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Author Topic: The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same  (Read 1666 times)
Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 02:51:05 AM
 #1

I joined awhile back, when Bitcoin was $5 and shortly before the (first?) bubble when it rose to $30 and then deflated back down. I promptly forgot about Bitcoin till I heard of this meteoric rise to $250.

Found my old wallet, and cashed out. That was a nice surprise.

But, after having read some of the recent threads here, the predictions and analysis, for those of you who've joined more recently, let me tell you this:

Apart from a bit more polish surrounding wallets (i.e. Blockchain.info), NOTHING - I mean NOTHING - has changed.

The same confused, disorganized agenda behind Bitcoin exists. There's been no coalescence of goals and idealogy behind Bitcoin to make it anything more than the faux-currency it was back then. Where are the businesses accepting bitcoin? Am I still relegated to buying drugs (Silk Road), some falafel at Mezze Grill, or some alpaca socks?

It's been nearly two years, and a pathetic level of progress. This is still the same motley crew of anarchists buying into the anti-establishment ideology, nerds who get their jollies from thinking they are a part of an emerging new "paradigm", and thieves manipulating and attacking the market.

Some of you may not have had the benefit of perspective, but I can tell you: this is still just a little casino, and nothing more.

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justusranvier
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April 18, 2013, 02:53:43 AM
 #2

Where are the businesses accepting bitcoin?
Here, let me help you with that.
Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 02:58:24 AM
 #3

That wasn't much help, since the best that search came up with was a smattering of random business that accept Bitcoin, nearly all online. Again, its not much more than alpaca socks, some domain space, and perhaps now some mail order cookies. Wow. Two years of evangelizing and old-world-order-crushing technology and that's all I get? Damn, Bitcoin just sells itself!




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Matthew N. Wright
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April 18, 2013, 03:00:06 AM
Last edit: April 18, 2013, 03:49:45 AM by Matthew N. Wright
 #4

Who said it would only take 2 years? People need to change first for ideas to grow, and ideas need plenty of time to be debated and perfected. The smartest people in the world aren't even involved in Bitcoin or possibly even aware of it yet. Stop worrying about the price of Bitcoin and just use it.


Edit: in second reading, it seems your point was that "bitcoin still isn't a currency". To that I say, "Good!" because it would in fact make an awful one at that.

Elwar
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April 18, 2013, 03:01:37 AM
 #5

Where are the businesses accepting bitcoin?

You can buy anything on the Internet with bitcoins.

Do you plan on ever buying anything on the Internet?

http://www.bitspend.net

First seastead company actually selling sea homes: Ocean Builders https://ocean.builders  Of course we accept bitcoin.
Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 03:04:28 AM
 #6

Weren't you the self-appointed arbiter who planned to open up some sort of Bitcoin mediation, and then realized you were in over your head and got boooed out of the forums? You know, Mr. Wright, "you were always on my mind." Wink


Who said it would only take 2 years? People need to change first for ideas to grow, and ideas need plenty of time to be debated and perfected. The smartest people in the world aren't even involved in Bitcoin or possibly even aware of it yet. Stop worrying about the price of Bitcoin and just use it.


Edit: in second reading, it seems your point was that "bitcoin still isn't a currency". To that I say, "Good!" because it isn't designed to be one.

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Matthew N. Wright
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April 18, 2013, 03:06:41 AM
 #7

A lot has changed since then. I'm in a band now.

It always cracked me up to watch people complaining about things and not doing anything about them though. If your point was "Bitcoin is a failure because it hasn't brought down the governments yet", then I'd agree with you on that one. Bitcoin will never "bring down governments" and people who think it will will continue to make it a failure.

Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 03:06:57 AM
 #8

That's your answer? That there's some service acting as an exchange, taking a cut as they convert your BTC to an actual liquid currency to buy goods and services?

Bitcoins are soooo much more liquid and widespread than I imagined. My bad.

Where are the businesses accepting bitcoin?

You can buy anything on the Internet with bitcoins.

