GODLIKE (OP)
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July 14, 2014, 04:15:07 PM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
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jonald_fyookball
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Core dev leaves me neg feedback #abuse #political
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July 14, 2014, 04:27:40 PM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
No. Mining is basically hashing, which is not a quantum algorithm. Quantum computers or supercomputers won't help. This kind of attack would involve trying to buy ASICS.
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EtherCoin
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July 14, 2014, 05:48:40 PM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
Bitcoin price skyrockets due to its limited nature. Miners are rich from past reserves. Bank gives up. Miners earn money from transactions. Eth.
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GODLIKE (OP)
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July 14, 2014, 10:18:56 PM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
Bitcoin price skyrockets due to its limited nature. Miners are rich from past reserves. Bank gives up. Miners earn money from transactions. Eth. Banks are much more rich than miners. Banks can keep up mining without rewards (i.e. losing money) much more than actual miners. Miners don't earn enough money from transactions at the moment. In the future, when billions of people will use BTC, yes, but now, they don't. BTC price will skyrocket when mainstream will kick in. Don't know when this will happen yet. At the moment only geeks, speculators and anarchists are jumping on the Bitcoin wagon.
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the joint
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July 14, 2014, 10:59:30 PM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
Based upon the number and type of questions you're asking, my guess is you haven't done a lot of personal research about Bitcoin. First, despite what anyone is telling you on this forum, *nobody* here knows what the true state of quantum computing is like. It's been asserted in this thread that quantum computing is nowhere near the point where we can crack SHA-256 with it. This is almost assuredly true given that there is no known instance of quantum computers wreaking utter havoc on everything. I'm pretty certain that if such an advanced computer existed, someone somewhere would have blown something up with it a long time ago. But, when you go off talking about supercomputers, this is different than a quantum computer. Currently, even an entire cluster of supercomputers wouldn't push the difficulty very high -- the network is currently *far* more powerful. Second, if that's the best plan you think a bank could come up with, let me tell you something -- it sucks and is somewhat laughable. As I just alluded to, supercomputers would definitely not be the way to go here. Forcing some type of scenario where the profitability of mining drops to zero or becomes negative is somewhat pointless if all you're trying to do is stop people from mining. Mining will always move towards an equilibrium between cost and benefits -- if difficulty increases to a point that threatens profitability, miners will drop out, and when the difficulty goes back down after they drop out, you'll see miners jumping back on board. Third, even if you did have a quantum computer that was powerful enough to crack SHA-256, then believe me when I say there are a *lot* more profitable targets than Bitcoin. Fourth, what would it matter if they "drop the rent of supercomputing power?" Aside from the fact that I mentioned earlier that supercomputers are little wimps compared to the Bitcoin network, how would making hashing power more affordable threaten the network? Currently, as I see it, the easiest way for a large entity to kill Bitcoin would simply be to buy enough ASICs to gain a majority share of the network hashrate so they can control it at will (or just buy and sell a large, random number of BTC every day to make it intolerably volatile for an indefinite period, but let's forget about that one for now). A few billion dollars ought to be enough. But then the question comes -- "WHY?" Why spend a few billion (which, even for a bank, is a sizable amount of money) to kill a market that's only worth a few billion in the first place? All this likely means is that one bank is now out a few billion dollars and are thus economically weaker compared to their competitors (i.e. other banks) who never spent even a penny. Is a bank really going to sacrifice market share to its competitors based upon some *potential* treat? Now, if the market cap of Bitcoin was tens or hundreds of billion dollars, this would imply that the network hashrate is many times greater, and now it becomes difficult for even a bank to scrounge up enough money to purchase the hardware required to gain a majority share of the network. TL;DR: Bitcoin has natural incentives built into it's core model that dissuade people from attacking it.
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hollowframe
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July 14, 2014, 11:11:08 PM |
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Anyway, by the time quantum computers are available for the public, all bitcoins have already been mined...
Do you think quantum's will be ready for the next 5-15 years? no way...
Eth.
The next question would be. How would quantum computers do if they can make it next year(Economically)? Spend million bucks for a handful of BTC? And then what? One could gain BTC efficiently by buying it. Using Quantum Computers doesn't seem logical. Just to play the role of devils advocate, what if something were to happen like the professor that was banned from using the supercomputers? One could simply "borrow" a quantum computer to mine bitcoin for some temporary period without paying anything. As was pointed out above quantum computing would not be a very efficient way to hash. I can't understand why you say this. For the little I know, quantum computing should empower cpu by 1000 of times. Maybe we still don't know how to code with qubits? But apart this, I can't see how a qubit, that can be in many superstates at once, can't be a much more efficient way to hash away numbers. It should be super efficient exactly in that, because it would make many more tests per second than cpu with 0-1 bits. ASICs can only do one specific task - that is to mine bitcoin or other SHA256 algo coin. Quantum computers can do a wider range of functions and as a result will be less efficient at mining then ASICs would be.
