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Author Topic: Local exchange and stabilization  (Read 14937 times)
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August 20, 2010, 05:36:03 PM
 #1

  First time poster here.  I just wanted to share some thoughts.  My intentions are only to contribute as I would like to see bitcoin succeed.  I come in peace. 
 
  I have been following the progress of Bitcoins for a while and am very impressed, intrigued and excited.  Well done Satoshi.  A true contribution. 

I have been researching alternative currencies for some time, specifically local/regional currencies and I would like to share some thoughts.   In my humble opinion, all currencies at their core are simply an accounting method.  Regardless of the inherent commodity value, scarcity, or monetary policy (i.e. politically driven fiat), when it all boils down to brass tacks, it’s simply a way to keep track of who has what and how much of it they have. 

  I think cryptographic decentralized digital currency is brilliant.  I think it is a natural revolutionary evolution.  The greatest challenge IMO is the valuation and stabilization of the bitcoin.  At this point it’s as though it is designed purely for speculation.  I’m going to list some (not all) of the attributes associated with Bitcoins.
  1.   Globally distributed
  2.   Digitally distributed
  3.   Distributed without national/political bias
  4.   Exchanged anonymously
  5.   Mined by cpu
  6.   The mine will run dry in x number of years (as I understand)
  7.   Limited supply

  For a second, let’s not look at these as pros or cons, but just that they are. 

  Attributes 1, 2, 3, and 4 - The fact that they are distributed globally, digitally and equally, without bias (sort of) gives them a specific characteristic.  If a nation can be viewed as a user group and a national currency is the exchange medium of a given user group and if the Bitcoin user group was a nation, it would be “the nation of international cryptoanarchist libertarian geeks”.  That’s not meant to be derogatory or characteristic of any individual.  I for one am proud to call myself a cryptoanarchist libertarian geek, but that’s not my point.  My point is that a currency is reflected by, if not defined by its user group.  I’m ok with that.  I think we are a smart and forward thinking group and we can add value to the currency.  However, therein lies a paradox.  We as a group choose to remain anonymous.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m not suggesting otherwise, anonymity is our golden asset, but it poses some challenges.  A national currency reflects the economic activity of a nation.  This can be represented by indicators such as GDP, inflation rates, interest rates etc. Regardless of the accuracy or truth of these indicators, they at least give a common idea as to the health of a group, economically.  Here are a few indicators I think would be useful.

  1.    Number of transactions over a given period
  2.   $ amount
  3.   # of unique addresses
  4.   Avg. $ per transaction

  I think we can derive some info from the block chain, but there is existing concern to how that affects our privacy.  You can never predict where the value of a currency is going for sure, but without any indication, I fear that we could be subject to wild swings.  This is my greatest concern.  Right now, Bitcoins are like a penny stock.  They are very cheap.  The exchange rate could double or triple next week and then cut in half the next.  There is the argument that the BTC appears to be finding equilibrium, but my contention would be “why?” and “in relation to what?” If I would like to purchase something tangible, say a basket of apples, I run the risk of bitcoins depreciating (or appreciating) by the time I pay for it.  Therefore I feel that stabilizing the exchange rate is our biggest and most important challenge.  I share my thoughts.

  Considering that bitcoins are distributed digitally and globally, it makes it extremely difficult to establish an exchange rate to be used for tangible things or local exchange, at least initially.  However it does make it a perfect currency for all things not local or tangible, such as digital labor and digital products (i.e. Coding, web development and ebooks etc).  That said here are some things I feel would greatly contribute to the growth, acceptance, use, value and “velocity of exchange” of Bitcoins.

  1.    “vworker.com” type exchange site that deals in bitcoins
  2.   Drupal/wordpress plugins to allow payment for digital goods via bitcoin (shopping cart, ecommerce etc.)

  I know these are lofty requests and obvious suggestions to put out there, but I can’t do them myself.  I’m not a coder.  I’m sure someone is already working on something to facilitate this type of application; I just want to share my emphasis on the value in their development. 
  With that in mind, I would like to make a request to anyone willing to develop something specific.  This I feel would be an invaluable bridge from the digital to the physical world.  I would be willing to pay bitcoins for it.
*An Arduino Library to interface Bitcoin with Arduino*.

 Basically, this would be a way to call bitcoin for confirmation to activate a motor or flow meter.  This would give us the ability to build a bitcoin vending machine, soda fountain, fuel pump etc.  If someone can write it, I’ll build it and put it on YouTube.  This would also be a very impressive “trick” to get bitcoin some attention.

  Attributes 5, 6, and 7 – My other concern is in regards to the general supply of bitcoins.  I think it is genius the way they are generated and limited and the fact that there is no central server is extremely liberating.  However, I see some challenges.  Suppose bitcoin were to take off over the next few years and steadily gain in value.  I think it gives an unfair advantage to those who got in early and had access to server farms.  I think there are already a few Rockefellers out there.  We then have classes inherently built into the bitcoin hierarchy.  And what about when bitcoins stop generating?  Then we have “the haves” and “the have nots”.  I know generating bitcoins is not the only way, or even the best way to acquire them, but it’s like a commodity, you can acquire gasoline by working for dollars then paying for it or you can be Standard Oil and get in early.  Also what happens if some or maybe a large number of bitcoins get corrupted or lost somehow? 

