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Author Topic: Is There Any Hope Left?  (Read 5176 times)
BurntSnow (OP)
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October 19, 2011, 06:13:42 AM
 #1

I'm going to make this short, because I'm more interested in reading your opinions rather than sharing mine. I'm sure most of you have invested in Bitcoins- and I consider even $50 an investment (though a small one). You could have invested when 10,000 Bitcoins were worth $25, or when a Bitcoin was worth about a buck. But do you regret not cashing in your investment earlier? Even I didn't expect the value of a Bitcoin to plummet this low, and despite getting rid of all my rigs and finally uninstalling both the RPC and Diablo miners from my main computer I still check MtGox each day in hopes that the economy will get much better. Then again, I'm a kid, so why should my opinion be taken seriously? The point that I'm trying to get at is, Bitcoins have been drastically falling in value ever since the CosbyCoin incident. At this point, do you intend to sell your investment and make what tiny profit (if any) you can get, or continue "believing" in Bitcoin?
As long as Silk Road is up, I'm sure Bitcoins will still be around regardless of their value. But I can just expect that one day I'll come back here and the whole community will be dead (metaphorically, of course).

One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.


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October 19, 2011, 06:33:43 AM
 #2

there is a reason why bitcoin was created

i believe this reason still stands

Yes, there is hope. there is always hope




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October 19, 2011, 06:42:43 AM
 #3

I'll keep the computer running until it no longer pays the electricity it costs to run it, and I have a very cheap electric rate, so no worries there.

I've found other uses for BTC apart from SR, and it will continue to have use to me for the future though.
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October 19, 2011, 07:01:07 AM
 #4

Bright future.

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October 19, 2011, 07:31:20 AM
 #5

I'm going to make this short, because I'm more interested in reading your opinions rather than sharing mine. I'm sure most of you have invested in Bitcoins- and I consider even $50 an investment (though a small one). You could have invested when 10,000 Bitcoins were worth $25, or when a Bitcoin was worth about a buck. But do you regret not cashing in your investment earlier? Even I didn't expect the value of a Bitcoin to plummet this low, and despite getting rid of all my rigs and finally uninstalling both the RPC and Diablo miners from my main computer I still check MtGox each day in hopes that the economy will get much better. Then again, I'm a kid, so why should my opinion be taken seriously? The point that I'm trying to get at is, Bitcoins have been drastically falling in value ever since the CosbyCoin incident. At this point, do you intend to sell your investment and make what tiny profit (if any) you can get, or continue "believing" in Bitcoin?

Honestly, I believe that this bubble-n-crash was a great thing for Bitcoins. The bubble brought in a lot of new blood (like me and some friends) in that community. The crash was necessary to clean the place of all the scammers and get-rich-quick-losers who don't bring a lot of value with them. Right now, a lot of projects are being created and Bitcoin is growing slowly, but clearly.

Yeah, if you just look at the price, you're going to miss the important details. Go check how many new users this forum gets. Check the volume of Bitcoins traded every day. Yeah, the price is low, but don't forget that for every person who sells, there's another one who buy Bitcoins and want its investment to grow.

I believe right now is the best time to invest into Bitcoins projects. Just 2 days ago, we bought a total of 4 GHash/s of new Radeon for our farm. This weekend, we're going to go from 8 GHash/s to 12 GHash/s. And yes, we pay our electricity and yes, we're making money. I really don't understand that now that the Bitcoin is accessible to more people because of its low price, all we see is "doom and gloom". With that difficulty going down like crazy, and the price going the same way, it's a wonderful opportunity to invest.


Quote
As long as Silk Road is up, I'm sure Bitcoins will still be around regardless of their value. But I can just expect that one day I'll come back here and the whole community will be dead (metaphorically, of course).

One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

It is not a ponzi scheme. Why? Because it is not.
Also, the sky is not brown. Why? Because it is not.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme

And don't take it personnally, but I believe it is impossible for you to become a millionaire with your current attitude. My guess is that, if you knew about Bitcoins from the start, you would have the same reaction as right now. One year ago, it was impossible to predict the bubble who occured in June. And right now, it's impossible to predict the next bubble who will occur in December 2012.

