Adrian-x
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August 05, 2014, 07:49:25 PM |
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It's already a no-brainer to borrow long term in USD and buy and hold BTC.
What we're waiting for to see hyperbitcoinization is for that knowledge to rapidly spread through the pool of potential borrowers.
I think banks are sensitive to this hence the reluctance to accommodate Bitcoin businesses. FYI in Canada this year I've made 3 deposits to Bitcoin exchanges, and 3 times I've had to visit my bank manager to confirm my accounts have not been compromised. Including 1 new card issue, and to my knowledge no fraud.
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Thank me in Bits 12MwnzxtprG2mHm3rKdgi7NmJKCypsMMQw
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Chalkbot
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August 05, 2014, 07:51:25 PM |
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Further increases in value would only reinforce this position for some of those folk, would it not?
no. we've seen perception and buying pressure rise several times during the run ups over the last several years. ppl get MORE bullish with the price rises. it's a feedback loop like justus was saying. and it doesn't just exist in Bitcoin. it's true for all markets. Yes, but if that were the only factor, than none of the previous price bubbles should have ended before completely collapsing the USD. Certainly of that (let's call it) 55% group, some of them will change their mind in a bull market, but at the same time, when there are rapid gains there is an increase in previously bullish folk changing tunes, under the pretense that we've gone too high to sustain. So an equivalent negative feedback loop? correct, it isn't the only factor. markets move in cycles or waves; none ever move in a straight up. this is why i believe there is some validity to technical analysis and i employ it routinesly. but i also rely on the fundamentals. there are always periods of bullishness and bearishness which we will continue to see. and then there's trend and the trend in Bitcoin has clearly been up. So this might be a personal question, but seeing as how you're interested in TA of interim price action, does that mean that you actively buy and sell bitcoin? I was smart enough to see where this was headed a long time ago, and that insight has served me well over time. However, I have 0 faith in my ability to predict how and when we get there, so the best plan has always been hold (for me). Perhaps the only reason I come here everyday is to see if we've arrived yet and be amused by all the people charting our course to destinations that must be unknown to them...
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cypherdoc (OP)
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August 05, 2014, 08:01:02 PM |
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Further increases in value would only reinforce this position for some of those folk, would it not?
no. we've seen perception and buying pressure rise several times during the run ups over the last several years. ppl get MORE bullish with the price rises. it's a feedback loop like justus was saying. and it doesn't just exist in Bitcoin. it's true for all markets. Yes, but if that were the only factor, than none of the previous price bubbles should have ended before completely collapsing the USD. Certainly of that (let's call it) 55% group, some of them will change their mind in a bull market, but at the same time, when there are rapid gains there is an increase in previously bullish folk changing tunes, under the pretense that we've gone too high to sustain. So an equivalent negative feedback loop? correct, it isn't the only factor. markets move in cycles or waves; none ever move in a straight up. this is why i believe there is some validity to technical analysis and i employ it routinesly. but i also rely on the fundamentals. there are always periods of bullishness and bearishness which we will continue to see. and then there's trend and the trend in Bitcoin has clearly been up. So this might be a personal question, but seeing as how you're interested in TA of interim price action, does that mean that you actively buy and sell bitcoin? I was smart enough to see where this was headed a long time ago, and that insight has served me well over time. However, I have 0 faith in my ability to predict how and when we get there, so the best plan has always been hold (for me). Perhaps the only reason I come here everyday is to see if we've arrived yet and be amused by all the people charting our course to destinations that must be unknown to them... i just buy dips.
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Chalkbot
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August 05, 2014, 08:16:21 PM |
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The update on this post says the OP will be releasing this info through a reliable business/economics news source.
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NewLiberty
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Gresham's Lawyer
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August 05, 2014, 08:21:49 PM |
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it looks to me that mining would be best described as being in a Pure Strategy Nash Equilibrium - cypherdoc Highlights are mine:" A pure strategy Nash equilibrium is a profile of strategies such that each player’s (miner's) strategy is a best response ((results in the highest available payoff (block reward)) against the equilibrium strategies of the other players (miners).
A pure strategy Nash equilibrium only requires that the action taken by each agent (miner) be best against the actual equilibrium actions taken by the other players (miners), and not necessarily against all possible actions of the other players (miners). In other words, it's expected for some miners to be malicious.
