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Author Topic: 2013-12-19 - Charles Stross - "Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire"  (Read 8154 times)
TraderTimm (OP)
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December 19, 2013, 03:49:58 PM
 #1

Reference Link: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/12/why-i-want-bitcoin-to-die-in-a.html

Above-the-fold Excerpt:

Bitcoin just crashed 50% today, on news that the Chinese government has banned local exchanges from accepting deposits in Yuan. BtC was trading over $1000 yesterday; now it's down to $500 and still falling.

Good.

I want Bitcoin to die in a fire: this is a start, but it's not sufficient. Let me give you a round-up below the cut.

--------

My response to his rant:

How utterly depressing.

Your leading title - "Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire" is so completely at odds with what I thought you were about, that I'm having a bit of cognitive dissonance parsing it.

It would be as if Isaac Asimov said "Robots - seriously, screw those buckets of junk, I just wrote about it for the checks."

You open with admitting the current financial system is crap, but apparently not crappy enough to replace, as Bitcoin isn't "IT".

In light of the massive fraud that we've seen globally, from the 2008 mortgage securitization fraud, LIBOR rigging scandal, HSBC Drug Money laundering and the continued Eurozone implosion courtesy of the Eurodollar and everyone hooking together the worst parts of their respective economies into a debt-chain of nightmare proportions, it seems that preserving the current system is one of the last things we should be considering.

And yet, when faced with the potential of complete freedom, the solution apparently is for Bitcoin to "die in a fire". Lightning has struck outside of our financial cave, and we're not rushing to the smouldering tree to nurture this spark, we're instead fleeing back into the damp cold depths, somehow reassuring ourselves that once you can feel the cave walls, you don't need light at all.

I find this particular view shockingly regressive. You, an author that I admire and have many times re-read your stories on taking technologies to the limit - "Accelerando" in particular comes to mind - and yet the very words out of your mouth regarding Bitcoin are riddled with fear and hostility.

Perhaps it was always part of your internal agenda, when I read this from "Accelerando":

"The last great transglobal trade empire, run from the arcologies of Hong Kong, has collapsed along with capitalism, rendered obsolete by a bunch of superior deterministic resource allocation algorithms collectively known as Economics 2.0."

I initially took this to mean that you recognized progress comes at a cost, but ultimately it is what enables us collectively to advance and improve our situation. Now, in light of your post about Bitcoin, I see this as fear of such an advance telegraphed four years before Bitcoin even existed.

As others will no doubt shine bright lights into the dark crevices of misunderstandings you have about Bitcoin, I'm just simply here to express my utter disbelief that someone as visionary as yourself can't see the benefits of a system that allows financial freedom.

You touch upon the fearful subjects of "Carbon Footprint" (Ignoring advances in lowered power consumption of the same.), "Bitcoin Malware" (Every ecosystem has predators and prey, surely), "Violates Gresham's Law" (Apparently we can steal electricity rather than pay? Funny how the utilities still operate then.) "Bitcoin's Lack of Regulation" (Like they've done such a stellar job with the regular system - please.)

And then, finally - "Bitcoin is designed for tax evasion" argument. Oh my. I suppose everyone is a crook and nobody would want to support their communities? Is this really the kind of thought process I'm supposed to believe you have? As for the "Gini Coefficient" you linked to, you do realize that distribution was on a singular exchange that ran with the money not long after, right? I'd say those funds have already been redistributed.

There's more, but honestly it all sounds like you're throwing your weight behind is the legacy financial system, warts and all, and somehow its better than having the ability to spend your money on what you want, or being able to shift your wealth around the globe without artificial barriers or constraints.

Perhaps I should ask about your stance on ebooks and Digital Rights Management, because it seems they're rather similar. Granted, "Accelerando" was released using a Creative Commons license, but what about the rest? Are you in favor of restrictive policies regarding data? Is every "regulation" in your view fair and just?

Am I to conclude that all of those flights of fancy that you've eloquently penned over the years really spring from the restricted and fearful psyche of someone who prefers flawed "protection" instead of actual freedom?

Please say it isn't so.

I'm not here to change your mind, because it seems you're quite firmly set on the issue, I'm just here to express my complete and utter shock that a visionary would rather hide in the back of his cave, feeling the walls for comfort, in the utter darkness.




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December 19, 2013, 04:00:37 PM
 #2

Fortunately, Bitcoin doesn't give a rat's ass... the blockchain keeps plodding along  Grin
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December 19, 2013, 04:03:35 PM
 #3

The Bitcoin Abides!

GenTarkin's MOD Kncminer Titan custom firmware! v1.0.4! -- !!NO LONGER AVAILABLE!!
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December 19, 2013, 04:05:20 PM
 #4

Bitcoin don't give a shit.

