's about what impact the internet might have. Nobody predicted where we are exactly now.
The fundamental thing many can't seem to get past with crypto is that people involved in it seem to want to, and often-times succeed, in generating value for themselves, out of what's tantamount to nothing.
How people cope with this apparently alien concept (from the point of view of labour's value being an essential dogma), is to focus on all of the times that value was in fact generated out of others misfortune. (As happens also.)
But, it's not the whole story, and, misses the forest for the trees. You can type a sentence and create a beautiful work of art, or ask a question and get an answer that condenses years of knowledge into a reply. The same way an NFT creates money.
It's not necessarily always a "scam" that labour-less endeavour can create value now. It's where society and technology has been heading for decades. But it's a huge cultural, social, political and economic shift.
It is inevitable that such changes provoke visceral averse responses, suspicion, failure to understand, etc. This will likely go on for some time before the future emerges. Crypto pushing all these buttons is a good sign.
Doesn't mean it's definitely the future - but, is there another contender with similar disruptive characteristics in all the necessary areas? Only AI but as yet it doesn't have a transactional exchange or latency store for generated value as crypto does.
> If you look at that coin gecko graph and look over the last two years there has been no growth, regardless of the scale.
Look over it again, it does that regularly.
It's expected behaviour for a highly volatile asset to retrace its previous levels. The important aspect is that despite this, its linear and logarithmic trend are both constantly increasing across the time series.
Can you use your MasterCard to pay a Russian person?
Why would we make an assumption like that? Also, who decides what is illegal?
The entire point of decentralized currency is that it isn't controlled by a national government, and is not subject to any particular country's laws or any corporation's policies.
The benefits go beyond just buying drugs, though. Cryptocurrency helps people to circumvent a wide variety of restrictions - from tariffs, to taxes, to labor laws, governments create all sorts of ridiculous barriers that disrupt the free market and make it difficult for people to do business.
If you're happy with your country's government though and are willing to follow whatever rules they happen to make, then of course it would just be easier to use the national currency. Nobody ever claimed otherwise.
(If at all.. Prices would drop, reducing some supply but also driving private sector usage up.)
It does so at the cost of enormous amounts of pollution. Sure it's non-violent, but it's still disastrously wasteful and after well more than a decade hasn't proven to really be anything more than a way for speculators to get rich off other speculators.
>It does take a lot of resources to protect a cryptocurrency from attack by corporations and nation states.
What do you think where this resources come from? Corporations and nation states.
So if I invent a token where I can prove to you that I burned electricity to mint it, will you accept it in return for some of your possessions or your labour?
https://news.energysage.com/how-many-watts-does-a-computer-u...
Let's get rid of television.
Gaming and coding.
It forgets about any peripheral plugged into it. And the only way to fix it is to reboot.
It is inconvenient to lose state. Web browsers can happily spring back up with previously-opened tabs, but you lose a sense of continuity with other apps, shell history, etc.
General question to the community, what's the state of window manager snapshotting these days? I've been able to snapshot/restore non-GUI process trees with CRIU, but I haven't been able to make it work with an X11|Wayland server. I don't think it snapshots GPU state.
Maybe it'd be a better idea to do everything in VMs, and save/load them across reboots?
https://nichegamer.com/high-end-gaming-pcs-banned-in-six-us-...
The ban from which high-spec PCs were specifically exempt?
https://www.pcgamer.com/high-end-gaming-pcs-are-exempt-from-...
But I suppose this pedantic point doesn't matter since HN hates cryptocurrency so much they lose their minds and start hating cryptography just out of spite as well.
Turning every single light on in my house at once is < 200W. So are all the other items in the list. Running all of them 24/7 is < 5kWh, not that you would ever do that. A single clothes dryer run is 5 kWh. A mid-size heat pump is about 8 kW.
I wonder if somebody built an automated process for this, or there is still a human element to it.
This is a scam. It's a self-organizing pyramid scheme. There is no "there" there -- the vitamins really arent a cure for cancer, and your friend telling you to buy a warehouse full is part of a cult of pushers who are desperate that their warehouses of vitamin pills (ie., tokens) doesn't become entirely unsellable.
All the numbers reported by the cryptocoin system are made up: these are manipulated markets with almost no buyers. "Market cap"s are inventions. The amount of actual liquidity in the system is tiny: people are looking for the exists. These exits are mugs called "hodlers", ideally, You, who'll buy their vitamins from them.