How do I know there's going to be another bubble in December 2012? The world is supposed to end next year, and people will invest into Bitcoin because of that. I have a chart with red lines made with Paint somewhere on my computer that proves it!

Seriously, I don't know, I'm like those early adopters who had no idea what Bitcoin could become in the future. I'm happy for them, because right now, I'm making money because of their efforts. I hope some other people will be able to make money later because of my efforts.

Quote
And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.

Well, some interesting ideas could emerge from it (thinking about Namecoin right now). But overall, we're going to see a lot of shit(like SolidCoin for example) where all the guy try to do is to rip-off Bitcoins, correct "problems" (in reality, these are not really problems, they are more like unique characteristics that are perceive like problems because people are afraid of them) and try to do the exact same thing Bitcoins does, but with a new paint job on it.

Overall, I'm just a random Internet guy, who's really sick of all that "fail" mentality around here. Why everybody is so obsessed with failure, whining or conspiracy? Don't you guys want to win sometimes? Sure there's a conspiracy/ponzi scheme/whatever out there. Somebody called God planted a death bomb in your ass and, evil as he is, he didn't told you when it's going to blow up. But hey! Lucky as we are, we can achieve things with the time we have!

BurntSnow, don't take anything in my post personnally. It's just that your post is similar to a dozen of "doom" post everywhere on this forum, and I just wanted to rant about it.



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October 19, 2011, 08:29:19 AM
 #6


One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.

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October 19, 2011, 11:17:58 AM
 #7

@Brunic - I have no idea why you are buying more rigs now when it's surely far cheaper and faster to buy the coins outright.

You must be mental.
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October 19, 2011, 11:33:38 AM
 #8

I'm sure most of you have invested in Bitcoins ( ... ) But do you regret not cashing in your investment earlier?  ( ... ) But I can just expect that one day I'll come back here and the whole community will be dead (metaphorically, of course).

Here's something I just said in another thread:

There are several different groups here:

Miners: Hash power lags price, so when the price is rising, miners make money; when it's falling, they're unprofitable.  Right now mining is useful to people who want to acquire coins without exchanges, or who just want to support the network.  Bitcoin is dead to for-profit miners, and will stay dead unless the price surges again, in which case it'll be profitable briefly.

Speculative investors:  A few got in early and aren't about to complain.  Most bought in above $10, and they're in the middle of a bloodbath.  The ones who say it's dead lost it all; the ones who say it's alive are trying to catch a falling knife.  Most will grab too early and get a handful of blade, but a few will get lucky and grab the handle.

Trolls:  Bitcoin was stillborn, is dead, was always dead, will always be dead, and anything it ever does is because it's a fucking zombie and we need to shoot it in the head.

Cryptoconsumers (My camp): We want to buy and sell things and don't care much about the exchange rate.  For us, Bitcoin is still in its infancy: there are still far too few places accepting it, and volatility is a real drag on acceptance; in my opinion a more stable altchain may eventually win for this reason.  But it (Bitcoin proper, and cryptocurrency generally) is still very much alive, and I have no reason to run away.


Quote
Bitcoins have been drastically falling in value ever since the CosbyCoin incident.

It's been falling since the bubble peaked.  CosbyCoin was inconsequential.  I drew this a month ago:



I've switched to log charts because linear charting is going to fail us as the prices fall into the 1-2 range.  Here's one I did a couple days ago:



Cosbycoin is that 220k volume spike in September.  It moved the price briefly but it didn't have any lasting effect.

This trend has been going a long time, and I consider it to be due to bad problems in Bitcoin's fundamentals: specifically, that until there's more commerce happening in coins, it's terribly overvalued.  Yes, even now.  More about that here:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=42514.msg579016#msg579016

Quote
At this point, do you intend to sell your investment and make what tiny profit (if any) you can get, or continue "believing" in Bitcoin?
I believe in fundamentals, not hopes and dreams.  I haven't held any significant number of coins in a long time.