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December 19, 2013, 04:29:29 PM
 #5

Bitcoin says, "talk to the hand!" see you in 2014 lol  Grin Grin

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December 19, 2013, 04:38:05 PM
 #6

https://i.imgur.com/sdkGGGX.png
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December 19, 2013, 04:43:07 PM
 #7

Bitcoin can't die in a fire, he lost me and his credability with his stupid title.

"Why I want bitcoin to crash to $0.00000000000 so i can point and laugh and all the people investing their time and money!! would have been more accurate
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December 19, 2013, 05:06:03 PM
 #8

well said, TT!
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December 19, 2013, 05:20:15 PM
 #9

The first sign of a tsunami is all the water pulling away.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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December 19, 2013, 05:23:04 PM
 #10

I'm still saddened and shocked about this. He really was the last person I expected to put out a missive against Bitcoin. I'll still enjoy his stories I guess, just not so sure I'll be too interested in reading any of his newest work. If the last thing I read is "Neptune's Brood", well, so be it.

fortitudinem multis - catenum regit omnia
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December 19, 2013, 05:25:18 PM
 #11

Let me guess, the author panic sold the coins he bought for $1200.  Cheesy

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December 19, 2013, 05:28:26 PM
 #12

I want Charles Stross to die in a fire... not even kidding




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December 19, 2013, 05:53:49 PM
 #13

Who is this guy anyway and why should we care what he thinks? There's a lot of haters out there who want to play prophets of doom to later brag how they were right.

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December 19, 2013, 05:55:51 PM
 #14

Who is he and why do we care? I skimmed to the point where it said "for starters, BtC is deflationary..." which is about when I lose my mind, so I stopped.

Bitcoin is the first monetary system to credibly offer perfect information to all economic participants.
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December 19, 2013, 05:58:29 PM
 #15

Who is this guy anyway and why should we care what he thinks? There's a lot of haters out there who want to play prophets of doom to later brag how they were right.

He's won Hugo and Nebula awards for his science fiction writing. Here's his wiki page - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Stross
I personally like his stuff, "The Atrocity Archives" are pretty fun, and "Accelerando" was a complete mind-blowing romp as well. Just the last person I expected to look at Bitcoin and say "Nah, I hope it dies."

fortitudinem multis - catenum regit omnia
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December 19, 2013, 05:59:39 PM
 #16

He's adorable
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December 19, 2013, 06:07:01 PM
 #17

Trader Timm you wish to see bitcoin crash? Well in that case we are both friend who are waiting for the collapsing of so called digital currency named “Bitcoin”. I can sense the storm nearby which will eventually destroy the bitcoin soon as bitcoin has already felt below the resistance of $1000 and now it’s time to fall further
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December 19, 2013, 06:24:17 PM
 #18

He's won Hugo and Nebula awards for his science fiction writing. Here's his wiki page - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Stross
I personally like his stuff, "The Atrocity Archives" are pretty fun, and "Accelerando" was a complete mind-blowing romp as well. Just the last person I expected to look at Bitcoin and say "Nah, I hope it dies."
Who would've thought... science fiction fans usually like all kinds of tech and innovation.

Trader Timm you wish to see bitcoin crash? Well in that case we are both friend who are waiting for the collapsing of so called digital currency named “Bitcoin”. I can sense the storm nearby which will eventually destroy the bitcoin soon as bitcoin has already felt below the resistance of $1000 and now it’s time to fall further
Where did he write that he want's it to crash? If you do then don't waste your time here, do something constructive instead.

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December 19, 2013, 07:44:19 PM
 #19

Anytime Bitcoin is in a fire, it just pisses on it until it goes out.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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December 19, 2013, 07:46:20 PM
 #20

Quote
and the "if this goes on" linear extrapolations imply that BtC will badly damage stable governance, not to mention redistributive taxation systems and social security/pension nets if its value continues to soar (as it seems designed to do due to its deflationary properties).
This article is just the whining of yet another kleptomaniac who hates the idea of people being able to hold on to their own money.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.
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December 19, 2013, 07:59:22 PM
 #21

Reference Link: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/12/why-i-want-bitcoin-to-die-in-a.html

Above-the-fold Excerpt:

Bitcoin just crashed 50% today, on news that the Chinese government has banned local exchanges from accepting deposits in Yuan. BtC was trading over $1000 yesterday; now it's down to $500 and still falling.

Good.

I want Bitcoin to die in a fire: this is a start, but it's not sufficient. Let me give you a round-up below the cut.

--------

My response to his rant:

How utterly depressing.

Your leading title - "Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire" is so completely at odds with what I thought you were about, that I'm having a bit of cognitive dissonance parsing it.

It would be as if Isaac Asimov said "Robots - seriously, screw those buckets of junk, I just wrote about it for the checks."

You open with admitting the current financial system is crap, but apparently not crappy enough to replace, as Bitcoin isn't "IT".

