That was a very worthwhile read. I'm liking the deliberate, measured, methodical approach George is taking to bitcoin as he has done this since day 1. His outside observer analysis is second to none at this stage, bitcoiners need to take very seriously his critiques. It is easy to be swept up when you are invested (I don't think George is
from reading his stuff)
I'm not too concerned about the finer details of why someone first traded bitcoins for USD, or anything else for that matter, that is a point for historians now imo. The fact is they did, and it could easily happen again for any other market based Internet currency that wants to get boot-strapped onto the network. In fact, if a corporate body wanted to do it just using their branding and some kind of promotional "free money" give-away I'm pretty sure any competitive currency could be launched fairly easily.
Paradoxically, the very innovations that may eventually doom bitcoin also explain why it deserves to be regarded as one of the most promising developments in the history of money since the invention of ordinary coins. For, as I explain in my paper on "Synthetic Commodity Money," its otherwise modest achievement proves that, with the help of the right software, one might design an "ideal" money commodity, with a supply function guaranteed to achieve whatever criterion of macro-economic stability one likes--be it a constant nominal money stock growth rate, a stable general price level, or a stable level or growth rate of nominal GDP. No muss, no fuss, and, best of all, no FOMC. Admittedly, it's only a possibility. But what a possibility!
I liked particularly these points and thoughts on better Internet currencies and bitcoiners need to watch very closely for competitors that WILL arise that can fulfill other macro-economic properties better than bitcoin ... like one with an algorithmically ensured stable value (e.g. against a basket of real world goods, milk, bread, burgers, fuel, etc). This is a difficult problem to do with a decentralised, trust-noone currency since who's commodity ticker would you trust once they know it is being used to set the value of a currency? (take note Fed. Res,, CME, Comex think we haven't noticed?)