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Author Topic: Is the world ready for all-digital currencies?  (Read 2888 times)
zebedee
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March 15, 2013, 02:12:12 PM
 #21

The question is "Is Bitcoin ready for the world?"

At the moment, the answer is no.
I think you're wrong.  If the transaction fees were there, it would be ready very quickly.  Money talks.
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March 15, 2013, 02:48:01 PM
 #22

The question is "Is Bitcoin ready for the world?"

At the moment, the answer is no.
I think you're wrong.  If the transaction fees were there, it would be ready very quickly.  Money talks.

What about the MAX_BLOCK_SIZE problem?

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March 15, 2013, 02:51:04 PM
 #23

What about the MAX_BLOCK_SIZE problem?
The debate about whether or not it will be fixed appears to be over. It will be fixed; the only questions remaining are how and when.
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March 15, 2013, 03:03:41 PM
 #24

This. Too many scaling problems right now...BTC can barely handle satoshi dice, much less an entire nations economy.
Bitcoin can scale up to the world (at least 2000 tx/s) if it's doing financial transactions.

Bitcoin cannot scale up if it needs to do informational transactions (SatoshiDice) or micropayments on top.
Only 2000 tx/s? That's not much. Maybe it is banks that will not be able to scale with Bitcoin. As long as SD is paying their fees, then what is the problem?

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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March 15, 2013, 03:05:48 PM
 #25

I am on the opinion that transaction density does not matter that much. Bitcoin's lead over altcoins has been growing during the last 2 years. Now LTC is doing well but after the atlantis hype pump is over, it will resume downtrend. Even if Bitcoin could never do more than 28 tx/s, I think it will just lead to the service developers adopting meta layers of accounting, not to a demise of bitcoin. In one service that I have been developing, we initially wanted to maximize blockchain usage for transparency and trust. The last few weeks led us to make an about turn, and now we want to minimize it for the sake of quick and cheap transactions.

What the gold bugs here afaicr have not yet mentioned, is that during the days of gold standard, gold was actually rather little used in everyday transactions. The purchasing power of a small gold coin was about BTC10 at today's price. You can seldom carry home that much Wink The multinational corporations and nation-states also did not send gold to each other. The big gold was sitting in London and its existence financed the world trade pre-WWI. The analogy to blockchain is obvious.

I can envision that blockchain usage may actually go down as the number of bitcoin users grows in leaps and bounds. It is somewhat frightening to send irreversible transactions to anonymous counterparties. The majority will prefer chargebacks and layers of insurance. Once these services have been developed to cater to the needs of the new entrants, the current power users also drift towards them. We will soon see bitcoin banking that is completely detached from blockchain addresses (in the user interface).  

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March 15, 2013, 03:30:52 PM
 #26


I can envision that blockchain usage may actually go down as the number of bitcoin users grows in leaps and bounds. It is somewhat frightening to send irreversible transactions to anonymous counterparties. The majority will prefer chargebacks and layers of insurance. Once these services have been developed to cater to the needs of the new entrants, the current power users also drift towards them. We will soon see bitcoin banking that is completely detached from blockchain addresses (in the user interface).  
Or the opposite can happen. 2-of-2 transactions can offer counterparty-backed escrow for worry free anonymous transactions. Even better is to use third-party escrow schemes. Even bots are capable of offering insurance for multisignature transactions. Bitcoin banks of the future will not make money simply off of holding money. They will have to work for it like everyone else. They will have to make calculated risks on loans of those willing to lose as well as gain. Banks of the future will be large miners using their fee income to make loans using the time-tested art and craft of the loan officer's ability to make safe investments.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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March 15, 2013, 03:36:52 PM
 #27

Off-chain transactions are a type of disenfranchisement.  Nearly ever advantage that makes Bitcoin superior to the forms of money it can replace is nullified unless users are able to perform their transactions on the blockchain.
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March 15, 2013, 03:50:00 PM
 #28

Off-chain transactions are a type of disenfranchisement.  Nearly ever advantage that makes Bitcoin superior to the forms of money it can replace is nullified unless users are able to perform their transactions on the blockchain.

+1 Remember e-gold?

Concerned that blockchain bloat will lead to centralization? Storing less than 4 GB of data once required the budget of a superpower and a warehouse full of punched cards. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/IBM_card_storage.NARA.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
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March 15, 2013, 03:53:36 PM
 #29

Remember e-gold?
Remember mybitcoin.com? Linode? BitFloor?
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March 15, 2013, 04:04:22 PM
 #30

I am on the opinion that transaction density does not matter that much. Bitcoin's lead over altcoins has been growing during the last 2 years. Now LTC is doing well but after the atlantis hype pump is over, it will resume downtrend. Even if Bitcoin could never do more than 28 tx/s, I think it will just lead to the service developers adopting meta layers of accounting, not to a demise of bitcoin. In one service that I have been developing, we initially wanted to maximize blockchain usage for transparency and trust. The last few weeks led us to make an about turn, and now we want to minimize it for the sake of quick and cheap transactions.