  At this point, this is the nature of the beast.  My fear is that, at some point it could be realized that some infrastructural modifications could add stability and value to Bitcoin and Satoshi would say “hey, we’ve redesigned Bitcoin, but we’re going to have to start over” or it would be too late and bitcoin would be devalued by another digital, anonymous, cash currency that incorporated some features that bitcoin can’t.  I can’t say I really understand exactly how bitcoin works as for as what the blockchain looks like and if features like this would even be possible, but here are some features that I feel could add value to Bitcoin as a platform.

  1. The ability to set up a bitcoin network within the bitcoin network.  Basically a local bitcoin sub-network defined by a given batch # with selected properties.  For instance, suppose I wanted to start a farmers market that operated on bitcoins, but I only have 500 bitcoins.  There are 50 people in the farmers market that all exchange with each other.   For the sake of example each exchanger provides a grocery that each person wants and they are all of equal value.  Each exchanger has 10 bitcoins and those 10 bitcoins buys them enough groceries for the week, because that’s what we’ve agreed they are worth and that’s all we have.  They can be divided almost forever so that’s ok with us.  Suppose that is $100 worth of groceries.  So every week these 50 people exchange 10 bitcoins (.2 bitcoins per exchange) inflow and outflow and end up with 10 bitcoins to start the next week.  Never ending cycle.  This is, of course, a simplified example but it’s only to illustrate a point.  In this model we would currently be exchanging $100 worth of groceries per person in the form of bitcoins, but we are really just exchanging groceries.  The value is dictated by the people growing and exchanging the groceries and depending on how they are exchanged past that point gives them real value exponentially. Bitcoin is just the accounting method. Now if we were to do this with the current bitcoin infrastructure, anyone could buy 500 bitcoins off the exchange for 35 bucks and purchase the entire farmer’s market.  And in order to purchase enough bitcoins to equal the current $ exchange rate would be 71,428 BTC equaling $5000.  Now if we want to use those 71428 btc and value them accordingly as our local currency, fine, but then we are subject to the exchange rate against the $.  If something happened and the bitcoin currency lost value by 90% someone could again purchase BTCs for pennies on the dollar and come in and buy the whole farmers market.  Furthermore if every county in the United States decided to do this it would require 224,357,142 BTC.  The ability to exchange with the open bitcoin market would be a valuable attribute, but it would have to be established on the individual basis.

  2.  The other feature would be to allow the option for bitcoins, specifically for a locally defined sub network, to diminish gradually at a definable rate through time.  Similar to the way grain receipts would gradually loose value in the Middle Ages to account for spoilage.  This would discourage hoarding and encourage spending and the velocity of exchange.  This would also solve the problem of lost bitcoins that would eventually expire and regenerate into new bitcoins.         
I’ll leave it at that for now.  I have some more ideas, but I don’t want to get too long winded.  I look forward to any responses.  I’ll also post an arduino library thread to see if I can get some feedback.   
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August 20, 2010, 05:48:30 PM
 #2

Well written! You've struggled with some of the same issues I have. I invite you to comment on some of the other threads as well. For example the GETS thread and the commodity thread.

The arduino idea is quite cool!
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August 20, 2010, 08:00:49 PM
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 Attributes 5, 6, and 7 – My other concern is in regards to the general supply of bitcoins.  I think it is genius the way they are generated and limited and the fact that there is no central server is extremely liberating.  However, I see some challenges.  Suppose bitcoin were to take off over the next few years and steadily gain in value.  I think it gives an unfair advantage to those who got in early and had access to server farms.  I think there are already a few Rockefellers out there.  We then have classes inherently built into the bitcoin hierarchy.



This really shouldn't be a concern, as we are still in a highly 'inflationary' period.  Those "Rockefellers" can only be so by saving their bitcoins until that day comes, which will not happen overall.  No one saves a fortune to die from hunger, those bitcoins will be spent.  Classes are, themselves, not really an issue here.  Classes are a cultural phenomenon, and a naturally occuring one at that.  Those cultural classes are not natural on the Internet.

Quote

  And what about when bitcoins stop generating?  Then we have “the haves” and “the have nots”.


In 120 years, we may have such class division.  Likely not so much within a future Bitcoin economy than we do presently in our managed fiat currency economies.  

Quote


 I know generating bitcoins is not the only way, or even the best way to acquire them, but it’s like a commodity, you can acquire gasoline by working for dollars then paying for it or you can be Standard Oil and get in early.


Standard Oil is a funny choice to represent this point, since Standard Oil didn't come to dominate because they were first, or even early.  They came to dominate because they were *cheapest*.  They had the most efficient distribution system ever devised at the time.  They were the Wal-Mart of energy in their own day.

Quote


 Also what happens if some or maybe a large number of bitcoins get corrupted or lost somehow?  



Deflation happens, that's why it's good that Bitcoins are so divisable.

Quote

  

  1. The ability to set up a bitcoin network within the bitcoin network.


I'm afraid that what you are suggesting here would break Bitcoin.  As an alternative, you could look into the LETS systems discussed elsewhere, and potentially 'back' the LETS with some number of bitcoins.


Quote



  2.  The other feature would be to allow the option for bitcoins, specifically for a locally defined sub network, to diminish gradually at a definable rate through time.  Similar to the way grain receipts would gradually loose value in the Middle Ages to account for spoilage.  This would discourage hoarding and encourage spending and the velocity of exchange.  This would also solve the problem of lost bitcoins that would eventually expire and regenerate into new bitcoins.        