Quote
One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

It's not a ponzi at all (A single person collecting investments and faking returns).  It's much closer to a pyramid scheme (a bunch of people buying in and then desperately seeking new suckers so they can cash out).  It's not quite the same since you're selling into a liquid market instead of expecting the people under you to keep paying back up the chain, but the general behavior is pretty similar: tons of people who just know they're going to get rich off this thing if they can just keep it growing, and who're totally convinced it's not a pyramid scheme because they're selling something that has some value (most pyramid schemes have some variant of this).

Quote
And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.

I advocate creating an altcoin that deliberately sabotages the speculation pyramid by creating market-indexed inflation.  My variant is based on a currency basket; Red wants to derive it from the cost of electricity; I'm sure there are others out there.  That means that it won't be very good for long-term investment since there is plenty of opportunity to depreciate with only limited appreciation potential.  However, that WILL prevent speculative bubble/bust cycles, and I think a little inflation is a fair price to pay to gain stability.  My goal is to have a transactional currency, not a speculative investment vehicle.

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October 19, 2011, 11:34:46 AM
 #9

I'm going to make this short, because I'm more interested in reading your opinions rather than sharing mine. I'm sure most of you have invested in Bitcoins- and I consider even $50 an investment (though a small one). You could have invested when 10,000 Bitcoins were worth $25, or when a Bitcoin was worth about a buck. But do you regret not cashing in your investment earlier? Even I didn't expect the value of a Bitcoin to plummet this low, and despite getting rid of all my rigs and finally uninstalling both the RPC and Diablo miners from my main computer I still check MtGox each day in hopes that the economy will get much better. Then again, I'm a kid, so why should my opinion be taken seriously? The point that I'm trying to get at is, Bitcoins have been drastically falling in value ever since the CosbyCoin incident. At this point, do you intend to sell your investment and make what tiny profit (if any) you can get, or continue "believing" in Bitcoin?
As long as Silk Road is up, I'm sure Bitcoins will still be around regardless of their value. But I can just expect that one day I'll come back here and the whole community will be dead (metaphorically, of course).

One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.

You could have been a millionaire by investing in apple in the 80s, doesnt make apple a ponzi scheme.  Some things accrue value.  Bitcoin accrues values as it becomes more trusted, and more widely used.
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October 19, 2011, 12:19:36 PM
 #10

+1, it's a lot like a low value stock.

I compare it more to the pink sheets (penny stocks, which I also consider to be pyramids).  The behavior is similar:  with a tiny market cap, just a few guys pumping it (on forums, "BUY XXX" spams, giddy youtube videos, or whatever) can start a bubble, the new guys will take over excitedly promoting it, and it'll self-sustain long enough for the first ones in to cash out.

But those only get one shot, then they're dead.  Bitcoin may have a future.  If it can create some real value by growing a real economy, it may get somewhere.  Don't listen to the excited speculative investors who're telling you this will happen... They're speculating.  Pay attention to signs of real commerce - that's the only thing that will drive growth in the long run.

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Bitcoin is the Devil's way of teaching geeks economics.  --Revalin 165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
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October 19, 2011, 01:29:24 PM
 #11

Can I get back to you when Bitcoin is ready for release? Remember we are not even halfway to a version 1.  Once soccer Moms have a version they can choose to use, we will have an idea about it's broader adoption.

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October 19, 2011, 04:03:16 PM
 #12

Finally got out of Newbville, so I will repost this:

THE MONEY IS NOT DISAPPEARING

A lot of people are talking about how the falling bitcoin prices is making money evaporate, as though Bitcoin is somehow eating up life savings. The only thing that is evaporating is electricity and overheated GPUs, everything else is just changing hands. If you draw an imaginary boundary around all of the people playing the bitcoin exchange game and consider all of the real dollars that they have put into it, there is no sinkhole where dollars are disappearing into. It's just they have redistributed there wealth between the players. It's like playing poker at your buddies house, you came to the table, made a bet, and someone lost and someone won. The people who bought at $30 lost, and the people who sold at $30 won.

