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421  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: wxBitcoin/bitcoind version 0.4.1 on: November 22, 2011, 03:19:15 PM
The folder inside the zip file says rc7. Is this rc7 or the final 0.4.1?
422  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / What if a Country were to start its own Cryptocurrency on: November 21, 2011, 11:17:53 PM
What if a country were to start its own cryptocurrency based on Bitcoin? What would they change? They could have a different method of initial distribution. For example, the govt could premine all the coins and then divide them equally among all their citizens. Or the govt could start owning all the money but then how would the citizens get the coins? Maybe the govt would want the ability to reverse transactions. They could print print paper currency and exchange it to people at coinbanks when people deposit their cryptocoins. The govt could have 1 central bank where all accounts must be held. Cryptocurrencies could be ushering in the era of Big Brother instead of guarding against him. What do you think?
423  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: FinCEN renamed "stored value" to "pre-paid access", let's hire a lawyer! on: November 17, 2011, 01:27:02 PM
With the stroke of a pen lawmakers can make anything illegal. Then whether they have the will and ability to enforce the new law. Then the courts get involved. I don't think it's much of a stretch to look at something like this
http://www.fincen.gov/statutes_regs/guidance/html/FIN-2010-A011.html
and see crypto-currencies getting make illegal. Then we'll see what happens from there
424  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Why Run the Bitcoin Client? on: November 16, 2011, 01:31:06 PM
If running the client provides a valuable service to the network, shouldn't that be rewarded?
425  Economy / Currency exchange / Reversability of USD Payments on: November 10, 2011, 07:40:48 PM
There is a lot of information floating around about what types of USD payments are reversible and which are not. We know that BTC and in person cash USD payments are not reversible. Can any other USD payments also be considered irreversible and if so after how much time has passed? For example, payments via
Dwolla
Paxum
Liberty Reserve
Dometic Bank Wire
International Bank Wire
ACH transfers
PayPal
OKPAY
BitInstant
426  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Exchanges and ING Person2Person on: November 10, 2011, 12:42:40 AM
I see Intersango has an account at Chase. I guess client could use Chase's quickpay service to deposit money to Intersango. But currently neither Mt Gox nor TradeHill allow deposits or withdrawals via ACH, do they?
427  Economy / Speculation / Re: Where are the arbiters? on: November 09, 2011, 08:27:30 PM
I'm waiting for Mt Gox to process a withdrawal from Mt Gox to my Paxum account so I can then send the money over to TradeHill. About how long does it take Mt Gox to process a withdrawal to a Paxum account? Trying to get ready for the next arb appportunity.
428  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Exchanges and ING Person2Person on: November 09, 2011, 06:02:56 PM
ExchangeBitcoins.com offered it before they shut down their exchange. I used it and it worked fine. It's an ACH transfer so you still have ACH delay of 2 to 3 business days. If the money is collected in an ING account and going to another ING account, the transfer is instantaneous. But there are restrictions, max amount is $5K per day I think. Plus, the service may only be for personal accounts, not business accounts. It's a good service and I'd like to see more exchanges offer it for deposits, withdrawals or both.
429  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [POLL] - What is the ultimate price of Litecoin? on: November 08, 2011, 04:42:34 PM
I think any successful money performs 3 functions relatively well: medium of exchange, unit of account and store of value. Any crypto-currency can serve well as a unit of account, they are just numbers with lots of decimal places. With no or low increases in supply crypto-currencies could be a good store of value. But the make or break test is "are many people using it as a medium of exchange?" Bitcoin has some merchants that accept BTC as payment but this will need to grow dramatically if BTC is to succeed in the long run. BTC is walking now. LTC and other crypto-currencies need to walk before they run. With a market capitalization of $24 million, BTC has a big head start on the other crypto-currencies. Being first is a big advantage in many markets. But then again, the only contant in this world is change. For example, who would have thought that Internet Explorer market share would fall to less than 40%
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_market_share
430  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Is there a version 0.4.1 of the Bitcoin client in the works? on: November 03, 2011, 02:52:20 PM
As some point I thought I saw there was a 0.4.1 version of the Bitcoin client in the works. Is that correct or is 0.5.0 going to be the next officially released version?
431  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Tracking Places that Accept Alternate Cryptocurrencies for Payment on: November 02, 2011, 05:39:39 PM
In the long run, I think a cryptocurrency's success is dependent upon the number places that you can use it as payment. I've seen some lists of where you can use Bitcoin as payment. But are there any lists of where you can use other alternate cryptocurrencies as payment? Or is there a good way to track whether the number of places where you can use alternate cryptocurrencies as payment is growing or shrinking?
432  Economy / Marketplace / Way to Track the Number of Places that Accept Bitcoin as Payment on: November 02, 2011, 05:30:45 PM
In the long run, I think Bitcoin's success is dependent upon the number places that you can use it as payment. Is there a good way to track whether the number of places that you can use Bitcoin as payment is growing or shrinking?
433  Economy / Speculation / Why We Can't Let Go of Our Losers on: October 16, 2011, 03:41:29 PM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204774604576631302847124750.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLE_Video_Top

