Bitcoin Forum

Bitcoin => Press => Topic started by: julz on August 28, 2012, 01:12:50 AM



Title: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: julz on August 28, 2012, 01:12:50 AM
Video - with Roger Ver (Bitinstant/memorydealers),Brian Armstrong (coinbase) , Drew Little ('new economist'/founder of producism) , Neils Vanderlanden (don't buy bitcoin guy!), David Wolman (author of The End of Money)

Quote
Chomping at the Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of Cyber Money

Host: Janet Varney
2012-08-24


http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/5037b5b402a76066bd0000da

also here: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xt4m31_chomping-at-the-bitcoin_lifestyle


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: cablepair on August 28, 2012, 01:23:06 AM
Video - with Roger Ver (Bitinstant/memorydealers),Brian Armstrong (coinbase) , Drew Little ('new economist'/founder of producism) , Neils Vanderlanden (don't buy bitcoin guy!), David Wolman (author of The End of Money)

Quote
Chomping at the Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of Cyber Money

Host: Janet Varney
2012-08-24


http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/5037b5b402a76066bd0000da

thanks for the link

I find it quite hilarious that the person who was against Bitcoin's qualifications were to the extent that he "made a youtube video series about not buying into Bitcoin."
also when she screwed up and said that Roger from Memory dealers is the  CEO of the largest Bitcoin company in the world? hahahaha


lmao



Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: beckspace on August 28, 2012, 01:47:57 AM
Little upper-left window keeps buffering live content:

Can't... watch... help...

https://i.imgur.com/ozURT.png


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: FreeMoney on August 28, 2012, 02:12:39 AM
Video - with Roger Ver (Bitinstant/memorydealers),Brian Armstrong (coinbase) , Drew Little ('new economist'/founder of producism) , Neils Vanderlanden (don't buy bitcoin guy!), David Wolman (author of The End of Money)

Quote
Chomping at the Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of Cyber Money

Host: Janet Varney
2012-08-24


http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/5037b5b402a76066bd0000da

thanks for the link

I find it quite hilarious that the person who was against Bitcoin's qualifications were to the extent that he "made a youtube video series about not buying into Bitcoin."
also when she screwed up and said that Roger from Memory dealers is the  CEO of the largest Bitcoin company in the world? hahahaha


lmao


How big is memory dealers?

Or do you mean accepting bitcoins isn't enough to be a "bitcoin company"


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: grue on August 28, 2012, 02:13:08 AM
>"...isn't backed by gold or silver like the way we think our conventional money is backed"
HAHAHAHAHHAA


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: cablepair on August 28, 2012, 02:27:45 AM
Video - with Roger Ver (Bitinstant/memorydealers),Brian Armstrong (coinbase) , Drew Little ('new economist'/founder of producism) , Neils Vanderlanden (don't buy bitcoin guy!), David Wolman (author of The End of Money)

Quote
Chomping at the Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of Cyber Money

Host: Janet Varney
2012-08-24


http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r/segment/5037b5b402a76066bd0000da

thanks for the link

I find it quite hilarious that the person who was against Bitcoin's qualifications were to the extent that he "made a youtube video series about not buying into Bitcoin."
also when she screwed up and said that Roger from Memory dealers is the  CEO of the largest Bitcoin company in the world? hahahaha


lmao


How big is memory dealers?

Or do you mean accepting bitcoins isn't enough to be a "bitcoin company"

I don't mean that at all, sorry Roger has been on these forums for a long time it was just humorous to me to hear him referred to as the CEO of the worlds Largest Bitcoin company!

which was a mistake, I believe she was talking about Bitinstant which he does marketing for or something, and I am not even sure Bitinstant is the "largest"

what was with her joke about her being the only Girl there? did I see her on the Girls of Bitcoin reddit board ;)


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: nimda on August 28, 2012, 02:43:30 AM
Lol, "largest"
Largest volume? MtGox/Silkroad
Most transactions? SatoshiDICE
Most company members? BitInstant (?)
Biggest deposit taker? Bitcoin Savings & Trust

...

Largest is such a funny word


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: kiba on August 28, 2012, 04:23:17 AM
"It's Mathematically IMPOSSIBLE!"


LOLZ!


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: MemoryDealers on August 28, 2012, 09:43:53 AM
Does anyone know how to download the video and put it on youtube?

