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1681  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Think about the "decentralization" of bitcoin from seven different aspects on: August 10, 2021, 11:39:27 PM
It might be fair to say: if centralization is a monopoly, decentralization trends nearer to a free market system.

There were many news stories and publications criticizing big american tech for being monopolies. Centralization enables monopoly. If it is true that many negative circumstances are endemic to monopoly. Then these criticisms may also extend to centralized monolithic formats. In that vein, decentralized design could be considered a hedge against monopoly and centralization.

Spheres of influence and control in bitcoin are decentralized in such a way as to make centralized control difficult to attain. The majority of crypto mining could be centralized in china. But that wouldn't be enough to give china complete control. Core developers have a great deal of influence, but its not centralized enough for their perspective to be the only one deemed relevant.

If monarchy is centralization. Decentralization could trend nearer to being a republic. Or format of democracy.
1682  Economy / Economics / Re: Where is the value reflected? on: August 10, 2021, 11:16:20 PM
Retailers can expect to boost sales through the addition of cryptocurrency support. A 20% increase in sales (I think that would be a reasonable number) through bitcoin adoption is a non trivial gain. While implementing bitcoin support by contrast would be affordable and trivial.

A few years ago, there were US stocks that significantly boosted their value simply by announcing plans for blockchain projects. Kodak, atari and many others saw significant stock gains through making blockchain proposals.

Retailers offering crypto support could be similar. Perhaps not on the stock side, but on the consumer side, sales could definitely trend upwards through giving consumers more options and tools.
1683  Economy / Economics / Re: Bullish: 'Vast Majority' of Institutions Will Own Crypto by 2026: Fidelity on: August 09, 2021, 11:55:25 PM
According to the survey, 70% of institutional investors intend to buy or invest in digital assets in the near future, with over 90% of them planning to do so by 2026.


That could be sufficient purchasing volume and demand to offset bitcoin's historical 4 year boom and bust cycle. It could explain the impetus behind bitcoin's recent uptrend.

The media claims bitcoin's latest uptick is due to "support" of US crypto regulation. Which is interesting as I don't know that anyone in BTC likes the regulation proposal.

If "70% of institutional investors" plan to buy digital assets. It would be very interesting to know what percentage will buy digital assets (crypto) through a bank, and what percentage would choose instead to make purchases using a stablecoin. The information could be valuable not only for comparison shopping purposes for whales. But also as it would be the only way to have an accurate picture of what true bitcoin purchasing volume looked like on the banking side of things where that data is unavailable.
1684  Economy / Economics / Re: When debt is an asset on: August 09, 2021, 11:46:03 PM
Around 10 years ago, former comptroller of the US government accountability office did a nationwide publicity tour. Where he tried to warn americans of the dangers posed by unfunded national debt reaching upwards of $400,000 per household. Of course, at the time he was completely ignored. No one took him seriously except for "conspiracy theorists".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjmCiDB_72g
Former U.S. Comptroller General David Walker on The Federal Fiscal Crisis

I don't support the idea of debt being an entirely evil thing. It can be useful and fair in buying a car, a house and things on credit.

The issue with debt is the lenders are usually much more educated, motivated and informed than the borrowing demographic. Over time the scale slowly dips in the favor of lenders. The trend accumulates into growing inequality and systemic unfairness. Until we reach a crisis point, where it is no longer sustainable.
1685  Economy / Economics / Re: Ukraine is the "island of crypto freedom" in Europe, what to expect ? on: August 09, 2021, 11:36:29 PM
Cryptocurrency legalization is like the 2021 version of "legalize marijuana". Its viewed by many as the most rational and quick answer to create jobs and generate economic growth. And so we see ambitious and innovative efforts to harness the positive effects bitcoin and crypto has on society being made by many. I don't think there's any deep angle to ukraine's crypto proposals. Adopting crypto is a no brainer.


The problem of Russian aggression is now stabilized, we managed to repulse Russian terrorist troops and separatist gangs in 2014-2017, and return a significant part of the occupied territories in eastern Ukraine.


Economic sanctions on russia forced them to rely purely upon banks for business transactions. It allowed banks to seize control over Putin and russia. The effects are tangible. Post economic sanction russia looks very different. The opposite of pre economic sanction russia.
1686  Economy / Economics / Re: Central bank digital currency will improve the use cases and value of Bitcoin on: August 09, 2021, 11:10:31 PM
The power of the market in a more open currency selection system will mean that cryptocurrencies are expected to play an important role in forcing these politicized central institutions to better manage their people’s funds.


I think the only thing that will truly incentivize institutions to better manage things, is people making an effort to be more informed and better educated. To cite an example of this.

Americans always complain about healthcare and how bad it is. Very few americans can explain exactly how healthcare is broken. The majority do not understand problems and obstacles related to reforming healthcare. Not knowing the basics on healthcare renders people powerless. Whenever a good healthcare proposal is put on the table, the media fools the public into hating it. And every time a terrible healthcare proposal is on the table, the media fools people into supporting it.