Similarly, there was no money tree when the price was ramping up. If you made money, that was late adopters putting cash into your hands. A purely speculative trading environment (Bitcoin basically) is just another type of poker. You are gambling on the actions of other individuals who in turn are gambling on the actions of you and everyone else.

I think that Bitcoin has value in that it can replace some of the action in penny stocks, commodities, and currency trading. All of these trading markets are tied down to some real world actions and have associated costs as well. Bitcoin has almost no costs and is only dependent on the people that use it. There is no shell company to declare bankruptcy, or mineral stores that have upkeep costs, or government fixing currency values. Speculating on Bitcoin ensures that the money isn't getting funnelled to anyone playing a different game than you are. Basically you can't get an edge by "cheating", you can only do your best to persuade others. It's about as fair of a gambling system as you will find anywhere.
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October 19, 2011, 04:23:17 PM
 #13

A lot of people are talking about how the falling bitcoin prices is making money evaporate, as though Bitcoin is somehow eating up life savings.

Unfortunately for a few overly-optimistic fools, it DID eat up their life savings, and they went into debt buying even more coins.

Like you say, that money wasn't destroyed, it just went to someone else... But I object to shoveling money from one person to another just because one bought in early and won the gamble against the guy who bought in late, when no one involved did anything to create or destroy any real value.  Exploiting people's gullibility is not a moral act.

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October 19, 2011, 04:48:54 PM
 #14

Bitcoin isn't about creating value, it's about moving value. Whether you're buying or selling dollars or bicycles with B, it's all the same thing. You're playing the game, shuffling around value.
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October 19, 2011, 04:53:37 PM
 #15

I agree, but it should be about choosing to move value, not having it moved because the market shifted around me in ways I didn't expect.

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
Bitcoin is the Devil's way of teaching geeks economics.  --Revalin 165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
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October 19, 2011, 05:03:20 PM
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I agree, but it should be about choosing to move value, not having it moved because the market shifted around me in ways I didn't expect.

Movement is relative. Flip around the typical Bitcoin exchange rate and suddenly it looks like there's a dollar bubble going on. USD crashed in June and has been skyrocketing ever since. Time to buy buy buy. But nobody ever looks at it that way. Same thing with dollars. Holding cash in your pocket is an investment in that cash, whether you realize that or not. If you are playing both sides of the Bitcoin/Dollar trade, then you have relative movement. Your feet are in two different boats and the only way to stabilize is to step out of one and into the other. I suggest the one that lets you buy groceries if you do that, but maybe you just need to practice balancing a bit longer.
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October 19, 2011, 05:04:09 PM
 #17

@Brunic - I have no idea why you are buying more rigs now when it's surely far cheaper and faster to buy the coins outright.

You must be mental.

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

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October 19, 2011, 05:43:13 PM
 #18

Movement is relative. Flip around the typical Bitcoin exchange rate and suddenly it looks like there's a dollar bubble going on. USD crashed in June and has been skyrocketing ever since. Time to buy buy buy. But nobody ever looks at it that way.

I do!  A couple weeks ago I commented that I had invested all my BTC into USD, and I've been earning a 1500% ROR ever since!  Smiley

But that's not really true.  It's hard to pin a specific value (Not price!  I mean value: how much it's actually worth when I buy goods) on a unit of currency, but BTC has lost 90% in 4 months, while USD hasn't lost more than 10% value even by pessimistic metrics.

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October 19, 2011, 06:25:13 PM
 #19

Bitcoin is dead to for-profit miners, and will stay dead unless the price surges again, in which case it'll be profitable briefly.

False.  My mining operation is still profitable and at the current difficulty, would remain profitable down to around $1/BTC.  Once difficulty readjusts next, my profitability level will be around $0.85/BTC.  Far from dead.

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October 19, 2011, 06:58:03 PM
 #20

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

Troll, or a complete moron? Cast your votes.

