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Author Topic: would you buy a marked quantum scifi bitcoin for above par?  (Read 6178 times)
adam3us (OP)
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January 02, 2015, 01:58:48 AM
Last edit: January 02, 2015, 11:10:47 AM by adam3us
 #1

Lets conduct a scifi thought experiment, and talk about Bitcoin at a requirement level assuming some magical quantum scifi tech that can make it real sometime during the next 100 years: using the really high level definition that Bitcoin is a global process of converting electricity into some physical coin via transmogrification/energy to physical object or sufficiently advanced scifi to look like magic today, and its called a bitcoin and it can be easily inspected to see how many Joules it took to make (and the time at which it was made); and where all of these bitcoins are produced globally such that the process somehow magically knows (via non-local quantum communication?) the number of bitcoins created globally and the Joules/bitcoin consumed and which then adjusts the Joules/proof required to produce bitcoins over time to hold production interval on target at 10mins every 2016 blocks, starting with 50 bitcoins from its earlier incarnation before a few upgrades, origination back in 2009, and then halving every 4 years and currently running ag 11.921bits/per block.  Its all a bit scifi but maybe the coin contains a globally unique proof of work, its somehow magically turing universal and cryptographic AI and it doesnt matter what algorithm is used for the proof and any will be accepted, just the mining is an optimally efficient process, and what counts is the amount of electricity used, and the verifier can understand and easily verify any proof (and obviously the AI is going to see through any short-cuts).

When you look at it like that, the 2015 bitcoin cant quite do that global non-local communication, universal cryptographic AI nor electricity to matter transmogrification, but thats really just an implementation limitation, that maybe we can fix with quantum sci-fi in the next 100 years future, and the current bitcoin is a pretty close facsimile.

One day a fellow named Bob had an idea, he could stamp an F on the bitcoins and call them foocoins and persuade people they were better!  He choose some different interval of parameters and split the bitcoins into different sizes and stamped F on top them and talked up a good spiel so that others started playing too.

However they were still fractions of actual bitcoins because the proof is universal due to the cryptographic AI, there was nothing Bob could do that could change that fact, no supply parameter changes, hash function used, software feature, not even a retro pacman game (loaded into the FHE processor in the coins), branding etc would change that because the universal cryptographic AI was measuring Joules expended, and unlike humans was not easily swayed by marketing and logos: a proof of joules mined is a proof joules mined, whatever letter or logo you stamp on the coin!  

Because it started at difficulty 1 and ideal quantum processors are fast, foocoin difficulty adapted really fast (2016 blocks were over in a femtosecond), but as few found Bobs ruse plausible difficulty stabilised and by some creative marketing Bob found he could sell smaller and smaller fragments of bitcoins with F stamped on them and exchange them for whole bitcoin.  As this was profitable Bob and his friends ramped up production and used the proceeds to go on a marketing drive!

One day some people started complaining that these coins were F crazy because they were the same material as bitcoin, in fact they were bitcoin, but Bob was selling them above par and they started demanding their money back.  Naturally Bob had spent a lot of the money on marketing and flashy objects.  The price crashed to true value, which unfortunately for the holders was really close to zero.  Bob made some money, but unfortunately he didnt hide his identity very well and he was convicted and given some community service and had to make reparations (it seems pyramid scams and stock pump & dump scams and currency skimming/debasement are still illegal in the 22nd century.)

We have that same problem in current times.  The universal AI is called common sense: changing hash functions does not change the joules expended per coin, a hash with half the gate count results in a difficulty twice as high but the same Joules/coin.  A hash with a lower power density (say because it uses more RAM) can be run at a higher clock rate within thermal limits, and still use the same Joules/coin.  Changing the supply function to 2x as many coins doesnt change the value it halves the price expressed in 1/2 bitcoins.  Having a shorter halving schedule just makes the price change to 4x as many coins at price expressed in 1/4 bitcoin after the earlier halving etc.  The pacman game doesnt change things either because if it was useful to play pacman on bitcoin, someone would fork the code and add it; an arms race of cutting and pasting each others code doesnt create value.  Chances are the reason bitcoin doesnt have a pacman game is it isnt that useful or you dont need bitcoin to play pacman.  The 2015 Bitcoin doesnt yet know about users mining coins stamped with creative logos is because it lacks quantum non-local communication, we'll fix that one day, but in the mean time humans can convert one supply function to another with simple math and measure average electrical efficiency and when measured this way people are paying way over par, no rational entity would put money into marked coins, never mind a cryptographic universal AI.