Brian of coinbase.com (http://coinbase.com) made this funny photo from the video:

http://a7.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/293391_739684504191_623970659_n.jpg


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: Matthew N. Wright on August 28, 2012, 09:46:04 AM
Lol, "largest"
Largest volume? MtGox/Silkroad
Most transactions? SatoshiDICE
Most company members? BitInstant (?)
Biggest deposit taker? Bitcoin Savings & Trust

...

Largest is such a funny word

Largest company members: Bitcoin Magazine, no contest.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 09:48:59 AM
hilarious: that host doesn't know how to say "financier" and thinks conventional money is backed by gold and silver.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: hazek on August 28, 2012, 10:21:19 AM
I thought it was a very good round table! Even the anti stuff was quickly squashed.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: World on August 28, 2012, 12:13:37 PM
Does anyone know how to download the video and put it on youtube?

use File Juicer http://echoone.com/filejuicer/ (http://echoone.com/filejuicer/) file>Browser Cache


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 01:40:10 PM
I thought it was a very good round table! Even the anti stuff was quickly squashed.

yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

Still true: nice round and good to see more mainstream coverage. It could've at least been longer, though.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 01:48:25 PM
just managed to watch it to the end... that blonde really cracks me up:

Quote from: roger ver
<roughly quoted> the government can't shut down bitcoin unless they hsut down every single computer on the internet, it's mathematically impossible.

Quote from: blonde
*pounds table, screachy voice* THIS IS FASCINATING! *puts hand to head* I don't understand! I don't understand.

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: Technomage on August 28, 2012, 01:59:58 PM
I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

+1

That is a very good point. In my experience people definitely trust Bitcoin more when they understand it better.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: Piper67 on August 28, 2012, 02:05:39 PM
I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

+1

That is a very good point. In my experience people definitely trust Bitcoin more when they understand it better.

The problem is that you need to understand several different areas fairly well in order to get the complete picture:

- P2P networks
- Code and Open Source
- Cyrptography
- Economics
- Law
- Markets

And I'm probably missing a few.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: kwukduck on August 28, 2012, 04:04:33 PM
Very nice video, too bad it was so short and we didn't really see a discussion .


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: yogi on August 28, 2012, 04:29:53 PM
I don't think she understands.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: Transisto on August 28, 2012, 05:19:42 PM
Very nice video, too bad it was so short and we didn't really see a discussion .
Yep, I'd have spent a whole evening explaining her the laws of mathematix and stuff, Not on-line though ::)


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: World on August 28, 2012, 05:34:50 PM
I don't think she understands.
you can explain to her,i think she is here  :D
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=15672.msg1137784#msg1137784 (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=15672.msg1137784#msg1137784)


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: greyhawk on August 28, 2012, 07:20:00 PM
Lol, "largest"
Largest volume? MtGox/Silkroad
Most transactions? SatoshiDICE
Most company members? BitInstant (?)
Biggest deposit taker? Bitcoin Savings & Trust

...

Largest is such a funny word

Largest company members: Bitcoin Magazine, no contest.

Did you put on weight or something?  ???


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: giszmo on August 28, 2012, 07:37:14 PM
yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

I'm still intrigued by the idea of demurrage and would love to see a big experiment on it but it would not work with a store of money and only with a governmental money that can be printed at will. Anyway, there is discussion about this here in the forum already and I turned sort of into a skeptic of combining demurrage with a bitcoin-based currency. Most likely it is impossible. (20% new money every year would have that effect but with anonymous users and a proof of work that would mean 20% of the world economy would go into mining. With "proof of identity mining" it could work with a massive incentive to trick the system and also I want bitcoin for it being cash online.)

I don't like/understand your comment on the "dumb blond". She is not into bitcoin for 2 years posting hundreds of questions. Also she asked the questions from a standpoint prior to her own research and did not at all make the impression of a deliberately dumb person.

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.
I studied maths and consider myself predestined for understanding bitcoin. Still barely a day goes by that I don't feel like having more insight today than yesterday. I see it as our job to answer all questions of interested people in a profound and easy way so that they can answer questions with confidence knowing whom to point to for more detailed questions so that the 3rd line can know people that know people that really know bitcoin and trust it. You will never get 7 billion people to understand bitcoin. Most likely not even 7 million.
It would actually be a dramatic waste of time to force feed the bitcoin white paper to everybody in the world yet that would be only the bare minimum to understanding bitcoin.
I hope for a world where people know that they can still use bitcoin tomorrow because experts checked it just like people know they are able to fly cause experts built planes (or wing suits :) ) for them.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: beckspace on August 28, 2012, 07:43:14 PM
I hope for a world where people know that they can still use bitcoin tomorrow because experts checked it just like people know they are able to fly cause experts built planes (or wing suits :) ) for them.

