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Author Topic: Julian Assange on Bitcoin  (Read 1838 times)
btcmind (OP)
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April 19, 2013, 04:19:46 PM
 #1

Released today. Converation from  23 of June 2011. Good analysis IMO.

http://wikileaks.org/Transcript-Meeting-Assange-Schmidt?nocache

Assange to Eric Schmidt: "You should be an early adopter. Because your Bitcoins are going to be worth a lot of money one day."

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And very important, actually. It has a few problems. But its innovations exceed its problems. Now there has been innovations along these lines in many different paths of digital currencies, anonymous, untraceable etc. People have been experimenting with over the past 20 years. The Bitcoin actually has the balance and incentives right, and that is why it is starting to take off. The different combination of these things. No central nodes. It is all point to point. One does not need to trust any central mint. If we look at traditional currencies such as gold, we can see that they have sort of interesting properties that make them valuable as a medium of exchange. Gold is divisible, it is easy to chop up, actually out of all metals it is the easiest to chop up into fine segments. You can test relatively easily whether it is true or whether it is fake. You can take chopped up segments and you can put them back together by melting the gold. So that is what makes it a good medium of exchange and it is also a good medium of value store, because you can take it and put it in the ground and it is not going to decay like apples or steaks. The problems with traditional digital currencies on the internet is that you have to trust the mint not to print too much of it.

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Yeah, to enforce scarcity, and scarcity will go up as time goes by, and what does that mean for incentives in going into the Bitcoin system. That means that you should get into the Bitcoin system now. Early. You should be an early adopter. Because your Bitcoins are going to be worth a lot of money one day. So once you have a... and the Bitcoins are just... a Bitcoin address is just a big hash. It's a hash of a public key that you generate. So once you have this hash you can just advertise it to everyone, and people can send you Bitcoins, and there is people who have set up exchanges to convert from Bitcoin to US dollars and so on. And it solves a very interesting technical problem, which is how do you stop double spending?

All digital material can be cloned, almost zero costs, so if you have currency as a digital string of numbers, how do you stop me... I want to buy this piece of pasta.
[JA using lunch table objects]

JA
Here is my digital currency and, now I take a copy of it. And now I want to buy your bit of egg. And then you go... and now I want to buy your radish! And you go, what? I've already got that! What's going on here? There's been some fraud! So there's a synchronization problem. Who now has the coin? So there is a point to point.. a spread network with all these problems, some points of the network being faster, some points of the network being slower, multiple paths of communication, how do you solve this synchronization issue about who has the currency? And so this is to mind actually the real technical innovation for Bitcoin, it has done this using some hashtrees and then a delay time, and then CPU work has to be done in order to move one thing to another so information can't spread too fast etc. OK, so, once you have a system of currency that is easy to use like that, then you can start to use it for things that you want to be scarce. What is the example of some things that we want to be scarce? Well, domain names. Names. We want names to be scarce. We want short names to be scarce, otherwise if they are not scarce, if it doesn't take work to get them, as soon as you have a nice naming system, some arsehole is going to come along and register every short name themselves.
cypherdoc
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April 19, 2013, 04:24:19 PM
 #2

he's right.
flug
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April 19, 2013, 05:22:20 PM
 #3

Assange = Satoshi?
noedaRDH
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April 19, 2013, 07:58:15 PM
 #4

Assange = Satoshi?

Doubtful, but he might know who Satoshi (the person or the group) actually is.

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Ask not what Bitcoin can do for you - ask what you can do for Bitcoin.
sd
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April 19, 2013, 08:08:33 PM
 #5

Assange = Satoshi?

Doubtful, but he might know who Satoshi (the person or the group) actually is.

If you were Satoshi would you tell someone who has a habit of publishing every scrap of information he has to the entire world no matter what the comeback is? He would be the last person on the planet I'd tell.
hammz
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April 19, 2013, 08:23:00 PM
 #6

Mt gox to start trading assangecoins, who else is mining?

 Cheesy
noedaRDH
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April 19, 2013, 09:17:10 PM
 #7

Assange = Satoshi?

