Bitcoin Forum

Bitcoin => Bitcoin Discussion => Topic started by: chaord on August 28, 2010, 07:05:36 AM



Title: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: chaord on August 28, 2010, 07:05:36 AM
Somewhere in this forum ( I have searched, but to no avail) I came across a funny high-level way of describing bitcoins:

"It's like a bunch of farmers grow crops, then burn the crops and take before and after pictures of the burnt crops.  They look at each other's pictures and collectively agree, "yep, you burnt those crops correctly."  Then they decide to trade those pictures amongst themselves as a currency/commodity/collectible"

So, I know the above example seems harsh, but it does point out the lack of intrinsic value nicely.  Please, let's not discuss whether you think bitcoins have intrinsic value or not; there are many other threads discussing this.  

Instead, what I would like to brainstorm about is the following: are there any upstanding social or commercial causes [Edit: with a large market] for which the properties of a system like bitcoin's are perfect for? Those properties being: decentralized, anonymous, global, etc.  Perhaps there is some giant market out there that the product/service which is bitcoin is absolutely perfect for.  Something that bitcoin is so perfect for that bitcoins become identified with that industry, much like gold first became identified with the ornamentation industry.  From that, perhaps bitcoin as a product/service/commodity will gain the intrinsic value enough to overcome its obstacles and be accepted into the mainstream.

Sadly, the only industries I can think of that readily desire bitcoin's inherent properties are the very industries that governments like to control or keep off the radar:
  • drugs
  • porn
  • gambling

There has to be an non-shady industry in good standing with the mainstream just asking for a product/service like bitcoin.  If not, we need to create one.  Any ideas?  

Perhaps there is some social cause that even governments agree anonymity, decentralization, etc is the best policy?  We need bitcoin concepts to be valued and ubiquitous before it is used heavily for the "shady" industries, IMHO.  Either that or maybe we should face the facts and become the porn kings and druglords of the internet. At least we'd gain a wide user base very quickly. Ha!


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Anonymous on August 28, 2010, 07:43:18 AM
So far most of the bitcoin accepting businesses are pretty innocuous.Maybe bitcoin is not anonymous enough to attract porn,gambling and drugs?

The most obvious mainstream use for bitcoins is charity.

Bitcoins are the perfect way to donate anonymously if you don't want people to find out who you support - just say wikileaks set up a bitcoin node.There might be powerful  people interested in finding out who the financial contributors are to such an organisation.

How would politicians look to the public if they shut down something that allows more support for charity organisations?




Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: hugolp on August 28, 2010, 03:25:12 PM
This does not seem to be a very shared opinion, but I have always though that as bitcoin evolves and more people adopts it, there would be different networks for more local use of the coins. For example, the shops in a town get together and agree to start their own bitcoin network, kind of like they do with local currencies to improve local shopping. There could even be exchanges between the different bitcoin networks.

But who knows what will end up happening. One thing is clear to me: the adoption of bitcoin depends on shops accepting bitcoin as method of payment. That will make people who is not so conscious about the monetary system to start using it.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Red on August 28, 2010, 04:07:52 PM
There has to be an non-shady industry in good standing with the mainstream just asking for a product/service like bitcoin.  If not, we need to create one.  Any ideas?  

I've been kicking this around for a while. I've been thinking of bitcoin as the privacy currency.

Suppose you want to post on a web site but don't want to give them personal information. If you could just include a bitcoin, that would make clear you are not a spammer. Or if you are, at least the site gets paid for canceling your posts.

The same thing is possible for dealing with spam email. Sending email to someone and want to avoid their spam filter? Slip them a couple of bitcoins. Then they have some when they want to send an email to someone new.

This way there is a complete circuit for bitcoins without going back to cash.

As people start making distributed social networking things it could be even more useful.
 


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: MoonShadow on August 28, 2010, 05:27:08 PM
So far most of the bitcoin accepting businesses are pretty innocuous.Maybe bitcoin is not anonymous enough to attract porn,gambling and drugs?

The most obvious mainstream use for bitcoins is charity.

Bitcoins are the perfect way to donate anonymously if you don't want people to find out who you support - just say wikileaks set up a bitcoin node.There might be powerful  people interested in finding out who the financial contributors are to such an organisation.

How would politicians look to the public if they shut down something that allows more support for charity organisations?


