cheat_2_win
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February 09, 2012, 10:51:34 PM |
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As casacius mentioned, if you didn't buy bitcoin when it was $2.00 a piece after the crash, then your argument that early adapters had an unfair advantage becomes irrelevant. You were never interested in the success of the bitcoin and are never invested enough to make it succeed.
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MPOE-PR
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February 29, 2012, 10:27:40 AM |
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I once complained regularly about early adopter unfairness, but now that prices have touched all the way down to $2 and stayed there long enough to be well within reach of anyone with vision, I don't think the complaint has merit anymore. Read "I've complained about it a lot before I was one of them, now that I am I see the wisdom of it". These complaints are bullshit. People wanting in can get in. People not getting in presumably did something better with their money and have no grounds to complain then. Unless they want to share with us that hamburger and fries they bought instead of buying bitcoins that is.
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farfiman
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February 29, 2012, 05:28:49 PM |
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As casacius mentioned, if you didn't buy bitcoin when it was $2.00 a piece after the crash, then your argument that early adapters had an unfair advantage becomes irrelevant. You were never interested in the success of the bitcoin and are never invested enough to make it succeed.
If an "early adopter" bought or mined (on a cpu) coins for a few cents - and some for much less ( "10,000 bitcoin pizza")- then they have made an enormous amount of money even at today's prices, and much much more if they sold in the bubble, So what is called the unfair advantage is still there in some peoples mind. If 1 bitcoin becomes worth 1000$ then there isn't much difference if you bought at 1 cent or 4 dollars as far as profit.
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"We are just fools. We insanely believe that we can replace one politician with another and something will really change. The ONLY possible way to achieve change is to change the very system of how government functions. Until we are prepared to do that, suck it up for your future belongs to the madness and corruption of politicians." Martin Armstrong
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Hunterbunter
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March 02, 2012, 02:27:39 AM |
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There is no way in hell you know what the price is going to be tomorrow, with 100% certainty.
This applies today, and it applies 2 years ago. No one "knew" it was going to hit $30. No one "knew" that $32 was the magic mark where it would head to $2.
There is no such thing as early adopter unfairness, because no one can predict the future with certainty. If someone "knew" it was going to be worth $32 when it was worth $0.01, then that's unfair. Did anyone know?
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anu
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March 02, 2012, 07:03:56 AM |
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There is no way in hell you know what the price is going to be tomorrow, with 100% certainty.
This applies today, and it applies 2 years ago. No one "knew" it was going to hit $30. No one "knew" that $32 was the magic mark where it would head to $2.
There is no such thing as early adopter unfairness, because no one can predict the future with certainty. If someone "knew" it was going to be worth $32 when it was worth $0.01, then that's unfair. Did anyone know?
I think it's more like the price today is $5. If Bitcoin takes off the way we like, the price will be in the order of >10K, more than 2000 times higher than now. The chance for this to happen is probably much larger than one in 2000. Since we *know* this, we're enjoying an unfair early adopter advantage.
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Hunterbunter
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March 02, 2012, 07:08:32 AM Last edit: March 02, 2012, 07:37:29 AM by Hunterbunter |
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There is no way in hell you know what the price is going to be tomorrow, with 100% certainty.
This applies today, and it applies 2 years ago. No one "knew" it was going to hit $30. No one "knew" that $32 was the magic mark where it would head to $2.
There is no such thing as early adopter unfairness, because no one can predict the future with certainty. If someone "knew" it was going to be worth $32 when it was worth $0.01, then that's unfair. Did anyone know?
I think it's more like the price today is $5. If Bitcoin takes off the way we like, the price will be in the order of >10K, more than 2000 times higher than now. The chance for this to happen is probably much larger than one in 2000. Since we *know* this, we're enjoying an unfair early adopter advantage. So we yell it to the world so they know about it too and can also profit, and they look and decide to not buy?
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finway
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March 02, 2012, 07:18:33 AM |
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There are no "ealier" adopter, there are only "now" adopters, and "now adopters" take risks.
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anu
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March 02, 2012, 03:05:15 PM |
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So we yell it to the world so they know about it too and can also profit, and they look and decide to not buy?
We yell it to the world and drown in the noise of the world. How many people have so far made a conscious decision not to buy? Let's keep yelling
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johnyj
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March 05, 2012, 01:38:56 PM |
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Actually I don't see the currency is a problem in a network based society, and most people don't even care about exchange fee when they buy something on internet using paypal, but the transportation and custom clearance of goods are the biggest trouble, how can BTC help with that? (If you pay by BTC, then shipping and tax will be free?)
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molecular
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March 10, 2012, 05:13:42 PM |
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There are no "ealier" adopter, there are only "now" adopters, and "now adopters" take risks.
well said, mr. red!
