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Author Topic: The intrinsic value of a bitcoin  (Read 4808 times)
dscotese (OP)
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June 02, 2013, 02:49:30 AM
 #1

About every ten minutes, a lot of computing power competes to find a data-specific solution. The solution is a time-marker that incontrovertibly proves that anything that uses that solution could not have existed before that moment, and that all the data specific to it must have existed before. We get one every ten minutes. That is what the consumed energy produces, and it's far more valuable than the energy used to create it.

A bitcoin mined since November of last year is worth 1/25th of one of these markers.  A bitcoin mined before then is worth 2% of one of them.  This is real intrinsic value.  It's potentially more valuable than anything I can imagine backing any kind of money.

I'm looking for better, simpler, more concise and obvious ways to explain this so that people who have trouble understanding why bitcoins have value can see it more clearly.

I'll go right brain for a sec.  You know those photos of a person holding a newspaper with a date on it that are used to prove that something happened after the date on the newspaper?  That's what bitcoin does, but it makes one of these snapshots every ten minutes.  The photo shows lots of stuff that was very obviously in existence on or before the newspaper's date.  Everything that incorporates the photograph very obviously was made on or after the newspaper's date.  Bitcoin makes one of these photos every ten minutes, but they aren't susceptible to corrupt newspaper manufacturers or even photo-shopping.  What is the value of the level of certainty provided by this system regarding the timing of whatever anyone wants to record with a timestamp?

Or really right-brained:  Bitcoin digitizes the timestream so that any information can be permanently recorded as existing before or not existing until a given point in time.

I thought of this after watching this youtube video: Bitcoin vs Gold&Silver.

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June 02, 2013, 02:59:02 AM
 #2

You can't redeem that Bitcoin back for the computing power used to create it.  The computing power spent to create a block doesn't create any more intrinsic value than the paper and ink costs at the Federal Reserve does.

You could say the UTILITY creates intrinsic value but it is a broader definition that most people would use.  The ability to transfer wealth anywhere in the world without restrictions and at high speed and low cost is valuable.  The network or what the network allows has value.   
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June 02, 2013, 03:01:34 AM
 #3

Also see:

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June 02, 2013, 03:09:42 AM
 #4

A bitcoin mined since November of last year is worth 1/25th of one of these markers.  A bitcoin mined before then is worth 2% of one of them.  This is real intrinsic value.  It's potentially more valuable than anything I can imagine backing any kind of money.

I'm looking for better, simpler, more concise and obvious ways to explain this so that people who have trouble understanding why bitcoins have value can see it more clearly.

A Bitcoin is 1/25th of the reward for creating a block.

Bitcoins have value because there are people who are willing to trade goods or other currencies for them. That's not intrinsic value. Bitcoins don't have any. If nobody else was using Bitcoins, they'd be useless.
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June 02, 2013, 03:38:19 AM
 #5

What intrinsic value does a car key have? It's useful for driving, but intrinsically worthless.

Hardforks aren't that hard. It’s getting others to use them that's hard.
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dscotese (OP)
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June 02, 2013, 03:49:30 AM
 #6

Perhaps intrinsic is the wrong word.  The block reward is the set of bitcoins that are produced (as specified in the protocol) for creating the marker.

Does the hash in the blockchain that can be incorporated into data to prove that the data was compiled at a point in time after the the block was solved have any value?

Does the hash in the blockchain can (and does) incorporate data to prove that the data existed before the point in time that block was solved have any value?

This has has value to me, and it seems it has value in establishing timelines of all sorts, even though we're all using it only to keep track of when bitcoins moved from one address to another.  I suppose it isn't intrinsic because I can use it whether or not I have any bitcoins at all, but the value is produced because of the (miners') desire to get the bitcoins, and the bitcoins they get are intimately (and permanently provably) tied to that hash.

Mike Maloney's contention was that the energy used to create a bitcoin is actually a loss (to the world, I imagine he implied).  My contention is that while the energy is lost (though paid for by the miners - a point which he seems to overlook), what the world gets in return is that very valuable timestamp hash.  I suppose it would be wrong to say everyone holding bitcoin has consciously agreed to dilute the value of their holdings to pay each miner who solves a block, but they have certainly agreed implicitly.  What of people who have no holdings and don't care?  Does the value of that timestamp more than make up for the loss of energy for them? Probably not yet, even though the miners pay for that energy.

Maybe that is where my thinking is going, and why I started this thread. 

