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Author Topic: $5000 per coin will never happen if PoW mining is allowed to continue  (Read 10175 times)
Jamie_Boulder
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October 24, 2014, 02:53:06 PM
 #201

Very interesting topic, unfortunately I don't have the time to read all the responses.

Favorited.

LeChatNoir
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October 24, 2014, 04:41:20 PM
Last edit: October 24, 2014, 05:04:41 PM by LeChatNoir
 #202

Totally agree with OP but POW expenses are not only proportional to market cap (Available supply * BTCUSD), they are also proportional to inflation.


POW expenses = AvailableSupply * BTCUSD * InflationRate * K1

$ to spend for 51% attack = POW expenses * K2

Security of the network = $ to spend for 51% attack / MarketCap = (AvailableSupply * BTCUSD * InflationRate * K1 * K2) / (Available supply * BTCUSD) = InflationRate * K1 * K2

K1 and K2 change with market conditions and other factors not important for this analysis.


Bitcoin and POW coins' security is proportional to the inflation rate and it goes down with time as block reward keeps halving and halving

There will never ever be a Bitcoin with inflation < 1%, POW model can't work with low inflation because it becomes vulnerable to speculative attacks.
Bitcoin can't exist with a 1 Trillion $ market cap if it costs 100 millions $ only to 51% attack it.

The only way to make a POW sustainable is to fix yearly inflation at a certain level (3% ?? who knows) and never drop below that.
Otherwise Bitcoin business model will slowly become flawed as the costs of security of the network will gradually switch from inflation to transactions fees in the future.

POS doesn't have this problem since the amount of $ someone has to spend to bring it down is and will always be proportional to the market cap of the coin.
And that is how it should be.

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DumbFruit
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October 24, 2014, 04:50:40 PM
 #203

The only way to make a POW sustainable is to block yearly inflation at a certain level (3% ?? who knows) and never drop below that
Otherwise Bitcoin business model will slowly become flawed as the costs of security of the network will gradually switch from inflation to transactions fees in the future.

Inflation is not the only way to fix this problem. Transaction fees can also take over if the block-size is limited. The question then becomes "how fast should the block-size increase?"
Gavin speculates 50%/yr increase is about right to keep up with technology. However, we don't want capacity to precisely fit demand, otherwise there are no funds going toward mining. Therefore, whatever the increase in block-size, it must be less than ideal.

If Gavin is correct, then we only know that the increase should be less than 50%/yr.

There is no perfect answer under the current system because any answer requires foreknowledge that cannot be known.

By their (dumb) fruits shall ye know them indeed...
LeChatNoir
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October 24, 2014, 04:53:20 PM
 #204

The only way to make a POW sustainable is to block yearly inflation at a certain level (3% ?? who knows) and never drop below that
Otherwise Bitcoin business model will slowly become flawed as the costs of security of the network will gradually switch from inflation to transactions fees in the future.

Inflation is not the only way to fix this problem. Transaction fees can also take over if the block-size is limited. The question then becomes "how fast should the block-size increase?"
Gavin speculates 50%/yr increase is about right to keep up with technology. However, we don't want capacity to precisely fit demand, otherwise there are no funds going toward mining. Therefore, whatever the increase in block-size, it must be less than ideal.

If Gavin is correct, then we only know that the increase should be less than 50%/yr.

There is no perfect answer under the current system because any answer requires foreknowledge that cannot be known.

The business model that imposes costs of network security to users who make transactions is completely flawed and will never work even with widespread adoption.
Network security of a proof of work coin MUST be paid by stakeholders via inflation.

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johnyj
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October 24, 2014, 05:05:27 PM
 #205

Fiat money does not have a production cost, but they are forced into circulation and take the chance that normal people don't understand how money works, once people realized a money without cost is just a scam, they will act

Decentralized currencies are not forced into circulation, thus people will voluntarily select the money which have a cost close to its face value, that is the spirit of fair trading. A cryptocurrency without production cost worth very little, since you can always duplicate and generate hundreds of copy of them, means endless supply

So, for $5000 coin, the coin's production cost must reach $5000, and currently it is far away from that

LeChatNoir
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October 24, 2014, 05:10:07 PM
 #206

Fiat money does not have a production cost, but they are forced into circulation and take the chance that normal people don't understand how money works, once people realized a money without cost is just a scam, they will act

Decentralized currencies are not forced into circulation, thus people will voluntarily select the money which have a cost close to its face value, that is the spirit of fair trading. A cryptocurrency without production cost worth very little, since you can always duplicate and generate hundreds of copy of them, means endless supply

So, for $5000 coin, the coin's production cost must reach $5000, and currently it is far away from that

No, real world doesn't work like that.

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DumbFruit
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October 24, 2014, 06:31:48 PM
 #207

The business model that imposes costs of network security to users who make transactions is completely flawed and will never work even with widespread adoption.