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October 19, 2011, 06:59:17 PM
 #21

Bitcoin is dead to for-profit miners, and will stay dead unless the price surges again, in which case it'll be profitable briefly.

False.  My mining operation is still profitable and at the current difficulty, would remain profitable down to around $1/BTC.  Once difficulty readjusts next, my profitability level will be around $0.85/BTC.  Far from dead.

Iceland should switch their national economy over to mining bitcoins. Their money is close to worthless anyways and they have the cheapest electricity in the world.
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October 19, 2011, 07:47:32 PM
 #22

False.  My mining operation is still profitable and at the current difficulty, would remain profitable down to around $1/BTC.  Once difficulty readjusts next, my profitability level will be around $0.85/BTC.  Far from dead.

I agree it's not completely dead.  That was said in context of another thread, and it was a bit of an oversimplification and exaggeration.

Most likely it will always be at least marginally profitable for you if you carefully plan your rigs for efficiency and you have inexpensive power, but the days where anyone could just pick up a couple Radeons and start shaking out coins worth well above their costs are over.  You can't do it on residential power in Hawaii or California no matter what hardware you have!

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
Bitcoin is the Devil's way of teaching geeks economics.  --Revalin 165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
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October 19, 2011, 07:56:03 PM
 #23

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.

Besides that, the technology is sound and improving everyday.

Remember, it took quite a few years before a significant number started using the Internet. The same for cell phones. It just takes time a for a new technology to be adopted. Not everybody sees the advantages right away. Considering that, Bitcoin is still quite young with less than 3 years of age.

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October 19, 2011, 09:14:54 PM
 #24

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.

...  and thus the cycle begins again.  This is exactly why I don't like the deflationary model.

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
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October 19, 2011, 09:41:58 PM
 #25

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.

...  and thus the cycle begins again.  This is exactly why I don't like the deflationary model.

The deflationary model has a very important social aspect in that it creates interest for Bitcoin before it becomes actually useful as a medium of exchange.

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October 19, 2011, 09:44:09 PM
 #26

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

Troll, or a complete moron? Cast your votes.

The residential price of electricity in Quebec, Canada is around 60% of the average price of electricity in the US. And the more electricity I consume, the more the price goes down. At a certain point, it's possible to pay 2.97 cents/kwh.

You should inform yourself before insulting people. Google is free of charge you know. Try "Hydro Québec" in Google if you don't believe me.
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October 19, 2011, 09:57:28 PM
 #27

The deflationary model has a very important social aspect in that it creates interest for Bitcoin before it becomes actually useful as a medium of exchange.

I know, but I think that scam-avoidance and volatility are hurting us more than the bait-factor is helping.  Perhaps we never would have gotten here without it, but now how do we get past here with it?

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
Bitcoin is the Devil's way of teaching geeks economics.  --Revalin 165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
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October 19, 2011, 10:32:50 PM
Last edit: October 19, 2011, 11:03:34 PM by mjcmurfy
 #28

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

Troll, or a complete moron? Cast your votes.

The residential price of electricity in Quebec, Canada is around 60% of the average price of electricity in the US. And the more electricity I consume, the more the price goes down. At a certain point, it's possible to pay 2.97 cents/kwh.

You should inform yourself before insulting people. Google is free of charge you know. Try "Hydro Québec" in Google if you don't believe me.

I don't disbelieve you, I'm sure you are telling the truth about Hydro power being relatively inexpensive in Canada. But for all I knew, you could have been a kid clocking up their parent's electricity bill, who doesn't understand that profit is what is left from revenue-expenses. I still don't know that for a fact.

My point was that it is rather silly to invest long-term in mining rigs with fiat currency in order to mine bitcoin so it can be sold for fiat profits when bitcoin can only be exchanged for $2 a coin and decreasing... well, you can see my dilemma.

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October 19, 2011, 10:48:31 PM
 #29

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

Troll, or a complete moron? Cast your votes.
We have to make a new name for him...trolon.



Lovin' the debate. Please continue, I feed off of threads like these.


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October 19, 2011, 11:41:17 PM
 #30

Of course there is hope, we're still around, aren't we?