Usually, HN comments ought be somewhat more sober -- but I think this is now out of line. Sobriety in this matter is enabling a system of exploitation which should not be entertained by decent people.
https://triple-a.io/crypto-ownership-data/
All crypto news is press releases from crypto companies. All crypto ideas are rehearsed sales pitches with no arguments or evidence. You should assume anything written on crypto which hypes it is a lie. You should investigate the site/author, and -- I'd predict -- you'll find that every single time it links back to people with profound economic incentives to lie to you.
For BTC, you have 400,000 addresses used daily transacting about 300,000 transactions. This is trivial to obtain as a public record. How many of those addresses are associated with only one individual?
If i wanted to simulate millions of users I could do so only with a trivial amount of money. What is a "user"? It's just an address. There are no "users" on the chain.
There are 70mil addresses on BTC, I believe. How fast could an interested party double that? Pretty quick.
These numbers, absent hard-hitting empirical data, should be regarded as fraud. They're made up, either at the level of the press release, or by technical manipulation. Eg., by moving lots of money around a few accounts to manipulate figures.
This is a system which maps, at least provably and publicly, to the entire daily economy of a small town. And it's energy usage is measured in 10^12
Unfortunately as you say it is hard to tell how much genuine usage there is. The only thing I would add is that while crypto is worse, I feel the same concern regarding misaligned incentives in regular finance.
In terms of address count, they're also as I understand intended to be use once[1]. On the other hand there's many people using the same wallet and transacting without ever leaving a exchange and causing a real transaction, though I probably wouldn't consider that as "counting" personally.
[1]https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Address_reuse
> All crypto news is press releases from crypto companies
Again, you could say the same thing about people trying to prop up the capitalist system as they are heavily invested in it and own property, etc..
I could argue that people arguing against crypto are mainly people who are upset that they missed the boat on the biggest price gains. But you could also make that argument about the stock market/capitalism. So it's not a valid point.
Economics textbooks are not written by people trying to hype an asset.
> you could say the same thing about people trying to prop up the capitalist system
Sure, and the heavily manipulated housing market, propped up by QE which dramatically inflated asset prices, is a major issue facing several large economies (eg., AU, UK esp.).
However homes, at the end of the day, are homes. If you're conned into overpaying 100,000 on a home whose value will drop 150k at some point because of obvious on-coming market corrections -- well, you still have a home.
Crypto's market correction is "to about zero". And there's no home left.
Crypto is a scam. These ideas are part of the scam. These whatabouts and fasle equivocations.
It's as much a homeopath saying, "what about big pharma?"
Even if economics textbooks are not written by the doomsayers for whatever reason, do you think banks and private companies are not doing PR blitzes for assets right before dumping them on us?
> If you're conned into overpaying 100,000 on a home whose value will drop 150k at some point because of obvious on-coming market corrections -- well, you still have a home
Well, at the end of the day you still have your ETH whether the price is $2k, 30 cents or $24k and you can use it to do public decentralized work across the L1 network. On which things like
You can also trade it or buy the VitaDAO token and vote on funding for translational research proposals
https://www.researchhub.com/paper/1266843/vitadao-whitepaper
The-Ken[c] did a report about how the number of Crypto users in India seems to be over-reported, on two counts - Users have accounts at multiple exchanges (Double Counting) and Users who are in it for the Free Crypto:
> Estimates peak at an overly enthusiastic 100 million crypto owners, as claimed by broker discovery and comparison platform BrokerChooser, but the true number is likely a more conservative 10 to 15 million, according to three industry executives The Ken spoke with.
> “We work with an internal estimate of about 4 to 5 million regular users in India,” said an executive at crypto exchange ZebPay. [...] Notably, the exchange takes into account not just individuals who made trades in the last 30 days, but also app opens while calculating the number of regular users.
> The situation is further exacerbated by exchanges offering joining bonuses and crypto rewards for signing up, like the Rs 100 worth of free bitcoin offered by crypto exchange CoinDCX.
> This lures users into creating an account—irrespective of whether they engage with it in the future or not—and helps the exchange pad up its user numbers.
A better source to consider is the Reserve Bank of India, which has made 2 interesting statements about the number of crypto investors in India.
1. RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, Nov 2021: "With a reasonable amount of confidence, I can say the number of investors in the crypto market seems to be exaggerated. Adding that most of the buyers of cryptos in those platforms have anyway invested just between Rs 1,000 and Rs 3,000. (12-36USD). [a]
2. RBI Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar, Feb 2022: "there is no data to justify how many investors have invested in these instruments and what is the amount of investment. Data informally gathered in November seems to indicate that crypto investments by Indians is nowhere near to being significant (although the pace of growth could make it a concern in future). This data showed that four out of five investor accounts held investments of less than ₹10,000 (122USD), with an average holding size of ₹1,566 (20USD). Wealth loss, if at all it is a possibility, is likely to affect only a small fraction of these investors." [b]
I also tried to dig into the original number from Triple-A (Which seems to have gotten a lot of traction because it was quoted in a policy-brief from UN-CTAD[5])
Here's where the number is coming from:
1. Triple-A, Crypto Firm, 2023 Figure[1] is 97.5M / 7.1% of India. The citation for this is their 2022 Report[4] (now deleted).
2. Finder.com, Stats Firm, latest figure is 29% based on a survey of 31k Indians[2]. 29% figure is based on self-selected participants, which are "internet, smartphone and Google AdMob users or Qualtrics research panel participants.".
3. Triple-A, Crypto Firm, 2022 Report[4], claims "over 100 million people, 7.30% of India" and cites HootSuite's Digital 2020 report along with Statista.
4. HootSuite numbers (survey backed), % of Internet Users aged 16 to 64 who own any form of cryptocurrency:
4.1 Digital 2023 - 16.8% [6]. Cites GWI-Q3-2022
4.2 Digital 2022 - 12.6% [7]. Cites GWI-Q3-2021
4.3 Digital 2023 - 7.1% [8] - *this seems to be the figure being used by Triple-A*, which ought to have an upper bound of 2.1% or so (63% of India is aged 15-64, with a 47% internet penetration). Cites GWI=Q3-2019.
HootSuite in turn cites GlobalWebIndex, which is again survey backed, and I couldn't find any clarity about the methodology.
5. Statista, Stats Firm, Paywalled[9]. This is again survey backed: "Which of these financial products and investments do you currently use/own? (...
the Keynote in [b] is definitely an interesting read though it's a bit unfortunate more statistics regarding holding sizes aren't shared.
The perspective expressed of crypto as (reading between the lines) a tool of foreign governments to dollarize EMs is an interesting one. I would be curious if the average person would rather have the individual option of being able to hold other currencies risk and all or if they would prefer to collectively have restrictions for the health of their banking infrastructure as a whole, and how much interest there was in crypto as a means to hold dollars or something else other than rupees, or hoping for extremely high returns in order to then convert back to rupees.
"This could be actual dollarization if stablecoins linked to the US Dollar become widely used, and there is good reason to believe that that they would be popular if permitted."
"Most cryptocurrencies are owned by businesses of AEs; therefore, better adoption of cryptocurrencies would add to their growth and employment. Significantly, it might be of advantage to the AEs if cryptocurrencies replace emerging market (EM) currencies as that would give AEs a better strategic control on the EMEs."
"With one or more private currencies being allowed, there would be parallel currency system(s) in the country. Thus, increased acceptance of cryptocurrencies would result in effective ‘Dollarization’ of our economy."
"They threaten the financial sovereignty of a country and make it susceptible to strategic manipulation by private corporates creating these currencies or Governments that control them."
"Almost all cryptocurrencies are priced in terms of Dollars (or potentially any of the freely convertible currencies). Wider adoption would actually result in wider use of these currencies. So cryptocurrencies are not a threat to convertible currencies as they are to the Rupee, which is not an international currency." (I believe the Rupee has since started to be used for international settlements[1])
[1]https://www.isas.nus.edu.sg/papers/indias-foreign-trade-poli...
Where are you getting this information? Have you experienced issues with liquidity when selling BTC or ETH?
The biggest liquidity scam here is tether -- that's where you accept one real dollar from a pigeon and turn it into 100s by creating a row in an excel spreadsheet called lol-wewillallbeinjail-soon.xlsx
That's the big real money pump into the system. Hopefully when tether fails, we can see past these manipulated numbers. ie., when people realise the 200bn+ they thought was there was 20bn, we may be able to estimate the actual amount of money being put in.