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Massimo80
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July 14, 2014, 11:55:59 PM |
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If quantum computers were actually available (at least to someone) and were effectively able to successfully attack cryptographic algorhitms, there would be a lot more profitable ways to use them; and, if one really wanted to use them against the Bitcoin ecosystem, cracking private keys would be a quite more useful target than mining.
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giveBTCpls
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July 15, 2014, 12:07:38 AM |
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When it comes to menaces, my only realistic concern I can think off is someone (or a group off) extremely rich people (think the Bilderberg Group for instance) decide to fuck up Bitcoin for X reasons, buy an insane army of ASICS and aim them all strategically to go 51%++
What do you think of such sceneareo?
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franky1
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July 15, 2014, 02:09:47 AM |
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all i can say on this matter is a future bitcoin update will allow both rsa256 addresses and rsa2046 addresses. just like bitcoin protocol allows compressed addresses, etc at the moment.
it would have to be an "allow both" at first, so that way its not a hard fork so that people that want to use old software and stick with 256 can, although they would need to update to pay/be paid in rsa2046 payments
then everyone would move their funds from 256 to 2046. this will then make pruning easier once alot of the old blocks that people have not touched, have moved their funds. making old blocks redundant(spent).
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I DO NOT TRADE OR ACT AS ESCROW ON THIS FORUM EVER. Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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July 15, 2014, 02:21:26 AM |
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all i can say on this matter is a future bitcoin update will allow both rsa256 addresses and rsa2046 addresses. just like bitcoin protocol allows compressed addresses, etc at the moment.
it would have to be an "allow both" at first, so that way its not a hard fork so that people that want to use old software and stick with 256 can, although they would need to update to pay/be paid in rsa2046 payments
then everyone would move their funds from 256 to 2046. this will then make pruning easier once alot of the old blocks that people have not touched, have moved their funds. making old blocks redundant(spent).
Bitcoin uses ECDSA not RSA. RSA requires significantly larger key sizes than ECDSA for the same level of security so it probably will never be used for a blockchain based technology.
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the joint
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July 15, 2014, 02:26:32 AM |
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When it comes to menaces, my only realistic concern I can think off is someone (or a group off) extremely rich people (think the Bilderberg Group for instance) decide to fuck up Bitcoin for X reasons, buy an insane army of ASICS and aim them all strategically to go 51%++
What do you think of such sceneareo?
Yep, or regulate it to death so it won't be mainstream, or buy and sell large, random amounts frequently for an indefinite period of time to create intolerable volatility.
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jonald_fyookball
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Core dev leaves me neg feedback #abuse #political
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July 15, 2014, 02:28:33 AM |
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When it comes to menaces, my only realistic concern I can think off is someone (or a group off) extremely rich people (think the Bilderberg Group for instance) decide to fuck up Bitcoin for X reasons, buy an insane army of ASICS and aim them all strategically to go 51%++
What do you think of such sceneareo?
In case a technological defense wasn't implemented, the community could decide to fork to a different proof-of-work algorithm such as SHA-3, and all that planning and tens of millions of dollars spent to attack Bitcoin would be for nothing.