+1.

Bitcoin, come fly with us.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: n8rwJeTt8TrrLKPa55eU on August 28, 2012, 08:06:28 PM
Regarding Bitcoin's gender skew, some good news.

I just noticed this woman has made two videos...and both of them are about Bitcoin!

https://www.youtube.com/user/gwendolynbell

Not sure how influential she is or can be, but perhaps she will eventually become a female spokesperson for Bitcoin, which could help make the idea & technology less intimidating in certain contexts.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: jimbobway on August 28, 2012, 08:27:35 PM
Regarding Bitcoin's gender skew, some good news.

I just noticed this woman has made two videos...and both of them are about Bitcoin!

https://www.youtube.com/user/gwendolynbell

Not sure how influential she is or can be, but perhaps she will eventually become a female spokesperson for Bitcoin, which could help make the idea & technology less intimidating in certain contexts.

I prefer ladybytes.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:43:55 PM
I don't think she understands.


yeah, lol. well, true... but!!! she's in the spirit!


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:44:28 PM
Very nice video, too bad it was so short and we didn't really see a discussion .
Yep, I'd have spent a whole evening explaining her the laws of mathematix and stuff, Not on-line though ::)

you'd end up fucking her... not the worst of options available.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:48:44 PM
yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

I'm still intrigued by the idea of demurrage and would love to see a big experiment on it but it would not work with a store of money

there has been a "big" experiment in some village in austria or switzerland, I don't recall... (someone chip in!). I think it only works at gunpoint and more valuable (storable) currencies will eventually take over.

I'm not sure about the ethical implications.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: giszmo on August 28, 2012, 10:53:27 PM
yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

I'm still intrigued by the idea of demurrage and would love to see a big experiment on it but it would not work with a store of money

there has been a "big" experiment in some village in austria or switzerland, I don't recall... (someone chip in!). I think it only works at gunpoint and more valuable (storable) currencies will eventually take over.

I'm not sure about the ethical implications.

If you are referring to the "original" experiment conducted in Wörgl, this I am aware of. I would like to see an experiment of this scale being repeated and well documented. It's really hard to get scientific data on the Wörgl experiment.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:54:52 PM
yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

I'm still intrigued by the idea of demurrage and would love to see a big experiment on it but it would not work with a store of money and only with a governmental money that can be printed at will. Anyway, there is discussion about this here in the forum already and I turned sort of into a skeptic of combining demurrage with a bitcoin-based currency. Most likely it is impossible. (20% new money every year would have that effect but with anonymous users and a proof of work that would mean 20% of the world economy would go into mining. With "proof of identity mining" it could work with a massive incentive to trick the system and also I want bitcoin for it being cash online.)

I don't like/understand your comment on the "dumb blond". She is not into bitcoin for 2 years posting hundreds of questions. Also she asked the questions from a standpoint prior to her own research and did not at all make the impression of a deliberately dumb person.

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.
I studied maths and consider myself predestined for understanding bitcoin. Still barely a day goes by that I don't feel like having more insight today than yesterday. I see it as our job to answer all questions of interested people in a profound and easy way so that they can answer questions with confidence knowing whom to point to for more detailed questions so that the 3rd line can know people that know people that really know bitcoin and trust it. You will never get 7 billion people to understand bitcoin. Most likely not even 7 million.

this!!, couldn't agree more.

It would actually be a dramatic waste of time to force feed the bitcoin white paper to everybody in the world yet that would be only the bare minimum to understanding bitcoin.
I hope for a world where people know that they can still use bitcoin tomorrow because experts checked it just like people know they are able to fly cause experts built planes (or wing suits :) ) for them.

I've been "trying to invent" "online money" back in the nineties. So maybe I'm pre-supplied with necessary bits of knowledge... but I still think understanding how bitcoin works is possible for anyone sane, even for 7 million individuals.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:56:22 PM
Regarding Bitcoin's gender skew, some good news.

I just noticed this woman has made two videos...and both of them are about Bitcoin!

https://www.youtube.com/user/gwendolynbell

Not sure how influential she is or can be, but perhaps she will eventually become a female spokesperson for Bitcoin, which could help make the idea & technology less intimidating in certain contexts.