I think that you are on  to something here.  Perhaps we could promote bitcoin to national or international charities as a means to accept small donations nearly effortlessly and with a near zero monetary overhead.  I know for me, donating to a good cause is easiest to justify to myself when there isn't going to be a credit card fee or even the cost of the postage stamp.  A 44 cent stamp is still getting close to the 3% overhead mark if one is writing a check for less than $20.  With Bitcoin, supporters could send a "widow's mite" over the Internet and know that every last bit of it would go to the actual funds of the organization.  We could also promote the same to social groups that come to the US to work and send money back to family in the motherlands.  The companies that profit from the transfer of such funds overseas legitimately cost quite a bit, themselves. 

If it's hard to get these groups to take such a thing seriously, mention that bitcoins can be sold online on the exchanges for other currencies, or locally to people who walk in the door looking to buy some bitcoins from the organization so that they can buy other stuff online, or even send support to *another* organization half-way around the world.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: chaord on August 28, 2010, 06:36:26 PM
I like Red's idea as an online privacy currency for posting and such.  I also really like the idea of charity.  Of course, I think an ideal scenario would be something that addresses a known social cause in an entrepreneurial manner (eg. social entrepreneurship).  This gives the marketers and promoters a profit motive and gives adopters a social motive. http://www.thehealthcareblog.com/the_health_care_blog/2008/08/creating-curren.html (http://www.thehealthcareblog.com/the_health_care_blog/2008/08/creating-curren.html)

Regardless, for something like bitcoin to be known and successful before it is used for the shady industries and shut down by governments, the adoption rate needs to turn viral IMHO.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Red on August 28, 2010, 06:47:46 PM
Political speech donations is another thing I think would be useful. Especially in an election season. With scotus changing the rules it might not even be rebellious.

This holds for PAC donations as well.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: chaord on August 30, 2010, 06:33:43 AM
One idea that I keep coming back to as being well suited for bitcoin as payment would be a decentralized freenet + twitter + flattr = bitcoin success?.  I'm not too familiar with freeneet, so for those of you who are, please speak up and tell me whether this is possible.  One of the things I like about freenet is what it stands for (eg. information freedom), however, one thing I don't like is the fact that I cannot control what information is stored/served by my node.  In a sense, freenet is not very autonomous from a node's perspective.  I would really like a decentralized information system with the following properties:
  • Simple enough and marketed to mainstream content providers and readers.
  • Decentralized and open source like freenet.
  • All data stored in nodes is encrypted so that even the owner of the node cannot tell exactly what he stores/serves
  • Unlike current freenet, the owner can "follow" certain sites and be assured (because it's open source) that his node will only be mirroring the sites that he "follows" and perhaps also the sites that those sites "follow."  Similar to FOAF.
  • Content providers (ie: nodes) can be paid in bitcoin but perhaps using an api similar to flattr.
With such a system, you can choose to store/serve sites like wikileaks or other information that you support while at the same time withholding your resources from those you do not (eg child porn).

The odds of getting the mainstream to host their own personal nodes is pretty slim IMHO, and the more feasible solution might be for the mainstream to "rent" a node from a "certified node custodians" who will implement the customer's encrypted node in one of the various cloud platforms.

I think if done correctly this could actually be a profitable venture.   Additionally, I would love to shift my career in the bitcoin direction and am interested in creating a bitcoin related startup.  If any of you are interested in collaborating, please PM/email me.  

In the mean time, I'd enjoy hearing some responses/critiques of such a system.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Insti on August 30, 2010, 06:51:45 AM
  • Unlike current freenet, the owner can "follow" certain sites and be assured (because it's open source) that his node will only be mirroring the sites that he "follows" and perhaps also the sites that those sites "follow."  Similar to FOAF.
The old "free speech for everyone who I agree with" proposal.


"If we don't believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all."  ~Noam Chomsky


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: FreeMoney on August 30, 2010, 06:54:38 AM
There is a difference between not doing violence on people you disagree with and merely not hosting their content.

I won't hurt anyone, but if your poem is crap I'm not reciting it.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: chaord on August 30, 2010, 07:09:12 AM
Sorry Insti, I'm going to have to agree with FreeMoney here ;).  Free speech must also be accompanied by freedom to be silent.

So operationally and technically though, could something like this be pulled off? Are all the pieces of the puzzle out there just waiting for someone to put them all together? Or are there some major technological/implementation hurdles that I'm not seeing?


