Bitcoin Forum

Bitcoin => Press => Topic started by: Piper67 on January 31, 2013, 03:21:13 AM



Title: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Piper67 on January 31, 2013, 03:21:13 AM
http://dailyanarchist.com/2013/01/30/is-bitcoin-sharia-compliant/


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: justusranvier on January 31, 2013, 03:36:03 AM
Next up, is bitcoin mining compatible with leprechaun farming?


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on January 31, 2013, 04:57:23 AM
Next up, is bitcoin mining compatible with leprechaun farming?

I'm guarantee many millions more people care about Sharia Law than miniature Irishmen.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: StarfishPrime on January 31, 2013, 05:55:27 AM
Bitcoin has enough challenges as it is. The press is constantly associating bitcoin with SilkRoad, money laundering, etc etc... The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on January 31, 2013, 06:04:45 AM
Bitcoin has enough challenges as it is. The press is constantly associating bitcoin with SilkRoad, money laundering, etc etc... The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

You're not just ignorant, you're an asshole.  No I'm not a muslim.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: odolvlobo on January 31, 2013, 06:08:19 AM
The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Such an ugly ignorant comment.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: StarfishPrime on January 31, 2013, 06:26:24 AM
The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Such an ugly ignorant comment.

This was posted under "press" - the comment is only in reference to the PR-implications for bitcoin. Nothing else. More specifically in reference to the comments to the original article.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on January 31, 2013, 06:53:51 AM
The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Such an ugly ignorant comment.

This was posted under "press" - the comment is only in reference to the PR-implications for bitcoin. Nothing else. More specifically in reference to the comments to the original article.

ig·no·rant 
/ˈignərənt/
Adjective
Lacking knowledge or awareness in general; uneducated or unsophisticated.
Lacking knowledge, information, or awareness about something in particular: "ignorant of astronomy".

Maybe improve your knowledge rather than defending your ignorance.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: odolvlobo on January 31, 2013, 06:55:52 AM
The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Such an ugly ignorant comment.

This was posted under "press" - the comment is only in reference to the PR-implications for bitcoin. Nothing else. More specifically in reference to the comments to the original article.

Thanks for the clarification; however, you are still saying that you want Muslims to be excluded because Muslims using bitcoin will deter ignorant people.

Bitcoin is opt-in. If Muslims want to use it, that's great. If ignorant people don't want to use it, then they can swim in their cesspool of dollars, but maybe they could overcome their ignorance and prejudice instead.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on January 31, 2013, 07:00:47 AM
The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Such an ugly ignorant comment.

This was posted under "press" - the comment is only in reference to the PR-implications for bitcoin. Nothing else. More specifically in reference to the comments to the original article.

Thanks for the clarification; however, you are still saying that you want Muslims to be excluded because Muslims using bitcoin will deter ignorant people.

Bitcoin is opt-in. If Muslims want to use it, that's great. If ignorant people don't want to use it, then they can swim in their cesspool of dollars, but maybe they could overcome their ignorance and prejudice instead.

+21,000,000


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: rebuilder on January 31, 2013, 08:44:35 AM
Bitcoin has enough challenges as it is. The press is constantly associating bitcoin with SilkRoad, money laundering, etc etc... The last thing bitcoin needs is to become the official currency of the 'jihad'. Hopefully it's NOT sharia compliant in any way at all.

Fortunately, who you or anyone else thinks should use Bitcoin has little bearing on who is able to use it.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Gabi on January 31, 2013, 01:16:40 PM
Next up, is bitcoin mining compatible with leprechaun farming?
+1

I hope it is not religion-compliant! And that it is not fantasy-compliant. And that is not horror movie-compliant. And so on.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Piper67 on January 31, 2013, 01:19:50 PM
Next up, is bitcoin mining compatible with leprechaun farming?
+1

I hope it is not religion-compliant! And that it is not fantasy-compliant. And that is not horror movie-compliant. And so on.