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GODLIKE (OP)
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July 15, 2014, 02:47:20 AM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
Based upon the number and type of questions you're asking, my guess is you haven't done a lot of personal research about Bitcoin. First, despite what anyone is telling you on this forum, *nobody* here knows what the true state of quantum computing is like. It's been asserted in this thread that quantum computing is nowhere near the point where we can crack SHA-256 with it. This is almost assuredly true given that there is no known instance of quantum computers wreaking utter havoc on everything. I'm pretty certain that if such an advanced computer existed, someone somewhere would have blown something up with it a long time ago. But, when you go off talking about supercomputers, this is different than a quantum computer. Currently, even an entire cluster of supercomputers wouldn't push the difficulty very high -- the network is currently *far* more powerful. Second, if that's the best plan you think a bank could come up with, let me tell you something -- it sucks and is somewhat laughable. As I just alluded to, supercomputers would definitely not be the way to go here. Forcing some type of scenario where the profitability of mining drops to zero or becomes negative is somewhat pointless if all you're trying to do is stop people from mining. Mining will always move towards an equilibrium between cost and benefits -- if difficulty increases to a point that threatens profitability, miners will drop out, and when the difficulty goes back down after they drop out, you'll see miners jumping back on board. Third, even if you did have a quantum computer that was powerful enough to crack SHA-256, then believe me when I say there are a *lot* more profitable targets than Bitcoin. Fourth, what would it matter if they "drop the rent of supercomputing power?" Aside from the fact that I mentioned earlier that supercomputers are little wimps compared to the Bitcoin network, how would making hashing power more affordable threaten the network? Currently, as I see it, the easiest way for a large entity to kill Bitcoin would simply be to buy enough ASICs to gain a majority share of the network hashrate so they can control it at will (or just buy and sell a large, random number of BTC every day to make it intolerably volatile for an indefinite period, but let's forget about that one for now). A few billion dollars ought to be enough. But then the question comes -- "WHY?" Why spend a few billion (which, even for a bank, is a sizable amount of money) to kill a market that's only worth a few billion in the first place? All this likely means is that one bank is now out a few billion dollars and are thus economically weaker compared to their competitors (i.e. other banks) who never spent even a penny. Is a bank really going to sacrifice market share to its competitors based upon some *potential* treat? Now, if the market cap of Bitcoin was tens or hundreds of billion dollars, this would imply that the network hashrate is many times greater, and now it becomes difficult for even a bank to scrounge up enough money to purchase the hardware required to gain a majority share of the network. TL;DR: Bitcoin has natural incentives built into it's core model that dissuade people from attacking it. Great post, thank you As for the WHY question, in this YOU may have to think a bit better. For the same reason we think Bitcoin will waste banks, banks will one day understand what's happening and WILL probably take any measure to blast it off. Besides, bilderberg are an interesting club, rotschild is an extremely rich family... if these organizations decide to take action against something that is mining (!!!) their grounds for billions of dollars, they will be glad to spend billions of dollars to protect their markets.
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jonald_fyookball
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Core dev leaves me neg feedback #abuse #political
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July 15, 2014, 02:55:34 AM |
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OK so let it be about quantum computers.
Let's assume that a fellowship of banks want to destroy Bitcoin. They buy computing power from a couple supercomputers and make, in a single 2 weeks session, jump the difficulty to the stars, so that mining becomes highly unprofitable, so pushing miners away from the business. They would hold this status until they see most if not all left the mining business, then drop the renting of supercomputing power.
Is this a possible scenario?
Based upon the number and type of questions you're asking, my guess is you haven't done a lot of personal research about Bitcoin. First, despite what anyone is telling you on this forum, *nobody* here knows what the true state of quantum computing is like. It's been asserted in this thread that quantum computing is nowhere near the point where we can crack SHA-256 with it. This is almost assuredly true given that there is no known instance of quantum computers wreaking utter havoc on everything. I'm pretty certain that if such an advanced computer existed, someone somewhere would have blown something up with it a long time ago. But, when you go off talking about supercomputers, this is different than a quantum computer. Currently, even an entire cluster of supercomputers wouldn't push the difficulty very high -- the network is currently *far* more powerful. Second, if that's the best plan you think a bank could come up with, let me tell you something -- it sucks and is somewhat laughable. As I just alluded to, supercomputers would definitely not be the way to go here. Forcing some type of scenario where the profitability of mining drops to zero or becomes negative is somewhat pointless if all you're trying to do is stop people from mining. Mining will always move towards an equilibrium between cost and benefits -- if difficulty increases to a point that threatens profitability, miners will drop out, and when the difficulty goes back down after they drop out, you'll see miners jumping back on board. Third, even if you did have a quantum computer that was powerful enough to crack SHA-256, then believe me when I say there are a *lot* more profitable targets than Bitcoin. Fourth, what would it matter if they "drop the rent of supercomputing power?" Aside from the fact that I mentioned earlier that supercomputers are little wimps compared to the Bitcoin network, how would making hashing power more affordable threaten the network? Currently, as I see it, the easiest way for a large entity to kill Bitcoin would simply be to buy enough ASICs to gain a majority share of the network hashrate so they can control it at will (or just buy and sell a large, random number of BTC every day to make it intolerably volatile for an indefinite period, but let's forget about that one for now). A few billion dollars ought to be enough. But then the question comes -- "WHY?" Why spend a few billion (which, even for a bank, is a sizable amount of money) to kill a market that's only worth a few billion in the first place? All this likely means is that one bank is now out a few billion dollars and are thus economically weaker compared to their competitors (i.e. other banks) who never spent even a penny. Is a bank really going to sacrifice market share to its competitors based upon some *potential* treat? Now, if the market cap of Bitcoin was tens or hundreds of billion dollars, this would imply that the network hashrate is many times greater, and now it becomes difficult for even a bank to scrounge up enough money to purchase the hardware required to gain a majority share of the network. TL;DR: Bitcoin has natural incentives built into it's core model that dissuade people from attacking it. Great post, thank you As for the WHY question, in this YOU may have to think a bit better. For the same reason we think Bitcoin will waste banks, banks will one day understand what's happening and WILL probably take any measure to blast it off. Besides, bilderberg are an interesting club, rotschild is an extremely rich family... if these organizations decide to take action against something that is mining (!!!) their grounds for billions of dollars, they will be glad to spend billions of dollars to protect their markets. I think the genie is out of the bottle. Cryptocurrency is here to stay one way or another. At some point even the staunchest opponents will have to accept that.