In light of the massive fraud that we've seen globally, from the 2008 mortgage securitization fraud, LIBOR rigging scandal, HSBC Drug Money laundering and the continued Eurozone implosion courtesy of the Eurodollar and everyone hooking together the worst parts of their respective economies into a debt-chain of nightmare proportions, it seems that preserving the current system is one of the last things we should be considering.

And yet, when faced with the potential of complete freedom, the solution apparently is for Bitcoin to "die in a fire". Lightning has struck outside of our financial cave, and we're not rushing to the smouldering tree to nurture this spark, we're instead fleeing back into the damp cold depths, somehow reassuring ourselves that once you can feel the cave walls, you don't need light at all.

I find this particular view shockingly regressive. You, an author that I admire and have many times re-read your stories on taking technologies to the limit - "Accelerando" in particular comes to mind - and yet the very words out of your mouth regarding Bitcoin are riddled with fear and hostility.

Perhaps it was always part of your internal agenda, when I read this from "Accelerando":

"The last great transglobal trade empire, run from the arcologies of Hong Kong, has collapsed along with capitalism, rendered obsolete by a bunch of superior deterministic resource allocation algorithms collectively known as Economics 2.0."

I initially took this to mean that you recognized progress comes at a cost, but ultimately it is what enables us collectively to advance and improve our situation. Now, in light of your post about Bitcoin, I see this as fear of such an advance telegraphed four years before Bitcoin even existed.

As others will no doubt shine bright lights into the dark crevices of misunderstandings you have about Bitcoin, I'm just simply here to express my utter disbelief that someone as visionary as yourself can't see the benefits of a system that allows financial freedom.

You touch upon the fearful subjects of "Carbon Footprint" (Ignoring advances in lowered power consumption of the same.), "Bitcoin Malware" (Every ecosystem has predators and prey, surely), "Violates Gresham's Law" (Apparently we can steal electricity rather than pay? Funny how the utilities still operate then.) "Bitcoin's Lack of Regulation" (Like they've done such a stellar job with the regular system - please.)

And then, finally - "Bitcoin is designed for tax evasion" argument. Oh my. I suppose everyone is a crook and nobody would want to support their communities? Is this really the kind of thought process I'm supposed to believe you have? As for the "Gini Coefficient" you linked to, you do realize that distribution was on a singular exchange that ran with the money not long after, right? I'd say those funds have already been redistributed.

There's more, but honestly it all sounds like you're throwing your weight behind is the legacy financial system, warts and all, and somehow its better than having the ability to spend your money on what you want, or being able to shift your wealth around the globe without artificial barriers or constraints.

Perhaps I should ask about your stance on ebooks and Digital Rights Management, because it seems they're rather similar. Granted, "Accelerando" was released using a Creative Commons license, but what about the rest? Are you in favor of restrictive policies regarding data? Is every "regulation" in your view fair and just?

Am I to conclude that all of those flights of fancy that you've eloquently penned over the years really spring from the restricted and fearful psyche of someone who prefers flawed "protection" instead of actual freedom?

Please say it isn't so.

I'm not here to change your mind, because it seems you're quite firmly set on the issue, I'm just here to express my complete and utter shock that a visionary would rather hide in the back of his cave, feeling the walls for comfort, in the utter darkness.





Dear Tradertimm,

As a dreamer and an advocate of progress myself, i commend you on the great rebuttal!

i wonder, did he ever respond to you ?


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December 19, 2013, 08:00:36 PM
 #22

Quote
and the "if this goes on" linear extrapolations imply that BtC will badly damage stable governance, not to mention redistributive taxation systems and social security/pension nets if its value continues to soar (as it seems designed to do due to its deflationary properties).
This article is just the whining of yet another kleptomaniac who hates the idea of people being able to hold on to their own money.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.

Yes, this reminds me of ~50% of the ZeroHedge commenters.  For *a decade* they have complained about the Fed and the unjustness of our monetary system, in favor of free-market solutions.  Bitcoin offers a practical alternative that still fits within our modern high-tech world--vastly more useful for modern trade than gold and silver.  But many ZeroHedgers mock it and cheer every time the price dips.  

I really don't understand.  

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
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December 19, 2013, 08:42:11 PM
 #23

Quote
and the "if this goes on" linear extrapolations imply that BtC will badly damage stable governance, not to mention redistributive taxation systems and social security/pension nets if its value continues to soar (as it seems designed to do due to its deflationary properties).
This article is just the whining of yet another kleptomaniac who hates the idea of people being able to hold on to their own money.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.

Yes, this reminds me of ~50% of the ZeroHedge commenters.  For *a decade* they have complained about the Fed and the unjustness of our monetary system, in favor of free-market solutions.  Bitcoin offers a practical alternative that still fits within our modern high-tech world--vastly more useful for modern trade than gold and silver.  But many ZeroHedgers mock it and cheer every time the price dips.  

I really don't understand.  