The game is simple - create magic tokens, create "stable" magic chips. Wash trade tokens with magic chips, pump the price to moon. Lure naive idiots and unload magic tokens for real money. Laugh all the way to the bank while telling suckers to keep holding till eternity.
> "Market cap"s are inventions. The amount of actual liquidity in the system is tiny
Is this different than the stock market? Or the banking sector? There are penny stocks, and there are bigger players.
It seems like in finance, sentiment is everything and it's a self-fulfilling prophecy.
> BTC can support c. 7 transactions/sec. Ethereum c. 20
Would you criticize the whole internet because dial-up was slow?
Oh, and regarding the vitamins:
High-dose vitamin C enhances cancer immunotherapy
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scitranslmed.aay8707
It's all about the dose and delivery method, you can't just make blanket statements.
https://www.cancer.gov/research/key-initiatives/ras/ras-cent...
Note how the vitamins aren't sufficient, but they enhance traditional treatments. Seems relevant.
There's a scale from "there are buyers at this market cap" (eg., suprisingly, twitter)... to "there are no buyers at this market cap".
Consider if you and I start a business which sells shares in the business (and nothing else), and we sell 1/1000 shares for $1000 -- that makes our business $1m on paper.
But is there a buyer for that $1m? Well sure, there was for SBF. Until jail, of course -- but many bought his shares in his business which sells shares in his business.
This isnt unique to crypto... crypto is just the latest incarnation whose "productive valuation dial" is close to 0%.
Have you had liquidity issues selling ETH or BTC?
Regarding hodling, again I don't see how this is different than the stock market. You can try to time the market or you can just hold AAPL for 30 years, understanding that any point it could all come crashing down when you're looking away.
In my experience though, every time I have sold ETH (including at the local peak in Jan 2018) it would have always been more profitable to hold it for longer (since I didn't have an immediate use for the cash).
A crypto token cannot be economically more productive. The only means by which its value can increase is ponzi-economics, ie., by more people entering the system increasing the *apparent* future demand for that token.
When people stop entering the system, tomorrow -- or in a decade -- the whole thing collapses.
> A crypto token cannot be economically more productive
What about when ETH was upgraded to use less power? Or future upgrades to reduce transaction fees? Ditto for the other planned upgrades: https://twitter.com/VitalikButerin/status/158866978247136870...
Unless you are arguing that the whole network is worthless, so upgrading something worthless is still worthless? Is that what you're saying?
Regarding "The reason the stock market grows is because businesses on that market grow" isn't there also an opposite scenario, where more investments (into factories, etc..) get made by companies/individuals with cash reserves during a recession because prices have come down? https://www.businessofapps.com/data/apple-data/
Using AAPL as an example, company revenue has steadily been going up since at least 2005 (with Q1 2008 being a record quarter), so why wasn't it spared during the 2008 recession? Is it not because of meme-nomics in the stock market?
Similarly, why do people say "buy on the rumor, sell on the news" if stock market reflects business reality?
> When people stop entering the system, tomorrow -- or in a decade -- the whole thing collapses
Isn't that exactly what Marx predicted of the capitalist system as a whole? I again fail to see the difference between crypto and the rest of finance. If anything, crypto, seems like a more extreme version of the traditional system (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accelerationism)
Also, I don't think BTC/ETH would cease to function if the prices went down. You seem to be confusing the promises made by certain charlatans with the actual utility of these assets, which is that they are inherently traceable and can be used to avoid things like this: https://www.yahoo.com/video/pentagon-35-trillion-accounting-...
And I am aware that they are not the ONLY solution to this problem, but I don't see how you can argue that they have no utility at all.
Insofar as private interests can manipulate these conditions, the numbers arent reliable either. Eg., many regard private equity as half-a-scam for these reasons: those numbers are also made up.
However, crypto is one of the most extreme cases of this pathology. It's a pure fiction: no t-shirts are being made; no apps being sold. My time today is as productive as it is tomorrow; no crypto will change that for me, or anyone.
Indeed, crypto is negative sum: money is being burned to run the mining. So, we're actually worse off. Crypto isnt zero value, in most cases, it's value is negative. Sell everything off, and some people will be owed money (mostly, the energy companies).
This is egregious. It's hard to overstate how dangerously stupid this is -- it's economic homeopathy.
The reason a BTC might be worth tomorrow is the same reason a beanie babby mightve been, or a misprinted stamp: just the belief that some other people want it.