Accurate information and understanding issues are the most relevant ingredients determining what institutions can get away with it. The only way conditions will improve is if people can do a better job being accurate on topics and supporting the right people and policies.
1687  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Is Bitcoin anti-inflation? on: August 09, 2021, 10:59:02 PM
As a person who really loves BTC, I want to ask, is Bitcoin anti-Inflation?


Deflationary design is incorporated in BTC. But if the goal was to create a pure inflation protected asset, I think there would be more safeguards and features built in to deter volatility.

Inflation alone is neither good or evil. Its a symptom of markets that manifest under certain conditions.

The problem is high risk will always be correlated with high profits. National mints sometimes overprint currency to bailout poor investments made by high rollers in public and private sectors. Leading to economic instability and inflation. The more underfunded programs and investments are, the higher the volume of fiat necessary to bail them out.

Bitcoin definitely represents an improvement over current markets and financial structures. But I do not think its fair to label it a pure inflation protected asset or something that was designed to be anti inflation.
1688  Economy / Economics / Re: Miami will launch its own cryptocurrency and reward users with bitcoin on: August 08, 2021, 11:58:03 PM
According to reports, Miami will launch its own cryptocurrency MiamiCoin (MIA) on August 3 local time, to fund infrastructure projects or activities in the city and encourage people to move to Miami.






Having made posts discussing how newly minted altcoins could be used to subsidize social and economic causes. This attempt resonates with me.  Grin

Perhaps Joe Biden and democrats could emulate this attempt at subsidizing infrastructure by rolling out a CBDC intended to fund unbudgeted US infrastructure costs.

I hope they post updates, a project roadmap. Tangible content that would allow the public to follow the progress or lack thereof. And note in which essential areas projects like these need the most improvement. It is disappointing how little information there was available on the history of auroracoin and similar ventures.
1689  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: Bots on: August 08, 2021, 11:47:16 PM
Has anyone used bots? Are they worth the time and effort?



Trading bots aren't a plug and play method of earning profits.

To get the most from them, requires knowledge of trading and algorithm tweaking. I think trading bots are mainly a hobbyist and curiosity sector for active and experienced traders to experiment with. Bots can be coded to fill in some of the blank areas where traders are disadvantaged. That would probably be the area where bots are most useful.

A better plug and play method of earning crypto is staking on celsius and platforms that offer decent interest APR IMO.

There are also blockchain and NFT based games like splinterlands that do airdrops and have crypto earning potential.
1690  Economy / Economics / Re: Enjoy comunism (II): Venezuela to cut 6 zeros from its currency on: August 08, 2021, 11:25:03 PM
Cubans were recently revolting against the government in cuba. Venezuela and north korea may try to improve economic conditions for citizens, to prevent them from revolting as well.

Venezuela was once one of the wealthiest nations in south america. In the present day I do not believe they have the start up capital or technical sophistication to rollout a CBDC. Their failing infrastructure, such as the caracas dam which once supplied free electricity that venezuelans used to mine bitcoin appears to have fallen into disrepair. With no real campaign or movement devoted towards improving matters. A venezuelan CBDC rollout would require additional infrastructure and support which venezuela appears unable to supply or maintain.

If venezuela was serious about improving their economy, they would focus on crude production and refinement. To create jobs and give the local economy a big push.
1691  Economy / Economics / Re: Some inspiration in the future of Bitcoin from the history of paper money on: August 04, 2021, 11:58:33 PM
Before bitcoin, there was Ron Paul proposing to audit the federal reserve. Fringe minorities proposing to re-implement a gold standard. Glass steagall versus the Volcker rule. Keynes vs Hayek. In my state there was actually a guy who owned reserves of gold and silver who tried to mint his own coins. There were malcontents of fiat currency before bitcoin. I wonder what happened to all of those people, it has been a long time since I've seen or heard any mention of them.


1. No monetary system is fixed. Human beings always tend to refine their system;


The system can be improved. Or it can regress and devolve over time as people forget past history. Knowledge and learning can be forgotten and lost. Technology and standards can fall. As was occurring in space and aerospace industries before space x came along.

Modern monetary systems are definitely regressing in ways. From a loss of a gold standard. To work increasingly being taxed to subsidize nonwork in an unsustainable loop.
1692  Economy / Economics / Re: China - everything is fine! But everything is bad ... on: August 04, 2021, 11:46:06 PM
Humans can break with a particular level of suffering, and once they break, the government will collapse.


I was wondering if chinese might revolt against corruption, brutality and inhumane treatment. Then I remembered much of china's history is defined by one corrupt and inhumane ruling regime or another. Chinese rulers have a long and brutal history of punishing lawbreakers and dissidents using the most painful, unusual and barbaric methods they could devise. This trend stems far back in their history, long before communists had taken over the country. In some ways, a case might be made for chinese communists being more tolerant and humane than previous ruling dynasty's from china's past history.

To cite one possible example of this:

Quote
Lingchi (simplified Chinese: 凌迟; traditional Chinese: 凌遲), translated variously as the slow process, the lingering death, or slow slicing, and also known as death by a thousand cuts, was a form of torture and execution used in China from roughly 900 until it was banned in 1905. It was also used in Vietnam and Korea. In this form of execution, a knife was used to methodically remove portions of the body over an extended period of time, eventually resulting in death.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingchi

Does anyone remember traditional chinese foot binding of women?