Yep, not just the zerohedgers, even the Gold & silver bugs in kitcoforums, the infowarers at the alex jones website fit the description you mention. The Ron Paul forum libertarians seems to have some sanity in adopting bitcoin.

Here they have the answer they've been waiting for all their lives and yet they mock it and laugh it off.

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December 19, 2013, 09:40:43 PM
 #24

The first sign of a tsunami is all the water pulling away.

A most excellent observation.

The recoil in horror, en masse, by the minority 'social leaders' of statist persuasion is a sure sign that the masses themselves are swelling and preparing for a massive tidal movement ... the very concept of money has broken the 100yo ice free from it's frozen skids and the sleigh is now definitely on the move again ...

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December 19, 2013, 09:46:55 PM
 #25

Yep, not just the zerohedgers, even the Gold & silver bugs in kitcoforums, the infowarers at the alex jones website fit the description you mention. The Ron Paul forum libertarians seems to have some sanity in adopting bitcoin.

Here they have the answer they've been waiting for all their lives and yet they mock it and laugh it off.

There exists, in this world, a group of people named "skeptics"; though I do believe a healthy dose of doubt makes for a very rational character, complete and utter doubt in everything makes a person nutters, e.g. "Illuminati plots!  NWO OWC!"  These folks don't really care for a change, they just want to shit on everything and hope the world burns with them on it.

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December 19, 2013, 11:03:24 PM
 #26

Dear Tradertimm,

As a dreamer and an advocate of progress myself, i commend you on the great rebuttal!

i wonder, did he ever respond to you ?

He metioned "hitting the pub" after a few of the comment replies, then later he said he'd be "wielding the ban hammer". I suppose he's either too busy drinking, or ban-hammering. I haven't seen my post appear, so he is either backlogged, drunk, deleted it, or all of the above.

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December 19, 2013, 11:05:58 PM
 #27

Trader Timm you wish to see bitcoin crash? Well in that case we are both friend who are waiting for the collapsing of so called digital currency named “Bitcoin”. I can sense the storm nearby which will eventually destroy the bitcoin soon as bitcoin has already felt below the resistance of $1000 and now it’s time to fall further

I didn't write about Bitcoin prices here, at all. If you must know, I think we go through regular cycles of buying/selling, and I try my best to understand which is about to happen. My main point in posting this is for overall awareness and to express my sadness at a very prolific and excellent sci-fi author falling for the "status quo is fine" mindset.

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December 19, 2013, 11:08:12 PM
 #28

Let me guess, the author panic sold the coins he bought for $1200.  Cheesy

It is point :-)
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December 19, 2013, 11:08:50 PM
 #29

Yes, this reminds me of ~50% of the ZeroHedge commenters.  For *a decade* they have complained about the Fed and the unjustness of our monetary system, in favor of free-market solutions.  Bitcoin offers a practical alternative that still fits within our modern high-tech world--vastly more useful for modern trade than gold and silver.  But many ZeroHedgers mock it and cheer every time the price dips.  

I really don't understand.  

Don't even get me started on those guys. Here's a post that I think encapsulates pretty well what they're really all about over there:

Yeah, starting to think that these "preppers" and "stackers" don't give a shit about being prepared or hedged, they just want to lord it over everyone about how well-off they'll be when the shit hits the fan. A variation on the "keeping up with the jonses" except its played out with how big your bunker is, and how large of a walk-in vault you have for your 'stack'.

Consumerism translated over into the realm of the paranoid, but not so paranoid as not to brag about it. Witness Hedgless Horseman's lovingly photographed locally-made meals, the excess of comments about what kind of gun/ammo to buy, the recommendations of dealers in gold bars and coins. They want to share, they NEED to share, to show everyone how "right" they are and how willing they are to see the world burn.

Take the labels off and recontextualize it, it might as well be a bunch of Bentley owners talking about their deluxe concealable pop-down garages, their security systems and of course, the wall safe full of rare cigars and hunting trophies.

Its the displacement of disposable income masquerading as a somber and sensible investment. No wonder they make fun of Bitcoin, not only do they not understand it, but they don't see how they can use it to brag about their foresight and preparedness.

Like it matters to me, at all, while they're counting down eagerly, waiting for the doomsday clock to hit midnight, Bitcoiners are actually fighting the system by participating in something that has benefits that go beyond a bunker or wall safe. Something that adds up to social justice in the face of rampant corruption and wealth inequality.

But they'll keep it up, because that's all they know, much like the inmate that goes back to prison after being freed, because the real world is too much of an unknown compared to the spartan cell they lived in for 30 years.


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December 19, 2013, 11:12:22 PM
 #30

Let me guess, the author panic sold the coins he bought for $1200.  Cheesy

It is point :-)

To be fair, I don't think he has ever mentioned Bitcoin before today. He also has said that in his book "Neptune's Brood", the reference to bitcoin wasn't THE BITCOIN, but another form of digital money that fits his story. He certainly hasn't talked about owning any, that's for sure.