Not that they do want it -- no, there arent enough people to sustain this belief. Just the appearance that enough people want it.
If i have 1,000,000 coffee beans and the first bean goes for a dollar, I can imagine myself a millionaire... until i try to sell the rest.
A significant reason that the hodl cultishness is pushed is precisely so people wont do this.
The T-shirt being made is that the transactions are traceable, verifiable, and the system is hard for one (state) actor to shut down or control. Again, I'm not arguing that crypto is the only way to get these benefits, but the idea that there is zero utility seems ludicrous.
> money is being burned to run the mining
But money is also wasted you call it with the traditional system: https://www.yahoo.com/video/pentagon-35-trillion-accounting-...
I tried to find an estimate of how many dollars have gone into crypto mining so far, but was unable to find it. However, I would bet that it's less than 35 trillion dollars
What else would you call, say, the NFT phenomenon?
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/238405/us-gold-productio...
There’s been so much done (and often right here on HN) to explain how crypto and NFTs are innovative, to link educational resources and list real world examples of legitimate use. As well as to resolve the various ideological controversies. Maybe it’s not quite common knowledge yet, but there’s no excuse in 2023 for being so clueless and, yet, assertive.
I also believe that the entire crypto ecosystem is a wasteful solution in search of a problem. And the biggest players in the space, over and over again have been proven to be criminal frauds trying to generate the next hype wave. Often through wash trading to make it appear that there is more of a market than there is.
The current wave of legal problems for Celsius, FTX, Binance and so on have started to reveal the lies that many expected all along. For example we've found out in court that the "attestations" long used by many were faked. (Not that this was a surprise given that, for example, Tether was revealed previously to have been faking its numbers.) To the extent that there actually was money, a lot of it was in now failed banks like Signature Bank. Or it is connected to money laundering, as happened with Tether. (See https://protos.com/did-tether-falsify-documents-to-fool-caut... for one of many places where that is reported.)
The sky-high valuations for cryptocurrencies these days are not believable. Yes, people trade that many tethers for a bitcoin, but good luck getting tethers redeemed. And most consumers had their money in fraudulent exchanges like FTX and Binance. They are learning the hard way the truth of, "Not your keys, not your crypto."
You say that there is no excuse in 2023 for being so clueless and, yet, assertive. I say that there is no excuse in 2023 for you being so dismissive about a field filled with Ponzi schemes, some of which have collapsed and others of which are still able to pretend to a solvency that they clearly don't have.
It’s just embarrassing to write this when there are so many real world examples of solutions being solved right now by crypto, as well as many active users of crypto who couldn’t care less whether it solves a problem you, personally, have.
The fact that you see Celsius, FTX and binance as a paragon of crypto and decentralised finance shows just how little you’ve been paying attention. They are centralised, crypto-adjacent companies. Please look at Yearn, Aave, Curve, Uniswap, GMX, Gearbox, NFTfi, Illuvium, countless NFT gated communities, and news reports of people in the third world using blockchains to make emergency, life saving transactions. And then afterwards maybe your beliefs about crypto might be worth posting in public forums.
Since you offered no evidence to counter what I said, I'll give an argument as low quality. Namely an argument from authority. I have about 200x the reputation that you do. I also have a background as a mathematician, a quarter century as a programmer, and used to work on Wall St.
Unless you provide actual EXAMPLES of real world examples of solutions ACTUALLY being solved by crypto, as well as reason to believe that the crypto ecosystem upon which those solutions rest is sustainable, I'm going to believe my knowledge, experience, and professional background over your fly by night content free crypto boosterism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-O3r2YMWJ4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uN46EsSBQw
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32103472
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35473327
congrats on your qualifications, tho
First, the most basic role of money is to be a medium of exchange. With reasonable overhead and in acceptable time, people need to be able to exchange money for goods and services. Crypto fails this in every practical way. If I want to buy pizza with bitcoin, my overhead exceeds the value of the pizza, the average time to make the purchase is longer than the average time to order, have it made, delivered, and get eaten by my family. (Have you ever SEEN hungry teenagers tear into pizza.) Also if people started trying to buy pizza with bitcoin, you'd quickly run into the problem that the maximum number of transactions per second on the bitcoin network is a fraction of the number of pizzas sold per second.
Yes, yes. This is all improvable. I've heard that for years. But these issues are not new, and haven't gone away.