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June 02, 2013, 03:51:27 AM
 #7

Does the hash in the blockchain can (and does) incorporate data to prove that the data existed before the point in time that block was solved have any value?

In a sense yes. Not on itself but the ability to do so.
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June 02, 2013, 04:47:12 AM
 #8

Regarding Bitcoins and gold, it's important to keep in mind that neither has "intrinsic" value.
Rather, both are valued by men for their unique properties.

Gold is:
* Divisible.
* Fungible.
* Value dense.
* Recognizable.
* Durable.
* Zero counter-party risk.
* Stable in supply, yet minable.
* Liquid.
* International.
* Non-manipulatable. (Non-centralized.)

By comparison:
* Diamonds, while valuable, are NOT divisible, nor are they fungible.
* Water, while valuable and divisible, is not value-dense enough to compete with gold as a form of money, on the free market.
* Food, while valuable, is not durable.
* Dollars, while liquid, do not represent zero-counter-party-risk (rather, they are debt-based.)
* Dollars, while recognizable, are not stable in supply (inflation is a worry).
* Dollars are also not minable. (Production is available only to a monopoly cartel, versus gold, which anyone can produce.)
* Food, which anyone can produce, is not liquid, especially in comparison to dollars or gold.
* Dollars, while you can hold them in your pocket, a board of bankers still has the power to reach into your pocket and manipulate its value. (This is not the case with gold.)

Soon it becomes very clear that gold was never "declared" to be a form of money by any "authorities" but rather, became money due to natural market forces.

If gold became money strictly due to natural market forces (as a result of its unique properties) then clearly the only reason it has been supplanted by dollars is due to artificial restraints imposed on the market by government force. (Such as legal tender "laws", tax "laws", money laundering "laws", etc.)

Such forces must be constantly active, otherwise, natural market forces would immediately resolve back to gold again as they have for thousands of years.

Now let's consider Bitcoin's unique properties:
* Divisible.
* Fungible.
* Value dense.
* Recognizable.
* Durable.
* Zero counter-party risk.
* Stable in supply, yet minable.
* Liquid.
* International.
* Non-manipulatable. (Non-centralized.)

AS WELL AS:
* Non-confiscatable.
* Accounts cannot be frozen.
* Anonymity is possible.
* Electronically transferrable.

As you can see, Bitcoin's unique properties are similar to those of gold, although it adds new properties due to its ethereal nature.

Those new properties (non-confiscatable, non-freezable, pseudonymous, transferrable electronically) all serve to route-around the artificial forces that are currently being used to supplant gold with the dollar. After all, the various immoral, legal-tender legislation in place today uses the force of a gun to impose fiat money onto an economy that would otherwise resolve to gold by natural forces. That artificial force depends on the government's collusion with banks and their collective monopoly on the ability to issue, store, freeze, confiscate, track, and transfer dollars.

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June 02, 2013, 04:55:50 AM
 #9

Bitcoin has no greater intrinsic value than any other currency but it has greater utility in the modern world, the same way email has greater utility than traditional mail.
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June 02, 2013, 05:12:13 AM
 #10

The intrinsic value is its features and utility. This is why precious metals became currency for thousands of years, because it had features and utility that are good for being used as a currency, therefore gaining intrinsic value. Some thing that is rare does not equal to intrinsic value, for example a 800lb human is rare, but not really valuable.

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June 02, 2013, 05:18:06 AM
 #11


Does the hash in the blockchain that can be incorporated into data to prove that the data was compiled at a point in time after the the block was solved have any value?

Does the hash in the blockchain can (and does) incorporate data to prove that the data existed before the point in time that block was solved have any value?


I'm with you 110%. It's an example of the paradigm shift that bitcoin can bring. It's the coalescing of the tcp/ip stack and html.

You are taking a peak under the covers. EVERY 10 minutes irrefutable proof of what was before and what is not after is generated. What value does that have? I don't know, but I know it does have value.