This is already considered in the Bitcoin system.  Bitcoin will continue to 'inflate' at a predetermined rate for about 120 years.  The max number of bitcoins is a function of the 64 bit number itself, and the declining rate of inflation chosen specificly to exploit that binary number to maximum effect.  The current appreciation of the value of a bitcoin is only a function of the expansion of the economy that Bitcoin represents at a rate higher than the inflation rate, which is still over 100% APR.  (as expressed annually, that rate will hit 100% APR near it's first anniversary, 50% APR near it's second anniversary, and 25% on it's third.  However, the inflation rate APR % will be about 6.25% on it's fourth anniversary)  Despite this high initial rate, Bitcoin cannot inflate indefinately, and a declining rate was chosen that fits well into the technical constraints of that 64 bit number.  (A bitwise shift, as I understand it; so the number of 50 coins per block currently was not chosen arbitrarily)  As for the 'lost bitcoins' issue, how would you identify which are lost, and which are simply saved, without a non-anonymous record of who has what?  That, also, would break the system for a great many.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 20, 2010, 08:06:54 PM
 #4

http://www.bitcoinwatch.com/

Daily total transfers and market prices.

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August 20, 2010, 08:13:37 PM
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Standard Oil is a funny choice to represent this point, since Standard Oil didn't come to dominate because they were first, or even early.  They came to dominate because they were *cheapest*.  They had the most efficient distribution system ever devised at the time.  They were the Wal-Mart of energy in their own day.

Standard Oil was never able to completely dominated the oil industry. By the time the anti-trust lawsuit was successful, it only have a marketshare of 64%. This was because they did not tried to undercut their competitor by outpricing them out of the market.

Even if was a monopoly, Stanard Oil earned it.

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August 20, 2010, 08:22:33 PM
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 Attributes 5, 6, and 7 – My other concern is in regards to the general supply of bitcoins.  I think it is genius the way they are generated and limited and the fact that there is no central server is extremely liberating.  However, I see some challenges.  Suppose bitcoin were to take off over the next few years and steadily gain in value.  I think it gives an unfair advantage to those who got in early and had access to server farms.  I think there are already a few Rockefellers out there.  We then have classes inherently built into the bitcoin hierarchy.

Those who got in early do so at the risk of bitcoins not taking off. Their generation of bitcoins would be quite useless if the bitcoin economy is not successful. So for those bitcoin miners, it is in their interest to invest in the economy. The more they invest in the economy, the potential for big pay day. However, useless activities mean that they either lose their bitcoins or their USDs. Eventually, it will even out the bitcoiners who invest not so wisely from the so wise.

Those who sit on their bitcoins and expect to get rich are mere gamblers.

Don't be so conceited that there are who are in rich class will remain so in perpetual. Entrepreneurs who win big may displace older business owners.

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August 20, 2010, 09:37:18 PM
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Even if was a monopoly, Stanard Oil earned it.

That's pretty much what I was trying to say.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 21, 2010, 12:18:32 AM
 #8

All the "have nots" have to do is find one thing that one "have" wants and exchange. Unless you are suggesting that everyone with coins will keep them all no matter what is offered, which is just not true. Or maybe before buying a used book every single bitcoin owner will verify that they are in fact trading with someone who already has bitcoins and not letting one of those dirty "have nots" into the club. A very silly thing to worry about.

Will some people have more bitcoins than others? Absolutely. That's the point. People who provide more of what people want are rewarded.

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August 21, 2010, 10:35:36 PM
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Here's how I see it:

(1) There needs to be an incentive for early adopters.   They are taking a risk because bitcoins might end up very valuable or they might end up worthless, depending on what the future demand for bitcoins is.  So there should some deflation built into the system.

(2) The deflation can't be too big, or it will discourage later adopters who will think they're being scammed by a pyramid scheme.   Also, according to some economists (hotly disputed by others) too much deflation can cause hoarding meaning fewer transactions being made in the currency.   Is it true?  Hopefully we'll get to find out.

Corollary to (2): if you don't like the deflationary monetary policy of the current bitcoin currency, or some other feature of it,  feel free to start your own and see if you can win over the merchants.
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August 22, 2010, 01:57:54 AM
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(2) The deflation can't be too big, or it will discourage later adopters who will think they're being scammed by a pyramid scheme.   Also, according to some economists (hotly disputed by others) too much deflation can cause hoarding meaning fewer transactions being made in the currency.   Is it true?  Hopefully we'll get to find out.

You're confusing two different concepts.  bitcoins are more similar to a commodity than a currency.  When you think bitcoins think gold.  Or the stock price of a publicly traded company.  Holding onto these assets with the expectation that their value will appreciate is not bad for an economy.  In fact, you aren't going to change any economy with bitcoins.

If the price of bitcoins is rising then that means bitcoins are successful.  People are holding them for their value.  That's what you want.  It's not good or bad.  If people worry it's a "pyramid scheme", then it's no different than people worrying about a bubble in the price of gold.  People worry in all markets.  If you didn't have worry then you would not have price discovery.

Don't forget that every time someone buys a bitcoin there is also a seller.  So when someone bets that the value will increase, there is someone else betting the value will decrease.

In other words, it's all good.  Smiley  I'd measure the success of bitcoins by the number of people that claim to hold them.
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August 22, 2010, 06:16:00 AM
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I'd measure it by the number of hamburgers they'll pay for a coin ;-)

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August 22, 2010, 03:11:47 PM
 #12

I saw a good definition of success when researching LETS. Int holds for bitcoin as well.

Money is hard to earn and easy to spend.
Bitcoins are easy to earn but hard to spend.

You can judge the success of bitcoin by how easy it is to spend your bitcoins on something that improves your life.