I prefer ladybytes.

+1, too bad she wont be at the conference.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 28, 2012, 10:57:56 PM
yeah, I'd like to have seen demurrage discussed more deeply (not because I think it's a good idea, but because I think it can't work), but maybe these forums are a better place than a mainstream tv format with a (deliberately) dumb blonde.

I'm still intrigued by the idea of demurrage and would love to see a big experiment on it but it would not work with a store of money

there has been a "big" experiment in some village in austria or switzerland, I don't recall... (someone chip in!). I think it only works at gunpoint and more valuable (storable) currencies will eventually take over.

I'm not sure about the ethical implications.

If you are referring to the "original" experiment conducted in Wörgl, this I am aware of. I would like to see an experiment of this scale being repeated and well documented. It's really hard to get scientific data on the Wörgl experiment.

thanks for chipping in relevant bits ("Wörgl"). You think it might work? Did it work out in Wörgl?



Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: herzmeister on August 28, 2012, 11:12:35 PM
It's really hard to get scientific data on the Wörgl experiment.

Quote from: wikipedia
the "experiment" was terminated by the Austrian National Bank on the 1st September 1933[4] (http://books.google.com/books?id=glqnzC-TLPMC&pg=RA1-PA237&lpg=RA1-PA237&dq=worgl+miracle&source=web&ots=I8CzhgeGUq&sig=TwFQG4bSH6yB06eWRajF3VItF1k&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result)[5] (http://books.google.com/books?id=gJX1buNKHj0C&pg=PA159&lpg=PA159&dq=worgl+miracle&source=web&ots=BBZY1B7-Sf&sig=bOLswzZQZRK6wHyt8Z6DovT1QU4&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false)

that's scientific (observational) data enough for me.

and our Chiemgauer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiemgauer) you can observe all the time.  :D


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: giszmo on August 29, 2012, 04:27:13 AM
It's really hard to get scientific data on the Wörgl experiment.

Quote from: wikipedia
the "experiment" was terminated by the Austrian National Bank on the 1st September 1933[4] (http://books.google.com/books?id=glqnzC-TLPMC&pg=RA1-PA237&lpg=RA1-PA237&dq=worgl+miracle&source=web&ots=I8CzhgeGUq&sig=TwFQG4bSH6yB06eWRajF3VItF1k&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result)[5] (http://books.google.com/books?id=gJX1buNKHj0C&pg=PA159&lpg=PA159&dq=worgl+miracle&source=web&ots=BBZY1B7-Sf&sig=bOLswzZQZRK6wHyt8Z6DovT1QU4&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#v=onepage&q&f=false)

that's scientific (observational) data enough for me.

and our Chiemgauer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiemgauer) you can observe all the time.  :D

Another quote from the German Wikipedia (http://): "Nach Androhung von Armeeeinsatz beendete Wörgl das Experiment im September 1933."
(After threatening to use the military, Wörgl terminated the Experiment in September 1933.)

With scientific data I did not mean clear signs of the experiment having been a success by the banks sending the cavalry. Rather a repeated experiment with today's scientific standards.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: herzmeister on August 29, 2012, 09:00:59 AM
Economics is not an exact science. You can't isolate humans with some soil and resources into a laboratory.  >:(

It's a social science. And I'd say for a regional currency demurrage is essential,
* because it encourages spending this currency instead of the national, thus boosting the local economy, and
* because otherwise in such a small economy, some will hoard too much, distribution would become too uneven and the money supply would become unstable.

But I'm for something like Ripple for a regional economy anyway, we don't need monetary systems with centrally managed supply anymore, as we're living in the information age.

And in the global scope, like intended with Freicoin, demurrage still doesn't make much sense for me. As many on this board would say, it's the production and not the consumption that matters.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: justusranvier on August 29, 2012, 01:24:55 PM
Economics is not an exact science. You can't isolate humans with some soil and resources into a laboratory.  >:(

It's a social science.
The standard disclaimer of social engineers everywhere to preemptively explain why their policies always seems to make everybody (except them and their friends) worse off.

* because otherwise in such a small economy, some will hoard too much, distribution would become too uneven and the money supply would become unstable.
This statement does not parse into something comprehensible unless "hoarding" is understood to mean, "retaining purchasing power earned by deferred consumption" and "unstable" is understood to mean, "impossible for the issuer to counterfeit in large quantities without attracting pitchforks and torches".