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GODLIKE (OP)
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July 15, 2014, 03:10:18 AM |
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Maybe. I hope so. But I find it strange that banks are not taking countermeasures to blast it off. I didn't see any serious attempt to kick Bitcoin off the moon, and this scares me a bit.
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hollowframe
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July 15, 2014, 04:04:01 AM |
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If quantum computers were actually available (at least to someone) and were effectively able to successfully attack cryptographic algorhitms, there would be a lot more profitable ways to use them; and, if one really wanted to use them against the Bitcoin ecosystem, cracking private keys would be a quite more useful target than mining.
The profitable way to use these kinds of technology would be to simply mine altcoins on a multipool, trying to do anything else would likely cost more then it would generate in revenue.
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GODLIKE (OP)
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July 15, 2014, 04:18:39 AM |
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If quantum computers were actually available (at least to someone) and were effectively able to successfully attack cryptographic algorhitms, there would be a lot more profitable ways to use them; and, if one really wanted to use them against the Bitcoin ecosystem, cracking private keys would be a quite more useful target than mining.
The profitable way to use these kinds of technology would be to simply mine altcoins on a multipool, trying to do anything else would likely cost more then it would generate in revenue. But we are not here to talk on how make them profitable, but if they were a good resource to destroy Bitcoin.
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Massimo80
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July 15, 2014, 01:31:52 PM |
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If quantum computers were actually available (at least to someone) and were effectively able to successfully attack cryptographic algorhitms, there would be a lot more profitable ways to use them; and, if one really wanted to use them against the Bitcoin ecosystem, cracking private keys would be a quite more useful target than mining.
The profitable way to use these kinds of technology would be to simply mine altcoins on a multipool, trying to do anything else would likely cost more then it would generate in revenue. If they were a viable menace to cryptography in general, every secure communication in the world could potentially be compromised, including web sites, digitally-signed emails, and so on. If that stage was to ever be reached, I'd be a lot more worried about credit cards and bank accounts than Bitcoin wallets.
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GODLIKE (OP)
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July 15, 2014, 01:49:38 PM |
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If quantum computers were actually available (at least to someone) and were effectively able to successfully attack cryptographic algorhitms, there would be a lot more profitable ways to use them; and, if one really wanted to use them against the Bitcoin ecosystem, cracking private keys would be a quite more useful target than mining.
The profitable way to use these kinds of technology would be to simply mine altcoins on a multipool, trying to do anything else would likely cost more then it would generate in revenue. If they were a viable menace to cryptography in general, every secure communication in the world could potentially be compromised, including web sites, digitally-signed emails, and so on. If that stage was to ever be reached, I'd be a lot more worried about credit cards and bank accounts than Bitcoin wallets. Because you are thinking like a robber, not like a central bank director.
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giveBTCpls
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July 15, 2014, 02:13:13 PM |
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When it comes to menaces, my only realistic concern I can think off is someone (or a group off) extremely rich people (think the Bilderberg Group for instance) decide to fuck up Bitcoin for X reasons, buy an insane army of ASICS and aim them all strategically to go 51%++
What do you think of such sceneareo?
Yep, or regulate it to death so it won't be mainstream, or buy and sell large, random amounts frequently for an indefinite period of time to create intolerable volatility. Yeah, but also, I think sometimes people compliate it so much. What about good ol old school bribing? Let's say a super powerful wealthy entity starts a plan to bribe current stakeholders. Say, the Winklevii. They great approached by said super rich entity, and they get told that, if they sell all of their stake to said entity, they will recieve a ridiculous amount of interest as well. They do this with every single stakeholder. From an outside POV, if done subtly the price would go low for sure, but Bitcoin has taken a lot of blows already and recovered. What would have changed in this scenareo is that all the big stakes now belong to an institution with evil intentions.
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