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December 19, 2013, 11:12:25 PM
 #31

Bitcoin does not simply die in a fire. Bitcoin IS the fire.
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December 20, 2013, 12:13:32 AM
 #32

Oh yeah ... burn it to the ground !

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=TZwmgeeFB-E#t=1956
 jump to 32mins in for the hellfire and brimstone part in the southern accent ... it's classic.

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December 20, 2013, 12:21:13 AM
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I LOVE THIS IMAGE!


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December 20, 2013, 04:16:22 AM
 #34

Nice rebuttal.

Stross is the modern day Ken MacLeod.  He clearly has socialist instincts but the facts of the world and the history of the 20th century have forced him to admit how much socialism sucks.  So he looks for alternatives.  Someone tells him about libertarianism.  He studies it.  It makes sense logically, but his gut recoils.  Despite this, he manages to wrote some decent science fiction with libertarian themes.

But deep down, he's still a socialist.  And when push comes to shove, like the emergence of a technology that frees money from the state, he sides with state power.  He might make overtures to freedom on paper, but when it actually matters, he'll always side with power.
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December 20, 2013, 12:29:10 PM
 #35

Hijacking pc's to mine bitcoins is long past. This guy needs to do his homework.
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December 20, 2013, 03:43:25 PM
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Happy new difficulty 1.2 bilion   Grin

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December 20, 2013, 03:47:32 PM
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I like him as an author. Outside of that I guess he should keep his mouth shut. Not liking something is one thing, but hoping it gets ruined for those that do is just selfish and retarded.
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December 20, 2013, 07:38:34 PM
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Sorry Charles; we invented the Bitcoin Firesafe, so it's too late for that.   Cool
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December 20, 2013, 08:00:55 PM
 #39

I like him as an author. Outside of that I guess he should keep his mouth shut. Not liking something is one thing, but hoping it gets ruined for those that do is just selfish and retarded.

Finally, an intelligent and rational argument against Bitcoin.
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December 20, 2013, 10:00:10 PM
 #40

Quote
and the "if this goes on" linear extrapolations imply that BtC will badly damage stable governance, not to mention redistributive taxation systems and social security/pension nets if its value continues to soar (as it seems designed to do due to its deflationary properties).
This article is just the whining of yet another kleptomaniac who hates the idea of people being able to hold on to their own money.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.
^^^  This!!!  There are a lot of folks who like to give voice to their support of liberty, but who at their core are merely interested in imposing their own concept of "liberty"--one that usually puts them in charge.

It's how leftists think.
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December 20, 2013, 10:08:05 PM
 #41

Here is a detailed response to the environmental claims against Bitcoin, fiat collectively requires significantly more energy expenditures to maintain: http://www.ofnumbers.com/2013/12/18/charles-stross-takes-on-the-bitcoin-community/



Reference Link: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2013/12/why-i-want-bitcoin-to-die-in-a.html

Above-the-fold Excerpt:

Bitcoin just crashed 50% today, on news that the Chinese government has banned local exchanges from accepting deposits in Yuan. BtC was trading over $1000 yesterday; now it's down to $500 and still falling.

Good.

I want Bitcoin to die in a fire: this is a start, but it's not sufficient. Let me give you a round-up below the cut.

--------

My response to his rant:

How utterly depressing.

Your leading title - "Why I want Bitcoin to die in a fire" is so completely at odds with what I thought you were about, that I'm having a bit of cognitive dissonance parsing it.

It would be as if Isaac Asimov said "Robots - seriously, screw those buckets of junk, I just wrote about it for the checks."

You open with admitting the current financial system is crap, but apparently not crappy enough to replace, as Bitcoin isn't "IT".

In light of the massive fraud that we've seen globally, from the 2008 mortgage securitization fraud, LIBOR rigging scandal, HSBC Drug Money laundering and the continued Eurozone implosion courtesy of the Eurodollar and everyone hooking together the worst parts of their respective economies into a debt-chain of nightmare proportions, it seems that preserving the current system is one of the last things we should be considering.

And yet, when faced with the potential of complete freedom, the solution apparently is for Bitcoin to "die in a fire". Lightning has struck outside of our financial cave, and we're not rushing to the smouldering tree to nurture this spark, we're instead fleeing back into the damp cold depths, somehow reassuring ourselves that once you can feel the cave walls, you don't need light at all.

I find this particular view shockingly regressive. You, an author that I admire and have many times re-read your stories on taking technologies to the limit - "Accelerando" in particular comes to mind - and yet the very words out of your mouth regarding Bitcoin are riddled with fear and hostility.

Perhaps it was always part of your internal agenda, when I read this from "Accelerando":

"The last great transglobal trade empire, run from the arcologies of Hong Kong, has collapsed along with capitalism, rendered obsolete by a bunch of superior deterministic resource allocation algorithms collectively known as Economics 2.0."