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: bitlane on August 29, 2012, 01:27:51 PM
Oh Janet....
I would drink a gallon of her pee, just to see where it came from.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: giszmo on August 29, 2012, 04:43:18 PM
Oh Janet....

Why so disgusting and sexist? I don't have a clear picture of your overall post quality but this post alone is worth an ignore.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: Rygon on August 31, 2012, 04:12:55 PM

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

I don't think most people fundamentally understand what it means to say that the US dollar is only backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States government." Yet, people still trust it because it has worked for them in the past.

Of course, past performance is not an indicator of future success...


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 31, 2012, 09:14:15 PM

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

I don't think most people fundamentally understand what it means to say that the US dollar is only backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States government." Yet, people still trust it because it has worked for them in the past.

Of course, past performance is not an indicator of future success...

Bitcoin doesn't have that luxury. It has to earn the trust. Earning it by "usualness" (I just looked that up for lack of a bette word) takes way too long and I don't think that's how the US dollar initially earned it's trust. It might be how it retains it, but it's not how it gained it in the first place. We need something else to support widespread trust and I don't think "this crypto-freak I know said it's safe and many people already use it" is quite sufficient.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: finkleshnorts on August 31, 2012, 09:25:04 PM

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

I don't think most people fundamentally understand what it means to say that the US dollar is only backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States government." Yet, people still trust it because it has worked for them in the past.

Of course, past performance is not an indicator of future success...

Bitcoin doesn't have that luxury. It has to earn the trust. Earning it by "usualness" (I just looked that up for lack of a bette word) takes way too long and I don't think that's how the US dollar initially earned it's trust. It might be how it retains it, but it's not how it gained it in the first place. We need something else to support widespread trust and I don't think "this crypto-freak I know said it's safe and many people already use it" is quite sufficient.

+1 molecular

I had to read a lot of crypto-freaks before I trusted bitcoin. It always takes so much explaining, and people are still skeptical. I usually go for the "open-source, vigorously and academically tested" route. I have no way of proving to anybody that it's secured by the laws of mathematics. I have gotten a lot of people very interested in bitcoin, but I haven't gotten anybody to actually buy some yet. I found out about it on my own, and once I decided it wasn't some elaborate scam, I HAD to buy some because I thought they were so revolutionary.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on August 31, 2012, 10:06:14 PM

I really do think fundamentally understanding how bitcoin works is necessary to be able to trust it.

I don't think most people fundamentally understand what it means to say that the US dollar is only backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States government." Yet, people still trust it because it has worked for them in the past.

Of course, past performance is not an indicator of future success...

Bitcoin doesn't have that luxury. It has to earn the trust. Earning it by "usualness" (I just looked that up for lack of a bette word) takes way too long and I don't think that's how the US dollar initially earned it's trust. It might be how it retains it, but it's not how it gained it in the first place. We need something else to support widespread trust and I don't think "this crypto-freak I know said it's safe and many people already use it" is quite sufficient.

+1 molecular

I had to read a lot of crypto-freaks before I trusted bitcoin. It always takes so much explaining, and people are still skeptical. I usually go for the "open-source, vigorously and academically tested" route. I have no way of proving to anybody that it's secured by the laws of mathematics. I have gotten a lot of people very interested in bitcoin, but I haven't gotten anybody to actually buy some yet. I found out about it on my own, and once I decided it wasn't some elaborate scam, I HAD to buy some because I thought they were so revolutionary.

Exactly the same situation here. I have 2 close friends and I talk to them about bitcoin a lot. It's fucking hard to explain to someone with close to no background. They only "trust" bitcoin because they know me for a along time and trust me. This gets them excited enough to acquire 50 or 150 bitcoins (I don't know their exact balances). I'm pretty sure if they had the same level of understanding that I have, they would try to get their hands on a lot more bitcoins.

Interestingly these 2 friends greatly differ in understanding money and the powers around it: the one just stubbornly holds on to his "real money" (fiat), the other one buys metal and even some survival stuff, wants to buy land. As different as their perception is about monetary issues in general, as united they are in not fully trusting bitcoin. Why? Because they do not understand it and I think the possibility that bitcoin is a huge well-done scam that even screwed over their close friend molecular still lurks in the back of their heads.

I think we might have use for an much longer "weusecoins" video that explains how bitcoin works in detail.

