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Topic: [2022-09-15] In the US conservationists want BTC to switch to PoS too (Read 465 times)

legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 7340
Farewell, Leo
Pretty much what DooMAD said above. Action is what matters, not words from clueless journalists and politicians. If they want Proof-of-Staked Bitcoin, they can have it. In fact, I endorse them try having it. Change a few lines, and fork the hell off the network. We don't hold anybody. If someone's so dumb that he refuses to acknowledge, let alone counter-argue, the immeasurable amount of arguments against Proof-of-Stake, let him be my guest.

Since actions speak for themselves, here's the beautiful, "environmentally-friendly", non-pump-and-dump of course, Proof-of-Staked Bitcoin fork: https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/bitcoinpos/. The chart is even better.
legendary
Activity: 3934
Merit: 3190
Leave no FUD unchallenged
My opinion is unpopular among my friends

I wouldn't place too much emphasis on opinions anyway.  Actions count for more.  Only the people who understand Bitcoin will go to the effort of running a node and that's what enforces the rules.  All this concern trolling from the lobbies is empty noise.  They're either going to do nothing but complain, or if they do take some form of action, they'll go about it in a totally ineffective manner, because they don't understand how any of this works.
newbie
Activity: 23
Merit: 5
My opinion is unpopular among my friends, but it's not because something is energy-intensive that it's necessarily bad. In exchange for Bitcoin's energy consumption, we have a decentralized, incorruptible and uncensorable ledger of financial transactions. That seems like a great deal to me!
legendary
Activity: 3934
Merit: 3190
Leave no FUD unchallenged
This is absolute nonsense....

Proof of Stake will just make it easier for FIAT rich a$$holes and Bitcoin whales to monopolize Bitcoin mining. This will jeopardize the security and decentralization of the technology.  Roll Eyes  We currently still have smaller miners having some influence over the direction that mining are going, within the mining pools where they are dumping their hashing power and with PoS, only a bunch of rich people will have all the say.  Roll Eyes

My first impression was that all this was just empty virtue-signalling from people who don't understand Bitcoin.  But I suppose we can't rule out the possibility that it's an orchestrated attack by those who do understand Bitcoin and how, in it's present form, it's impossible for them to control.  It's effectively a smear campaign, so it may well be an attempt (albeit a weak one) to co-opt Bitcoin.  Either way, it's not going to work.

legendary
Activity: 3514
Merit: 1963
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
This is absolute nonsense....

Proof of Stake will just make it easier for FIAT rich a$$holes and Bitcoin whales to monopolize Bitcoin mining. This will jeopardize the security and decentralization of the technology.  Roll Eyes  We currently still have smaller miners having some influence over the direction that mining are going, within the mining pools where they are dumping their hashing power and with PoS, only a bunch of rich people will have all the say.  Roll Eyes

I think these environmental groups have to do some more research to see the real agenda behind this whole PoS hype that are spread by controlled mainstream media. Also, calculate the amount of "dirty" energy used by Banks and large financial firms... to see the bigger picture.  Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 3374
Merit: 2198
I stand with Ukraine.
I dont think the protest will succeed, Ethereum is at another level and I think it needs it more than Bitcoin. Ethereum has fewer developers than bitcoin with sole developers that can make unanimous decision. More so ethereum has unlimited supply of coin and many more problems to resolve, from high transaction fee, token economics etc
This project will not succeed primarily because at this stage, Bitcoin is not able to switch to the PoS algorithm. Whether bitcoin needs it or not, this question has always been debatable, but most developers have always insisted on the immutability of bitcoin in this matter. It should be noted that any changes to Bitcoin are very difficult for its developers to accept, since there has never been unity among them. Apparently, bitcoin will remain so, with the exception of minor changes. Whether this is good or not, time will tell.

I can't imagine how not switching to the PoS can be a bad thing. Proof-of-work is an amazing mechanism, invented in the 1990s but but actually belonging to the future. Criticizing it for the vast amount of electricity consumption is like criticizing an airplane for having wings. Yes, we should think of reducing CO2 emissions, but it should be done not at the expenses of abandoning new technologies.
full member
Activity: 2142
Merit: 183
I dont think the protest will succeed, Ethereum is at another level and I think it needs it more than Bitcoin. Ethereum has fewer developers than bitcoin with sole developers that can make unanimous decision. More so ethereum has unlimited supply of coin and many more problems to resolve, from high transaction fee, token economics etc
This project will not succeed primarily because at this stage, Bitcoin is not able to switch to the PoS algorithm. Whether bitcoin needs it or not, this question has always been debatable, but most developers have always insisted on the immutability of bitcoin in this matter. It should be noted that any changes to Bitcoin are very difficult for its developers to accept, since there has never been unity among them. Apparently, bitcoin will remain so, with the exception of minor changes. Whether this is good or not, time will tell.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
@cr1776. I made a similar argument like that already, however, @Betwrong's argument based on Chainalysis' data is different. It is telling everyone that crinimal usage of bitcoin is very low. I reckon this might give the antagonizers another argument. They will also begin to say that bitcoin is a ponzi and only good for speculation without creating much value for society.