I initially took this to mean that you recognized progress comes at a cost, but ultimately it is what enables us collectively to advance and improve our situation. Now, in light of your post about Bitcoin, I see this as fear of such an advance telegraphed four years before Bitcoin even existed.

As others will no doubt shine bright lights into the dark crevices of misunderstandings you have about Bitcoin, I'm just simply here to express my utter disbelief that someone as visionary as yourself can't see the benefits of a system that allows financial freedom.

You touch upon the fearful subjects of "Carbon Footprint" (Ignoring advances in lowered power consumption of the same.), "Bitcoin Malware" (Every ecosystem has predators and prey, surely), "Violates Gresham's Law" (Apparently we can steal electricity rather than pay? Funny how the utilities still operate then.) "Bitcoin's Lack of Regulation" (Like they've done such a stellar job with the regular system - please.)

And then, finally - "Bitcoin is designed for tax evasion" argument. Oh my. I suppose everyone is a crook and nobody would want to support their communities? Is this really the kind of thought process I'm supposed to believe you have? As for the "Gini Coefficient" you linked to, you do realize that distribution was on a singular exchange that ran with the money not long after, right? I'd say those funds have already been redistributed.

There's more, but honestly it all sounds like you're throwing your weight behind is the legacy financial system, warts and all, and somehow its better than having the ability to spend your money on what you want, or being able to shift your wealth around the globe without artificial barriers or constraints.

Perhaps I should ask about your stance on ebooks and Digital Rights Management, because it seems they're rather similar. Granted, "Accelerando" was released using a Creative Commons license, but what about the rest? Are you in favor of restrictive policies regarding data? Is every "regulation" in your view fair and just?

Am I to conclude that all of those flights of fancy that you've eloquently penned over the years really spring from the restricted and fearful psyche of someone who prefers flawed "protection" instead of actual freedom?

Please say it isn't so.

I'm not here to change your mind, because it seems you're quite firmly set on the issue, I'm just here to express my complete and utter shock that a visionary would rather hide in the back of his cave, feeling the walls for comfort, in the utter darkness.




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December 20, 2013, 10:36:44 PM
 #42

Here is a detailed response to the environmental claims against Bitcoin, fiat collectively requires significantly more energy expenditures to maintain: http://www.ofnumbers.com/2013/12/18/charles-stross-takes-on-the-bitcoin-community/


Thanks for the link, its a good read - and confirms what I already knew empirically. Which also further depresses me that Stross can miss something so painfully obvious. Perhaps he'll be in the "Laggard" part of the adoption curve, when all of his peers start selling books in Bitcoin. One can only hope he'll see reason.

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January 06, 2014, 04:04:36 PM
 #43

Dear Tradertimm,

As a dreamer and an advocate of progress myself, i commend you on the great rebuttal!

i wonder, did he ever respond to you ?

He metioned "hitting the pub" after a few of the comment replies, then later he said he'd be "wielding the ban hammer". I suppose he's either too busy drinking, or ban-hammering. I haven't seen my post appear, so he is either backlogged, drunk, deleted it, or all of the above.

I don't see your response under his post. Was it removed?
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January 06, 2014, 05:38:41 PM
 #44

Quote
and the "if this goes on" linear extrapolations imply that BtC will badly damage stable governance, not to mention redistributive taxation systems and social security/pension nets if its value continues to soar (as it seems designed to do due to its deflationary properties).
This article is just the whining of yet another kleptomaniac who hates the idea of people being able to hold on to their own money.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.
^^^  This!!!  There are a lot of folks who like to give voice to their support of liberty, but who at their core are merely interested in imposing their own concept of "liberty"--one that usually puts them in charge.

It's how leftists think.

Strange, I always thought that libertarianism was as left as you can be right without actally crossing the left-right line. Except the extreme-right libertarians, of course. Oh, and I forgot the socio-anarchists, too. They're as right as you can be left without being right of the left. Confusing isn't it!

Vires in numeris
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January 06, 2014, 06:59:12 PM
 #45

Bear in mind that science fiction authors often write about adversarial propositions -- you can't write a good story without conflict to drive the plot.  As a writer you don't need to believe that either side is "right" -- you need to understand the conflicts and make the characters passionate about their causes and show how it drives their interactions. 

Later on, people will think that whichever side of the conflict the writer put the protagonist on is the side he personally believes in, and for some shallow predictable polemist writers that's true.  But that isn't how it works in general, or David Brin could never have written 'Glory Season'. During the story, the only character who remotely shares the values of the reading audience, or for that matter the author, gets killed.  He wasn't the protagonist.  In fact the protagonist was too late to save him.  And his death resulted in (and from) merely the evolution, not the resolution, of a conflict between two opposing sides both of which most of us would consider dystopian.