Much as I share your lack of religious sentiment, I must say that the thought of some ultra-wealthy Saudis coming to the realisation that Bitcoin is Sharia compliant gives me a bit of a stir... in a good way.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Gabi on January 31, 2013, 01:23:18 PM
 :D I understand what you mean, and indeed, same here!

But i think that these rich saudis won't really care about that.  ;)


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: DobZombie on January 31, 2013, 01:24:11 PM
I hope it's non compliant to EVERYTHING (except Satoshi's White Paper)


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: UPENtXF on January 31, 2013, 02:29:15 PM
Yes, this is actually a very important question. So, who will be the final authority on this, and when can we expect the final verdict?


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Gabi on January 31, 2013, 03:21:22 PM
Actually no, it isn't exactly an important question  :D


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Transisto on January 31, 2013, 04:06:42 PM
I've heard from good sources that even visiting bitcointalk is against Islam.

I wouldn't risk my god's allegiance for a few bitcoins.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: ShadowOfHarbringer on January 31, 2013, 08:18:42 PM
The better question would be: Is Bitcoin Kosher ?  ;D

Because if it is, there could be big money coming at us...


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: marcus_of_augustus on January 31, 2013, 08:49:49 PM
The better question would be: Is Bitcoin Kosher ?  ;D

Because if it is, there could be big money coming at us...

Lol ... coming at you in ways you could never imagine.

... someday you might want to notice who's sitting in the bull-pen of the opposition too.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: cho on January 31, 2013, 09:20:56 PM
As far as I understand islamic banking, bitcoins would be a lot more Halal than dollars. The most important point of islamic law regarding money is the forbidding of applying interests (usury). That can be achieved with dollars, as much as with bitcoins.
But islamic banking seems to attach more importance to the "real value" of money than to the "face value". This means you can (as far as I understand) ask for interests if the rate matches inflation rate. If the focus is on "real value", wouldn't that make bitcoin a better currency than fiat ?

For a much better and deeper post on that topic, read Joise :
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=28374.0
"In addition, Islamic law forbids the use of a promise of payment, such as the US dollar, as a medium of exchange. There is growing dissention among religious fundamentalists in Saudi Arabia regarding the exchange of oil for US dollars."


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Puppet on January 31, 2013, 09:47:14 PM
Interestingly (terrible pun intended), both Kosher and Islamic banking forbid usury. Though in both cases in practice its usually either ignored or sidestepped these days.
Now Im not a religious person nor do i claim to be too knowledgable about the subject, but it would seem to me that bitcoin might fit both religions better than most fiat currency.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: ArticMine on January 31, 2013, 10:20:40 PM
A cursory review of the article and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_banking (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_banking) would lead one to conclude that modern fiat currencies such as the USD are haraam since the creation of fiat money via fractional reserve banking is based entirely on debt (usuary), and that Bitcoin is a way better alternative for a Muslim wishing to be sharia compliant.

The implication of this over the long term for the Bitcoin price is huge when one considers that a very significant part of the worlds population is Muslim.



Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: ShadowOfHarbringer on January 31, 2013, 10:22:09 PM
The better question would be: Is Bitcoin Kosher ?  ;D

Because if it is, there could be big money coming at us...

Lol ... coming at you in ways you could never imagine.

... someday you might want to notice who's sitting in the bull-pen of the opposition too.

Doesn't matter that there are some of them in the opposition.

If they would declare bitcoins kosher, that would mean the orthodox types would accept it as money.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: dree12 on January 31, 2013, 10:25:32 PM
I think Bitcoin is in the interest of Sharia law because it lowers interest rates to zero, making the current system untenable. Thanks to the lack of inflation, Bitcoin's oft-negative paper inflation rates would make it impractical to continue charging interest.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: thoughtfan on February 01, 2013, 08:37:12 PM
I'm not a fan of religion, particularly Islam, and I'm even less of a fan of technology (or anything) empowering the religious.  Yet traditionally the way it works is religious leaders make rules for their followers whilst doing whatever suits them.  In the case of Bitcoin what I envisage along those lines is for example, a priest who called Bitcoin evil and banned its use then as he had his religious police out there preventing the lay people using Bitcoin he would at the same time be quietly putting some money away in Bitcoin, or using it for his nefarious purchases!