Do you plan on ever buying anything on the Internet?

http://www.bitspend.net

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Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 03:11:15 AM
 #9

Are you still running an English-teaching school in Japan (or Korea or where was it?)


To be fair, that was a well-written song. I'm being serious (which I know may be hard to believe because I'm being so sarcastic in this thread). But I used to listen to that song relatively often, which is why I remember it. I can't find the damn link anymore.

A lot has changed since then. I'm in a band now.

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Matthew N. Wright
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April 18, 2013, 03:16:51 AM
Last edit: April 18, 2013, 03:42:08 AM by Matthew N. Wright
 #10

I haven't taught English since a bit before I got into Bitcoin. I'm completely focused on digital currencies now. I may not be terrifically good at business, but I can't seem to stop making things. The threshold for adoption is insanely low in Bitcoin (hence the lack of quality standards) so it makes for a pretty good place to test out your business ideas. If you succeed, you get some bitcoins that you can potentially decide to swap out for a more useful currency to you. If you fail, thank everyone for humoring you while you learn, make up for any financial liabilities, and take your lessons with you to your next project.

I can see why people call Bitcoin a "scammer's paradise" for the exact same reason. It's easy to close shop on one ponzi and open up again the next day across the street. Just wait until people start using Ripple IOUs. That's gonna be a show you won't want to miss.


Elwar
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April 18, 2013, 03:24:17 AM
 #11

That's your answer? That there's some service acting as an exchange, taking a cut as they convert your BTC to an actual liquid currency to buy goods and services?

Bitcoins are soooo much more liquid and widespread than I imagined. My bad.

How is that any different from BitPay who allows merchants to accept bitcoins then converts those bitcoins into dollars for them?

This service allows people like me who would rather not use dollars switch over and leave the dollar.

Chicken and egg, the more people convert to only using bitcoins, the more merchants switch over.

So...ya, one side of the equation is taken care of.

First seastead company actually selling sea homes: Ocean Builders https://ocean.builders  Of course we accept bitcoin.
Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 03:43:59 AM
 #12

My point, which you missed but Mr. Wright caught, was that not more than a few inches have been made in progress towards achieving more liquidity with Bitcoin - both with respect to the operation of the exchanges and with respect to Bitcoin as a supposed currency.

On a simliar note, how on earth is MtGox still around, much less the dominant exchange? They kept flubbing up left and right when I last followed BTC. They'd blame problems on hackers, overloaded servers and then halt trading, even unwinding trades. Looks like they do the same thing. If there was ONE thing I expected to change since my last visit, it was that someone more technologically savvy would have opened up a more stable exchange. This fact alone tells me that all the rhetoric about making BTC ubiquitous and easy enough for the average folk to use was just hot air.

I just can't believe Mt. Gox still runs the show. If they weren't manipulating/frontrunning then, they'd be stupid not to do so now - seems like the BTC community is a codependent housewife who'll take the harshest beating and still make breakfast the next day for her man.



That's your answer? That there's some service acting as an exchange, taking a cut as they convert your BTC to an actual liquid currency to buy goods and services?

Bitcoins are soooo much more liquid and widespread than I imagined. My bad.

How is that any different from BitPay who allows merchants to accept bitcoins then converts those bitcoins into dollars for them?

This service allows people like me who would rather not use dollars switch over and leave the dollar.

Chicken and egg, the more people convert to only using bitcoins, the more merchants switch over.

So...ya, one side of the equation is taken care of.

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Crypto Canary
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April 18, 2013, 03:56:08 AM
 #13

Adoption has been sluggish even though news of bitcoin has been mainstream for the past couple of years because most people don't trust it's chaotic value. Most merchants will not use a currency they have to constantly adjust the price to (also people in general aren't going to spend something that might double in value in a month). It is not widely used in commerce because bitcoin is not really a currency, but a commodity. People hold bitcoin just to make money. It has become mostly self-serving with only a few bitcoin related services scattered around the edge. There has not been much of an increase in adoption because it's just not really that useful.
Shinobi (OP)
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April 18, 2013, 03:58:36 AM
 #14

Holliday, you listening? This man/woman knows what he/she is talking about.