Taking a loss is hard to take. But avoiding a loss can be much worse.

U.S. stocks have lost some $4 trillion since their peak in October 2007, but investors aren't fleeing the market en masse. So far this year, according to investment-research firm Morningstar, investors have taken $14 billion more out of U.S. stock mutual funds and exchange-traded funds than they have added. That is less than 0.4% of the total assets of U.S. stock funds.

In other words, while some investors have taken their losses, most are grimly sitting on them.

That could be a mistake. Research published in 1998 by behavioral-finance professor Terrance Odean of the University of California, Berkeley, showed that individual investors are 50% more likely to sell a winning stock than a loser—even though, on average, the stocks these investors sell go on to outperform while those they hold onto underperform.

Why the reluctance to bail? Selling an underwater asset, says Mr. Odean, "isn't primarily about economic loss, it's about emotional loss." Once you sell below your purchase price, he believes, you can no longer tell yourself, "I still made a good choice, and it'll come back."

Individual investors aren't the only ones who can't make peace with their losses, according to numerous academic studies. Mutual-fund managers who cling to losing stocks underperform, by roughly four percentage points annually, the managers who cut their losses.

On average, professional futures traders and stock traders hurt their returns by clinging to their losers. Real-estate investment trusts hang onto properties that are losing money longer than they keep those that are in the black.

Unpublished research presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroeconomics earlier this month sheds new light on this old problem. Neuroeconomics is an emerging field that combines the techniques of neuroscience with theories from psychology and economics to study financial behavior.

In one study, led by Gregory Berns of Emory University, people lay inside a brain scanner while deciding to hold or sell an investment; the price of the asset changed randomly up or down. The researchers focused on the ventral striatum, a region of the brain that has been shown to respond to rewards, particularly when they are unexpected.

When an asset was underwater and its price rose, activity in the ventral striatum of the typical person in the experiment was "blunted," or insignificant, rather than robust. "Many of the participants told us they had hope for a rise," says Andrew Brooks, a co-author of the study. Perhaps because these people got what they expected, an uptick in price "wasn't surprising," Mr. Brooks says, and therefore didn't excite this part of the brain's reward center.

That suggests that many investors who are losing money may automatically assume—rightly or wrongly—that their position is bound to recover.

Other research at the meeting pointed to a second flaw in how investors might think about losses. A study led by Camelia Kuhnen of Northwestern University found that people are much worse at estimating whether a bad investment will produce mild or severe losses than they are at predicting whether a winning investment will generate small or large gains. "Learning [about probabilities] is particularly faulty," Prof. Kuhnen says, "when people are in a bad environment with losses left and right and they have their own money at stake."

There are several steps that can help you dump your losers.