It is possible that suffering has been culturally mandated by chinese culture for many years. Which could leave them without much in the way of alternative ideas of how to do things.
1693  Other / Archival / Re: The impact of Musk & Saylor's Tweets on Prices & Investor Sentiment on: August 04, 2021, 11:08:16 PM

In general, it turns out that Musk's tweets were negative. The same cannot be said about his tweets about DOGE. They are almost all positive.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMl9RsptX-8

Elon Musk at NBC - SNL - DOGECOIN to the MOON May 8 2021

Where does doge's massive crash after Elon Musk's "dogecoin, to the moon!!" appearance on SNL factor in.

Its very strange to me that Elon Musk's tweets could affect markets at all. Musk not being an investor or someone with significant investments in stock, bonds or tradeable assets.

Why would markets, hedge funds or traders care what Elon Musk thinks about bitcoin, dogecoin or anything for that matter. If Elon Musk's tweets affected tesla stock, that might make sense. Aside from tesla buying more than $1 billion in BTC I don't know that there's any real correlation.
1694  Economy / Exchanges / Re: Coinbase New FUD on: August 04, 2021, 10:55:15 PM
It is possible coinbase has had one class action lawsuit or another filed against it since its founding.

Quote
Coinbase Hit by Lawsuit Over Alleged Insider Trading

Mar 5, 2018

According to a court document dated last Thursday, the case has been brought by Jeffery Berk, representing a group of investors that placed trading orders on Coinbase or its order book trading platform GDAX from Dec. 19–21, 2017.

Based on the complaint, the case takes aim at Coinbase’s launch of bitcoin cash (BCH) trading in the same month, with the plaintiffs accusing the company of tipping off insiders ahead of the formal launch. As such, the group accuses the firm of negligence, and is seeking damages, the amount of which will be decided at trial.

As previously reported, San Francisco-based Coinbase first announced in August that it would support bitcoin cash – a new crypto asset that was forked from the bitcoin blockchain in November. At the time, the exchange said the new service would go live by Jan. 1, after which investors would be able to withdraw bitcoin cash.

When Coinbase launched BCH trading on Dec. 20, BCH prices spiked just prior to the announcement and accusations soon appeared on social media suggesting that employees of the firm might have tipped off others in advance. The company responded to the claims by announcing it would conduct an investigation into whether any staff members may have violated its insider trading rules.

https://www.coindesk.com/coinbase-hit-lawsuit-alleged-insider-trading

....


The above seemed like a damning case against coinbase from 2017 where the value of bitcoin cash began to climb on exchanges, even before coinbase had officially released the announcement of listing it.

There was another class action lawsuit filed against coinbase, that I remember from years ago. Coinbase accepted orders and money from clients trying to buy crypto. Weeks, or in some cases months passed, without clients receiving the crypto they paid for. That was another class action lawsuit filed against coinbase years ago. I would post a link. Unfortunately search engines are mostly listing the most recent class action lawsuit filed against coinbase. It doesn't seem like I will have an easy chance finding a source for it.

Long story short, there have been so many lawsuits filed against corporations like coinbase its hard to keep track of them all.
1695  Economy / Economics / Libertarians built a Bitcoin economy in a small town, feds shut it down on: August 03, 2021, 10:16:30 PM
Quote
THE SACKING OF A CRYPTO MECCA

TheThe sky was still dark when the agents arrived at Leverett St. in Keene, New Hampshire, a leafy block of kit houses at the quiet edges of the small college town. They settled on a house at the corner, surrounding it with two armored BearCat G3s and a fleet of unmarked SUVs. Both BearCats had gunners stationed in a hatch on the roof, clad in camo fatigues. The only light came from the blue-and-red sirens, strobing off houses in every direction.

Inside, Ian Freeman was asleep with his girlfriend and their small dog Coconut. He woke to the sound of exploding glass. A ramming pole, tethered to the front of one of the BearCats, had plowed through a first floor window, tearing off the frame as it backed up. Freeman threw on a bathrobe and stumbled downstairs, still shaking off sleep. There was shattered glass everywhere. His first thought was that some stranger had thrown a brick. But then he heard a whirring sound, a small hovering drone that police had deployed to explore the house. He looked outside and saw blinding lights. Coming into focus beside the lights, men pointed rifles at him.

One mile east, Freeman’s talk radio co-host Aria DiMezzo stumbled downstairs in her underwear only to be met by a tactical assault team, who told her they would shoot her if she moved. At the town’s Bitcoin Embassy, a group of agents tore a Bitcoin dispenser from the concrete floor, leaving four symmetrical holes where it had been bolted down. They took another machine from the Campus Convenience in central Keene, another from a bar called Murphy’s Taproom, and a fourth from the Red Arrow Diner in Nashua. Together, they held more than $50,000 in cash.