(I dont always get new reply notifications, pls send a pm when you think it has happened)

Wanna gimme some BTC/BCH for any or no reason? 1FmvtS66LFh6ycrXDwKRQTexGJw4UWiqDX Smiley

The more you believe in Bitcoin, and the more you show you do to other people, the faster the real value will soar!

Do you like mmmBananas?!
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October 20, 2011, 01:50:04 AM
 #31

Only until Despair.  Then we're going to board the place up.

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
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October 20, 2011, 03:38:49 AM
 #32

Mining stopped to be profitable for me yesterday. I made some calculations and find out that it costs 31eur to mine 24/7 in 1 month. I can earn 28 to 30 eur in current price...
And guess what? I'm not going to stop.
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October 20, 2011, 03:42:33 AM
 #33

Hope and fear keep people from seeing things clearly.  I'm just continuing to watch.
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October 20, 2011, 04:21:19 AM
 #34

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.
Early adopter prices would be more like $0.05.  I doubt very much we'll get anywhere near that level.

(gasteve on IRC) Does your website accept cash? https://bitpay.com
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October 20, 2011, 04:43:55 AM
 #35

Due diligence. People who bought at 30$ should Google that up.

If you want to invest in something, you have to do your own research, free of bias, and come up with your own idea of what the value of something really is. Next compare to the market price, factor in liquidity, risk, and so forth. Determine how much you are willing to lose, based on your confidence in your own valuation metrics.

Do that, and you will make money trading.

Don't, and you are the only one to blame.

The USD value of bitcoins themselves is irrelevant. What's valuable is the infrastructure around it... Money (currencies, gold, bitcoins, etc...) is just a way to measure the value of products and services. How are you helping anyone by sitting on your ass holding bitcoins in hopes of getting rich? Get to work kids!

Please read on Austrian economics and stay away from the Keynesian bullshit and you might end up getting that and start making good financial decisions... you'll thank me later Wink
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October 20, 2011, 05:19:33 AM
 #36


I don't disbelieve you, I'm sure you are telling the truth about Hydro power being relatively inexpensive in Canada. But for all I knew, you could have been a kid clocking up their parent's electricity bill, who doesn't understand that profit is what is left from revenue-expenses. I still don't know that for a fact.

My point was that it is rather silly to invest long-term in mining rigs with fiat currency in order to mine bitcoin so it can be sold for fiat profits when bitcoin can only be exchanged for $2 a coin and decreasing... well, you can see my dilemma.

Yeah, I see your point there. Don't worry, I've been an entrepreneur for a couple of years now, I know what I'm talking about. It's just....I don't know, I have a Bitcoin start-up business, like you have a Bitcoin start-up business also. It's simply that I'm doing mining, while your doing torrent service. How would you feel if I came from nowhere, telling that you're a troll or a moron for doing torrent services?

My point is, currently, producing a Bitcoin cost me around 1.25$(didn't calculated with the last difficulty drop, so it could be lower). They are currently sold at 2.50 $CAN. My margin of profit is 50%. Why would I pay 2.50$ to have a Bitcoin when I can produce them at half the price?

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October 20, 2011, 01:23:55 PM
 #37

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.

Troll, or a complete moron? Cast your votes.

The residential price of electricity in Quebec, Canada is around 60% of the average price of electricity in the US. And the more electricity I consume, the more the price goes down. At a certain point, it's possible to pay 2.97 cents/kwh.

You should inform yourself before insulting people. Google is free of charge you know. Try "Hydro Québec" in Google if you don't believe me.

I don't disbelieve you, I'm sure you are telling the truth about Hydro power being relatively inexpensive in Canada. But for all I knew, you could have been a kid clocking up their parent's electricity bill, who doesn't understand that profit is what is left from revenue-expenses. I still don't know that for a fact.

My point was that it is rather silly to invest long-term in mining rigs with fiat currency in order to mine bitcoin so it can be sold for fiat profits when bitcoin can only be exchanged for $2 a coin and decreasing... well, you can see my dilemma.

