@P4man, time will tell whether you are right or the market is. I'm putting my money on the market though.
Because I'm concerned about the sustainable development of bitcoin since stability will lead to widespread adoption. Uncertainty will place many miners on the sideline and it could lead to a network hash rate that stalls instead of grows steadily.
Free markets are not the end all be all of economics. They require rational decision making to reach a pareto optimal state. The point is, bitcoin could be crushed in the process if confidence wanes.
I didn't get into mining to make big money. I like hardware and wanted to support what I believe could be an incredibly democratizing force for everyone.
I guess I'm just a naive idealist.
A network hash rate that stalls? Are you kidding? I don't see any possible way that the network hashrate could stall with the release of ASIC miners. It will increase very quickly...
Confidence in the profitability of mining may wane (but not to the point of stalling hash rate any time soon), but confidence in the technology itself will never be stronger. As someone else mentioned earlier in this thread, it will mean that Bitcoins will be protected by ASICs - the best application-specific technology that money can buy. After all, don't you WANT Bitcoin to be protected with the best? That means that anyone malicious will have that much harder of a time trying to attack the network. Essentially, that's the true goal at the heart of mining. Anyone sitting on the sidelines should at least be applauding this upcoming innovation.
@phelix - the devs won't change the algo for a variety of reasons, including, but not limited to:
- No one would trust Bitcoin if it can be so easily overcome by ASIC miners. GPU's and FPGA's are moderate protection, but anyone with a large bank account could create their own ASIC. Therefore, the sooner ASIC miners are also helping to protect the network, the better.
- No matter what the algorithm is changed to, an ASIC could be developed for it. Therefore, Bitcoin needs to embrace ASICs, not run from them by changing the algo every 6 months.
- Changing the algo would show people that Bitcoin is wrong/weak/untrustable, and that core pieces of it can be changed at the whim of a handful people.
- Changing the algo would ultimately serve to waste the time, money, and effort of many valuable people in the Bitcoin community currently working on developing ASICs. We'd likely lose most of them.
Basically, changing the algo would cripple or kill Bitcoin.