There was even more money in Freeman’s home, seized by federal agents and later reported to the courts in a forfeiture filing: $180,000 in cash, a 100oz Swiss silver bar (worth roughly $3,000), and a platinum coin stamped with a portrait of Ron Paul. There were boxes full of gold-laced bills called goldbacks that were too obscure to even put a value on — some taken from Freeman’s home, others seized in transit by the postal service. The biggest prize was two Casascius physical Bitcoins, worth 100 and 1 btc respectively, first available in 2011 and now worth more than $4 million.


For police, the money was nearly as important as Freeman himself. For years, they had been tracking his Bitcoin business for evidence of money laundering or other crimes. As far as they were concerned, it was all part of an unlicensed money transmittal scheme processing millions of dollars a year. The purpose of the raid was to break that system, tearing out Freeman’s Bitcoin machines one by one and seizing any illegal proceeds along with them.

News of the raid spread fast. A local Linux developer and crypto activist named Christopher Waid rushed to Freeman’s house to film the last gasps of the raid, catching footage of the BearCats, the drone, and the bizarre militarism of it all. When he was done there, he headed to the Bitcoin Embassy, where a crowd had gathered to watch police carry out duffel bags and plastic tubs full of loose paper. Despite the name, the embassy was little more than a side room to a convenience store. The most radical part of it was the bookshelf, offering DevOps manuals alongside copies of Ludwig von Mises’ Socialism and Robert A. Heinlein’s The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.

For years, Freeman had been warning about federal encroachment, broadcasting every night on the radio about the tightening fist of the state. His Bitcoin venture was part of a broader Free State movement in New Hampshire, turning a quiet corner of New England into a libertarian paradise. Now the counterforce was here, like a prophecy fulfilled, and the Free Staters understood their role perfectly. They were ready with cameras, asking for warrants and litigating precisely where they were allowed to stand while the raid dragged on. When police herded the crowd across the street, it just meant they had to yell that much louder.

“You guys are the fucking enemy!” one of the protestors told the agents, as they carried out another tub of papers. “You’re not protecting anybody’s fucking freedom. You’re all a bunch of gangsters.”

By the end of the day on March 16th, six people were in custody: including Freeman, his girlfriend, and a married couple who lived nearby. Two co-hosts on the radio show were also named: DiMezzo and a man born as Richard Paul, who had legally changed his name to Nobody in protest of the bureaucratic state. According to the indictment, all six had been involved in Freeman’s Bitcoin dispenser business. An indictment filed under seal the day before the raid counted out thirteen instances when someone from the group had contacted a bank on behalf of the business since April 2017, listing each call or email as a count of wire fraud.

The defense lawyers describe the project in more idealistic terms. “The defendants were a loosely affiliated group of people with libertarian political leanings that included a strong belief that Bitcoin was a great development for those who champion human freedom,” one filing reads.


There are lots of people like that in Keene, although you might not guess it from driving through. A quiet college town of less than 25,000 people, the libertarian migration to New Hampshire (also known as the Free State Project) has turned it into a magnet for cryptocurrency buffs, some of whom have unexpectedly become millionaires after the Bitcoin boom of the past few years. In 2019, Forbes called the town a “crypto mecca,” citing more than 20 businesses accepting some form of cryptocurrency payment. Many of those businesses were solicited directly by Freeman and his cohort, who saw cryptocurrency as a kind of moral crusade against the belligerence of the US government.

Freeman is best known as the host of Free Talk Live, a libertarian talk radio show syndicated to 185 radio stations across the country. Many of the activists outside the embassy had appeared on the show at some point, including Waid. When the BearCat rammed through the window, it was ramming into Freeman’s studio, a maze of cables and audio racks where the show is recorded, mixed, and distributed.

Free Talk Live gave Freeman the power to draw together a community of crypto-minded libertarians in Keene, but it also amplified his ugliest mistakes. Most recently, it gave center stage to his still-active lawsuit against New Hampshire’s mask mandate. (“I was never really convinced that COVID was a particularly dangerous thing,” Freeman tells me when I ask about the case.) The show also gave an early home to the infamous “crying nazi” Christopher Cantwell, who appeared on Free Talk Live when he was still trying to brand himself as a libertarian anti-police activist. (“When he became a racist, I fired him from Free Talk Live,” Freeman says. “He just kept getting deeper into that world.”)

The chaotic world of libertarian talk radio made Freeman’s show a natural gathering point for the early Bitcoin community. Free Talk’s first call about Bitcoin came in December 2010, the same month Satoshi Nakamoto disappeared from active development of the Bitcoin spec.

Hyped on the Free Talk Live site as the first consumer media mention of Bitcoin, the episode now comes off as a bizarre time capsule. The first 20 minutes are taken up with a discussion of voluntarist alternatives to the fire department and municipal road maintenance, after which the conversation turns to crystal meth and Venezuela. Around 40 minutes in, a caller named Jeremy from Australia chimes in to talk about a new digital currency called Bitcoin.

“It was about six cents for a Bitcoin in August and now it’s 26 cents, so it’s already increased quite a bit,” Jeremy says.

“My initial concern was that it’s essentially a fiat currency, because it’s not backed by anything,” Freeman responds. “It’s a neat idea. I don’t know if it’s yet a fantastic alternative.”