Mining is still profitable for me as well. Still will be for awhile. And I own my own house and pay my own electricity bills. Your myopia actually is suggesting you are more of a troll than others that are stating their mining / electricity cost unique situations.

I invested in july, to see prices plummet, and I regret nothing! I've got a shit ton of hardware I can always sell on ebay if need be. only invest what you are willing to lose, and I'm still winning.

You gotta pay
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October 20, 2011, 05:47:37 PM
 #38

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.

...  and thus the cycle begins again.  This is exactly why I don't like the deflationary model.

The deflationary model has a very important social aspect in that it creates interest for Bitcoin before it becomes actually useful as a medium of exchange.


I like your point.

Anyhow as said elsewhere many times, we need to build a Bitcoin Economy if we want a stable Bitcoin.

The nice part is that a stable Bitcoin is not needed to start a Bitcoin Economy, even though it is very benefical to it. Sellers can immediately convert the Bitcoin, and stay safe of the exchange rate, while still contributing to the Bitcoin Economy by creating a flow of value.

What we really need is to stop is Bitcoin Robberies. Everytime a Hacker get his hands on a large ammount of Bitcoin, the value plummet along with trust and credibility.

A currency not backed up by an army is a very big challange...
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October 22, 2011, 05:20:42 AM
 #39

I see the current situation as a good opportunity for people to get near early adopter prices for Bitcoin.

...  and thus the cycle begins again.  This is exactly why I don't like the deflationary model.

The deflationary model has a very important social aspect in that it creates interest for Bitcoin before it becomes actually useful as a medium of exchange.


I like your point.

Yeah, that's pretty smart, I never thought of it like that before.

However Revalin's point is good too.  If you look at just about any thread of economic history, the biggest bubble/crash cycles often seem to arise out of circumstances where some prominent and well-known quality of the bubble asset leads to an easy conclusion that the asset's value will substantially appreciate in the long run.

What we really need is to stop is Bitcoin Robberies. Everytime a Hacker get his hands on a large ammount of Bitcoin, the value plummet along with trust and credibility.

A currency not backed up by an army is a very big challange...

+1.  I literally suspect that a massive international government crackdown would have been better tolerated  by the bitcoin economy (or maybe I'm wrong and this is it  Cheesy)

Also it probably doesn't help that scammers have to unload their coins on the market to realize any benefit.
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October 23, 2011, 12:36:34 AM
 #40

@Brunic - I have no idea why you are buying more rigs now when it's surely far cheaper and faster to buy the coins outright.

You must be mental.

Yeah, I'm mental because I make profits.  Roll Eyes

Dude, I'm making money of mining Bitcoins and selling them. Why should I stop? With these new rigs, I'll just make more money.


Because instead of MINING bitcoins, you can just BUY bitcoins.
At the moment prices are less than the cost to mine them, or about the same.
Not to mention that buying bitcoins instead of inflating the currency more by mining them will help to drive the price up further.
It ain't June anymore son.
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October 23, 2011, 02:47:13 AM
 #41

Because instead of MINING bitcoins, you can just BUY bitcoins.

Yes, I know.

Quote
At the moment prices are less than the cost to mine them, or about the same.

No. My margin of profit is around 50% right now on 1 Bitcoin mined. Why?
-The highest I can pay is 7.5 cents/kwh for electricity. It's possible for me to pay lower than that.
-I use Canadian dollars. 1 Bitcoin give me more $CAN than $US. Since I pay my bills in $CAN, I get more for my money. The 20-30 cents I get in bonus helps a lot.

Each day, I mine Bitcoins for 1.30$ while you buy them for 3$. It's a free world, so buy them if you want. I prefer mining them, since it's cheaper.

Quote
Not to mention that buying bitcoins instead of inflating the currency more by mining them will help to drive the price up further.
It ain't June anymore son.