OK, what next? You are making a big deal out of the fact that there are poor people in horrible third world countries who want to use crypto to escape authoritarian oversight. At best this is a red herring, I lean towards calling it disingenuous. A far more important use case for crypto is crooks trying to get paid for their ransomware attacks without themselves being caught by law enforcement. And the third world has benefitted far more from payment networks like M-PESA than all of crypto.
Besides, the single best way to help the poor people in horrible third world countries is to continue the worldwide economic progress of the last couple of centuries. Few understand how astonishing the improvement in human life is. Watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo for a 5 minute video demonstrating how dramatic it is.
Moving on, crypto is nowhere near as decentralized as boosters claim. A handful of central players are responsible for owning most crypto, doing most mining, and so on. Moxie, the lead developer behind Signal (great app, BTW), decided to experiment with NFTs. What he found was shocking. First, we are one website hack away from, say, all bored apes turning into pictures of shit. Second, his experiment verifying accidentally pissed off a couple of companies that everyone else uses to get their view of the blockchain. The result? The contents of the blockchain notwithstanding, his NFT disappeared! See https://moxie.org/2022/01/07/web3-first-impressions.html for more details of his experiments.
Moving on, all of the defi platforms that you named have something big in common. They are riding on the back of a bubble inflated by fraudulent Ponzi schemes, controlled by a handful of people. They use all sorts of phrases like "arbitrage" and "yield farming". But all those are simply euphemisms that round to "Ponzi". Without the fraud, the whole ecosystem implodes. Because it rests on nothing real.
Oh, sure. Defi offers automated trading protocols to allow you to do things like hedge risks. Automated trading strategies have an important role in our world. But they have limits. For example when everyone tries to hedge the same risks with the same trading strategy, it doesn't work. The traditional finance world learned that the hard way on Monday, October 19, 1987, and has had periodic reminders since. It won't work better in the defi world.
Another limitation of automation is that if someone figures out how to exploit it, your money disappears arbitrarily fast. Crypto enthusiasts treat the regular heists of large amounts of crypto as teething pains. But actually they are an intrinsic part of the platform that can't be eliminated. Once you eliminate the Ponzi underpinning, crypto trading strategies do what you don't want it to, and don't do what you do want it to. You lose both ways.
Moving on...
> the opinion that this Kool-Aid is poisonous
my opinion is that it's a certain type of person who is the poison
You've shown no evidence of being willing to engage in thinking about reality. Instead you always look for the most facile dismissal possible of the received party line for your brand of crypto enthusiasm.
So you don't have to worry about becoming a person who winds up dismissing reality. You're already there. Enjoy feeling rich from the Ponzi schemes that you're part of, right until the reality that you're ignoring slaps you in the face.
And that ends this attempt at conversation. Feel free to have the last word. I'm not engaging further.
They hated mjburgess because He told them the truth.
The amount of actual goods and non-crypto-related actual services purchased with crypto in the last year probably wouldn't fill a high school basketball court.
People who get paid in crypto immediately turn it into real money because the only thing it's used for is building virtual pyramidal constructs.
This individual appears to be largely outside the influence of the cartel, at most couple hundred people with a further concentric core of four dozen or so, who control all the liquidity levers and self-reported "usage" and "transaction" metrics in the whole system. These would be the large, long-established and highly publicity-averse miners and the pools they (pretend not to) control, the only group that can afford to burn transaction fees the prop up usage metrics, because they are actually paying a substantial share of those fees to themselves.
Obviously the payout to the people impacted by the gox hack has been perpetually delayed, and there's no guarantee it will happen anytime soon, but certain legal milestones have been reached that will make it quite difficult to delay past this year. When it does happen, we'll see a genuine liquidity event - something north of 120,000 Bitcoins - happen over a very short time, although the trustee has not disclosed how they will manage to do this without completely tanking the market or otherwise introducing slippage that privileges the earliest recipients of the payout over later recipients. This isn't tge same as a in-on-the-game joker like Musk talking about buying and selling a billion dollars in crypto in the past tense, where there is no way to measure his words against the market. The addresses that hold the gox coins are known and monitored.
In 2022, US mined only 5.4gram of Gold per sec[1]. This is a scam.
Or not. Weighing BTC's utility based on how many transactions it supports per second is as pointless as measuring Gold's utility based on how much of it is mined per second.