Freeman came around to Bitcoin in the months that followed, eventually fitting it into broader complaints about the way the US government controls the value of the dollar. The price kept rising: within three years it had cleared $1,000, then $10,000 four years after that. According to the forfeiture documents, Freeman’s cryptocurrency holdings are now worth well over $5 million.

As more money flooded into cryptocurrency, something else came with it. The version of Bitcoin that’s become popular in recent years is less political and more straightforwardly interested in making money. Venture capital has embraced the blockchain as an opportunity on the same scale as targeted advertising or independent-contractor labor schemes. It’s rare to hear concerns about the Federal Reserve at a Bitcoin conference these days, and few are interested in standoffs with regulators — there’s just no money in it.

But if you’re ready to work with regulators, the money is almost endless. Coinbase, an early adherent to federal Know Your Customer rules, is now processing more than $100 billion of transactions every month, while the company itself is valued at $50 billion. New wallet regulations are creeping forward from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and while some activists cry foul, most entrepreneurs have welcomed them with open arms. At the Bitcoin 2021 conference in Miami, the Winklevoss twins promised a crowd of real estate moguls and retail investors that anyone who owns a Bitcoin will one day be a millionaire.


For true believers like Freeman, that shift has been bittersweet. “There’s nothing wrong with somebody seeing it from that perspective and just wanting to invest in a thing and be successful,” Freeman tells me. “But in the libertarian Bitcoin community up here, they see it differently. They see it as a dramatic transfer of power.”

But if Mt. Gox and the Silk Road represented a transfer of power, the power is now shifting back the other way. In 2017, international raids took down BTC-e (then the largest unregulated exchange), with a money laundering sting revealed the following year. An Ohio man was arrested last year for running a Bitcoin tumbler called Helix, which mixed blockchain records with obscure transactions; a month after the New Hampshire raid, a Russian-Swedish national was arrested for running a similar service called Bitcoin Fog.

In public statements, prosecutors refer to these as “darknet” cases, treating the unregulated Bitcoin system as a loosely organized criminal conspiracy. There is a lot of tainted money on the blockchain: money from drug sales, online scams, or stolen from individual users as part of a breach. Tumblers and anonymous exchanges let criminals escape with that money, so law enforcement agencies are trying to shut them down one by one, like plugging holes in a dam. With so much dirty money trying to get clean, the prosecutions take on a kind of fatalist logic. Any unregulated exchange will eventually be used for money-laundering; any unmonitored flow of coins will eventually be an accomplice to a crime.

For the Keene project, keeping those coins unmonitored was the whole point. Their goal was to maintain the privacy and freedom of Bitcoin’s original design while staying just inside the bounds of the law. But to the federal government, it just looked like one more hole to be plugged.

By the end of May, both Freeman and DiMezzo were out on bail, with the trial scheduled for October 2022. Waid announced Freeman’s release with a wry blog post on Free Keene: “After Significant Delays Hostage Takers Release Ian From From Merrimack County Spiritual Retreat.”

The conditions of the bail are stringent, befitting the aftermath of the raid: they can’t leave their homes, trade Bitcoin, or communicate with other co-defendants. That last provision created significant problems for Free Talk Live, since it meant the main two co-hosts could no longer speak to each other without risking more jail time. Within a few weeks, the court granted a relief order letting them talk for the purposes of coordinating the show, and the show returned to its usual troublemaking. By the end of July, they were drumming up support for a ballot measure that would allow New Hampshire to secede from the United States.

Nobody took a more adversarial stance toward the legal system and stayed in jail for months longer. According to court records, his calls with the public defender broke down into screaming matches. After two weeks in jail, he made a phone call so alarming that it halted his efforts for pretrial release. The recording itself is sealed, but a filing gives alarming titles for the exhibits, including “audio clip — needs to die,” “audio clip — start shooting pigs,” and “audio clip — kill himself if sentenced.”

Prosecutors say he made threats against his public defender’s life, and the public defender withdrew from the case the next day, putting the bail hearing on hold. As late as August, he was still in jail. Supporters rallied outside the corrections building, waving signs that said “Free Nobody.”


Freeman’s cohort had always lived at the margins of the broader Free State Project — but after the arrest, a new wave of libertarian activism sprung up around him. The Free Keene website became a flurry of daily news about bail hearings and protests. Waid started a website to support “the Crypto6,” as he called them. Soon, T-shirts bearing the name were a regular sight around town. A longtime Free State activist named Dave Ridley started organizing jail rallies, lending more local credibility to the cause.

As the jail rallies tapered off, Ridley turned to a more ostentatious kind of activism: branding himself as “Bitcoin Gandhi” and launching a 24-day march from Keene to Concord dressed in robes in a historically accurate Gandhi costume. A string of YouTube videos show him walking down the narrow shoulders of two-lane highways, picking up trash and occasionally being questioned by confused but genial highway patrollers. In an open letter to the head of New England’s General Services Agency, Ridley called for the federal government to distance itself from the case, saying, “escalations of this type indicate a Venezuelan-style slide into currency-fascism.” The month after, Ridley’s Gandhi alter ego took part in another protest outside the Concord federal building with Mr. Bitcoin, a Mr. Met-style foam suit embodiment of a physical Bitcoin.