Toll roads impose the cost of their upkeep on everyone that uses them, is that completely flawed too?

Network security of a proof of work coin MUST be paid by stakeholders via inflation.
This is a very strong claim. Why "MUST" it be so? There are all kinds of ways I can think of to pay for PoW, though they all have tradeoffs.

By their (dumb) fruits shall ye know them indeed...
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October 24, 2014, 06:38:15 PM
 #208

Quote
This is a very strong claim. Why "MUST" it be so? There are all kinds of ways I can think of to pay for PoW, though they all have tradeoffs.
Because security is not free.
If you pay nothing - you receive nothing
DumbFruit
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October 24, 2014, 06:39:53 PM
 #209

Quote
This is a very strong claim. Why "MUST" it be so? There are all kinds of ways I can think of to pay for PoW, though they all have tradeoffs.
Because security is not free.
If you pay nothing - you receive nothing

That's true, but again, it doesn't necessarily need to be paid for through inflation.

By their (dumb) fruits shall ye know them indeed...
amaclin
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October 24, 2014, 06:43:30 PM
 #210

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That's true, but again, it doesn't necessarily need to be paid for through inflation.
Yes. you can pay by buying coins from miners.  Grin
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October 24, 2014, 07:07:32 PM
 #211

A PoS coin on the other hand costs nothing to attack, so anyone who wants to attack such a coin is able to do so without any cost/risk.

You're so clueless and a parrot of myths, it's embarrassing. Somebody please attack NXT and finish off its 11-month run, I am sure it will be no more difficult that taking a morning crap.

(Double face-palm snipped)


I would but:
  • Computer cracking is now considered more serious than actually killing someone
  • I have forgone about $60-$90 in revenue because I have been too busy/lazy to configure my Bitcoin miners over the past 3 months.

Essentially, the hardest part is finding a 0-day exploit (or series of exploits) that the majority of the "forgers" are vulnerable to. You then break into their machines and vote on whatever forks you want.

However, to prevent a simple roll-back, you may want to be even more ingenious. For example, you can randomly corrupt the block-chain such that no two nodes agree on the block-chain history. This is cheap since no proof-of-work is stored in the block-chain. This would be difficult for any PoS coin built "on top" of the Bitcoin bock-chain such as Mastercoin, however (such coins benefit from Bitcoin's PoW that you want to get rid of).


James' OpenPGP public key fingerprint: EB14 9E5B F80C 1F2D 3EBE  0A2F B3DE 81FF 7B9D 5160
LeChatNoir
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October 24, 2014, 09:04:00 PM
Last edit: October 24, 2014, 09:19:09 PM by LeChatNoir
 #212

The business model that imposes costs of network security to users who make transactions is completely flawed and will never work even with widespread adoption.

Toll roads impose the cost of their upkeep on everyone that uses them, is that completely flawed too?

Network security of a proof of work coin MUST be paid by stakeholders via inflation.
This is a very strong claim. Why "MUST" it be so? There are all kinds of ways I can think of to pay for PoW, though they all have tradeoffs.

No, it isn't flawed. Those who use and consume the road must to pay for the road maintenance.
In bitcoin those who store value in the protocol should pay for the security of the blockchain proportionally to the amount of time they hold their bitcoins.
Inflation is perfect for that purpose, as long as you hold your bitcoins your stake is constantly devalued to pay for security (miners).

It is very important for a POW currency to be stable, that the money someone has to spend to attack it, is strictly proportional to the market cap of the coin.
This condition can be achieved only with a stable and moderate inflation rate.
Bitcoin will never be able to work properly with 0% inflation and revenues from transaction fees only, i think 2% inflation is also too low, the 21 million coins cap will one day be broken or bitcoin will die.


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TonyT
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October 26, 2014, 05:12:06 AM
 #213

Time has proven centralization of currency issuing power is inevitable whether it is fiat or bitcoin, the only different is the players.

Might as well change the protocol and switch it to PoS system.

You can do this now. Please sell all your bitcoin and buy a PoS alt sir. Why haven't you already done this?

He has not done so since he is speculating with BTC, same as you, hoping for a pop in price.  But he's quite right:  as outlined in the academic study cited in Coindesk by an Austrian computer scientist, Google this, the transaction fees of BTC are set to rise, and will in 10 years time if not sooner become close to what is charged now by Western Union, PayPal, or your local bank for wires.

Bitcoin = Paypal.  BTC is a short term buy but a long term sell.

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October 26, 2014, 06:23:08 AM
Last edit: October 26, 2014, 06:51:49 AM by inBitweTrust
 #214

He has not done so since he is speculating with BTC, same as you, hoping for a pop in price.  But he's quite right:  as outlined in the academic study cited in Coindesk by an Austrian computer scientist, Google this, the transaction fees of BTC are set to rise, and will in 10 years time if not sooner become close to what is charged now by Western Union, PayPal, or your local bank for wires.

Bitcoin = Paypal.  BTC is a short term buy but a long term sell.