I believe in cryptocurrency as a concept and I'm invested in it, but I'm concerned about some of Bitcoin's economics and don't believe that Bitcoin can possibly represent the ultimate evolution of cryptocurrency.  In the long run cryptocurrency requires some refinement and evolution before it will be better than what it attempts to replace.

The simple fixed money supply, if it were the main or only form of money, would lead to fairly dire instabilities.  In the very long run, if Bitcoin were the *only* money supply, then we'd have  economic collapse because with a fixed money supply an investor could always do as well, on average, just sitting on his money as investing it in something productive.  Good thing then that it will never be the *only* money supply. 

For every complex problem (like regulation of the money supply by nation states and distrust of those who do it), there is a solution that is simple, easy, and wrong (like doing and allowing no regulation of the money supply at all).  I fear that Bitcoin's current approach is one of many wrong answers, that it will take actual long-term use to observe exactly how and why it is wrong, and that cryptocurrencies will need to experiment for a long time in order to find better answers.


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January 06, 2014, 07:05:48 PM
 #46

Bear in mind that science fiction authors often write about adversarial propositions -- you can't write a good story without conflict to drive the plot.  As a writer you don't need to believe that either side is "right" -- you need to understand the conflicts and make the characters passionate about their causes and show how it drives their interactions. 

Later on, people will think that whichever side of the conflict the writer put the protagonist on is the side he personally believes in, and for some shallow predictable polemist writers that's true.  But that isn't how it works in general, or David Brin could never have written 'Glory Season'. During the story, the only character who remotely shares the values of the reading audience, or for that matter the author, gets killed.  He wasn't the protagonist.  In fact the protagonist was too late to save him.  And his death resulted in (and from) merely the evolution, not the resolution, of a conflict between two opposing sides both of which most of us would consider dystopian.

I believe in cryptocurrency as a concept and I'm invested in it, but I'm concerned about some of Bitcoin's economics and don't believe that Bitcoin can possibly represent the ultimate evolution of cryptocurrency.  In the long run cryptocurrency requires some refinement and evolution before it will be better than what it attempts to replace.

The simple fixed money supply, if it were the main or only form of money, would lead to fairly dire instabilities.  In the very long run, if Bitcoin were the *only* money supply, then we'd have  economic collapse because with a fixed money supply an investor could always do as well, on average, just sitting on his money as investing it in something productive.  Good thing then that it will never be the *only* money supply. 

For every complex problem (like regulation of the money supply by nation states and distrust of those who do it), there is a solution that is simple, easy, and wrong (like doing and allowing no regulation of the money supply at all).  I fear that Bitcoin's current approach is one of many wrong answers, that it will take actual long-term use to observe exactly how and why it is wrong, and that cryptocurrencies will need to experiment for a long time in order to find better answers.


So much wrong in here it is not worth correcting anymore ....

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January 06, 2014, 07:13:17 PM
 #47


So much wrong in here it is not worth correcting anymore ....

That's all right.  I don't have enough information yet to make corrections myself; I'd no expectation that anyone else would.  Wink
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January 07, 2014, 04:32:21 PM
 #48


That's all right.  I don't have enough information yet to make corrections myself; I'd no expectation that anyone else would.  Wink

So science fiction writers have a free license to "kick the hornets nest" because they can? How completely idiotic.

As for how Bitcoin is the "wrong answer", I'd love to see your defense of how the existing system is the "right" one. And if you believe this, why the fuck are you here?

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January 07, 2014, 04:46:43 PM
 #49

reading the story and some of the comments below its a bit off a joke really  Cheesy


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January 07, 2014, 07:21:44 PM
 #50

ain't even mad


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January 07, 2014, 07:23:37 PM
 #51

Bitcoin don't give a shit.

its hard not to swear when dealing with some of these dystopiates isn't it  Cheesy

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January 08, 2014, 12:34:41 AM
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So science fiction writers have a free license to "kick the hornets nest" because they can? How completely idiotic.

All writers actually.  Their business, when they are good, is to get us to think about things.  Whether that's fiction writers 'kicking the hornet's nest' and making us question our own beliefs and biases, or journalists daring to tell the truth no one else dares name and making us question our institutions and leaders.


As for how Bitcoin is the "wrong answer", I'd love to see your defense of how the existing system is the "right" one. And if you believe this, why the fuck are you here?


In many places around the world, like pretty much all war zones, Cyprus, Greece, Italy, most of sub-saharan Africa, and much of Latin America, Bitcoin is definitely a better system than what currently exists, because the people doing monetary policy there either are desperate, have no idea what they're doing, are corrupt, or are under too much pressure from people who are desperate, have no idea what they're doing, or are corrupt.   A 'dead' hand with mindlessly simple algorithms is better than management by actively incompetent or malicious people.  

In many other places around the world, where actual competent and reasonably honest people are doing monetary policy, Bitcoin is not remotely a better solution in terms of monetary policy.  It *is* however, a better solution as a financial network.  Nothing as good exists for cross-border money flows, including into and out of all those nations where barriers exist to honest business because the officials in those countries doing monetary policy are incompetent or corrupt.  