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June 02, 2013, 01:13:34 PM
 #12

looking at a bank note from a real working human beings perspective. i personally dont see a bank note as being x grams of gold, or y worth of government debt. or even z worth of computer parts or bread i can buy.

i see it as the A amount of minutes/hours i had to work to get it in my salary plus the quality of that time based on my expertise/skills.

so for me the best guess for the lowest intrinsic value of a bank note is mimimum wage..

look at gold. the miners dont just throw a random number out, they look at the price of the excavators, the deisel used, the costs of digging on the land and the time taken to then get gold.

they set this as their minimal value of selling it to traders. ofcourse they will try for more.. but for the lowest value point the  is basically the labour costs of digging gold.

no one, unless insane or having no other choice would happily sell at a loss compared to creation costs.

the same with bitcoin, there is speculation (bitcoin high price) but if you look at the low price and put some thought behind it, no sane person would sell bitcoin cheaper then the electrical/time costs of making that coin. making mining costs the intrinsic value, much like minimum wage is for bank notes

so don't worry about bitcoin high prices as they are pure speculation. use the low price as your bases of value. bitcoin bubble of 2013 never burst as the true value has been on a constant rise

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June 02, 2013, 01:14:51 PM
 #13

Regarding Bitcoins and gold, it's important to keep in mind that neither has "intrinsic" value.

Not true. See Uses of Gold in Industry, Medicine, Computers, Electronics, Jewelry.
ElectricMucus
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June 02, 2013, 02:26:14 PM
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the same with bitcoin, there is speculation (bitcoin high price) but if you look at the low price and put some thought behind it, no sane person would sell bitcoin cheaper then the electrical/time costs of making that coin. making mining costs the intrinsic value, much like minimum wage is for bank notes

No, as said these are entirely different things.
Golds intrinsic value comes for its inherent usefulness which any physical material has to some extent.
Intrinsic value does not apply to goverment issued money there it is backing which is a guarantee of the ability to settle debt with it and it is required to pay taxes, both of which is enforced.

Neither intrinsic value nor backing does apply to Bitcoin. However Bitcoins have utility, that is the amount of people interested in acquiring them and the economic activity associated with it.
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June 02, 2013, 02:30:29 PM
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looking at a bank note from a real working human beings perspective. i personally dont see a bank note as being x grams of gold, or y worth of government debt. or even z worth of computer parts or bread i can buy.

i see it as the A amount of minutes/hours i had to work to get it in my salary plus the quality of that time based on my expertise/skills.

so for me the best guess for the lowest intrinsic value of a bank note is mimimum wage..

look at gold. the miners dont just throw a random number out, they look at the price of the excavators, the deisel used, the costs of digging on the land and the time taken to then get gold.

they set this as their minimal value of selling it to traders. ofcourse they will try for more.. but for the lowest value point the  is basically the labour costs of digging gold.

no one, unless insane or having no other choice would happily sell at a loss compared to creation costs.

the same with bitcoin, there is speculation (bitcoin high price) but if you look at the low price and put some thought behind it, no sane person would sell bitcoin cheaper then the electrical/time costs of making that coin. making mining costs the intrinsic value, much like minimum wage is for bank notes

so don't worry about bitcoin high prices as they are pure speculation. use the low price as your bases of value. bitcoin bubble of 2013 never burst as the true value has been on a constant rise


Now this I can agree with, Regardless the momentum and rate of adoption should keep things bubbly. I still question bitcoin when transactions with a .003fee still take 30+minutes to clear, and the fact so few people use bitcoin for daily goods/store of value.

The store of value will take atleast 10-15 years to determine if the people want this.

 
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June 02, 2013, 03:23:33 PM
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the same with bitcoin, there is speculation (bitcoin high price) but if you look at the low price and put some thought behind it, no sane person would sell bitcoin cheaper then the electrical/time costs of making that coin. making mining costs the intrinsic value, much like minimum wage is for bank notes

No, as said these are entirely different things.
Golds intrinsic value comes for its inherent usefulness which any physical material has to some extent.
Intrinsic value does not apply to goverment issued money there it is backing which is a guarantee of the ability to settle debt with it and it is required to pay taxes, both of which is enforced.

Neither intrinsic value nor backing does apply to Bitcoin. However Bitcoins have utility, that is the amount of people interested in acquiring them and the economic activity associated with it.

Definition of 'Intrinsic Value'
1. The actual value of a company or an asset based on an underlying perception of its true value including all aspects of the business, in terms of both tangible and intangible factors. This value may or may not be the same as the current market value.

golds true value comes from its costs. its then the markets that play around with the price due to how useful it is... hint supply and demand.

EG.
gold miners would mine it. and sell it to markets. they would NEVER sell it at a loss of how much it cost to dig it up. so thats its actual intrinsic value.

the markets will THEN see there is lots of demand so the markets will see an opportunity to raise the price because of demand (usefulness). this is not true value... that's market value

EG. a business may have a billion dollar idea.. thats its market value. but currently the actual assets of the business are only worth 10million. thats its intrinsic value

bitcoin miners asset are its gpu's, electricity and time taken. calculate that together to get its intrinsic value. once sold the markets can play around with the price due to demand.