What's the point of owning 100,000 BTC if you can't buy the occasional, wine, woman or song?
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August 22, 2010, 03:55:53 PM
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I saw a good definition of success when researching LETS. Int holds for bitcoin as well.

Money is hard to earn and easy to spend.
Bitcoins are easy to earn but hard to spend.

You can judge the success of bitcoin by how easy it is to spend your bitcoins on something that improves your life.

What's the point of owning 100,000 BTC if you can't buy the occasional, wine, woman or song?


You will have a hard time spending your gold bullion.  I wouldn't make the mistake of then assuming you don't want any gold bullion.

This is an important point that people are missing.  The success of bitcoin will depend heavily on how easily you can convert between bitcoins and the US dollar.  The number of retailers that accept bitcoins is not nearly as important.  We need 3 or 4 competing exchanges.  Once you have that, market forces will do the rest.
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August 22, 2010, 04:14:16 PM
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The dealers and exchanges ARE the market. Bitcoin is the system of accounting, not the things being accounted for.

Posters here have been confusing the Bitcoin with currencies, with Federal Reserve Notes, and with Euros. Now you want Bitcoin to get your women and booze. No! Find a dealer that has what you want and see what he will take for it. If it's Bitcoins, then you've got a deal.

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August 22, 2010, 05:02:44 PM
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You will have a hard time spending your gold bullion.  I wouldn't make the mistake of then assuming you don't want any gold bullion.
Exactly my point. USD is much more useful as money than gold bullion is.

This is an important point that people are missing.  The success of bitcoin will depend heavily on how easily you can convert between bitcoins and the US dollar.  The number of retailers that accept bitcoins is not nearly as important.  We need 3 or 4 competing exchanges.  Once you have that, market forces will do the rest.
I think this statement is off base. The success of PayPal depends on how easily it converts to the US Dollar (et al). Bitcoin will be a success when you don't have to convert them to anything. That is the point of the exercise. Creating electronic proxies for Dollars has been done to death. It's easy by comparison.

Fresno, bitcoin is designed to be currency-like for use in a currency-like fashion. That's the point if the exercise. Merchants treat and use bitcoins as money. Markets for trading different currencies are secondary to the concept.

Digital accounting and limited edition digital commodities are trivial and uninteresting by comparison.
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August 22, 2010, 05:56:55 PM
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You might be a little US-centric, Red. Will you say the same thing in six months when the world discovers it's no more valuable than any other bankrupt currency?



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August 22, 2010, 07:37:03 PM
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Digital accounting and limited edition digital commodities are trivial and uninteresting by comparison.


An anonymous digital commodity is clearly not trivial.  Gold is very trivial however.  And you should hold a little physical gold for security.  Something tells me you prefer a fiat currency instead.  Smiley

Do you honestly think the US government is going to allow a significant number of retailers to accept bitcoins?  How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending bitcoins?  You don't.  And the IRS isn't going to be understanding about that.
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August 22, 2010, 07:50:24 PM
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Do you honestly think the US government is going to allow a significant number of retailers to accept bitcoins?

Why not?  The currency is public and traceable, and no one seems to have objections to Microsoft Points, FarmVille credits, Linden$, etc.


How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending bitcoins?  You don't.  And the IRS isn't going to be understanding about that.

How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending US paper dollars (cash)?

(rhetorical question...)


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August 22, 2010, 08:04:35 PM
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How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending US paper dollars (cash)?

(rhetorical question...)

Call it rhetorical if you like, but that does not make your point.  The IRS has the ability to audit your bank accounts.  That makes it really hard to cheat on your taxes in any significant way.  Your bitcoin wallet is easily hidden, however.

And no, the IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest.  Congress is already nervous about transactions that use anything other than the US fiat currency.

http://themonetaryfuture.blogspot.com/2010/01/irs-may-push-for-tax-compliance-in.html

You guys are fooling yourselves if you think bitcoin can be successful as a currency instead of a commodity.  If you treat it as a commodity I think it'll survive.  If you try and talk retailers into accepting bitcoins then you are just digging your own grave.

Have you forgotten the raid on the Ron Paul silver dollars?  Their mistake wasn't the silver dollars.  It was the move of retailers in the north-east to accept them instead of the US fiat currency.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10390631/raid-on-ron-paul-dollar-maker.html


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August 22, 2010, 08:13:24 PM
Last edit: August 22, 2010, 08:53:39 PM by jgarzik
 #20


How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending US paper dollars (cash)?

(rhetorical question...)

Call it rhetorical if you like, but that does not make your point.  The IRS has the ability to audit your bank accounts.  That makes it really hard to cheat on your taxes in any significant way.  Your bitcoin wallet is easily hidden, however.

And no, the IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest.  Congress is already nervous about transactions that use anything other than the US fiat currency.

http://themonetaryfuture.blogspot.com/2010/01/irs-may-push-for-tax-compliance-in.html

Your link does not substantiate your argument that "IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest".

It should surprise no one that the IRS wants to tax income generated by US citizens.
It should surprise no one that it is likely illegal to not report bitcoin income to the IRS.

And none of this changes bitcoin's viability in any way.  The IRS just wants you to report income, regardless of currency, or even if there is no currency involved at all.

[edited to add barter link]

You guys are fooling yourselves if you think bitcoin can be successful as a currency instead of a commodity.  If you treat it as a commodity I think it'll survive.  If you try and talk retailers into accepting bitcoins then you are just digging your own grave.