The number of new Bitcoins injected is fixed. Mining more just give me a bigger cut on the 50 BTC bounty on each block. Mining doesn't influence the price at all, since the rate of new Bitcoins stay the same. The only thing mining influence is the difficulty index and the reward you get in your pockets.
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October 24, 2011, 03:09:26 AM
 #42

I'm going to make this short, because I'm more interested in reading your opinions rather than sharing mine. I'm sure most of you have invested in Bitcoins- and I consider even $50 an investment (though a small one). You could have invested when 10,000 Bitcoins were worth $25, or when a Bitcoin was worth about a buck. But do you regret not cashing in your investment earlier? Even I didn't expect the value of a Bitcoin to plummet this low, and despite getting rid of all my rigs and finally uninstalling both the RPC and Diablo miners from my main computer I still check MtGox each day in hopes that the economy will get much better. Then again, I'm a kid, so why should my opinion be taken seriously? The point that I'm trying to get at is, Bitcoins have been drastically falling in value ever since the CosbyCoin incident. At this point, do you intend to sell your investment and make what tiny profit (if any) you can get, or continue "believing" in Bitcoin?
As long as Silk Road is up, I'm sure Bitcoins will still be around regardless of their value. But I can just expect that one day I'll come back here and the whole community will be dead (metaphorically, of course).

One more thing, can someone explain to me how this ISN'T a ponzi scheme? I could have become a millionaire by selling Bitcoins right now if I had known about them from the start.

And finally, how do you think the BTC economy will influence other cryptocurrencies? Or as I call them, knock-offs.

If 50 bucks is a major investment for you, do not try to make a buck speculating on currencies.
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October 24, 2011, 08:19:25 AM
 #43

Until a legit company comes and sets up a secure exchange for trading bitcoins, bitcoin will never take off.  Every single major crash bitcoin had so far is due to those shit basement outfits getting hacked or trying to scam its clients themselves. There is little to no faith left in the current list of btc exchanges/wallet holders, and without trust and stable environment to conduct trades, a currency cannot exist.  

The $30 bubble created by the media didnt help the matter, but the main reason bitcoin crashed and will remains at such depressed levels is the fact there is no legit trustworthy exchanges.

We need someone like fidelity or amazon to come in and setup a legit exchange, or a real facebook-type startup to create a secure exchange with a real us company behind it.  I am not holding my breath..

ps: also if the main bitcoin forum (yes i am talking to you admins) can stop getting fucking hacked every 2 sec, it would also help the matter.

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October 24, 2011, 08:45:06 AM
 #44

Inflation is theft from the people holding the "whatever", unless you are giving the new "whatever" to every person already holding it, which would be pointless.

Inflation isn't theft if your coins aren't devalued.  If new coins are mined but the exchange rate remains stable, the total economy just gets bigger and you don't lose anything.


We need someone like fidelity or amazon to come in and setup a legit exchange, or a real facebook-type startup to create a secure exchange with a real us company behind it.  I am not holding my breath..

Exchb was great while it lasted.  CampBX looks like it might be a winner too.  I doubt you're going to have established companies jumping in at this stage, but we've had two US-based startups with real people behind them who seem to be taking it seriously.

      War is God's way of teaching Americans geography.  --Ambrose Bierce
Bitcoin is the Devil's way of teaching geeks economics.  --Revalin 165YUuQUWhBz3d27iXKxRiazQnjEtJNG9g
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October 25, 2011, 12:28:26 PM
 #45

Quote
Re: Is There Any Hope Left?
No.

Bitcoin is doing just fine. What is nutty is not the recent price drop, but the former $30/bitcoin situation. A bunch of people thought that bitcoin was getting more traction as a household name than what it was (and this is not a bad thing either) and bought a bunch of it at nutty prices.

It is my believe that bitcoin will stabilize at $1.50 and at that point, with all these projects and tools in place, it will become a viable STABLE way to pay and get paid.

From there, will  bitcoin ever reach USD 100 per bitcoin? Sure, but it might take 20 years, AS IT SHOULD BE!

GOX SUX COX!
The true faces of the Bitcoinica / Intersango SCAM! - Bitcoin was born in the shad0ws, for the shad0ws.
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