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/238405/us-gold-productio...
Lightning supports unlimited transactions per second.
* digital cash
* peer to peer transactions
* digital gold
* censorship resistant transactions
* hard money with fixed monetery policy and capped supply
* highly-decentralized with no single point of failure
Never did it promise to be a high throughput alternative to Visa for buying coffee
Nevertheless the Lightning Network has innovated in the space such that buying a coffee is now trivial using Bitcoin.
I am a crypto “chud” and I believe eventually Bitcoin will become a viable currency and a stable unit of account.
It isn’t that today as it is still a highly volatile asset class with rapidly growing adoption but we are still early.
For now it provides dissidents a viable option that is apolitical and cannot be easily censored.
It offers a hard-money alternative to fiat-money which can be arbitrarily inflated/diluted in value by centralized powers.
It offers a digital asset that is highly liquid, difficult to confiscate, and easy to access for the billions of unbanked throughout the world.
You may not see the use case for Bitcoin but that speaks more to your individual privilege as a citizen of a first world nation than it does for Bitcoin’s usefulness to millions or potentially billions of people around the world.
Guess how much Apple stock I can sell right now? Zero. Stock markets are currently closed and Apple cannot be traded. When they are open, I'm looking at a T+2 settlement window. That's not very liquid. One might even call it market manipulation to only open for trading 18% of the time, and of course to shut off trading at any other time on a whim.
Consider an IPO for a company which sells shares, there is no question "at what point does the share price collapse to zero" -- it has a price. The company is worth something: it has profit/loss, assets, etc.
Consider selling all ETH for USD -- the obvious question, to me, is: at what point does the price collapse to zero? 10% of them? 15%? 25.00000001%?
This is an extremely non-linear effect, after 20bn is sold it might just be the next dollar afterwards. Or 50bn. Or 15bn.
I suspect there's about 20-50bn of "real money" in the system, radically double (-double-double) counted by many participants (esp, eg., via tether).
If any coins on any chain were sold off at a high enough rate, perhaps so the total across the entire ecosystem were a trivial 10-20% of ETHs alleged "market cap" -- i think the whole thing goes to zero. At 18.9111123% there'll be no buyers at any price, everyone will realise, and bang goes the whole show.
You can't say that about apple; or any stock whose value derives from owning a business that has *actual assets.
ie., I think the fragility here, of this system and this posted numbers, is radically extreme in percentage terms. Yes, your $1m USD here or there will make no difference.
The ethereum network has no use, right? Nothing is priced in ethereum, no one needs ETH, nor will they ever.
Magic beans might be required to play the magic bean game -- casino chips are required by the casino, sure. But people enjoy gambling, there's an exchange of value -- a reason a person will work a day to make $100 and then trade it for an evening gambling.
But cryptocurrency networks do not have any reason to use them: nothing is priced in them, no govs tax in them, no businesses hold them, and so on.
There's smallish number of criminal gangs (and the like) who do have a use: a lot of crime today is priced in crypto. This gives highly anonymous networks an actual exchange value for their tokens. I suspect this minimal value will be targeted by relevant govs eventually, and disappear.
Ethereum, like Apple, has a dividend. You can stake ETH and earn rewards from the network. Granted, these rewards are accrued in ETH, but they are mostly based on gas fees that users pay the network, which has no dependency on the price of ETH. ETH is bought and sold with dollars so your dividend comes through with a thin layer of abstraction.
However, people don't buy Apple stock for it's asset value or its dividend. They buy it because of the huge TAM of Apple and promise of future growth. Similar to why people buy Ethereum's token.
Let's look at a different stock: DoorDash. They lose money hand over fist every quarter. They have very little assets, and again if you're a common stock holder those shares will be worth $0 when the company is liquidated. However it's still worth a nonzero sum because of speculation and future expectations of growing or turning a profit. Does that makes it a scam? Is their market cap fake because it can collapse to zero say any moment?
Turning off the cryptos is sound environmental policy, that energy will be needed for the electrification of transport.
> "Despite its heavy power needs, cryptocurrency mining offers a potentially beneficial and symbiotic relationship between power usage and power generation. Miners can participate in demand response programs, incentives offered by ERCOT to quickly turn off miners’ power during periods of peak demand. When electricity prices are high or supply is straining to meet demand, miners can reduce their energy use. Supply and demand run in tandem, so if a miner stops using electricity, it’s the equivalent of a power plant producing extra electricity that could assist in meeting grid demand and help with grid stability."