Have you forgotten the raid on the Ron Paul silver dollars?  Their mistake wasn't the silver dollars.  It was the move of retailers in the north-east to accept them instead of the US fiat currency.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10390631/raid-on-ron-paul-dollar-maker.html

Again, your link does not substantiate your arguments.  That guy was a nutter trying to sue the US mint.

OpenCoin has a nice legal report on the currency that's worth reading.

Jeff Garzik, Bloq CEO, former bitcoin core dev team; opinions are my own.
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GoldRush
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August 22, 2010, 10:15:38 PM
 #21


How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending US paper dollars (cash)?

(rhetorical question...)

Call it rhetorical if you like, but that does not make your point.  The IRS has the ability to audit your bank accounts.  That makes it really hard to cheat on your taxes in any significant way.  Your bitcoin wallet is easily hidden, however.

And no, the IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest.  Congress is already nervous about transactions that use anything other than the US fiat currency.

http://themonetaryfuture.blogspot.com/2010/01/irs-may-push-for-tax-compliance-in.html

Your link does not substantiate your argument that "IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest".

It should surprise no one that the IRS wants to tax income generated by US citizens.
It should surprise no one that it is likely illegal to not report bitcoin income to the IRS.

And none of this changes bitcoin's viability in any way.  The IRS just wants you to report income, regardless of currency, or even if there is no currency involved at all.

[edited to add barter link]

You guys are fooling yourselves if you think bitcoin can be successful as a currency instead of a commodity.  If you treat it as a commodity I think it'll survive.  If you try and talk retailers into accepting bitcoins then you are just digging your own grave.

Have you forgotten the raid on the Ron Paul silver dollars?  Their mistake wasn't the silver dollars.  It was the move of retailers in the north-east to accept them instead of the US fiat currency.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10390631/raid-on-ron-paul-dollar-maker.html

Again, your link does not substantiate your arguments.  That guy was a nutter trying to sue the US mint.

OpenCoin has a nice legal report on the currency that's worth reading.


Between 1933 and 1971 it was illegal to own gold bullion in this country.  And merchants weren't even accepting gold as a currency.  It is important that you understand why the US, for decades, required that you turn over your gold bullion to the US government.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Order_6102

In Australia it is currently a crime to trade gold bullion without reporting all transactions to the Australian government.

You are living in blissful ignorance if you think the US government is going to allow widespread use of bitcoins as a currency.  However, it is perfectly legal to create something that people will buy.  Your odds are much better if you treat bitcoins as a commodity.

Then again, maybe the whole point in the bitcoin project is to ultimately be shutdown by government.  It would bring a lot of attention to government's control of our personal wealth.  If that is the case, then use bitcoins as a currency instead of something you hold for price appreciation.


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August 23, 2010, 09:09:07 AM
 #22

I feel like the commodity vs currency argument is somewhat cyclical.  Many finance professional would consider the USD as a commodity for analysis purposes.  On the other hand, I tend to think that an ideal situation is where local physical transactions utilize whatever commonly accepted local currency (whether it be USD, bitcoins, or some other community currency) and if I can have my debit card and bank exchange in and out on the fly.  When people ask me why my purchasing power always seems to be going up, I can tell them about the commodity aspect (scarcity) of bitcoin.  When they ask me how I'm able to purchase whatever, wherever I want, I can give them the currency exchange aspect.  That would be my utopia Wink
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August 23, 2010, 02:39:52 PM
Last edit: August 23, 2010, 04:12:30 PM by noagendamarket
 #23


How, exactly, do you ensure compliance with tax laws when people are spending US paper dollars (cash)?

(rhetorical question...)

Call it rhetorical if you like, but that does not make your point.  The IRS has the ability to audit your bank accounts.  That makes it really hard to cheat on your taxes in any significant way.  Your bitcoin wallet is easily hidden, however.

And no, the IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest.  Congress is already nervous about transactions that use anything other than the US fiat currency.

http://themonetaryfuture.blogspot.com/2010/01/irs-may-push-for-tax-compliance-in.html

Your link does not substantiate your argument that "IRS is not ok with Linden dollars and the rest".

It should surprise no one that the IRS wants to tax income generated by US citizens.
It should surprise no one that it is likely illegal to not report bitcoin income to the IRS.

And none of this changes bitcoin's viability in any way.  The IRS just wants you to report income, regardless of currency, or even if there is no currency involved at all.

[edited to add barter link]

You guys are fooling yourselves if you think bitcoin can be successful as a currency instead of a commodity.  If you treat it as a commodity I think it'll survive.  If you try and talk retailers into accepting bitcoins then you are just digging your own grave.

Have you forgotten the raid on the Ron Paul silver dollars?  Their mistake wasn't the silver dollars.  It was the move of retailers in the north-east to accept them instead of the US fiat currency.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10390631/raid-on-ron-paul-dollar-maker.html

Again, your link does not substantiate your arguments.  That guy was a nutter trying to sue the US mint.

OpenCoin has a nice legal report on the currency that's worth reading.



You are right.It is all about reporting your income.If there are bitcoin millionaires I would expect them to reduce their tax bill due for bitcoins as for frn's.Only a fool pays more taxes than he has too.  Smiley  Hire an accountant if you are concerned .How the hell do you work out your tax liability for using bitcoin though?
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August 23, 2010, 05:30:25 PM
 #24

I feel like the commodity vs currency argument is somewhat cyclical.  Many finance professional would consider the USD as a commodity for analysis purposes.  On the other hand, I tend to think that an ideal situation is where local physical transactions utilize whatever commonly accepted local currency (whether it be USD, bitcoins, or some other community currency) and if I can have my debit card and bank exchange in and out on the fly.  When people ask me why my purchasing power always seems to be going up, I can tell them about the commodity aspect (scarcity) of bitcoin.  When they ask me how I'm able to purchase whatever, wherever I want, I can give them the currency exchange aspect.  That would be my utopia Wink

I'm not making a philosophical argument.  It's a practical one.  If tens of thousands of retailers are accepting bitcoins at their website, then the government is going to step in.  There is plenty of history to support this.  On the other hand, if tens of thousands of people are buying and holding bitcoins like they are beanie babies or gold coins, then you aren't likely to attract the attention of congress, yet you've met the goal of creating an alternate method for holding some of your wealth.

