Thanks for the reply Ian,
The so called 51% attack (which is actually the >50% attack) doesn't require a competing currency (just the hardware hashing power) - what such an attack potentially can do is either "undo" some tx's or refuse any new tx's (the latter being perhaps of more concern). In either case if such an attack were to be carried out it certainly would be an issue for Bitcoin (please also note the that Bitcoin is one word not two) although not necessarily fatal (ideas such as "proof of stake" are already being trialled in other alts). Also note that the cost (in terms of hardware) to carry out such an attack would be rather high.
The reason I mentioned a competing currency, is that their value could hypothetically increase if they could reuse new tx's (double spend?) Bitcoin's value to zero.
Thanks for the heads up about Bitcoin being one word.
Could the open source aspect of BC at a later date choose to increase BC supply?
It is a trivial change in terms of source code but without 100% of current users agreeing to migrate to the same new software it would result in a "hard fork" (which would turn Bitcoin into effectively 2 currencies at the point that the new software was used).
Wouldn't this likely cause a loss of value for Bitcoin?
Although IANAL the software was initially released in 2009 (and contains "Copyright (c) 2010 Satoshi Nakamoto" comments in the source code) so unless a patent was filed in 2010 I think it would not be possible to do so now.
In the U.S., I believe that Copyright is somewhat irrelevant in regards to protecting inventions. I also read somewhere that you can patent software without including the source code.
I don't think this would happen, but even if the 2010 Copyright was in public domain and not patentable, if further variations to the source code became novel and unique beyond the scope of obviousness or the natural evolution to the 2009 publication, then someone could file a patent claim. If they were granted one, it would present some interesting circumstances I would imagine.
This is all fascinating to me. Learning and trying to figure out the best way to start with Bitcoin and assess it's future seems like a daunting task.
Thanks again,
Levi