A bitcoin is a proof of Joules spent, no matter what branding or features you market with a bitcoin its still a bitcoin, and can no more change than a clump of gold atoms will cease to be gold atoms and start a floating price against gold if stamped with a letter F (assuming free instant assay like bitcoin has).

Adam

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January 02, 2015, 03:19:31 AM
 #2

Yes. Bitcoin is the energy backed currency many have been looking for. We only need to make circuits that work at near 100% efficiency in converting electricity to heat and then harness that heat for more useful work.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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January 02, 2015, 08:27:55 AM
 #3

Bitcoin is the energy backed currency many have been looking for.

Bitcoin could be an energy backed currency, but it's not backed by energy now (or you have a perverted understanding what "backed" is).
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January 02, 2015, 08:33:28 AM
 #4

Bitcoin is the energy backed currency many have been looking for.

Bitcoin could be an energy backed currency, but it's not backed by energy now (or you have a perverted understanding what "backed" is).
I think what you meant to say is "It depends upon what the meaning of the word 'is' is."

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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January 02, 2015, 11:36:29 AM
 #5

Yes. Bitcoin is the energy backed currency many have been looking for. We only need to make circuits that work at near 100% efficiency in converting electricity to heat and then harness that heat for more useful work.


Still a 0-sum game. You harness the heat, your costs for mining effectively go down, difficulty goes up, and you're back where you started.

Coins cost money according to their usefulness no matter what. That market-defined measure of "usefulness" can always be measured in some fixed joules/coin for a given level of usefulness.

Bitcoin is the first monetary system to credibly offer perfect information to all economic participants.
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January 02, 2015, 12:21:07 PM
 #6

I think you assume that all Coins are directly tied to Bitcoin when you don't need to be. If you are pegged against a more fungible asset than Bitcoin, it invalidates your argument because the two exist as separate entities.
adam3us (OP)
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January 02, 2015, 02:03:20 PM
 #7

I think you assume that all Coins are directly tied to Bitcoin when you don't need to be. If you are pegged against a more fungible asset than Bitcoin, it invalidates your argument because the two exist as separate entities.

Thats valid but if something is pegged against an external value (USD, shares, property) held as a custodian or owned by the issuer its not really a bitcoin, its an issued asset with ownership tracked by the blockchain.  The limitation is the user has to trust the issuer, and the blockchain narrow AI cant value the asset (Bob in his garage may go nuts one day and issue a bazillion shares in Bob's F coin stamping scam).

Those are valid things but they are not bitcoins (cryptocurrency units).

Adam

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January 02, 2015, 02:17:55 PM
 #8

Lets conduct a scifi thought experiment, and talk about Bitcoin...

I have just noticed "researching decentralization" in your forum signature. If we consider Bitcoin as the first step to decentralization then creation of millions small "Bitcoins" (let's call them altcoins) seems to be the second step in the same direction. But for an unknown reason you keep promoting only Bitcoin and trying to construct other systems on top of it. It would be great to know why...
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January 02, 2015, 02:34:44 PM
 #9

Lets conduct a scifi thought experiment, and talk about Bitcoin...

I have just noticed "researching decentralization" in your forum signature. If we consider Bitcoin as the first step to decentralization then creation of millions small "Bitcoins" (let's call them altcoins) seems to be the second step in the same direction. But for an unknown reason you keep promoting only Bitcoin and trying to construct other systems on top of it. It would be great to know why...

the universal cryptographic AI was measuring Joules expended, and unlike humans was not easily swayed by marketing and logos: a proof of joules mined is a proof joules mined, whatever letter or logo you stamp on the coin! 

He's saying that no matter what altcoins claim, they are no better than Bitcoin and are only used to scam value out of actual original Bitcoins. The reason is that they all use the same amount of energy to reach value.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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January 02, 2015, 03:00:57 PM
 #10

He's saying that no matter what altcoins claim, they are no better than Bitcoin and are only used to scam value out of actual original Bitcoins. The reason is that they all use the same amount of energy to reach value.

The question is not related to this thread only but to all recent work done by Adam Back. If you don't mind I'll wait for his reply.
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January 02, 2015, 03:17:04 PM
 #11

He's saying that no matter what altcoins claim, they are no better than Bitcoin and are only used to scam value out of actual original Bitcoins. The reason is that they all use the same amount of energy to reach value.