If the point of bitcoin is to make a stand against government invasion of our personal wealth, then bitcoin is on the right track.  When/if retailers accept bitcoins you can bet the government will be there to regulate and tax them.
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August 23, 2010, 07:11:27 PM
Last edit: August 24, 2010, 01:04:56 AM by creighto
 #25

Quote from: trebronics link=topic=885.msg10849#msg10849

I'm not making a philosophical argument.  It's a practical one.  If tens of thousands of retailers are accepting bitcoins at their website, then the government is going to step in.  There is plenty of history to support this.  On the other hand, if tens of thousands of people are buying and holding bitcoins like they are beanie babies or gold coins, then you aren't likely to attract the attention of congress, yet you've met the goal of creating an alternate method for holding some of your wealth.

If the point of bitcoin is to make a stand against government invasion of our personal wealth, then bitcoin is on the right track.  When/if retailers accept bitcoins you can bet the government will be there to regulate and tax them.



If Bitcoin ever takes off, it matters not what they are called or by whom.  Eventually, any method of exchange that is difficult to track will get the attention of those who, for whatever reason, feel that it is thier duty to track.  If retailers never accept Bitcoin, then there will never be a problem; but the acceptance of Bitcoin for trade is the root purpose.  If retailers never accept Bitcoin, then it is a failure and whatever those other people do is irrelevent.  Other attempts to develop an online currency such as this have failed because they all, ultimately, depended upon a single institution to support them.  That institution became the single point of failure for that currency, and logically became the target of TPTB.  Those same powers also understand legal attacks well; it is their field, after all.  However, such tactics will not prove very succesful against Bitcoin, as there is no single institution to assault that can bring down the beast.  Those attacks will bring down the unlucky retailers, but not the system; and attacking all such people becomes prohibitively expensive.  The real attacks, when they do come, will be more direct upon the network in an attempt to undermine the faith in the network.  

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 24, 2010, 12:32:33 AM
 #26

If retailers never accept Bitcoin, then it is a failure and whatever those other people do is irrelevent.

Most retailers are not accepting gold when you purchase something.  Does this mean gold is a failure and that the gold coins and bars you have are worthless?
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August 24, 2010, 01:04:24 AM
 #27

If retailers never accept Bitcoin, then it is a failure and whatever those other people do is irrelevent.

Most retailers are not accepting gold when you purchase something.  Does this mean gold is a failure and that the gold coins and bars you have are worthless?


As a medium of exchange, yes.  As a storage of value, well, that's debatable.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 24, 2010, 02:53:19 AM
 #28

As a medium of exchange, yes.  As a storage of value, well, that's debatable.
Hear hear!

There appear to be some people who think that bitcoins represent a store of value ABSENT the acceptance of bitcoin as a commonly accepted medium of exchange. Nothing could be more preposterous. What value would it be storing?
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August 24, 2010, 03:31:45 AM
 #29

As a medium of exchange, yes.  As a storage of value, well, that's debatable.
Hear hear!

There appear to be some people who think that bitcoins represent a store of value ABSENT the acceptance of bitcoin as a commonly accepted medium of exchange. Nothing could be more preposterous. What value would it be storing?

The demand by others for bitcoins.  That is exactly why gold is over $1200/ounce.  Bitcoins are very similar to gold.  If you understand why people pay so much for a yellow metal that sits in a safe and does nothing, then you will have your answer.
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August 24, 2010, 03:57:03 AM
 #30

The demand by others for bitcoins.  That is exactly why gold is over $1200/ounce.  Bitcoins are very similar to gold.  If you understand why people pay so much for a yellow metal that sits in a safe and does nothing, then you will have your answer.
Excellent! Charles Ponzi himself decided to come to the forum. Welcome!

How exactly is gold like bitcoins?
What makes bitcoins more like gold than say like 2008 Oklahoma collectable quarters?
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August 24, 2010, 04:05:19 AM
 #31

The demand by others for bitcoins.  That is exactly why gold is over $1200/ounce.  Bitcoins are very similar to gold.  If you understand why people pay so much for a yellow metal that sits in a safe and does nothing, then you will have your answer.
Excellent! Charles Ponzi himself decided to come to the forum. Welcome!

How exactly is gold like bitcoins?
What makes bitcoins more like gold than say like 2008 Oklahoma collectable quarters?

Are you calling gold a Ponzi scheme?  This is getting rediculous.
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August 24, 2010, 05:00:07 AM
 #32


Are you calling gold a Ponzi scheme?  This is getting rediculous.

I think that he was comparing your "bitcoins are like gold" analogy to a ponzi scheme.  Of course that's inaccurate, but any comparison of bitcoins to hard money is also misleading.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 24, 2010, 05:12:01 AM
 #33

As a medium of exchange, yes.  As a storage of value, well, that's debatable.
Hear hear!