For this reason I'd prefer it to be found to be compliant with Sharia so everybody gets to use it equally without threat. 

But just as Bitcoin is designed to be immune to government intervention and interference, there's also little in practical terms that could be done by religious leaders to control it either.  They might be better versed in the tools of guilt and shame to control people than governments (who haven't really needed to due to their use of guns) but I would hope the leaders would think better than to try and use it as yet another means of control.

The criteria as presented in the blog seem conveniently vague enough for 'scholars' to come to whatever decision suits their needs so let's hope they choose wisely :)


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: thoughtfan on February 01, 2013, 11:11:40 PM
Sorry, I did provoke this but seeing as you responded I'll go with this off topic flow.

Sound like you view religion as all bad and corrupt.
It's not the way I would put it but I can't be critical of someone drawing that conclusion from what I say.  I know many religious people whose core belief is that as humans we are inherently evil and that the good deeds they and other religious folk do (and their abstinence from evil deeds) are due to their faith.  This delusion is largely harmless but the corollary, the assumption that those who are not religious (or who are of a different religion) are also inherently evil but don't have faith to redeem themselves, is not necessarily as benign.  Mark Twain sums up where I am on the relationship between religion and human atrocities as follows: "With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil — that takes religion."

Religion doesn't go away and its frequently the system of government.
I think 'frequently' misses the immense progress on this over the last few centuries.  Historically, until relatively recently all systems of government had religious elements.  The separation of church and state, the concept of a secular government is phenomenally important.  Of course it doesn't prevent abusive rule but it takes out a whole raft of excuses for oppression. Recently, as I posted elsewhere (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=139977.msg1495692#msg1495692), British secularists and Christians worked together to quash a crazy British law.  In the US I can't see this would have happened because the religious right seem to have forgotten secularism is a protector of all to practice whatever beliefs as long as they don't interfere with others.  Now they see secularism as an enemy,  as somehow an attack on their right to practice their faith.  They seem to fail to see that all the secularists want is that the religious don't get special privileges just from belonging to the dominant religion.

Revolutions and collapsing empires also don't go away and oppressive governments haven't lasted as long as some of our religions so I at guess there's good reasons for the faith many people have in them.
As for 'good reason' I'm not sure what you mean.  There are certainly fairly sound anthropological explanations (good reasons?) that explain the role of religion in human evolution and how religion persists even today.  Or are you suggesting it having been around for so long as being a good reason to believe in God? Isn't that as problematic as suggesting something must be right because a lot of people believe it?  Also the idea of someone contemplating the pros and cons, 'reasoning' out whether or not to have faith doesn't quite seem to fit my experience of how people come to believe.

Getting back to technology and the religious, in the extreme the argument is always that it's not guns that kill people but the people who shoot them.  It unfortunately takes very little imagination to envisage people who have bizarre world-views causing great harm with guns - or with planes, come to that.  Without intending to imply I have the right to prevent someone from owning guns I will admit to having a preference that some people didn't have them!  Likewise I would prefer militant Islamists didn't use internet forums to recruit, that they didn't use encrypted comms to plan and that they didn't use Bitcoin to fund their atrocities.  However, for me the overriding principle is that I neither have the right to deny, nor should I vote a representative to deny anybody other than convicted criminals the use of these technologies.

Maybe for the religiously oppressed, as for the politically oppressed, Bitcoin will be a tool that will have a part in their path to liberation (physical and mental) and for this reason I hope the imams will not deem Bitcoin to be in contravention of Sharia law.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on February 02, 2013, 06:16:44 PM
Actually no, it isn't exactly an important question  :D

Maybe not to you, but the world is bigger than you.  It is a very important question to many millions of people.

Anti-religionists are just as hateful as the religionists they rail against.

There are many problems with any religious organization, but all of the sacred texts contain wisdom.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: justusranvier on February 02, 2013, 06:22:36 PM
Anti-religionists are just as hateful as the religionists they rail against.
One of the most hateful actions of all is to threaten a child into believing a lie. How long would religions survive if they couldn't bully children into compliance?