> "simple economic theory suggests that increased mining activity could spur additional energy infrastructure. Mining facilities often are located near wind and solar farms that provide access to cheap electricity prices"
Do you disagree with the Comptroller?
https://time.com/6193004/crypto-climate-impact-facts/
Maybe you are talking about 'bias' because of my username? It's a joke name from after FTX busted. I think cryptocurrency speculation is some beanie babies stuff.
This is not how to evaluate, you must seek multiple sources.
> ridiculously condescending your comment would sound
What is condescending about my statement? You are the one being toxic, living up to the commonly held connotations for your handle...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_window_fallacy
At Qbix, back in 2018 we were the first ones to implement Monero mining as an option to pay for an Calendars app that was on 50,000 computers, instead of a monthly recurring fee. But we quickly took it out. Back then it blew up and was all over the news, while I was finally taking a week vacation on a cruise with bad internet LOL:
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-43386918
https://venturebeat.com/security/mac-app-calendar-2-misfires...
https://mashable.com/article/apple-app-mining-cryptocurrency
https://www.newsweek.com/apple-your-mac-mining-cryptocurrenc...
https://www.engadget.com/2018-03-13-apple-calendar-2-crypto-...
https://9to5mac.com/2018/03/13/crypto-mining-calendar-app-io...
The original article was from ArsTechnica, who interviewed me:
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2018/03/there...
I told them:
"We have decided to REMOVE the miner in the app. The next version will remove the option to get free features via mining. This is for three reasons:
1) The company which provided us the miner library did not disclose its source code, and it would take too long for them to fix the root cause of the CPU issue.
2) The rollout had a perfect storm of bugs which made it seem like our company wanted* to mine crypto-currency without people's permission, and that goes against our whole ethos and vision for Qbix.
3) My own personal feeling that Proof of Work has a dangerous set of incentives which can lead to electricity waste on a global scale we've never seen before. We don't want to get sucked into this set of incentives, and hopefully our decision to ultimately remove the miner will set some sort of precedent for other apps as well.
Ultimately, even though we technically could have remedied the situation and continued on benefiting from the pretty large income such a miner generates, we took the above as a sign that we should get out of the "mining business" before we get sucked into the Proof of Work morass of incentives."*
Earlier this year "Ordinals Theory" and now the "BRC-20" tokens have been taking off like crazy... https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2023/05/02/first-mover-amer...
In anything that's NOT proof of work, I would be willing to engage and help the ecosystem. But with proof of work, I'm worried that the Bitcoin blockchain having MORE applications is bad for the world. I've spoken to people whose job it is to defend Bitcoin and they had to admit that, if market forces continue, then Bitcoin will start to cause blackouts for people around the world (in some parts, it already has).
Ironically, the Bitcoin maxis probably hate that their beloved blockchain is now going to be overrun with degens bidding up their transaction fees to the moon: https://twitter.com/IntercoinOrg/status/1654355480569839616
Anyway, I am wondering, maybe helping NFTs on Bitcoin and making degens have a mania and crowd out the Bitcoin transactions will actually make Bitcoin LESS attractive to the HODLers? In that case, I'd do it. I wish Bitcoin price would fall and make it uneconomical to mine it, while non-PoW projects like Polygon break free of it and see a lot more adoption.
Not a single (linked) source is mentioned regarding the energy metric, other than a description that it's a guess with supposedly > 100% margin for error.
Not a word on the energy mix. It draws a direct conclusion between energy consumed and CO2 output as if these are 1:1.
The statement that BTC/ETH contribute nothing of value is surely one many agree with, but not factual. It implies that this author/magazine cares about energy use, which surely they do not. There's 5 million energy sucking ads on the page and it's a magazine that can't wait to tell you about the all-new 3 foot long GPU so that you can play your game at 8K on a 240FPS.
Do you enjoy feeling anger over something, something you or no one in the entire world cannot change?
What on Earth makes you think that?
True, it would be difficult to get every country in the world to get together and ban it simultaneously—but if converting cryptocurrencies to USD and EUR were banned, you just watch how fast they would dry up and blow away.
Banks can't differentiate between consulting fees and buying bitcoin.
Btw I don't have anything to win by telling you this, I'm only bringing information to light.