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Anonymous on August 30, 2010, 07:55:41 AM
  • Unlike current freenet, the owner can "follow" certain sites and be assured (because it's open source) that his node will only be mirroring the sites that he "follows" and perhaps also the sites that those sites "follow."  Similar to FOAF.
The old "free speech for everyone who I agree with" proposal.


"If we don't believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all."  ~Noam Chomsky

It is also a property rights issue.If I dont want someone coming onto my property I should be allowed to stop them.It is only the state which makes you use their "service" whether you want it or not.[/list]


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: mizerydearia on August 30, 2010, 08:02:00 AM
Bitcoin can majorly pwn Western Union.  In regards to "charity" idea, I established a thread (http://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=950.msg11644#msg11644) to help establish how we can best communicate or write to charities and organizations.

Regardless, for something like bitcoin to be known and successful before it is used for the shady industries and shut down by governments, the adoption rate needs to turn viral IMHO.
I agree.  Bitcoin to revolutionize how charities receive donations seems promising.

So operationally and technically though, could something like this be pulled off? Are all the pieces of the puzzle out there just waiting for someone to put them all together? Or are there some major technological/implementation hurdles that I'm not seeing?

I think there is a need for a web-based interface to work with the daemon.  There are some (http://github.com/aceat64/phpMyBitcoin) efforts.  I'm working on a php-based templating implementation.  I will release it in a day or two.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: grondilu on December 20, 2010, 01:44:05 AM
Sadly, the only industries I can think of that readily desire bitcoin's inherent properties are the very industries that governments like to control or keep off the radar:
  • drugs
  • porn
  • gambling

Why would you want anything else ?  If you ignore moral aspects, then those activities fullfill what you were claiming for.

I don't use gold as an ornementation personnaly, and yet I own gold because I know some people love gold jewelery.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: FreeMoney on December 20, 2010, 02:25:34 AM
Sadly, the only industries I can think of that readily desire bitcoin's inherent properties are the very industries that governments like to control or keep off the radar:
  • drugs
  • porn
  • gambling

Why would you want anything else ?  If you ignore moral aspects, then those activities fullfill what you were claiming for.

I don't use gold as an ornementation personnaly, and yet I own gold because I know some people love gold jewelery.


You don't even need to ignore moral aspects since there is nothing wrong about pleasure.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: genjix on December 20, 2010, 02:38:06 AM
Firstly you guys might want to check out our project:
http://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/28/internet-poker/rake-free-open-poker-room-run-poker-community-938389/

http://poker.bitcoinvegas.com/wiki

Secondly, just because you don't yet know the applications of Bitcoin, doesn't mean they don't exist. Very clever things we never thought of are going to spring up. New ways of doing things.

It makes me feel so good that I made 500 BTC worth of my bitcoins in a diversified way- a) played poker b) donations for bringing that Wikipedia article out of the incubator c) hacking up a website over 1 weekend and selling it d) trading currency. It's not much money, but it is a very cool feeling.

If bitcoin takes off then there will be a new economy of workers on the internet; people selling artwork, people receiving donations for editing wikipedia, coders getting micropayments...

... A new cultural revival :)


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: jimbobway on December 20, 2010, 03:07:20 AM
Bitcoin as a type of investment.  So the investment business.  Maybe as a tool for diversifying your portfolio.  Kind of like how websites sell gold as an investment, a collectible.

Baseball cards are collectibles based on demand and a limited supply too.   Why not bitcoins?


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Timo Y on December 20, 2010, 08:54:42 AM
Bitcoin as a type of investment.  So the investment business.  Maybe as a tool for diversifying your portfolio.  Kind of like how websites sell gold as an investment, a collectible.

Bleh, I would be disappointed if that were to become the main use of Bitcoin. It would just be an investment like hundreds of others. There is nothing that "Bitcoin as an investment" does that other investments don't do.

I hope that Bitcoin's killer app will be something more innovative than that, exploiting a feature that is unique to Bitcoin.  p2p bandwidth allocation and p2p DNS allocation are two examples where Bitcoin would not only be ideal, but it would be very hard or impossible to use a centralised currency.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: QuantumMechanic on December 20, 2010, 09:21:22 AM
Bitcoin can be used to incentivise contributions to p2p networks like distributed online storage (Tahoe-LAFS once accounting is implemented), filesharing, wireless ad hoc networks, anonymizing overlay networks, etc.  I think all of these could have pretty mainstream appeal - especially wireless ad hoc networks and distributed online storage!