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JoelKatz
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March 11, 2012, 03:22:38 AM |
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If an "early adopter" bought or mined (on a cpu) coins for a few cents - and some for much less ( "10,000 bitcoin pizza")- then they have made an enormous amount of money even at today's prices, and much much more if they sold in the bubble, So what is called the unfair advantage is still there in some peoples mind. Except it's something in the past that nobody can change and has nothing to do with Bitcoin going into the future. You can buy at today's prices and early adopters can sell at today's prices. So any future changes in Bitcoin prices are equally available to early adopters and today's adopters.
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ripper234
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March 11, 2012, 01:03:10 PM |
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So we yell it to the world so they know about it too and can also profit, and they look and decide to not buy?
We yell it to the world and drown in the noise of the world. How many people have so far made a conscious decision not to buy? Let's keep yelling If we tell people "Buy BTC, it is a good investment", we are perceived as pyramid schemers. If we don't tell anyone ... we are silently abusing our "unfair insider information" and are "evil early adopters" and hoarder. Damned if we do, damned if we don't.
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molecular
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March 11, 2012, 06:32:31 PM |
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So we yell it to the world so they know about it too and can also profit, and they look and decide to not buy?
We yell it to the world and drown in the noise of the world. How many people have so far made a conscious decision not to buy? Let's keep yelling If we tell people "Buy BTC, it is a good investment", we are perceived as pyramid schemers. If we don't tell anyone ... we are silently abusing our "unfair insider information" and are "evil early adopters" and hoarder. Damned if we do, damned if we don't. Easy way out: just tell them you're giving them insider information.
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FreeMoney
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Strength in numbers
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March 11, 2012, 08:55:38 PM |
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As casacius mentioned, if you didn't buy bitcoin when it was $2.00 a piece after the crash, then your argument that early adapters had an unfair advantage becomes irrelevant. You were never interested in the success of the bitcoin and are never invested enough to make it succeed.
If an "early adopter" bought or mined (on a cpu) coins for a few cents - and some for much less ( "10,000 bitcoin pizza")- then they have made an enormous amount of money even at today's prices, and much much more if they sold in the bubble, So what is called the unfair advantage is still there in some peoples mind. If 1 bitcoin becomes worth 1000$ then there isn't much difference if you bought at 1 cent or 4 dollars as far as profit. Ummm, seems big to me, If you had $100 to invest then buying at 1 cent means you can retire vs at $4 you can buy a decent new car and go on a vacation.
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Play Bitcoin Poker at sealswithclubs.eu. We're active and open to everyone.
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ribuck
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March 11, 2012, 09:32:09 PM |
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If you had $100 to invest then buying at 1 cent means you can retire vs at $4 you can buy a decent new car and go on a vacation.
But you can only get that decent new car and the vacation because the early schmuck was willing to take the risk at 1 cent to help bootstrap the currency.
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Etlase2
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March 12, 2012, 06:20:59 AM |
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If we tell people "Buy BTC, it is a good investment", we are perceived as pyramid schemers. If we don't tell anyone ... we are silently abusing our "unfair insider information" and are "evil early adopters" and hoarder.
Damned if we do, damned if we don't.
what do you suppose that means?
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ribuck
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March 12, 2012, 11:27:18 AM |
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If we tell people "Buy BTC, it is a good investment", we are perceived as pyramid schemers. If we don't tell anyone ... we are silently abusing our "unfair insider information" and are "evil early adopters" and hoarder.
Damned if we do, damned if we don't.
You're presenting a false choice. The "non-damned" option is to spread information freely, but don't recommend that others buy. Let the recipients of the information make their own decisions. If you look back at the early posts on this forum, it's clear that most of the early adopters were doing just that.
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cbeast
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Let's talk governance, lipstick, and pigs.
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March 12, 2012, 11:56:17 AM |
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Damned if we do, damned if we don't.
Preaching to the choir. In the words of Brother Sam Singleton, goddamn!
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Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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ripper234
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March 12, 2012, 12:20:36 PM |
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If we tell people "Buy BTC, it is a good investment", we are perceived as pyramid schemers. If we don't tell anyone ... we are silently abusing our "unfair insider information" and are "evil early adopters" and hoarder.
Damned if we do, damned if we don't.
You're presenting a false choice. The "non-damned" option is to spread information freely, but don't recommend that others buy. Let the recipients of the information make their own decisions. If you look back at the early posts on this forum, it's clear that most of the early adopters were doing just that. Most people won't take the time to fully digest the information, and will instead rely on my tl;dr summary. So, when I talk to family, friends, and in general people I care about, I recommend they put some money into BTC. It can be as little as 1-10 BTC, but I simply don't understand how holding 0 BTC today is rational.
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N12
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March 12, 2012, 11:08:47 PM |
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If you had $100 to invest then buying at 1 cent means you can retire vs at $4 you can buy a decent new car and go on a vacation.
But you can only get that decent new car and the vacation because the early schmuck was willing to take the risk at 1 cent to help bootstrap the currency. What risk? Getting into a huge bubble, getting scammed by MyBitcoin, getting MtGox hacked? No, I think the biggest risk here was the one the later fools took because the infrastructure sucked while the valuation of Bitcoins rose too quickly.
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