What the gold bugs here afaicr have not yet mentioned, is that during the days of gold standard, gold was actually rather little used in everyday transactions. The purchasing power of a small gold coin was about BTC10 at today's price. You can seldom carry home that much Wink The multinational corporations and nation-states also did not send gold to each other. The big gold was sitting in London and its existence financed the world trade pre-WWI. The analogy to blockchain is obvious.

I can envision that blockchain usage may actually go down as the number of bitcoin users grows in leaps and bounds. It is somewhat frightening to send irreversible transactions to anonymous counterparties. The majority will prefer chargebacks and layers of insurance. Once these services have been developed to cater to the needs of the new entrants, the current power users also drift towards them. We will soon see bitcoin banking that is completely detached from blockchain addresses (in the user interface).  
You 100% nailed it! How many transactions are being done with actual gold? I'd guess, less than 1 tx/s. Bitcoin would be able to do 10000 tx/s, probably more.
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March 15, 2013, 04:06:49 PM
 #31

I am on the opinion that transaction density does not matter that much. Bitcoin's lead over altcoins has been growing during the last 2 years. Now LTC is doing well but after the atlantis hype pump is over, it will resume downtrend. Even if Bitcoin could never do more than 28 tx/s, I think it will just lead to the service developers adopting meta layers of accounting, not to a demise of bitcoin. In one service that I have been developing, we initially wanted to maximize blockchain usage for transparency and trust. The last few weeks led us to make an about turn, and now we want to minimize it for the sake of quick and cheap transactions.

What the gold bugs here afaicr have not yet mentioned, is that during the days of gold standard, gold was actually rather little used in everyday transactions. The purchasing power of a small gold coin was about BTC10 at today's price. You can seldom carry home that much Wink The multinational corporations and nation-states also did not send gold to each other. The big gold was sitting in London and its existence financed the world trade pre-WWI. The analogy to blockchain is obvious.

I can envision that blockchain usage may actually go down as the number of bitcoin users grows in leaps and bounds. It is somewhat frightening to send irreversible transactions to anonymous counterparties. The majority will prefer chargebacks and layers of insurance. Once these services have been developed to cater to the needs of the new entrants, the current power users also drift towards them. We will soon see bitcoin banking that is completely detached from blockchain addresses (in the user interface).  

This can happen but only if individual users can send and receive Bitcoins for small transactions say under 20 USD (2013 dollars) if they so wish via the blockchain. Take that away and the whole point of Bitcoin is gone. Yes one can build an e-gold or PayPal type service on top of Bitcoin, but if that type of service becomes the only practical option for the average user then what exactly has Bitcoin accomplished?

Concerned that blockchain bloat will lead to centralization? Storing less than 4 GB of data once required the budget of a superpower and a warehouse full of punched cards. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/IBM_card_storage.NARA.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
rpietila
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March 15, 2013, 04:20:56 PM
 #32

I am on the opinion that transaction density does not matter that much. Bitcoin's lead over altcoins has been growing during the last 2 years. Now LTC is doing well but after the atlantis hype pump is over, it will resume downtrend. Even if Bitcoin could never do more than 28 tx/s, I think it will just lead to the service developers adopting meta layers of accounting, not to a demise of bitcoin. In one service that I have been developing, we initially wanted to maximize blockchain usage for transparency and trust. The last few weeks led us to make an about turn, and now we want to minimize it for the sake of quick and cheap transactions.

What the gold bugs here afaicr have not yet mentioned, is that during the days of gold standard, gold was actually rather little used in everyday transactions. The purchasing power of a small gold coin was about BTC10 at today's price. You can seldom carry home that much Wink The multinational corporations and nation-states also did not send gold to each other. The big gold was sitting in London and its existence financed the world trade pre-WWI. The analogy to blockchain is obvious.

I can envision that blockchain usage may actually go down as the number of bitcoin users grows in leaps and bounds. It is somewhat frightening to send irreversible transactions to anonymous counterparties. The majority will prefer chargebacks and layers of insurance. Once these services have been developed to cater to the needs of the new entrants, the current power users also drift towards them. We will soon see bitcoin banking that is completely detached from blockchain addresses (in the user interface).  

This can happen but only if individual users can send and receive Bitcoins for small transactions say under 20 USD (2013 dollars) if they so wish via the blockchain. Take that away and the whole point of Bitcoin is gone. Yes one can build an e-gold or PayPal type service on top of Bitcoin, but if that type of service becomes the only practical option for the average user then what exactly has Bitcoin accomplished?

In my off-the-sleeve thinking, $1 per transaction is not punitive. Making a blockchain transaction in the future will anyway be rare. And I currently see not much reason why it would even become that expensive. Making a physical gold transaction costs you about $50 these days.

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March 15, 2013, 04:42:10 PM
 #33

... Making a physical gold transaction costs you about $50 these days.