If only I knew how to explain it without losing people on the way.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: nimda on August 31, 2012, 10:37:41 PM
My problem with explaining it is that it is too revolutionary. It has so many properties that I don't know where to start.
-Decentralized
--No central authority
---No central point of failure
---No inflation at said authority's whim
---Can't be taken down

-Relies on cryptography
--Can't be stolen no matter how good the excuse

-Pseudonymous
--Can be totally anonymous if done correctly

-Near-instant transactions
-Near-zero fees

-Open Source
--Tested by a large number of people
--Anyone can audit it or submit bugfixes

-Distributed fairly to those who help secure the network against attack
-Created at a predictable rate

-Blockchain enables many cool things like SatoshiDICE's provably fair gambling

Etc etc. That's a lot of meaningful points, and it's hard for people to get their heads around all of it.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: n8rwJeTt8TrrLKPa55eU on September 01, 2012, 03:33:59 AM
My problem with explaining it is that it is too revolutionary. It has so many properties that I don't know where to start.

Yes, it's funny, this happens to me also, the damn thing is too brilliant.  It's a great floor wax and a delicious dessert topping, simultaneously.

I guess a better way to go about it would be to ask people a single question: what do you hate the most about your bank (or credit cards, or the financial system).  Then, depending on the answer, zero in and describe how Bitcoin solves that particular problem, without mentioning all the other benefits.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: DeathAndTaxes on September 01, 2012, 04:00:23 AM
I think time will also help.  When Bitcoin is still around 10 years after genesis even those who don't understand exactly how it works but first heard about it in a CNBC snippet 7 years prior will have a little more confidence it isn't some pyramid scheme or HYIP.  SR also helps.  It is an "must have site" for some users and the only way they can pay is Bitcoin.  Not saying Bitcoin should rely on SR but having things that people want which require Bitcoins is useful.  People are more likely to try somethng new if they "have to" rather than just because "it isn't PayPal".


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: molecular on September 01, 2012, 09:04:59 AM
My problem with explaining it is that it is too revolutionary. It has so many properties that I don't know where to start.
-Decentralized
--No central authority
---No central point of failure
---No inflation at said authority's whim
---Can't be taken down

-Relies on cryptography
--Can't be stolen no matter how good the excuse

-Pseudonymous
--Can be totally anonymous if done correctly

-Near-instant transactions
-Near-zero fees

-Distributed fairly to those who help secure the network against attack
-Created at a predictable rate

-Blockchain enables many cool things like SatoshiDICE's provably fair gambling

Etc etc. That's a lot of meaningful points, and it's hard for people to get their heads around all of it.

yes, deathandtaxes, time will help. but I'm impatient and the fiat system might collapse sooner than later. We better be ready to jump in.

The above features of bitcoin I quoted are secondary properties (I removed opensource) that can be derived from the fundamental properties (what's in satoshis paper). Satoshis short paper alone is sufficient to figure these out.

I think it's much better to try to explain these "dry math fundamentals" and let people figure out the implications for themselves.  That's much more effective in my mind than yelling at them: "but, but, it's decentralized therefore no govt. can shut it down!". Maybe the specific individual targeted doesn't even put much weight on this (or any other) particular feature.

If only it wasn't so damn hard to understand! We're so deeply involved ourselves that we don't even appreciate how hard it is.

Like the mathematics professors usual answer when asked some comprehension question ("I don't understand this or that"): "What exactly don't you understand? It's all right there... trivial to see.". There's nothing "exactly" that isn't being understood by the confused student, it's the big picture he's missing. He's missing it because he doesn't see how the cogs and wheels all work together in concert because his mind doesn't yet have the capacity to hold all the detail info at once. He can see this cog driving that wheel or whatever and all the little details one at a time, but in the end, he understands exactly nothing. He doesn't see the woods for all the trees and it doesn't help to yell at him: "look: the woods, all the animals that thrive in it, isn't it beautiful?!".

He has to figure it all out by himself, in quiet mind, only then he will have his heureka moment and be able to appreciate the beauty and really trust the "secondary properties" that derive from the "boring" technical details.


Title: Re: 2012-08-28 huffingtonpost.com - Chomping At The Bitcoin - The Ups And Downs Of C
Post by: yogi on September 01, 2012, 03:28:32 PM
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6154/6187677458_2901d4d63c.jpg

So when is this book coming out?