A Nash equilibrium has the nice property that it is stable: if each player expects 'a' to be the profile of actions played, then no player (miner) has any incentive to change his or her action (no incentive to start cheating). In other words, no player (miner) regrets having played the action that he or she played in a Nash equilibrium." http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1968579Nice. I hadn't looked at it that way but it makes perfect sense. Nash equilibrium works well in theory, the real world is a little more messy. Pre-mass adoption there are so many outside interests seeking bitcoin failure that there are other incentives at play. Once there is more distribution and buy in, the full effects of the Nash Equilibrium will be much stronger than they are today. the Nash equilibrium is a solution concept of a non-cooperative game; therefore, i think the Nash Equilibrium takes those hostile actors into account. the minimum # of participants required to apply the theory is 2 and doesn't depend on large #'s. what's also important for all actors to know and understand, and to know that the others know, is that the longest blockchain and the POW required to construct it is mathematically immutable. b/c we know that the hashrate of the Bitcoin Network is thousands of times larger than most of the supercomputers on Earth makes the strategical decision making of each individual actor clear; don't cheat. Understood, I'm more referring to the folks that are the non-participants in the game. Lest we forget these currently vastly outnumber the participants with respect to potential game resources available to them. Game-ending scenarios are often dismissed as impossible when in fact they are merely unlikely, as are the application of non-monetary/computing power factors. Threats to date have generally been within the game players, and Nash applies well. In general I not only agree but the also salute the application of the principle. Consider however the implications if one were to throw something like stuxnet into the works or a fab level exploit into each of the main chip makers, say by coercion or covertly, and subsequently activated? There are defenses certainly, but it would be disruptive and could be timed with other types of interference. Unlikely but possible. Thankfully, we are not under serious attack or opposition, but I'd still give a BTC =~ 0 a >0 p value, and Nash holds the rest in place.
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justusranvier
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August 05, 2014, 09:26:24 PM |
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sidhujag
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August 05, 2014, 10:48:13 PM |
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Ivanhoe
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August 05, 2014, 10:53:19 PM Last edit: August 05, 2014, 11:15:38 PM by Ivanhoe |
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If they instead were one of the nations who applied bitcoin... They would have had so much wealth.
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sidhujag
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August 05, 2014, 10:56:50 PM |
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If they instead were one of the nationale who applied bitcoin... They would have had so much wealth. Sooner or later someone will take the plunge... but not until a few more zero's are added to the right... right now credability within the dev community must be addressed, if the dev community can be trusted to make proper decisions, maybe someone would be interested (and perhaps say we will do it if we have our own developers control the source or something?) but anyways thats the central weakness of the open source model we have with bitcoin, its controlled by a select few and we dont have control over what they do or are coerced to maybe do.
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Carlton Banks
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August 05, 2014, 11:11:46 PM |
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Something like that will end up as a case study for how this kind of idea can't compete with a sounder system, bring it on. But who knows whether it'll really happen, governments have been talking all tough about cryptocurrency but doing (what amounts to) nothing.
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Vires in numeris
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cypherdoc (OP)
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August 05, 2014, 11:17:37 PM |
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If they instead were one of the nationale who applied bitcoin... They would have had so much wealth. Sooner or later someone will take the plunge... but not until a few more zero's are added to the right... right now credability within the dev community must be addressed, if the dev community can be trusted to make proper decisions, maybe someone would be interested (and perhaps say we will do it if we have our own developers control the source or something?) but anyways thats the central weakness of the open source model we have with bitcoin, its controlled by a select few and we dont have control over what they do or are coerced to maybe do. this is where the mind twisting comes in. say Gavin is coerced into lifting the 21M limit, say to 100M. he submits a patch, yet theoretically no one will download or use it. we're all here because we've already bought into a system that will only ever print 21M.
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sidhujag
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August 06, 2014, 05:40:27 AM |
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U really think it would survive then? Power to the people! but in reality it woul dbe a big hit... but i think it would recover... just a big hit... probably signify a major top or something on the chart.
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Melbustus
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August 06, 2014, 07:55:53 AM |
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CNBC has *really* turned around on bitcoin recently: http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000298809&play=1They're now talking effortlessly and seriously, and with almost no back-pedaling, about both the tech potential and price potential of bitcoin.
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Bitcoin is the first monetary system to credibly offer perfect information to all economic participants.
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marcus_of_augustus
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Eadem mutata resurgo
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August 06, 2014, 08:34:26 AM |
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Who pays the piper right? The banksters are not coming, they are already here ... don't look around they are watching you and might stab you in the back. Hint: Morgan Stanley knows ...
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rpietila
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August 06, 2014, 08:57:24 AM |
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Even you: as long as you are accumulating (let's say an altcoin), you erect sell walls and fud. When you are done, you let it fly. Their net accumulation is soon over, perhaps by the next halving.
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HIM TVA Dragon, AOK-GM, Emperor of the Earth, Creator of the World, King of Crypto Kingdom, Lord of Malla, AOD-GEN, SA-GEN5, Ministry of Plenty (Join NOW!), Professor of Economics and Theology, Ph.D, AM, Chairman, Treasurer, Founder, CEO, 3*MG-2, 82*OHK, NKP, WTF, FFF, etc(x3)
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Bank Of Bitcoin
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August 06, 2014, 09:14:55 AM |
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i think gold collapse thats will not affect anything with bitcoin ? gold always up time to buy .
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cypherdoc (OP)
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August 06, 2014, 05:12:00 PM |
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nice. ghash down to 27%. the Nash Equilibrium in full display.
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impulse
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August 06, 2014, 05:16:13 PM |
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nice. ghash down to 27%. the Nash Equilibrium in full display. Yeah, I should have screen capped it but Discus Fish had briefly surpassed them earlier today.
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cypherdoc (OP)
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August 06, 2014, 05:16:20 PM |
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i'm tellin' ya, you'd better look the hell out if you're short:
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