This is disturbingly similar to countless SolidCoin discussions. Pools are slightly centralized, but compete relentlessly for clients. If one ever did something evil, miners (who ARE decentralized) would switch to a different pool (or p2pool).
Let's be generous. 10,000 miners vs. 7,000,000,000 billion people on the planet. 1 in 700,000 people on the planet actually mine. Of that a smaller percentage and that can be calculated I guess get the lion share of coins and that number will continue to drop as ASICs come online. Fewer and fewer people with more concentrated hash power on machines that are virtually useless for anything else but mining bitcoin.
How is that generous? As of this moment there are
about 80,000 Bitcoin Forum users and 24 hour high of
about 60,000 connected hosts. Using the more generous 80,000 users,* that gives us a rough ballpark of one out of every eight Bitcoiners is getting paid to run the financial system! Not to mention that mining is not very profitable at all, involves risk, and requires some decent computer skills. If someone starts selling preconfigured ASIC boxes to n00bs with free electricity, or Bitcoin actually reaches a significant percentage of that 7 billion people, then the number of miners could easily grow dramatically. Even a few thousand entities running a world currency would be far better than the hundreds of governments that do it for most people now.
Miners aren't getting rich, and even the present-day 10,000 should be sufficient for competition. I don't think my money needs to be egalitarian or democratic any more than my car or my computer do. A tool is judged by its usefulness, not its political motives.
If you dispute it give me the exact numbers for bitcoin and then tell me how anyone with half an idea couldn't distribute coin more equitably? Even if you distributed every account on say Facebook an equal number of XRP you would still do better than bitcoin. Alot better infact even with the massive number of double accounts.
What is the problem with an uneven number of people first briefly holding the block reward, when it is frequently traded away at very little profit to a speculator? Anyone from any internet-connected device can speculate in any language already.
Don't get me wrong, I'm interested in both Ripple and Freicoin and I've tried both out. I'm still wrapping my head around both; they're really clever and inspirational ideas. But to me any amount of centralization is a big deterrant. I have to admit I'm stubborn in that regard - I'd want to see a clear plan for how
exactly it's distributed in a way that's democratic or egalitarian, but not also vulnerable to spam/sockpuppets, the digital divide, uncertain adoption rates, or the distributing organization being targeted by the powers that be.
* Although about half of those forum accounts are Atlas.