pjviitas (OP)
|
|
January 30, 2014, 03:29:17 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
|
|
|
|
toomsie
Member
Offline
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
|
|
January 30, 2014, 03:43:04 PM |
|
If they destroy it, more will come to replace it.
|
|
|
|
greyhawk
|
|
January 30, 2014, 03:43:36 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Psht. Gobbledigook. Here's how you kill Bitcoin: Step 1: Shut down the exchanges. Step 2: There is no step 2
|
|
|
|
jballs
|
|
January 30, 2014, 03:56:27 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Psht. Gobbledigook. Here's how you kill Bitcoin: Step 1: Shut down the exchanges. Step 2: There is no step 2 I seldom use the term but... Lol. You are going to shut down every exchange in every jurisdiction in the world, including localbit, craigslist, irc? Outlawing bitcoin trading would send the price to the moon. No sense arguing that point, name a thing that costs less on the black market than it costs in a free market. One thing... As for OP I came to the same conclusion, about the major pools anyway. That is why i put money in VTC. I dont know if they will fly, but they are moving the ball towards decentralizing again, surely a moving target but altcoin will survive even if bitcoin dies. But i do not really expect the gov to kill it, just regulate it eventually.
|
|
|
|
BitCoinDream
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2394
Merit: 1216
The revolution will be digital
|
|
January 30, 2014, 03:59:22 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
I guess difficulty will go down wena govt stops mining under its demography.
|
|
|
|
MakeBelieve
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:09:28 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Psht. Gobbledigook. Here's how you kill Bitcoin: Step 1: Shut down the exchanges. Step 2: There is no step 2 Unrealistic not every government would want to destroy Bitcoin so there would still be exchanges in some countries.
|
On a mission to make Bitcointalk.org Marketplace a safer place to Buy/Sell/Trade
|
|
|
RodeoX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:21:55 PM |
|
Will not work. Will cost billions.
|
|
|
|
MakeBelieve
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:23:08 PM |
|
Will not work. Will cost billions.
Surely the government will have enough money though they could just print more off.
|
On a mission to make Bitcointalk.org Marketplace a safer place to Buy/Sell/Trade
|
|
|
RodeoX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:26:09 PM |
|
Will not work. Will cost billions.
Surely the government will have enough money though they could just print more off. lol, well they certainly have spent billions on other ill fated projects.
|
|
|
|
MakeBelieve
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:27:30 PM |
|
Will not work. Will cost billions.
Surely the government will have enough money though they could just print more off. lol, well they certainly have spent billions on other ill fated projects. Haha I don't think it would benefit them to destroy Bitcoin what would be the point?
|
On a mission to make Bitcointalk.org Marketplace a safer place to Buy/Sell/Trade
|
|
|
RodeoX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:31:52 PM |
|
Haha I don't think it would benefit them to destroy Bitcoin what would be the point?
I agree. Assuming you had billions to spend you might be able to hurt bitcoin. Of course bitcoin 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, etc. will require additional billions. In the end what has been achieved for all this money, and why was it done in the first place?
|
|
|
|
tinyteapot
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:34:27 PM |
|
The 'Government' (which one exactly?) won't shut it down, the banks will. They'll come up with their own, and force it upon you. McDonalds, Amazon and WalMart will all eagerly back it, and bitcoin will die.
|
|
|
|
MakeBelieve
|
|
January 30, 2014, 04:36:21 PM |
|
The 'Government' (which one exactly?) won't shut it down, the banks will. They'll come up with their own, and force it upon you. McDonalds, Amazon and WalMart will all eagerly back it, and bitcoin will die.
Why would those companies be backing the banks I think some of them you have mentioned have interest in accepting Bitcoin.
|
On a mission to make Bitcointalk.org Marketplace a safer place to Buy/Sell/Trade
|
|
|
RodeoX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
|
|
January 30, 2014, 05:20:16 PM |
|
The 'Government' (which one exactly?) won't shut it down, the banks will. They'll come up with their own, and force it upon you. McDonalds, Amazon and WalMart will all eagerly back it, and bitcoin will die.
I don't understand. How are they going to force me to use their alt-coin? And why would acceptance by some of the worlds largest companies cause bitcoin to die?
|
|
|
|
LostDutchman
|
|
January 30, 2014, 06:26:29 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Well, as far as power requirements go, they would have to push things beyond 400 amps (88,000 watss; 88KW) before things would affect me. I kinda doubt that will happen but you do have an intersting hypothesis. My $.02.
|
|
|
|
MakeBelieve
|
|
January 30, 2014, 06:29:03 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Well, as far as power requirements go, they would have to push things beyond 400 amps (88,000 watss; 88KW) before things would affect me. I kinda doubt that will happen but you do have an intersting hypothesis. My $.02. That's certinaly a lot of power you are using and not counting others who are mining with amazing machines it would take too much money to defeat Bitcoin this way.
|
On a mission to make Bitcointalk.org Marketplace a safer place to Buy/Sell/Trade
|
|
|
LostDutchman
|
|
January 30, 2014, 06:37:57 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Well, as far as power requirements go, they would have to push things beyond 400 amps (88,000 watss; 88KW) before things would affect me. I kinda doubt that will happen but you do have an intersting hypothesis. My $.02. That's certinaly a lot of power you are using and not counting others who are mining with amazing machines it would take too much money to defeat Bitcoin this way. I am not using all the power yet but also have two other rent-free locations with the same 400 amp incoming. I intend to use up at least 85% of the available incoming with scryptcoin mining rigs, both for myself and my corporation.
|
|
|
|
conspirosphere.tk
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2352
Merit: 1064
Bitcoin is antisemitic
|
|
January 30, 2014, 06:48:01 PM |
|
step 1) NSA-backdoor into as many btc-users puters as possible -not to speak about exchanges
step 2) pwn them hard making believe that it's some hacker to make an example of how unsafe cryptos are (while the guv instead...)
|
|
|
|
LostDutchman
|
|
January 30, 2014, 07:09:49 PM |
|
Step one: Procure whatever hardware necessary to force difficulty to continue increasing. Step two: Wait until the power requirements for running a mining setup from a single family dwelling becomes next to impossible. Step three: Mop up any remaining centralized mining facilities through either taking them over in the name of national security or bombing it into the stone age. Step four: Profit.
I wouldn't doubt that the NSA already has this kind of scheme cooked up and ready to deploy.
Well, as far as power requirements go, they would have to push things beyond 400 amps (88,000 watss; 88KW) before things would affect me. I kinda doubt that will happen but you do have an intersting hypothesis. My $.02. That's certinaly a lot of power you are using and not counting others who are mining with amazing machines it would take too much money to defeat Bitcoin this way. Not mining Bitcoin. Why tie up a bunch of money in"pre-ordered" vapourware ASIC rigs for Bitcoin when the same money can be put to work mining alts almost right away? You order Bitcoin ASICs and by the time they get to you the difficulty is so high that your equipment is nearly uselsess. I've got a ton of fans spinning against Litecoin and am very happy. My $.02.
|
|
|
|
delaro
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
|
|
January 30, 2014, 07:18:10 PM |
|
Outlawing bitcoin trading would send the price to the moon. No sense arguing that point, name a thing that costs less on the black market than it costs in a free market. One thing... All kinds of things... Guns for example.
|
|
|
|
|