There appear to be some people who think that bitcoins represent a store of value ABSENT the acceptance of bitcoin as a commonly accepted medium of exchange. Nothing could be more preposterous. What value would it be storing?

The demand by others for bitcoins.  That is exactly why gold is over $1200/ounce.  Bitcoins are very similar to gold.  If you understand why people pay so much for a yellow metal that sits in a safe and does nothing, then you will have your answer.


People demand gold for it's 'store of wealth' quality.

Gold has this quality (moreso than silver) because of it's long history as money.

Gold became this defacto money because of it's wide demand as a commodity.

It became a widely demanded commodity due to it's usefulness and beauty in jewelry, and it's relative scarcity.

Gold is no longer scarce relative to other elements nearby on the periodic table such as uranium, thorsium, etc.; nor as compared to silver, the other historic money.  Yet gold continues to maintain it's position as a store of value, perhaps by shear historic inertia.  Anyone can say that this is not a sustainable position, and that the value of silver should overtake that of gold, but no one can say *when*.  If bitcoin is the first cryptocurrency to be accepted by the market, then bitcoin will continue to dominate that market even if some technically superior solution comes along.  How many people here have seen a betamax vcr?

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 24, 2010, 05:13:25 AM
 #34

There appear to be some people who think that bitcoins represent a store of value ABSENT the acceptance of bitcoin as a commonly accepted medium of exchange. Nothing could be more preposterous. What value would it be storing?
The demand by others for bitcoins. 

I was referring to the demand for bitcoins absent their currency-like utility.

Selling bitcoins ONLY because others will want them even more in the future, is by definition a Ponzi scheme.
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August 24, 2010, 05:15:41 AM
 #35

If bitcoin is the first cryptocurrency to be accepted by the market, then bitcoin will continue to dominate that market even if some technically superior solution comes along.  How many people here have seen a betamax vcr?

That's a huge leap and a poor analogy.  Being first mover in a market often means nothing more than providing seed ideas for a more powerful player.

Jeff Garzik, Bloq CEO, former bitcoin core dev team; opinions are my own.
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August 24, 2010, 05:37:40 AM
 #36

That's a huge leap and a poor analogy.  Being first mover in a market often means nothing more than providing seed ideas for a more powerful player.
Hense Betamax begetting VHS, but VHS dominated the market and crowded out everything else incl disks up till DVD.
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August 24, 2010, 11:28:19 AM
 #37

Bitcoins would be an excellent virtual game currency.The problem is they are also a cash substitute and violate a lot of the terms and conditions of such things as super rewards.If someone could come up with a separate version that could be used as a virtual currency and that doesn't break the terms and conditions of virtual currency platforms it would be nice.
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August 24, 2010, 04:30:20 PM
 #38

Bitcoins would be an excellent virtual game currency.

I've always thought that but your TOS points are well taken!

I think bitcoin has huge potential as an anonymous speech currency. It could replace the CAPTCHA for those times you want to speak but don't see a need to give sites your personal information.

Or for when you wanted to make donations to speakers you support that prefer to remain anonymous. Think political or religious speech gadflies.

Also, suppose you modified the TOR to support bitcoin, then you could offset the expenses of those running exit nodes, without compromising either party's anonymity. You could simply include a donation transaction when you set up the connection. The receiver can send it to any address they want.

I'm trying to come up with ecosystems where the coins can circulate extensively without being converted back to national currencies after each exchange.
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August 24, 2010, 06:16:50 PM
 #39

These statements should be obvious to everyone, but sometimes stating the obvious illuminates the not so obvious. 
  All currencies/exchange mediums exist by design.  Their design is based on a set of rules either established by or given to the exchanging parties.  Sometimes the rules change, evolve or completely mutate over time, but it’s the rules of exchange and the qualities of that medium that define it as a currency.  There are many different currencies with many different rules.  These many currencies are designed with characteristics that facilitate exchange within a specific application.
 
National Currencies - are designed to be accepted nationally

Local Currencies (which have many variations and designs) – are typically designed to be traded locally and remain local, specifically when there is a shortage of national currency.

Coupons – are designed to promote exchange with a specific business
   
Airline Miles – are designed to promote exchange with a specific airline

Stock certificates – are designed to represent a percentage of interest in a company which can be traded between parties.

Futures Contracts – are designed to represent a quantity of a commodity which can be traded between parties for the purpose of speculation, hedging or acquiring

This, of course, is by no means an exhaustive list.

Commodities, on the other hand, exist not by design, but are produced for their function.  No one designed apples.  They exist and we have found uses for them and ways to increase there production.  Commodities require resources (energy, labor, time, etc.) to grow and/or harvest or mine.  The cost required to produce them adds to their value, but it is not limited to.  The value of products derived from one barrel of crude far exceeds its extraction costs as well as its market value.  The value of a commodity is based on its application of use.  Scarcity alone does not create value. 

This brings me to my point.
It is my opinion that bitcoin could be seen as a considerably valuable commodity.  I am also certain that the value of bitcoin as a commodity is based on its unique characteristics as a currency/medium of exchange.  I will repeat that. 

Bitcoin’s value as a commodity is directly dependant on it’s characteristics as a currency.

The attributes that make it particularly unique as an exchange medium
- anonymous
- decentralized
- p2p
- fast
- secure
- easily integrated
- almost free of transaction fee
- easy of use
-private
are what make it valuable as a commodity.  Much like the characteristics that make gold an ideal medium of exchange.  The big difference being that, outside of the rules designed to use gold as a currency, it has many other uses as a commodity as do platinum, silver etc.