Freeman was familiar with this kind of civil disobedience, acting out to showcase the brutality of the carceral status quo. Years earlier, Freeman had smoked marijuana on the main street of Keene, daring local cops to arrest him for a crime that usually goes unpunished. (A friend filmed the encounter from across the street.) A longer running gag is Freeman’s refusal to pay municipal fines, litigating every parking ticket or summons until the bureaucracy finds it easier to simply give up.

Looking at his Bitcoin business, it can be hard to tell where that activism ends and the straightforward business begins. Freeman’s machines were real, and he was making money by building out cryptocurrency infrastructure like any entrepreneur. But he arranged the business in a self-consciously risky way, avoiding financial licensing and other measures that insulate many Bitcoin businesses from prosecution. Even more than his Wall Street competitors, Freeman was deeply familiar with cryptocurrency prosecutions. He knew that his Bitcoin dispenser left him exposed, but it never slowed him down.

Freeman believes he was under investigation as early as 2018, when he says a federal agent approached Renee Spinella with questions about Freeman’s Bitcoin dealings. Spinella refused to inform on Freeman; she and her husband were among the six arrested during the raids. But it was an ominous sign, the first indication of a federal case against Freeman’s Bitcoin business.

Still, it wasn’t enough to make Freeman drop the project. As he tells it, his Bitcoin work was too important to give up, a kind of moral crusade against the American state and its ability to wage war.

“I was on a mission to spread Bitcoin,” Freeman says. “To give people an opportunity to get out of this government money system that funds evil and funds violence and funds war. Dollar by dollar, people need to get out of that system.”

Freeman also didn’t think the FBI could make a case. “We believed that this was legal,” he says. “There was a legal opinion written by our church attorney that looked at both federal and state regulations and he said, this is just a sale of a product; this isn’t money transmission.”

That opinion, prepared by the Shire Free Church, rests on a unique technical point that makes Freeman’s Bitcoin dispensers more like vending machines than an ATM. The machines look like a Cupertino-fried version of your standard cash machine, but each one holds its own wallet, akin to a stash of Bitcoins held physically inside the machine. So instead of transmitting your money from somewhere else, Freeman argues it’s merely dispensing a locally controlled inventory. It’s a clever distinction, although one can see how the FBI might not be convinced.


Freeman was operating the business openly and the New Hampshire Banking Department never told him to shut it down, but he kept receiving ominous signs from law enforcement. Earlier this year, he was cultivated by a stranger who claimed to be a drug dealer — and who Freeman believes was actually an undercover FBI agent.

“This guy had been a Bitcoin buyer, seemed like a decent guy. He’d shown up at one of our crypto meetups,” Freeman says. “He wasn’t even talking to me personally, but I was within earshot and I heard him say he was a heroin and ecstasy dealer and it was like, ‘Red alert! We have a possible fed here! You’re either a federal agent or you’re a fucking moron.’” Freeman says he recognized the legal danger and refused to sell to the man, thinking he’d avoided a money laundering charge
.

But if Freeman was ready to butt heads with the federal government, he wasn’t ready for the dramatic violence of the raid. “They could have just come and knocked,” Freeman says. “No one had to get their windows busted in.”

He also wasn’t ready for the full scope of the charges. Reviewing the case now, he’s particularly alarmed by the charge of operating a “continuing financial crimes enterprise,” which was levied against him specifically. It seems to have been triggered by the Shire Free Church allegedly bringing in more than $5 million in gross receipts over two years, which puts it in a different class of criminal organization. When we spoke, Freeman was still expecting more charges to emerge from ongoing grand jury proceedings.

“It was worse than I expected it to be,” he tells me. “And they’re not done yet.”

Once DiMezzo was released, one of her biggest surprises was the bail restriction on Bitcoin. It’s a reasonable request from prosecutors — you can’t let an accused diamond smuggler sell diamonds — but it’s meant a huge change in her lifestyle because, unlike most cryptocurrency enthusiasts, DiMezzo actually uses Bitcoin as money. She tells me she made about 80 percent of her purchases directly off the blockchain before the arrest, usually businesses in the Keene area that have set up Bitcoin payments through a local point-of-sale system called AnyPay. DiMezzo says she could eat at a different restaurant every night and always pay in crypto. This isn’t how Bitcoin works for most people and it can feel like Keene’s crypto mecca is a kind of island, blissfully cut off from the broader motion of cryptocurrency.

After the raid, the island is shrinking. In a phone call from the Merrimack jail, Freeman’s co-host Nobody spoke to me bitterly about Bitcoin developers’ refusal to increase the block size, a disagreement that ultimately led to the 2017 Bitcoin Cash split. His side lost that fight — the block size didn’t change, pushing the price of Bitcoin up while on-blockchain transactions got slower and slower. The Keene contingent still uses Bitcoin Cash where possible or fully anonymous alternatives like Monero, but it’s a much harder sell than Bitcoin.