It's uniquely useful for anything that can make use of automated microtransactions, really.

If/while storage and bandwidth costs are too high for generators to facilitate these microtransactions, then maybe a Ripple-like network could be used to make the payments, with Bitcoin automatically clearing any debts that build up large enough such that this clearing is economical.  Hopefully much of the debts in Ripple would end up canceling anyway, further reducing the overall burden on the Bitcoin network.  Since the risk for microtransactions across Ripple is very small, perhaps credit line management could be mostly automated using trust metrics.  In this way, I think such a network could become quite connected and thus very effective for microtransactions.  Either way, Bitcoin is the facilitator of microtransactions, and all the neat things that rely on them.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: RHorning on December 21, 2010, 12:07:08 AM
I have thought about microtransactions in relations to Bitcoins, and while the threshold of what minimum payment can be made effectively with Bitcoins is something that is trivial compared to other electronic payment methods, I don't see payments less than $1 USD being effectively transferred without substantial cost in the near future.  Much of that depends on how the transaction fee system evolves as a matter of practice.  If transaction fees remain low, microtransactions will continue to flourish and be exchanged in the network... but don't count on it as a long-term business plan for the future.  Perhaps other systems like Ripple will develop for those transactions that are effectively less than $1 in equivalent wealth transferred.

Where I do see Bitcoin really coming into its own is with microloans.... and not just such tiny "investments" in 3rd world countries.  I'm still trying to work out the technical details, but I think there could be a system set up where many different people could "invest" into some concept ranging from just a few bitcoins to thousands or tens of thousands of bitcoins under some mutually agreed upon terms.  If somebody has some idea for how to make money using Bitcoins, I think eventually some methods are going to be created to pool resources and get the initial investment available to those who want to create these enterprises.

And I don't think it is going to be for the "illegal" stuff either, but rather something simple like setting up a website selling candles or "investing" in a programmer to make some interesting software.  We've seen some of that already on these forums, and I think that is only the beginning.  What Bitcoin does is to significantly lower the barriers to entry for emerging business concepts.... and that is something which may be very powerful in the near future blowing out of the water any of these "nefarious" concepts that have been mentioned earlier.

Investing in bitcoins like you would baseball cards or gold has value, but investing in enterprises earning bitcoins for an expected return on investment is going to amplify that value much more.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: jimbobway on December 21, 2010, 12:45:57 AM
You guys might think I am crazy but I think Pizza4Bitcoins.com could be an industry identifier for tangible items if done correctly.  Why?  Well for several reasons.

1.) People aren't willing to spend a lot of their Bitcoins they have saved or generated.  Pizza requires more than a micropayment, but it's not too bad of a price range of around $15.

2.) Right now it is hard to buy small tangible items with Bitcoins online.  If you buy a candy bar online it's $1.00 plus shipping of $5 so it is not worth it as a business model.  With Pizza4Bitcoins, shipping is almost free.  It's almost free because Pizza Hut automatically includes the delivery charge with the order already. 

3.)  People like to eat pizza.

I guess the core of my argument is free shipping for food that comes within 1 hour of ordering online using Bitcoins.  Yummy!



Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: jimbobway on December 21, 2010, 12:48:52 AM
I have thought about microtransactions in relations to Bitcoins, and while the threshold of what minimum payment can be made effectively with Bitcoins is something that is trivial compared to other electronic payment methods, I don't see payments less than $1 USD being effectively transferred without substantial cost in the near future.  Much of that depends on how the transaction fee system evolves as a matter of practice.  If transaction fees remain low, microtransactions will continue to flourish and be exchanged in the network... but don't count on it as a long-term business plan for the future.  Perhaps other systems like Ripple will develop for those transactions that are effectively less than $1 in equivalent wealth transferred.

What ever happened to all the talk of using microtransactions for games, using bitcoins as a virtual currency?  All we need is one social hit game "Bitcoinville" (like Farmville) and Bitcoin will fly like a G6.  Farmville made millions of dollars with people buying it's virtual currency.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Hal on December 21, 2010, 04:36:22 AM
I see Bitcoin as ultimately becoming a reserve currency for banks, playing much the same role as gold did in the early days of banking. Banks could issue digital cash with greater anonymity and lighter weight, more efficient transactions.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: kiba on December 21, 2010, 04:56:24 AM

What ever happened to all the talk of using microtransactions for games, using bitcoins as a virtual currency?  All we need is one social hit game "Bitcoinville" (like Farmville) and Bitcoin will fly like a G6.  Farmville made millions of dollars with people buying it's virtual currency.