There are many problems with any religious organization, but all of the sacred texts contain wisdom.
Every scam surrounds the central lie with camouflaged truths, otherwise they aren't believable.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: thoughtfan on February 02, 2013, 06:34:14 PM
Anti-religionists are just as hateful as the religionists they rail against.

Sounds like a clever comment but but I don't accept the presumption that either side are in essence hateful.  My impression from too many years following youtube theist v. atheist 'debates' is that where theists are angry they tend to talk of atheists as being evil, falsely (in almost all instances) accusing them of wanting to restrict their freedoms to practice religion.  Whereas atheist anger I think more generally is as a result of frustrations arising out of false accusations, of rewriting history and a failure to understand that demanding secular public institutions protects everyone equally.

There are many problems with any religious organization, but all of the sacred texts contain wisdom.
Indeed they do but the wisdom of the reader is a prerequisite to extracting the 'good bits'.  A religious leader/manipulator can also extract the bits that suit his needs just as a rose-tinted believer only sees the bits that support their world view.  More to the point a reader with the wisdom to spot the wise bits doesn't need the 'sacred texts' - I'd venture to say he/she is equally likely to enhance his/her wisdom from reading Shakespere than any sacred text!


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: thoughtfan on February 02, 2013, 06:36:46 PM
....... and for this reason I hope the imams will not deem Bitcoin to be in contravention of Sharia law.

arab/muslim countries are not united , even if one imam deems Bitcoin 'haram' , there might be other imams that deem bitcoin 'halal' , a fatwa is non-binding

if some imam says Bitcoin is OK/halal then that is good news , since more people will learn about Bitcoin and start using it so free advertisement

Thank you for the clarification.  I had understood that but I can see how the way I wrote it could look as if I meant they decided as a collective.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on February 02, 2013, 06:59:31 PM
Anti-religionists are just as hateful as the religionists they rail against.
One of the most hateful actions of all is to threaten a child into believing a lie. How long would religions survive if they couldn't bully children into compliance?

When I left home and went to college, I did not believe in God.  After I started practicing yoga, I had some extraordinary experiences that led me to gain faith.  Since then I have studied the majority of the world's religions very intensely out of my own desire for self improvement.  I have a much better life because of these experiences, and threats were not a part of it.  That said, you have to apply reason to the texts or you will fail to understand.  English texts especially are so far from the original that sometimes the original meaning is lost.

When I have children, they will be exposed to all religions and will be taught to read them critically in the context of how they came to us from prophet to writer to council of trent(at least for the christian bible), to translator, to translator, to translator, and finally in our hands.

Quote
There are many problems with any religious organization, but all of the sacred texts contain wisdom.
Every scam surrounds the central lie with camouflaged truths, otherwise they aren't believable.

I don't find scamming in the texts, just things that can be misinterpreted.  It is the organizations that tell you how to interpret it where the problem lies.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on February 02, 2013, 07:12:35 PM
Anti-religionists are just as hateful as the religionists they rail against.

Sounds like a clever comment but but I don't accept the presumption that either side are in essence hateful.  My impression from too many years following youtube theist v. atheist 'debates' is that where theists are angry they tend to talk of atheists as being evil, falsely (in almost all instances) accusing them of wanting to restrict their freedoms to practice religion.  Whereas atheist anger I think more generally is as a result of frustrations arising out of false accusations, of rewriting history and a failure to understand that demanding secular public institutions protects everyone equally.

Please don't lump all who claim to believe in God together.  People can call anything God and worship it.  That doesn't mean they have true religion or speak for all believers.  Don't take what the loudest say as what the majority thinks.

Quote
There are many problems with any religious organization, but all of the sacred texts contain wisdom.
Indeed they do but the wisdom of the reader is a prerequisite to extracting the 'good bits'.  A religious leader/manipulator can also extract the bits that suit his needs just as a rose-tinted believer only sees the bits that support their world view.  More to the point a reader with the wisdom to spot the wise bits doesn't need the 'sacred texts' - I'd venture to say he/she is equally likely to enhance his/her wisdom from reading Shakespere than any sacred text!