Which is why e-gold was invented 17 years ago in 1996. Creating  e-gold / PayPal clones on top of Bitcoin is not the solution at all to the blockchain scaling problems. 

Concerned that blockchain bloat will lead to centralization? Storing less than 4 GB of data once required the budget of a superpower and a warehouse full of punched cards. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/IBM_card_storage.NARA.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
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March 15, 2013, 05:24:20 PM
 #34

E-gold "failed" due to being too big to hide.

Bitcoin hides by being ubiquitous and by not requiring any more resources than any normal Joe Sixpack's home entertainment centre.

So basically as long as Joe Sixpack can still mine with his full node at home while watching Great War of Independence movies or Super Bowl games or whatever and cleaning his gun collection, he might be able to sleep at night without his gun in his hand, feeling reasonably secure that the Feds aren't going to kick his door down in the middle of the night and cart him off to Gitmo for being a patriot.

If the bitcoin services cited had not been run by scammers and/or incompetents, they would likely have followed in e-gold's footsteps. As it was, they shot themselves before their doors got kicked in by the Feds.

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March 15, 2013, 05:58:43 PM
 #35

E-gold "failed" due to being too big to hide.

Bitcoin hides by being ubiquitous and by not requiring any more resources than any normal Joe Sixpack's home entertainment centre.

So basically as long as Joe Sixpack can still mine with his full node at home while watching Great War of Independence movies or Super Bowl games or whatever and cleaning his gun collection, he might be able to sleep at night without his gun in his hand, feeling reasonably secure that the Feds aren't going to kick his door down in the middle of the night and cart him off to Gitmo for being a patriot.

If the bitcoin services cited had not been run by scammers and/or incompetents, they would likely have followed in e-gold's footsteps. As it was, they shot themselves before their doors got kicked in by the Feds.

-MarkM-


It also failed because it was proprietary.  PayPal has this same problem. I have funds in PayPal and want to pay someone that has a Webmoney account or maybe an M-PESA account. Sure there may be an exchanger that charges 5% or more in fees, but it is not practical. It is like an AOL user sending an email to a CompuServe user in 1990. Two incompatible proprietary systems. Now today with Bitcoin if I have coins in MtGox and want to send them to someone with a Walletbit account this is simple do via the blockchain. Just like today someone with a gmail account can send an email to someone with a live account.

Make blockchain transactions impractical for the average user and one has destroyed the very essence of Bitcoin. This is why increasing the maximum blocksize to allow Bitcoin to scale with growth is imperative. Joe Sixpack will still be able to mine with his full node at home but he may have to forgo the sixpack and use the funds to invest in a better Internet connection and upgrade his computer equipment.

Concerned that blockchain bloat will lead to centralization? Storing less than 4 GB of data once required the budget of a superpower and a warehouse full of punched cards. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/IBM_card_storage.NARA.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
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March 15, 2013, 06:03:37 PM
 #36

Today we have deep web, darknet and similar technology that was unavailable at e-gold times. As long as the coins can be withdrawn to blockchain at any minute, it is doable. Most of it depends from service provider. Compare MtGox, Silk Road and MyBitcoin. The same basic principle, first have coins immediately available but non-anonymous and can withold your coins, second is both very anonymous and coins available, third is slightly anonymous but coins unavailable.

I agree that building traditional service upon Bitcoin destroys most of Bitcoin advantages. But it is already done and for some uses it is working.

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March 15, 2013, 06:06:12 PM
 #37

But it is already done and for some uses it is working.
That's fine for people who are willing to make the tradeoff.

There are some people, however, who want to limit Bitcoin so that most users will have no choice but to to use off-chain transactions. That's what I mean by disenfranchisement.
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March 15, 2013, 06:07:40 PM
 #38

I forgot Joe's online multiplayer first person shooters, or virtual militia training as he might prefer to think of it. I used the term "entertainment centre" thinking that kind of implies pretty much the most excessive or borderline-excessive e-penis-enabler on the block. Smiley

So I hope that may is more about the possibility he isn't keeping up with all the latest games than a hint even the needs of such as those might be dwarfed by the needs of his full node...

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March 15, 2013, 06:08:33 PM
 #39

But it is already done and for some uses it is working.
That's fine for people who are willing to make the tradeoff.

There are some people, however, who want to limit Bitcoin so that most users will have no choice but to to use off-chain transactions. That's what I mean by disenfranchisement.

+1

Concerned that blockchain bloat will lead to centralization? Storing less than 4 GB of data once required the budget of a superpower and a warehouse full of punched cards. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/IBM_card_storage.NARA.jpg https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card
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March 15, 2013, 06:16:52 PM
 #40

Bitcoin is not limited now and will scale in future. I'm confident about that. For me it seems that someone is using multiple accounts to spread FUD on this forum. Or simply have installed Norton Antivirus on his Celeron laptop with 5400RPM drive. Bitcoin is scaling, will scale and is going to be usable for blockchain transactions in future.

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