http://www.reddit.com/r/DarkNetMarkets/comments/2rb4ai/stop_feing/Reading the comments, you become aware of two things:
1) Almost every darknet market participant is FEing
2) Almost every darknet market participant has been taken advantage of because of the practice of FEing
What is FEing? FE stands for Finalize Early. It means that the buyer immediately releases his coins from escrow to the seller. The seller does not ship the product until he receives the payment. As you would expect, paying anonymous online drug dealers up front does not always turn out well. So why on Earth does anyone FE? Why do buyers and sellers not take advantage of multi-signature escrow. To put it simply, multi-sig escrow is simply a terrible, terrible idea from the perspective of the seller. Bitcoin's volatility is simply too high. If your profit margin is 20% and bitcoin declines by 20% in the 2-7 days that it's in escrow, then you've lost 100% of your profits. You can charge 10-20% more to make up for the volatility, but then your prices will be uncompetitive. Why? Because reputable vendors are offering normal prices and even discounts in exchange for FEing and buyers are agreeing. Why? A simple comparison of outcomes. Let's compare the two options:
Option 1) Three-party multi-sig escrow where the escrow is kept in BTC.
This is totally secure for the buyer, but the merchant takes a huge volatility risk. It's currently unpopular with bitcoin in darknet markets and will likely never become popular, hence my
skepticism of OpenBazaar/FreeBazaar's adoption prospects.
Option 2) Centralized escrow + FE. This is totally unsecure for the buyer, as he loses control of his coins immediately, but it is totally secure for the seller. The seller offers a competitive discount to entice buyers, which the buyer likes. Buyers can minimize their risk by choosing a seller with an established, honest reputation. However, this does not prevent scams because a seller with a established reputation is sometimes just building trust so that he can steal an even bigger sum of money in the end. This is currently the most popular style on darknet markets with bitcoin.
To try to quantify it:
Option 1. Seller Satisfaction: 2, Buyer Satisfaction: 10
Option 2: Seller Satisfaction: 10 , Buyer Satisfaction: 5
Option 1 just absolutely sucks for sellers, so they won't do it unless they are doing it temporarily to build a reputation. Buyers are forced to take Option 2 or refuse to participate. Seller offers a nice discount to entice them. Buyers aren't happy but they can live with it. Could there be a third option could achieve a higher aggregate satisfaction for everyone? What about a
USD-stabilized escrow?
Have you ever heard of nubits or bitUSD? Each are different, but both have mechanisms by which they maintain a value of $1. The idea of USD-stabilized escrow is to use a combination of a USD-stable currency (e.g. nubits/bitUSD and a free-floating anonymous currency (e.g. Monero/Boolberry/Darkcoin/etc.) to provide a USD-stable escrow with untraceable, unlinkable transactions. (I'm not interested in a pissing match over which USD-stable asset is better or which anonymous currency is better. You can do your own research and figure it out.)
Option 3) USD-stable centralized escrow: Instead of keeping the escrow in a free-floating currency, any deposits received in escrow are immediately exchanged for a USD-stable asset held by the marketplace administrator. Once the buyer receives the product and releases the escrow, the USD-stable asset is exchanged back into the free-floating cryptocurrency. The seller will receive, at the time of escrow release, the amount of free-floating currency equivalent to the seller's list price in USD. The seller then withdraws his anonymous, free-floating cryptocurrency. The transaction is totally untraceable and unlinkable. The seller never sees the USD-stable asset. He takes no volatility risk. He does absolutely 0 work.
How does Option 3 stack up? Well, the buyer's risk is much, much improved compared to Option 2, where the buyer loses control of his coins immediately and risks immediate total loss. From the seller's perspective, the seller's risk is slightly worse because he must now trust the marketplace for 2-7 days (until delivery is complete) rather than a few minutes or hours. However, the seller will not need to add any FE discount or bonus, which he will like. I believe buyers and sellers will both be relatively happy with Option 3, and I'd quantify it as follows:
Option 3: Seller Satisfaction: 8 , Buyer Satisfaction: 8
Although the seller isn't as happy with Option 3 as he is with Option 2, the buyer is much happier with Option 3 as he won't face constant exit scams and bait-and-switch scams.
Notably, Option 3 allows buyers more flexibility in choosing new, unestablished sellers. It allows non-established sellers to begin selling for a normal price instead of being forced to sell cheaply or assume volatility risks with escrow in order to build a reputation. The buyers and sellers need only trust the marketplace for the duration of the shipping time.
Thoughts on Option 3? Would the market continue using Option 2 if Option 3 were available? Would marketplaces be willing to float the necessary amount of USD-stable assets to facilitate the USD-stable escrow?
(Why do I post this in the altcoin section? Because if you haven't noticed, bitcoin isn't involved in this. It's only a matter of time before people realize that altcoins can be more than speculative assets. Altcoins can do things bitcoin can't, and it's time that we put them to use.)