Also, if there is really a shortage of electricity, what will common society demand to be turned of first? The bitcoin miners or the things that they consider more important to them like the factories that create their goods or the banks that run their financial fiat system? We bitcoin users are only less than 1.5% of society.
legendary
Activity: 4130
Merit: 1307
@Betwrong. This is because their argument is bitcoin does not do anything productive for society except help criminality by making it much easier for criminals to launder their money, much easier to create drug dealing marketplaces in the darknet, much easier to pay for pedophilia content from the darknet and many much more negative reasons. In my own personal interpretation, if they are being used for those things, this good for bitcoin as a technology because it makes real peer to peer payments across the world much easier to do. I do not support criminality, however.

Using cryptocurrencies, especially Bitcoin, for money laundering and other criminal activities results in capture of those criminals in the increasing number of cases. Imo, ciminals will still be using crypto, but only because of their own stupidity.

Check out this article, "Crypto Crime Trends for 2022" by Chainalysis Team:

In fact, with the growth of legitimate cryptocurrency usage far outpacing the growth of criminal usage, illicit activity’s share of cryptocurrency transaction volume has never been lower.

Btw, unscrupulous journalists can use the same article to blame BTC in helping criminals, but we all know what is really true.

Exactly.  Criminals use tools. That doesn't make the tools evil or good.  A bank robber driving a getaway car doesn't mean cars are evil. Ditto a gun or bitcoin. People can be killed with things that are "all natural and organic" and people can be saved or killed by various medicines (see e.g. Michael Jackson).

When you see "journalists" saying something is evil or bad, it pays to really thing about it.
legendary
Activity: 3374
Merit: 2198
I stand with Ukraine.
@Betwrong. This is because their argument is bitcoin does not do anything productive for society except help criminality by making it much easier for criminals to launder their money, much easier to create drug dealing marketplaces in the darknet, much easier to pay for pedophilia content from the darknet and many much more negative reasons. In my own personal interpretation, if they are being used for those things, this good for bitcoin as a technology because it makes real peer to peer payments across the world much easier to do. I do not support criminality, however.

Using cryptocurrencies, especially Bitcoin, for money laundering and other criminal activities results in capture of those criminals in the increasing number of cases. Imo, ciminals will still be using crypto, but only because of their own stupidity.

Check out this article, "Crypto Crime Trends for 2022" by Chainalysis Team:

In fact, with the growth of legitimate cryptocurrency usage far outpacing the growth of criminal usage, illicit activity’s share of cryptocurrency transaction volume has never been lower.

Btw, unscrupulous journalists can use the same article to blame BTC in helping criminals, but we all know what is really true.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
@Betwrong. This is because their argument is bitcoin does not do anything productive for society except help criminality by making it much easier for criminals to launder their money, much easier to create drug dealing marketplaces in the darknet, much easier to pay for pedophilia content from the darknet and many much more negative reasons. In my own personal interpretation, if they are being used for those things, this good for bitcoin as a technology because it makes real peer to peer payments across the world much easier to do. I do not support criminality, however.
legendary
Activity: 3374
Merit: 2198
I stand with Ukraine.
https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-climate-crypto-idAFL8N30T03R
REFILE-Cost of crypto: report says U.S. bitcoin as dirty as 6 million cars
"LOS ANGELES, Sept 23 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The carbon footprint of the U.S. bitcoin industry is rising at breakneck speed, a report from environmental groups found on Friday, now rivaling the emissions of 6 million cars each year."

And yet, for the last few years, the US alone have manufactured between 8 and 12 million cars every year.  Funny how it's only a good thing when it's in their interests. 

There are almost 1.5 billion cars in the world in 2022. This "6 million cars each year" argument is a weak one. Some people want to use cars and some people want to use Bitcoin. Why the former should be more privileged than the latter?

As for the switching to PoS resulting in using less energy, here's a nice article on that:

"The Environmental Myth Of Proof Of Stake"
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
@DooMAD. Agreed. However, we can complain everyday but they will always control the storylines, the scripts and the narratives. I reckon the only way for miners to get back complete control is to take mining away from their jurisdictions or mine bitcoin illegally.
legendary
Activity: 3934
Merit: 3190
Leave no FUD unchallenged
https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-climate-crypto-idAFL8N30T03R
REFILE-Cost of crypto: report says U.S. bitcoin as dirty as 6 million cars
"LOS ANGELES, Sept 23 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The carbon footprint of the U.S. bitcoin industry is rising at breakneck speed, a report from environmental groups found on Friday, now rivaling the emissions of 6 million cars each year."