I'm invested in Bitcoin because it solves a multi-trillion dollar problem; how to send money quickly, cheaply, easily, and securely around the world and break down barriers to trade.  It may or may not be better monetary policy depending on where you live, it's a risky and volatile investment, and its equilibrium price when it's valued according to its utility will most likely be found through a huge cycle of bubbles and at least one 99% crash driven by currency speculation.  But I honestly believe that its value according to utility is higher than the current price, and that's why I'm invested.  
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January 08, 2014, 08:23:24 PM
 #53

I don't see your response under his post. Was it removed?

I checked recently, and it isn't there. No proof that it even made it, so I'm not sure what the problem was. Highly likely it was in the moderation queue and got deleted/binned from there.

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January 08, 2014, 08:29:55 PM
 #54


So science fiction writers have a free license to "kick the hornets nest" because they can? How completely idiotic.

All writers actually.  Their business, when they are good, is to get us to think about things.  Whether that's fiction writers 'kicking the hornet's nest' and making us question our own beliefs and biases, or journalists daring to tell the truth no one else dares name and making us question our institutions and leaders.


As for how Bitcoin is the "wrong answer", I'd love to see your defense of how the existing system is the "right" one. And if you believe this, why the fuck are you here?


In many places around the world, like pretty much all war zones, Cyprus, Greece, Italy, most of sub-saharan Africa, and much of Latin America, Bitcoin is definitely a better system than what currently exists, because the people doing monetary policy there either are desperate, have no idea what they're doing, are corrupt, or are under too much pressure from people who are desperate, have no idea what they're doing, or are corrupt.   A 'dead' hand with mindlessly simple algorithms is better than management by actively incompetent or malicious people.  

In many other places around the world, where actual competent and reasonably honest people are doing monetary policy, Bitcoin is not remotely a better solution in terms of monetary policy.  It *is* however, a better solution as a financial network.  Nothing as good exists for cross-border money flows, including into and out of all those nations where barriers exist to honest business because the officials in those countries doing monetary policy are incompetent or corrupt.  

I'm invested in Bitcoin because it solves a multi-trillion dollar problem; how to send money quickly, cheaply, easily, and securely around the world and break down barriers to trade.  It may or may not be better monetary policy depending on where you live, it's a risky and volatile investment, and its equilibrium price when it's valued according to its utility will most likely be found through a huge cycle of bubbles and at least one 99% crash driven by currency speculation.  But I honestly believe that its value according to utility is higher than the current price, and that's why I'm invested.  

"They make us think" - ah yes, the defense for the people who are "just asking questions", seemingly oblivious as to the implications of their actions. He knew exactly what he was doing. Its clear from the title, the content, and the subsequent cherry-picked comments that he allowed to remain on his blog. If he's going to have his own censor-happy kingdom, fine - but to throw baseless accusations against Bitcoin is ridiculous.

I could make a claim against you, that you have no defense of - because I just "Say so", and it wouldn't help anyone involved. It wouldn't make them "think" or "hear the truth" about a damn thing. Its mudslinging, plain and simple. Stross sure wasn't advocating a patient and rational debate.

Stross came out of the gate fists slinging his slop, behaving like a reckless bully. That is a far cry from your portrayal of someone trying to ignite debate about important internal issues regarding Bitcoin.

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January 08, 2014, 11:17:27 PM
 #55

Charles Stross is an excellent hack writer but sounds like a pissy little whinging baby in this article.

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January 10, 2014, 04:20:22 AM
 #56

Regarding Stross' allegations, here is a very detailed rebuttal with numbers regarding environmental impact and carbon use: http://www.ofnumbers.com/2013/12/18/charles-stross-takes-on-the-bitcoin-community/
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January 11, 2014, 02:40:44 AM
 #57

Regarding Stross' allegations, here is a very detailed rebuttal with numbers regarding environmental impact and carbon use: http://www.ofnumbers.com/2013/12/18/charles-stross-takes-on-the-bitcoin-community/

Cool, just a few typos.

Saying that you don't trust someone because of their behavior is completely valid.
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January 11, 2014, 02:43:21 AM
 #58

I love Stross's work, but I didn't hold back much when I wrote up my article about what he and Krugman (by quoting him) got totally wrong. Just because a technology has the hallmarks of something that could supplant a current system isn't a reason to want it to die.

What's really odd about this reaction from Stross is that some of his work involves cultures that exist based on highly divergent and individualized technology use.

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January 11, 2014, 05:46:56 AM
 #59

Every and anyone who does/do not benefit, or are somehow threatened from their position or dependancy on any medium that is directly threatened by the success of BTC want Bitcoin to "die in a fire". Fortunately, there are more pros than cons, to anyone remotely intelligent and objective.

Long Live Bitcoin!


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