The question is not related to this thread only but to all recent work done by Adam Back. If you don't mind I'll wait for his reply.
He explained it in his OP. Perhaps if you ask more specific questions he might not have to simply repeat himself.

Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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January 02, 2015, 03:18:59 PM
 #12

He explained it in his OP. Perhaps if you ask more specific questions he might not have to simply repeat himself.

The question is not related to this thread only but to all recent work done by Adam Back. If you don't mind I'll wait for his reply.
adam3us (OP)
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January 02, 2015, 03:30:35 PM
Last edit: January 02, 2015, 05:59:30 PM by adam3us
 #13

Lets conduct a scifi thought experiment, and talk about Bitcoin...

I have just noticed "researching decentralization" in your forum signature. If we consider Bitcoin as the first step to decentralization then creation of millions small "Bitcoins" (let's call them altcoins) seems to be the second step in the same direction. But for an unknown reason you keep promoting only Bitcoin and trying to construct other systems on top of it. It would be great to know why...

There's a difference between decentralisation and fragmentation.  You can have a system that is decentralised, but if you have many mini-systems they wont be very decentralised, nor secure by definition; and much utility value comes from the network-effect of the larger system also.

It depends what you view bitcoin is, but I've come to view it as a generalised unit of proof of work measured in normalised electricity x time.  And from that point of view it doesnt seem possible to make a new unit, only to improve the unit (if its still an electronic proof of use of electricity at a given time, its always a bitcoin definitionally as it is the word to describe that thing).  As in the parable marking a bitcoin (a standardised electricity-time unit by definition) with a logo or brand and trying to sell it for above par with branding isnt creating decentralisation nor value.

Btw its really hard to improve bitcoin algorithmically or protocol.  The implementation has some known things left to improve, and they have a pretty comprehensive wishlist.  If people  want to work on improving bitcoin there is a github, developer mailing list, etc.  They're always looking for quality assurance, code security review, documentation writers, and protocol & code review.

Adam

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January 02, 2015, 08:26:32 PM
Last edit: January 02, 2015, 08:52:34 PM by cryptogeeknext
 #14

... scifi,  ... The universal AI...

Hmm, we might be approaching The Singularity sooner than we think:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHVtUw5wToA

Hopefully, a little bit of humor allows our brains to cool down and start thinking better Smiley

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January 02, 2015, 08:51:43 PM
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There's a difference between decentralisation and fragmentation.  You can have a system that is decentralised, but if you have many mini-systems they wont be very decentralised, nor secure by definition; and much utility value comes from the network-effect of the larger system also.
You start writing like a bolshevik: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_centralism . I'm pointing this just to make sure you are aware. I still enjoy your writing and read most of it.


Please comment, critique, criticize or ridicule BIP 2112: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=54382.0
Long-term mining prognosis: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=91101.0
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January 02, 2015, 10:02:18 PM
 #16

I fail to see the point of this rant.... nothing useful or particularly insightful...
adam3us (OP)
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January 03, 2015, 09:45:47 AM
 #17

I fail to see the point of this rant.... nothing useful or particularly insightful...

Satoshi invented a new element called bitcoinium, and all alt-coins are made of it too; if you pay above par for bitcoinium you're getting ripped off.

Adam

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January 03, 2015, 10:42:11 AM
 #18

I fail to see the point of this rant.... nothing useful or particularly insightful...

Satoshi invented a new element called bitcoinium, and all alt-coins are made of it too; if you pay above par for bitcoinium you're getting ripped off.

Adam


You actually sum up a bunch of facts which were already running through my head in random order.
Thanks for confirming the thought.


I'm dreaming about electric cooking plates running miners underneath.
Or those store heaters they always have at the entrance blowing warm air.

Electric heating is finally able to become efficient thanks to bitcoin.

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January 03, 2015, 10:49:45 AM
 #19

Electric heating is finally able to become efficient thanks to bitcoin.

Unfortunatelly, tech progress moves in a direction that leads to non-heating bitcoin mining rigs - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adiabatic_circuit.
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January 03, 2015, 11:00:40 AM
 #20

Electric heating is finally able to become efficient thanks to bitcoin.

Unfortunatelly, tech progress moves in a direction that leads to non-heating bitcoin mining rigs - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adiabatic_circuit.
Interesting read.
However, this technique will make mining more efficient but cannot make efficiency 100% so there will always be some heat dissipation although much less than current values.
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