And yet, for the last few years, the US alone have manufactured between 8 and 12 million cars every year.  Funny how it's only a good thing when it's in their interests. 
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 4602
https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-climate-crypto-idAFL8N30T03R
REFILE-Cost of crypto: report says U.S. bitcoin as dirty as 6 million cars
"LOS ANGELES, Sept 23 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The carbon footprint of the U.S. bitcoin industry is rising at breakneck speed, a report from environmental groups found on Friday, now rivaling the emissions of 6 million cars each year."
legendary
Activity: 3178
Merit: 1054

BTC had been attacked for a long time and because they can't get to win, they are using Greenpeace.
Greenpeace is losing its plot after this anti Bitcoin publication. they are losing millions of donors from Bitcoiners who had funded them because of this and they don't deserve to be funded anymore. if BTC turned POS, this is going to become a security and we all know the SEC was aiming to regulate securities.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
In addtion to my argument on mining cryptocoins illegally. This will only increase if cryptomining regulations everywhere begins to be strictly enforced. I also speculate that much of illegal cryptomining will occur in third world countries where it would be easier to tap electric lines and steal electricity.



Three crypto miner sites in Argentina were caught last week by the country's tax and customs policy agency, the Administración Federal de Ingresos Públicos (AFIP).

Upon investigation, authorities identified a taxpayer that had imported mining equipment using a company of which he was partner. That person initially told inspectors that he had sold equipment, but eventually showed them where the machines were operating.


Source https://www.theblock.co/post/169345/clandestine-crypto-miners-in-argentina-caught-by-authorities
legendary
Activity: 4130
Merit: 1307
Quote from: cleanupbitcoin.com
We know a basic software code change would reduce Bitcoin’s energy use by 99.9%. If only 30 people — the key miners, exchanges, and core developers who build and contribute to Bitcoin’s code — agreed to reinvent proof-of-work mining or move to a low-energy protocol, Bitcoin would stop polluting the planet. So why isn’t Bitcoin changing its code?


They don't care about security and probably in their case actively want to destroy it because a secure bitcoin prevents the statists from essentially enslaving everyone to be subservient to their whims.  Clearly a fork would be beneficial because it would cause chaos, and a change to PoS would empower them.

The only thing the conservationists want to conserve is their own power over everyone else.  Bitcoin threatens that.  They'd like to expand it of course and bitcoin stands in the way of that too.
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
Quote from: cleanupbitcoin.com
We know a basic software code change would reduce Bitcoin’s energy use by 99.9%. If only 30 people — the key miners, exchanges, and core developers who build and contribute to Bitcoin’s code — agreed to reinvent proof-of-work mining or move to a low-energy protocol, Bitcoin would stop polluting the planet. So why isn’t Bitcoin changing its code?

They don't know different between code and protocol. Additionally, they underestimate difficulty of software development.

Somebody should ask the cleanupbitcoin.com people whether they have ever worked on a large-scale codebase before.

As I am typing this, I am squashing multiple bugs in a 50K lines-of-code proprietary C++ crypto payment processor (nearly all of it written by myself over the months). It is about to undergo heavy integration testing in a few days before it becomes a Release Candidate.

So yeah. I don't see how the basic software code change is as basic as they say it is.
copper member
Activity: 1652
Merit: 1901
Amazon Prime Member #7
If they're happy to waste their money on advertising that won't have any impact, we're happy to watch 'em do it.  Utterly futile endeavour.  And since when does the US give a shit about the environment anyway?  These groups would be better served trying to influence their own government who are fucking up the planet way faster than Bitcoin ever could.

I am afraid that this might only be the beginning. They might only be starting to create a storyline and use this to manipulate the public. Once manipulated into thinking with a storyline that proof of work is bad for the environment, they begin funding their lobbyists to call on lawmakers and politicians to create an argument and campaigns to regulate cryptocoin mining or ban it similar to China.
You are probably right. Fidelity holds very little crypto on behalf of their customers, when compared to other holders. Although this does conform with an ongoing problem with major investment fund companies (such as BlackRock) that try to use their holdings of their customer's shares in order to advance their own political/social agenda. The problem in this case is that no investment company has the influence over bitcoin's development that investment companies have over most public corporations.

I suspect that the next step in this campaign is to trying to get congress to implement regulations over mining.
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