"Bwa" hahaha, little one.

Adoption has been sluggish even though news of bitcoin has been mainstream for the past couple of years because most people don't trust it's chaotic value. Most merchants will not use a currency they have to constantly adjust the price to (also people in general aren't going to spend something that might double in value in a month). It is not widely used in commerce because bitcoin is not really a currency, but a commodity. People hold bitcoin just to make money. It has become mostly self-serving with only a few bitcoin related services scattered around the edge. There has not been much of an increase in adoption because it's just not really that useful.

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justusranvier
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April 18, 2013, 04:00:56 AM
 #15

Adoption has been sluggish
Is it really that hard to use Google?

http://blog.bitpay.com/2013/04/bitpay-eclipses-silk-road-in-bitcoin.html
Elwar
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April 18, 2013, 04:01:20 AM
 #16

Adoption has been sluggish even though news of bitcoin has been mainstream for the past couple of years because most people don't trust it's chaotic value. Most merchants will not use a currency they have to constantly adjust the price to (also people in general aren't going to spend something that might double in value in a month). It is not widely used in commerce because bitcoin is not really a currency, but a commodity. People hold bitcoin just to make money. It has become mostly self-serving with only a few bitcoin related services scattered around the edge. There has not been much of an increase in adoption because it's just not really that useful.

Almost every sentence if FUD.

First seastead company actually selling sea homes: Ocean Builders https://ocean.builders  Of course we accept bitcoin.
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April 18, 2013, 04:25:09 AM
 #17

I remember you OP.

We had a discussion about Bitcoin in 2011 and you were bashing it back then too (I had a different nick then). I couldn't find our original conversation because I had Theymos delete my old account and started out fresh but you definitely were spouting the same shit then. I point out flaws with the system in hopes that they can be corrected but you just bash it constantly. If you hate Bitcoin so much why don’t you go play somewhere else?

Matt is trying to be nice to you because he has screwed up so much that he needs to be a good boy for a while. I really wish we had the old Matt back because you would tongue lashed for about 10 pages until you give up crying.

I did find an example of you in 2011: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=19199.msg240867#msg240867

Matthew N. Wright
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April 18, 2013, 04:31:21 AM
Last edit: April 18, 2013, 04:51:49 AM by Matthew N. Wright
 #18

he needs to be a good boy for a while.

1 Corinthians 13: When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. But when I grew up, I put away childish things.

(Relevant quote above should in no way reflect any kind of support of la Biblia, a book of childish stories of make believe.)

Regardless of OP's intentions, people here need to stop seeing questions of legitimacy as an "attack on bitcoin". It wreaks of cultism and "bitcoin is too big to fail" fallacy. The emotional responses to very real criticisms in the OP are embarrassing.

Currency competition is the key. Bitcoin, the proof of concept experimental currency that acts like a commodity, is just one. Ripple is another. Keep 'em coming, and keep on the fence about all of them.

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April 18, 2013, 04:38:38 AM
 #19

Adoption has been sluggish even though news of bitcoin has been mainstream for the past couple of years because most people don't trust it's chaotic value. Most merchants will not use a currency they have to constantly adjust the price to (also people in general aren't going to spend something that might double in value in a month). It is not widely used in commerce because bitcoin is not really a currency, but a commodity. People hold bitcoin just to make money. It has become mostly self-serving with only a few bitcoin related services scattered around the edge. There has not been much of an increase in adoption because it's just not really that useful.

Almost every sentence if FUD.

And he's attacking credibility of posters who disagree with him.

"Weren't you the guy who..." It's like a bad Family Guy episode.
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April 18, 2013, 04:41:10 AM
 #20

Quote
I first got on the web a couple of years back, in 1993. Here it is 1995 and I can't buy anything I want on the web. There's nothing on it. It sucks. No one will ever want to use the web....


That's how ridiculous your line of reasoning sounds.
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