Doubtful, but he might know who Satoshi (the person or the group) actually is.

If you were Satoshi would you tell someone who has a habit of publishing every scrap of information he has to the entire world no matter what the comeback is? He would be the last person on the planet I'd tell.

Satoshi wouldn't have to tell Julian. Someone who knows of Satoshi or knows who of the group might have contacted Julian.

1NwGKiLcAngD1KiCCivxT6EDJmyXMGqM9q

Ask not what Bitcoin can do for you - ask what you can do for Bitcoin.
btcmind (OP)
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April 19, 2013, 09:21:13 PM
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Doubtful, but he might know who Satoshi (the person or the group) actually is.

agreed. i was wondering how narrow the set of people is. the talent must have shown earlier somewhere. i wonder how much depends on the fact that the inventor is anonymous. if the person would be known, people might think it's a scam or base their decisions on the personality.
tvbcof
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April 19, 2013, 09:36:29 PM
 #9


I see nothing in his statements which is not pretty obvious.  It's relatively good analysis, but in a 'thinnest kid a fat camp' sort of a way...at least relative to the non-tech section of this forum.  I believe Assange to have been a long term and semi-active participant in the cypherpunks movement so his statements about that are particularly interesting to me.


sig spam anywhere and self-moderated threads on the pol&soc board are for losers.
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April 19, 2013, 10:32:10 PM
 #10

Assangination markets?

ChristianK
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April 19, 2013, 10:32:35 PM
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If you were Satoshi would you tell someone who has a habit of publishing every scrap of information he has to the entire world no matter what the comeback is? He would be the last person on the planet I'd tell.
I don't think you understand Assange.

Assange didn't publish the identity of the people who left Wikileaks along with Daniel Domscheit-Berg to found OpenLeaks, even through the OpenLeaks folks took a harddrive of valuable data with them that they afterwards deleted.
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April 19, 2013, 10:44:49 PM
 #12

I wish people wouldn't associate Bitcoin with "scarcity."  Bitcoins are limited.  But this has nothing to do with actual, physical scarcity.  A limited currency actually promotes abundance.

Civil Liberty Through Complex Mathematics
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April 19, 2013, 10:51:34 PM
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Doubtful, but he might know who Satoshi (the person or the group) actually is.

agreed. i was wondering how narrow the set of people is. the talent must have shown earlier somewhere. i wonder how much depends on the fact that the inventor is anonymous. if the person would be known, people might think it's a scam or base their decisions on the personality.

They both were on the Cypherpunks mailing list.
Luckybit
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April 19, 2013, 10:53:29 PM
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If you were Satoshi would you tell someone who has a habit of publishing every scrap of information he has to the entire world no matter what the comeback is? He would be the last person on the planet I'd tell.
I don't think you understand Assange.

Assange didn't publish the identity of the people who left Wikileaks along with Daniel Domscheit-Berg to found OpenLeaks, even through the OpenLeaks folks took a harddrive of valuable data with them that they afterwards deleted.

Open leaks was a good idea that failed. Wikileaks was a good idea that failed. Neither are practical for 2013.
Mark_Twain
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April 19, 2013, 11:15:47 PM
 #15

I think J.A. is fascinating... i feel sorry for his condition! I wouldnt like to live in a 20m2 room for a year...

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April 20, 2013, 12:37:39 AM
 #16

I think J.A. is fascinating... i feel sorry for his condition! I wouldnt like to live in a 20m2 room for a year...

I wonder if assange is having as hard a time of me as buying selling BTC in the uk.
cypherdoc
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April 20, 2013, 12:43:27 AM
 #17

I wish people wouldn't associate Bitcoin with "scarcity."  Bitcoins are limited.  But this has nothing to do with actual, physical scarcity.  A limited currency actually promotes abundance.

i agree with this.  it implies that there never is enough.

i prefer the term "fixed".

the point of a fixed supply currency is to attempt to preserve the value of that currency once all the coins are in circulation and their price has equilibrated.  it's not meant to be inflationary nor deflationary.
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