The financial side of Bitcoin (the side you would find partying in Miami) isn’t interested in Bitcoin Cash. They don’t care about on-chain transactions or anonymity or anything else that would add friction to the vast sums of money pouring into cryptocurrency. For most of the new arrivals, Bitcoin is about profit, not politics.

“There’s that division,” Freeman says, “between the people who want to be regulated and controlled and people who see [cryptocurrency] as a new freedom that we have.”

That division is particularly stark after the raids, now that supporters are trying to raise money and awareness. It would be a good time to have rich and powerful friends, but Freeman doesn’t have any expectation that the institutional Bitcoin world will step in. “They probably won’t speak up in any of our cases,” Freeman tells me. “We’re irrelevant to them.”

Bitcoin was born as a way to escape from all this, to build a monetary system outside the reach of the dollar, the Fed, or the government. That was the dream that first drew Freeman into Bitcoin, before it was any more plausible of an investment than gold-laced currency or silver coins. In the decade since, Silicon Valley and Wall Street have gotten friendlier with Bitcoin, and prosecutors have learned how to tame it — but Freeman sees the same dream of escape still living beneath it all.

“They’re gonna regulate the exchanges,” he says. “We know that. They’re going to regulate the banks, wherever else they can apply pressure… But regardless of how much effort they put into trying to control cryptocurrency, it will fail because of the decentralized nature of it.”

It is a point of almost religious faith for him. No matter how hard the clampdown, it will be incomplete. The wilder forces will survive just out of reach.

“They can’t control Bitcoin,” he tells me. “That’s why they hate it.”

https://www.theverge.com/22599932/bitcoin-raid-keene-new-hampshire-ian-freeman-libertarian-prosecution

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I'm surprised this hasn't received more publicity.

There is an odd angle here where they praise bitcoin cash and criticize bitcoin for not adopting larger block sizes.

There have been many regional cryptocurrency projects like auroracoin in iceland. Many articles and stories published about small villages and towns rolling out their own cryptocurrency for local use. Unfortunately I have not seen anything in the way of updates or news on these ventures.

How's the weather in el salvador. If raids are on the table, I wonder if bitcoin safe havens will see a good influx of crypto migrants. Crypto refugees?

1696  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Why can Bitcoin change human relations of production? on: August 03, 2021, 09:51:06 PM
I think bitcoin's influence on production. Could be similar to the effect crowdfunding and crowdsourcing have had. It grants start ups and manufacturing sectors more options and greater flexibility. In contrast to what they had previously under more traditional methods. Early in the pandemic, I seem to remember medical professionals seeking funding on this forum for a COVID plasmid vaccine start up venture. That type of added flexibility in securing funding could definitely change the way manufacturing and production are done.

Cryptocurrencies could also cut down on the amount of unnecessary regulation and red tape involved. Resulting in a production process that is more efficient and streamlined.

On paper that may not seem like much. Considering bitcoin's market cap of around $1 trillion. Even if only a small fraction is devoted towards start ups and manufacturing ventures that produce things. The net sum of funding and results could be significant. Without factoring in ICOs, alt coins, NFTs and other branches of crypto.

Concern with "production," is more a political statement, than a narrative in crypto circles. As someone said above, I've never once seen or heard anyone in crypto mention bitcoin as being involved with production in any shape or form. It would be interesting to know where OP got the idea it was a common theme.
1697  Other / Off-topic / Re: Google's Quantum Computer Builds First-Ever Time Crystal on: August 03, 2021, 08:19:12 PM
science times is not a reputable source give me a reputable source and I will look into it and give my opinion but until then I am not giving science times a click or the attention.


https://www.quantamagazine.org/first-time-crystal-built-using-googles-quantum-computer-20210730/
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2285797-google-researchers-made-a-time-crystal-inside-a-quantum-computer/
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/google-time-crystal-discovery-big-170941870.html


Many media outlets repost news from other sites without checking credentials or sources.

Which has diminished the credibility of a high percentage of content published.

If it is true that more than 90% of media is owned by a tiny handful of corporations, wouldn't that mean that small and independent sources would be viewed as being more legitimate than centralized media.
1698  Economy / Gambling discussion / Re: Will you be betting more during the Olympics? on: August 03, 2021, 08:10:00 PM
Amateur sports are less consistent than professional level sports IMO. There is also less media coverage and less information available. These conditions could align to make amateur level sports like the olympics less profitable than the major leagues from a gambling perspective. The 4 year span between olympic events also makes things hard. To be aware of current events, a person would really have to keep up with sports on an amateur level to bet accurately.

On the flip side the reduced focus on amateur sports could mean bookies invest less time and effort into setting odds or matches that are dangerous to bet. Corruption and cheating with illicit substances definitely do exist on an amateur level. As has been documented.

1699  Other / Off-topic / Google's Quantum Computer Builds First-Ever Time Crystal on: August 03, 2021, 07:34:17 PM
Quote
Eureka! Google's quantum computing labs may have created the first-ever time crystal using their quantum computer. According to a recent research preprint titled "Observation of Time-Crystalline Eigenstate Order on a Quantum Processor" by researchers at Google and physicists from Princeton, Stanford, and other universities, they have created a new phase of matter that upends the laws of thermodynamics.