The aforementioned attributes are some of the features of bitcoin I was particularly drawn to as an exchange system, specifically the decentralization. Not only because it thwarts manipulation, but because the lack of need for a central regulation is one less entity to be responsible for.  If the rules can be established and the algorithm is left to regulate it, then we can subtract the human element which in my opinion tends to be the greatest contributor of error and corruption. 

Finite supply is actually less of an attribute for my desired application of use which I previously mentioned, is local exchange. 

It appears that there are many opinions out there on what the goals of bitcoin should be, ranging from video game money to crushing the Fed.  Regardless, we are all entitled to them and no one is an authority considering we have never seen anything like bitcoin before.  It reminds me when I first understood what Napster was and how it worked.  Being tied to the music industry myself, I immidiately knew "some changes was a comin".  One simple idea and some inovative technology sent the corporate conglomerates to absolescence purgatory.

I reiterate my initial concern that stabilization is the biggest challenge at least for the sake of using bitcoins on the microeconomic local level.  The exchange rate volatility is just too vulnerable.  I do, however, feel that it stands strong as a currency designed specifically for exchange of digital goods and services globally as well as for speculative trading.  All of which have there place in society.       
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August 24, 2010, 07:00:25 PM
 #40

If bitcoin is the first cryptocurrency to be accepted by the market, then bitcoin will continue to dominate that market even if some technically superior solution comes along.  How many people here have seen a betamax vcr?

That's a huge leap and a poor analogy.  Being first mover in a market often means nothing more than providing seed ideas for a more powerful player.


Betamax did not 'beget' VHS.  Betamax was a competing standard that came to market about a year after VHS was introduced.  The Betamax standard and level of video quality was superior in many ways, but it lost the race for one simple reason.  It wasn't better *enough* to overcome the 'first to market' advantage, and now they are lost to history.  In order for any new cryptocoin system to overtake Bitcoin once the market is established would require either a dramatic improvement in usefullness (unlikely) or a near monopoly level form of institutional support.  A cryptocurrency established and supported by the Federal Reserve, as an example, could probably crush Bitcoin at this point and for a long time into the future within the confines of the US legal system.  However, it would still have to compete with Bitcoin internationally on it's own merits.  The success or failure of one system or the other would depend greatly upon the future faith of foreigners.  

I'm not saying it's impossible for another system to overtake Bitcoins, but assuming that Bitcoin can make it for the next couple years unchallenged, it's going to take quite an advantage for another system to win.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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August 24, 2010, 08:04:16 PM
 #41

I'm not sure it effects your point significantly, but I'm pretty confident I remember Betamax coming before VHS. Other formats came before both but were never successful with consumers.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Videotape_format_war
http://www.mediacollege.com/video/format/compare/betamax-vhs.html
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November 27, 2010, 09:20:40 PM
 #42

OK, well on the arduino thing, you need to think about what exactly you want it to do.  If it's a simple app I'd be happy to try to code it, at least on the firmware side, in exchange for some bitcoins. But I anticipate it may have to rely on some server side software to run bitcoind.  I don't think arduino will be able to run a full bitcoin client, there's only a couple k of ram, no FPU, and 32kB of program memory.  Requesting info on a balance from some server somewhere should be doable, but arduino doesn't have networking. There is an ethernet shield, but it's not that cheap, and then one would have to wonder why not just put a 65 dollar foxconn mini itx board in the vending machine and run linux, for about the same price.  So elaborate exactly what the library would do and how please?
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November 28, 2010, 03:55:19 AM
 #43

Thank you for your response.  I don't think it has to be all that complicated.  Here is a link
http://infinityexists.com/videos/arduino-arp-cop/
to a project that runs a python script to listen to an arp poison monitor.  When it recognizes the event it sends a character to the arduino.  The arduino then blinks an led. 

If a script could be written to poll the bitcoin client/server looking for payment and then send the number of bitcoins to the arduino.  The arduino could then trigger (insert anything you can think of here).  I wanting to have it turn a stepper motor proportionately in relation to how many bitcoins it recognizes.  A candy dispensor for starters.

The arduino wouldn't be running the client, it would only be listening for a number.  The arduino is important because I think it is in the spirit of experimentation and open source and widely available.  There would have to be a computer attached, possibly an embedded linux system, but at this point any computer for experimentation.  Thank you so much for any help. 
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November 28, 2010, 05:38:00 AM
 #44

I'm not sure it effects your point significantly, but I'm pretty confident I remember Betamax coming before VHS. Other formats came before both but were never successful with consumers.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Videotape_format_war
http://www.mediacollege.com/video/format/compare/betamax-vhs.html


Betamax was a professional recording standard before VHS, but VHS was in the mass market first.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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November 28, 2010, 06:50:29 PM
 #45

I'll look into how to do the python script.  As it happens I'm working on a project for someone else that on the arduino side is almost identical to what you are talking about (a silent alarm for a storeowner I know, where he would click on a systemtray icon and it would alert people in the backroom). So it's probably pretty easy, I have no idea how to do the python side, and I haven't done any python for a few years, but I'll let you know as soon as I have something. 

On a sidenote I have a gpg key on the keys.gnupg.net server now if anyone cares to use it.  I was thinking about cryptography today, and I'm sure it's been pointed out, but ideally all emails should be encrypted with very strong cryptography, especially the stuff that isn't interesting.  The main security hole as I see it now is that people will instantly know that the contents of a message are important if it is encrypted, and may resort to the beating people with a wrench method.  If all communications are strongly encrypted the signal to noise ratio makes that impossible.

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