That's my point... The problem is not the texts or faith itself, it is the human controlled organizations that use if for their own benefit.

As for wisdom per page, you may be right comparing the bible to shakespere, but the yoga sutras (http://swamij.com/yoga-sutras-list.htm) will crush any text in wisdom per word (the entire text is roughly 196 sentences and even just the first chapter will provide you with plenty to ponder for the next 10 years).

DISCLAIMER: the link above is just one single translation to English of an ancient text originally passed orally in Sanskrit.  Please use reason and explore other translations before you take things too seriously.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Gabi on February 02, 2013, 07:54:28 PM
What is Sauron opinion about bitcoin???


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: notme on February 02, 2013, 10:17:19 PM
What is Sauron opinion about bitcoin???

He's all about centralized control, so I'd say not positive.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: marcus_of_augustus on February 03, 2013, 12:22:44 AM
What is Sauron Megatron opinion about bitcoin???

ftfy


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: hardcore-fs on February 03, 2013, 12:57:02 AM
http://dailyanarchist.com/2013/01/30/is-bitcoin-sharia-compliant/

No......
Women are not allowed to use enabling technology, so how would they use bit-coins?


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Roger_Murdock on February 03, 2013, 04:43:25 AM
What is Sauron opinion about bitcoin???

He's all about centralized control, so I'd say not positive.

You know, the analogy of central banking as the Ring of Power has occurred to me before. The monopoly power to create money is simply too great to be wielded by any one person or group of people without corrupting them. Bitcoin, if it succeeds, will effectively cast that ring into Mount Doom. I guess that makes Satoshi Frodo.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: Mageant on February 03, 2013, 12:53:18 PM
You know, the analogy of central banking as the Ring of Power has occurred to me before. The monopoly power to create money is simply too great to be wielded by any one person or group of people without corrupting them. Bitcoin, if it succeeds, will effectively cast that ring into Mount Doom. I guess that makes Satoshi Frodo.

I agree totally. All the calls for a more fair money system fail at the point where it has to be trusted to somebody.
Nobody should control the money, is the only way to go. That's why Gold and Silver worked because basically nobody could simply control the creation of it.

Regarding Sharia compliance IMHO it should be ok because Bitcoin does not imply or necessitate the payment of interest.



Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: ShireSilver on February 03, 2013, 02:19:18 PM
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[Disclaimer: the profits on sales of these cards get split with Muslims4Liberty, which the artist is a principal in.]


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: renfr on April 24, 2014, 11:20:34 PM
Why do you ask?

Are muslims going to use bitcoin? To do what? Send coins anonimously to fund Al-Qaeda?

I hope bitcoin remains haram, let's not give them terrorists another tool to kill more innocents.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: dree12 on April 25, 2014, 12:11:02 AM
Why do you ask?

Are muslims going to use bitcoin? To do what? Send coins anonimously to fund Al-Qaeda?

I hope bitcoin remains haram, let's not give them terrorists another tool to kill more innocents.

I hope you're trolling. Either way, welcome to my ignore list.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: bryant.coleman on April 25, 2014, 04:22:38 AM
Why do you ask?

Are muslims going to use bitcoin? To do what?

Why other people collect Bitcoins? Most of the Muslims are also similar. Major uses are remittances, online shopping and investment.

Send coins anonimously to fund Al-Qaeda?

Al Qaeda doesn't need Bitcoins. They have a lot of other risk-free options.


Title: Re: 2013-01-30 Is Bitcoin Sharia Compliant?
Post by: renfr on April 25, 2014, 03:11:56 PM
Why do you ask?

Are muslims going to use bitcoin? To do what? Send coins anonimously to fund Al-Qaeda?

I hope bitcoin remains haram, let's not give them terrorists another tool to kill more innocents.

I hope you're trolling. Either way, welcome to my ignore list.
Come back when Deutschland becomes an islamic shithole, oh wait it's not called Deutschland anymore, more like Türkland.