Are you referring to this paper?
http://sdiwc.net/digital-library/near-zero-bitcoin-transaction-fees-cannot-last-forever.html

Did you even bother reading it? Otherwise, what paper specifically are you referring to that actually discusses the projected numbers and models hypothetical outcomes?

You aren't just following the headlines are you? Please tell me you are reading the research papers and references like I have before asserting such statements.

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October 26, 2014, 06:26:23 AM
 #215

No, it isn't flawed. Those who use and consume the road must to pay for the road maintenance.
In bitcoin those who store value in the protocol should pay for the security of the blockchain proportionally to the amount of time they hold their bitcoins.
Inflation is perfect for that purpose, as long as you hold your bitcoins your stake is constantly devalued to pay for security (miners).

It is very important for a POW currency to be stable, that the money someone has to spend to attack it, is strictly proportional to the market cap of the coin.
This condition can be achieved only with a stable and moderate inflation rate.
Bitcoin will never be able to work properly with 0% inflation and revenues from transaction fees only, i think 2% inflation is also too low, the 21 million coins cap will one day be broken or bitcoin will die.

Just like how linux, and any other open source distro has mandatory fees for their product to maintain development, right?

Hmmm, I wonder how Bitcoin is currently affording all the development right now that far surpasses any alt?

I wonder if anyone else has experimented in the past with non-mandatory fees to support development? I wonder if their are proven models that are more secure than software that requires payment?

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October 26, 2014, 02:42:21 PM
 #216

PoW mining currently transfers $500 million USD worth of wealth out of the Bitcoin eco-system, into the pockets of pools/miners/asic hardware vendor/electricity company.

This wealth transfer will go on, perpetually, as long as PoW mining exists. Because, as long as Bitcoin relies on PoW mining to secure the network, the expense will exist, and it can
not be cheap (otherwise attack on the network will be cheap and easy too).

In order for Bitcoin price to rise, there has to be at least more than $500 million of new money to enter the eco-system, every year, just to maintain the current price.

All Bitcoin holders are essentially charged a 10% tax per year, perpetually, by the PoW mining network. How can this be sustainable?

PoW mining will continue until someone comes up with a way to distribute wealth as fairly as PoW, so far PoS is not even a candidate.
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October 26, 2014, 02:47:19 PM
 #217

PoW mining currently transfers $500 million USD worth of wealth out of the Bitcoin eco-system, into the pockets of pools/miners/asic hardware vendor/electricity company.

This wealth transfer will go on, perpetually, as long as PoW mining exists. Because, as long as Bitcoin relies on PoW mining to secure the network, the expense will exist, and it can
not be cheap (otherwise attack on the network will be cheap and easy too).

In order for Bitcoin price to rise, there has to be at least more than $500 million of new money to enter the eco-system, every year, just to maintain the current price.

All Bitcoin holders are essentially charged a 10% tax per year, perpetually, by the PoW mining network. How can this be sustainable?

PoW mining will continue until someone comes up with a way to distribute wealth as fairly as PoW, so far PoS is not even a candidate.

its not only about distribution... its also the only way to get a distributed consesus (i will count POS only IF there are enough security experts which has tested it - and i dont think that will ever happen)

transfer 3 onemorebtc.k1024.de 1
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October 26, 2014, 02:49:03 PM
 #218

If they disallow PoW mining now there would be a huge protest as many companies and individuals have put a large investment in mining tools and i think they have made plans for several years in advance.
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October 26, 2014, 02:50:14 PM
 #219

I'm sure that many companies don't keep their wealth in BTC, they just exchange it for $. Am I the only one who thinks that ASIC companies will be the first ones to leave if bitcoin collapses?
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October 27, 2014, 09:37:21 AM
 #220

PoW mining currently transfers $500 million USD worth of wealth out of the Bitcoin eco-system, into the pockets of pools/miners/asic hardware vendor/electricity company.

This wealth transfer will go on, perpetually, as long as PoW mining exists. Because, as long as Bitcoin relies on PoW mining to secure the network, the expense will exist, and it can
not be cheap (otherwise attack on the network will be cheap and easy too).

In order for Bitcoin price to rise, there has to be at least more than $500 million of new money to enter the eco-system, every year, just to maintain the current price.

All Bitcoin holders are essentially charged a 10% tax per year, perpetually, by the PoW mining network. How can this be sustainable?

PoW mining will continue until someone comes up with a way to distribute wealth as fairly as PoW, so far PoS is not even a candidate.
You make a very good point that PoS mining effectively forces the distribution of a coin to stay the same, however this is not the only weakness of PoS mining. Another major issue is that under PoS is that it will essentially cost zero to attack the network.

While I do agree that PoW does give miners a large incentive to sell their newly mined coins as soon as they mine them, I would not necessarily consider this a bad thing, as this will likely cause the distribution of coins to be much more even then it is today   


 
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