First, get a second opinion, from a financial adviser or an investor you respect, on your money-losing positions. Ask not whether you should sell the investments, but rather if they are worth buying at today's price. If the answer is no, consider selling.

Measure how long you hold your losers and your winners. If you hang onto your money-losing positions much longer than your winners, then put yourself on a regular schedule of looking for losses to harvest. (You don't have to wait until December.)

Taking a loss is easier when you think of it as a swap—in which you replace a loser with a new investment in a similar (but not identical) asset—rather than a sale. That makes taking action easier, since you aren't forced to admit that your original judgment was a complete failure.

Finally, realize that a loser can change from a liability to an asset when you close it out at a loss, since you can use losses to offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income on your tax return.

"Think about the term 'harvesting your losses,'" suggests Meir Statman, a finance professor at Santa Clara University. "That should put you in mind of strolling in an orchard picking ripe peaches rather than rotten losses." Just be sure to check with your accountant to make sure the loss is worth taking.
434  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Design Flaws of Bitcoin That Could Be Corrected in Another Digital Currency on: October 12, 2011, 01:42:41 PM
I'm asking. But if everything about Bitcoin can be changed, then there are no guarantees. If I buy BTC thinking the supply of BTC can not be changed to allow more than 21 million, I'm wrong. It could easily be changed to allow 21 billion, 21 trillion or more.

Faster confirmations would be nice. Is that possible? Is there a price to pay for faster confirmations?
435  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Design Flaws of Bitcoin That Could Be Corrected in Another Digital Currency on: October 12, 2011, 01:02:37 PM
Are there any characteristics of Bitcoin which you consider disadvantages that can't be change in BTC but that could be changed in another digital currency? If another digital currency is going to replace Bitcoin I would think that it have to have advantages over BTC. Of course there could be external differences that could make another digital currency more desirable. For example, if a country were to issue it's own digital currency. But what parts of the Bitcoin protocol would you change if you were starting from scratch?
436  Economy / Speculation / Re: Bitcoin Half-Life is About 6 Weeks on: October 12, 2011, 12:54:06 PM
After my original post, I received a friendly visit from 2 gentlemen that work or don't work at the NSA. I was a little confused about that part. They logically explained my errors in reasoning. I now see that on a long-term basis, BTC is on a parabolic rise from zero in Feb 2009. The short and intermediate trend don't matter. The long-term trend is what matters. Therefore, I'd like to officially change from a Bitcoin bear to a Bitcoin bull. I expect BTC to be $100 by November, $1,000 by January and $10,000 by March. The train is leaving the station. Woo-Woo! Don't get left behind. This time is different. It's a paradigm shift of historical proportions. Bitcoin is like Dianetics for money with Satoshi being L. Ron Hubbard. All we need is for someone to convert Tom Cruise.
437  Economy / Speculation / Re: Buy on the Way Up or on the Way Down on: October 12, 2011, 03:56:31 AM
Trend is still down. Don't buy now unless you like getting run over by a freight train.
438  Economy / Speculation / Bitcoin Half-Life is About 6 Weeks on: October 12, 2011, 03:44:17 AM
BTC has fallen from 32 to 16 to 8 to 4 with a half-life of about 6 weeks. If this continues, we'll see $2 by the end of November, $1 by the end of January and $0.50 by March. Down 88% from it's high of $32. For those who are long BTC, the trend is not your friend.
439  Bitcoin / Mining / Re: Lowest Variable Cost to Mine BTC Assuming Non-Free Electricity on: October 10, 2011, 12:02:44 AM
I know the difficulty can change. I was thinking more of given the current difficulty what is the cost of electricity to produce 1 BTC on the most efficient GPU.
440  Bitcoin / Mining / Lowest Variable Cost to Mine BTC Assuming Non-Free Electricity on: October 09, 2011, 02:36:13 PM
Assuming that you have to pay for electricity, what the lowest USD per BTC mining cost that you've seen? I want to exclude sunk costs like the cost of hardware. What's the best online calculator for calculating this cost?
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