We have a group effort at...ummm...Rabbit Doubt but it never come to fruits.

Anyway, I have too many projects...Bitpredict, JStet(a game in cavnas!), and Soulplaying...

Until one of those project is completed, I won't work on any new game.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: MoonShadow on December 21, 2010, 05:48:55 AM
What ever happened to all the talk of using microtransactions for games, using bitcoins as a virtual currency? 

Bitcoin still works as a micropayment system, for games or otherwise, but as a standardized internal debit system.  Imagine if Farmville switched to Bitcoin, using Mybitcoin.com's internal multi-user online wallet format.

Game sites could do this all day, sending and receiving at will to/from the Bitcoin network, but internally functioning as a 'virtual currency'.  When you're done playing, you could just ask for your balance back and get it in ten minutes or less.  What we need to see happen is for these various online wallet sites to standardize their transactions between themselves, removing another layer of burden from the Bitcoin network.  For example, A.com, B.net and C.org are all versions of online wallets.  A.com is just an online wallet site, B.net is a gaming site and C.org is a market site (I.E. Etsy).  At first, none of these sites trust one another, as none of them have much of a history; so interactions occur entirely over the Bitcoin network.  Eventually, traffic on the Bitcoin network starts to push up the cost of transactions to a level that, from the collective perspectives of websites, justifies the work of interaction.  So each of these sites (and many more) open accounts on each other's sites, funding them largely evenly, and develop a means of automated communication that allows the others to identify addresses that belong to members.  So when a member of A.com wishes to send 50 bitcoin to B.net to fund a game for some time, A.com can tell (without the bitcoin network) that the address used to fund said account is tied to B.net, and can 'credit' the account by reducing the member's A.com account by 50, increasing B.net's account (at A.com) by 50, and then notifying B.net that said 'credit' has occurred.  Given large enough sites, most of the transactions will tend to balance out, and only rarely will the sites have to 'normalize' their agreements using the Bitcoin network.  This saves the sites, and by proxy their members, the associated costs of transactions on the Bitcoin network; and therefore reducing the costs of transactions for all Bitcoin users.

And this is how microtransactions can still occur using Bitcoin even when the cost of transactions are no longer free.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: jimbobway on December 21, 2010, 05:57:18 AM
Right now I am programming web based virtual worlds for a living, but I signed an NDA so I don't think I can program a web game without losing my job if they found out.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: MoonShadow on December 21, 2010, 06:00:06 AM
Right now I am programming web based virtual worlds for a living, but I signed an NDA so I don't think I can program a web game without losing my job if they found out.

A non-disclosure agreement?  Really?  Or do you mean a non-compete contract? 

You could present the idea of writing an online game for bitcoin to the company, and if they reject it, get that in writing.  You won't be in competition with an employer that doesn't desire to compete in that market.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: jimbobway on December 21, 2010, 06:27:22 AM
Right now I am programming web based virtual worlds for a living, but I signed an NDA so I don't think I can program a web game without losing my job if they found out.

A non-disclosure agreement?  Really?  Or do you mean a non-compete contract? 

You could present the idea of writing an online game for bitcoin to the company, and if they reject it, get that in writing.  You won't be in competition with an employer that doesn't desire to compete in that market.

A can't remember what it's called but when I read the contract it sounded threatening.  The thought of doing it for free has crossed my mind.  Shrug.  Kinda busy though.


Title: Re: a new thought experiment: bitcoin's industry identifier
Post by: Anonymous on December 21, 2010, 10:46:09 AM
I thought of the possibility of attaching an open id to certain coins. Say you wanted to use super rewards people would do the offers and receive coins. Imagine for example they wanted to use those coins at the bitcoin mmo. If they used the same open id they could withdraw their super rewards to their same open id account at the mmo. That amount of coins could then be only spent in the game to prevent super rewards claiming bitcoin is a cash equivalent. This would then be within the terms of service of virtual currency companies.

Problem solved. There is no need to setup a new id system when open id already exists. :)