I DO NOT TRADE OR ACT AS ESCROW ON THIS FORUM EVER.
Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
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June 02, 2013, 04:20:51 PM
 #17

the same with bitcoin, there is speculation (bitcoin high price) but if you look at the low price and put some thought behind it, no sane person would sell bitcoin cheaper then the electrical/time costs of making that coin. making mining costs the intrinsic value, much like minimum wage is for bank notes

No, as said these are entirely different things.
Golds intrinsic value comes for its inherent usefulness which any physical material has to some extent.
Intrinsic value does not apply to goverment issued money there it is backing which is a guarantee of the ability to settle debt with it and it is required to pay taxes, both of which is enforced.

Neither intrinsic value nor backing does apply to Bitcoin. However Bitcoins have utility, that is the amount of people interested in acquiring them and the economic activity associated with it.

Definition of 'Intrinsic Value'
1. The actual value of a company or an asset based on an underlying perception of its true value including all aspects of the business, in terms of both tangible and intangible factors. This value may or may not be the same as the current market value.

golds true value comes from its costs. its then the markets that play around with the price due to how useful it is... hint supply and demand.

EG.
gold miners would mine it. and sell it to markets. they would NEVER sell it at a loss of how much it cost to dig it up. so thats its actual intrinsic value.

the markets will THEN see there is lots of demand so the markets will see an opportunity to raise the price because of demand (usefulness). this is not true value... that's market value

EG. a business may have a billion dollar idea.. thats its market value. but currently the actual assets of the business are only worth 10million. thats its intrinsic value

bitcoin miners asset are its gpu's, electricity and time taken. calculate that together to get its intrinsic value. once sold the markets can play around with the price due to demand.

So here we are today a bitcoin is worth 117. Yesterday it was worth 130. What changed?
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June 02, 2013, 04:32:39 PM
Last edit: June 02, 2013, 04:52:19 PM by franky1
 #18

speculation price/market price changed.

intrinsic value has not.

check out my chart. u will see each month the low (intrinsic value). now draw a line to June and that will put a estimated intrinsic value of about $110.

meaning the point where no one is dumb enough to sell below..

so expect price swings ABOVE $110 but if it goes below $110.. then that is where you should be asking what the big problem is.

anything else is just speculation based on supply and demand

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Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
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June 02, 2013, 05:57:02 PM
 #19

franky1 you are confusing 'value' with 'cost'.
Value (economics), a measure of the benefit that an economic actor can gain from either a good or service

Bitcoins does not provide a gain based on the effort that is taken to create them. A bitcoin on it's own does not even provide any benefit, only the properties of the network can provide one.

addendum: You can also not imply that the value must always be larger than the cost, it is normally true under sound economical conditions, but this is not always the case. Certain "renewable" energy sources for example, like alcoholic fossil fuel substitutes take more energy to create than they provide historically. This is possible because of irrational market participants like politicians who provide subvention for these technologies.
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June 02, 2013, 06:58:41 PM
 #20

Value is a subjective concept, just like intrinsic value of USD, some people think it has lots of value, while some others don't

Currency's value is a consensus, what you can benefit from a bitcoin depend on how many other people are accepting it as a payment medium, and how high they value the bitcoin

But you can't really compare a miner's work with a baker's work and get a rough estimation of the value of one bitcoin. Mining, especially customized hardware mining is a complex job, involves lots of computer and network skills. And no matter how many smart miners are working, the amount of coin generated per day is always the same

So it is impossible to value bitcoin from a cost perspective, electricity and hardware investment is only part of the cost, people tends to forget about the man hours that put into mining

Only through supply and demand, there is a way to roughly decide the value of bitcoin

There are some fundamentals that affect bitcoin's demand:

We are entering a deleveraging era, after financial crisis, many people start to pay back their loan and save for their pension, bitcoin is a good candidate for saving due to controlled and limited future supply

Central banks can not exit their QE easily, people already get used to free money, if they stop it, economy will fall back to recession, this means fiat money will get constantly inflated in the foreseeable future

More and more people start to discover the FRB and banks' scam through money printing, they will find alternative to spread the risk, gold/silver have already been lifted quite a lot but bitcoin is even better suited for the task

So, supply is fixed and demand is increasing, that is the intrinsic value of bitcoin

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