For many years, physicists have tried to create this novel phase that moves in a regular, repeating cycle that can sustain this constant change without using any energy. Despite the name, time crystal will not let Google build a time machine.

An article in The Next Web clarified two points about time crystal. First, it is a difficult concept to understand and harder to explain. Second, the team of researchers might have created a time crystal that they presented in their preprint research that has yet to receive a full peer review. Until then, the legitimacy of the study will still be in question.

Google announced that they collaborated with university physicists and created the world's first-ever time crystal. It is a new phase of matter that upends Sir Isaac Newton's law of thermodynamics.

For example, putting an ice cube in a glass of water introduces two different temperatures. Over time, the water gets colder while the ice cube gets warmer and melts. But eventually, the cold water will turn into room-temperature water or be in thermal equilibrium. According to Energy Education, the heat stops flowing when temperatures balance out.

TNW reported that the room temperature glass of water will always melt the ice cube because classical physics dictates that the universe is constantly moving towards entropy, which is the movement towards change. The entropy of a system will always be the same if there are no processes, which is not possible in the universe because stars explode, black holes are sucking, and people are lighting things on fire.

But with a time crystal, they do not necessarily follow Newton's first law of thermodynamics. A time crystal could theoretically maintain entropy even when they are in a process.

How Did Google Make a Time Crystal?
Time crystals were initially hypothesized in 2012, but they have just recently been realized. Google's quantum computer has accomplished what many thought was impossible.  

"Our work employs a time-reversal protocol that discriminates external decoherence from intrinsic thermalization, and leverages quantum typicality to circumvent the exponential cost of densely sampling the eigenspectrum," the authors wrote in the paper. "In addition, we locate the phase transition out of the DTC with experimental finite-size analysis. These results establish a scalable approach to study non-equilibrium phases of matter on current quantum processors."

According to Slash Gear, Google's quantum computer called Sycamore could use a chip with 20 of its qubits, maintaining two states simultaneously. Qubits are the controllable quantum particles, and tuning the interaction strength between each qubit allowed researchers to randomize interactions to achieve body localization. Then, microwaves upended the particles into their mirror orientation without using energy from the laser itself.

Google once made bold predictions in quantum computing as companies dig into the technology, which included improving batteries, making effective drugs and vaccines, and developing more effective fertilizers.

https://www.sciencetimes.com/articles/32564/20210731/googles-quantum-computer-builds-first-time-crystal-now-closer-building.htm


....



Google is claiming they invented a time crystal which violates the laws of thermodynamics. (Coincidentally this research has not yet been peer reviewed.)

These announcements aren't far from google claiming they have developed the foundation for building a perpetual motion machine which suffers no efficiency energy losses due to entropy and thermodynamics.

I wonder how farfetched and difficult to believe these quantum computing announcements will have to become before people are able to summon the skepticism for them they deserve.
1700  Economy / Economics / Senators push through bill with surprise crypto tax amendment on: August 02, 2021, 05:15:47 PM
Quote
In a surprise amendment to a massive bipartisan US infrastructure bill, senators have moved to collect tax on cryptocurrency – requiring transactions of more than $10,000 to be reported to the IRS.

With the amendment approved, the bill will now be presented to the House of Representatives and the US Senate where it could soon be written into law.

The new bill will focus on businesses – such as centralised exchanges (CEX) – creating a legal obligation for them to report transactions of more than $10k on their platforms to the Inland Revenue Service (IRS).

$10,000 transactions are already the standard threshold for IRS reporting requirements, so this latest proposal can be seen as an extension of the information reporting regime into the crypto space.

This follows a Treasury publication earlier in the year that suggested tax-enforcement on crypto assets were necessary in order “to minimise the incentives and opportunity to shift income out of the reporting regime”.

However, the real catalyst for this legislation has been a desperate need to fill a funding gap in the new $550 billion national infrastructure plan, which aims to modernise America’s aging transport and power grid systems.

The IRS has been examining crypto for a while. Last year it added a line about cryptocurrency to its individual tax returns.

Many leaders in the industry have already begun to push back against the new proposals, seeking to build congressional support against a policy that sees crypto as a cash cow.

“It’s hugely problematic – we’re pushing every lever right now to change it,” said Kristin Smith, Director of the Blockchain Center.

However, some industry leaders have welcomed the new tax proposals, pointing out the bill could form a level of protection for cryptocurrency.

“This is long-term super positive, as much as taxes suck,” said Robert Leshner, Founder at Compound Labs.

“Once the US government realises that crypto can pay for infrastructure, it’s going to be less tempting to squash it.”

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/senators-push-bill-surprise-crypto-115026952.html


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This is a strange news story. I thought they had already implemented tax reporting on transactions larger than $10,000 many months ago.

The infrastructure bill in question is a whopping 2,700 pages long. Its doubtful lawmakers, experts or analysts will have a chance to read everything contained in the bill before its voted on.

If regulation regarding cryptocurrencies were snuck into the bill at the last minute, I would expect it to address stablecoins. Which regulators seemed very concerned about only a short time ago.

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