Pages:
Author

Topic: Ripple: A Distributed Exchange for Bitcoin - page 11. (Read 66712 times)

member
Activity: 85
Merit: 10
Fortune favors the bold and brave
Seems to me they are riding one of the carts on the "decentralized" train uninvited.



In regards to uninvited, they do have Jed McCaleb on the team...
sr. member
Activity: 339
Merit: 250
División de Poderes s.XXI es Descentralización
Meh, the problem of ripple is the same of bitcoin, very few people use it. Yes, if everyone use ripple, then it would be good as an exchange for bitcoin. But well, then if everyone use bitcoin, we would not even need an exchange.

+1. What do we need an exchange for ? We will just trade in bitcoins and forget about the old money.
The only problem I see is that currently half of the bitcoin economy is held by less than 2 million early adopters. This has to spread a lot more.
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
Having an open credit clearing system, rather than one run by governments, is both a useful and an interesting concept.

An ideal monetary system should facilitate both credit clearing and settlement. The former is what gives a currency 'elasticity', while the latter allows people to choose their exposure to it.

If one party wants to exchange goods with another for IOUs, then great. Trust is extremely liquid and allows easy trade. If both parties would rather not rely on trust, then they can both exchange goods instead. Where is the problem?

I'm not sure why there is so much hostility here, tbh. Ripple and Bitcoin are two separate things. You don't have to abandon one, in order to find the other useful.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
Becoming an entity that is creating funds that can be converted to and from real-world currencies is something where a LOT of scams can/will/did happen. Beyond simple vouchers/gift cards there's a lot of regulations on that. check your local bank regulation website (e.g. FinCen) for more info.

Agreed, but extending trust to your friends would be much less problematic. I don't see anything problematic there.
Yes, as long as it stays very small, it might (IANAL!) not be an issue. It might be too much hassle though to issue new IOUs for every book that you lend to somebody, each hour of work you help your parents or for that 10 bucks a friend borrows from you to pay for a pizza...

To exchange USD to BTC on Ripple however means that you need highly trusted and accepted USD and BTC IOUs respectively (e.g. from MtGox or Bitstamp, not from a single user on this board). This most likely will be provided by a regulated entity.
legendary
Activity: 1137
Merit: 1001

A distributed example - bitstamp is down currently. The bitstamp IOUs are still trading on ripple.

Cool, thats what bitcoin also should do: trade IOUs.

Not sure I understand the tone of your response, but when you trade "bitcoins" and "USD" on mtgox, you are trading mtgox IOUs, not actual coins or USD. When you buy 1 btc on mtgox, nothing hits the blockchain until you redeem (on their terms of course). All coins and USD stay in-house, just their pointers move.
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 500
Martijn Meijering
Becoming an entity that is creating funds that can be converted to and from real-world currencies is something where a LOT of scams can/will/did happen. Beyond simple vouchers/gift cards there's a lot of regulations on that. check your local bank regulation website (e.g. FinCen) for more info.

Agreed, but extending trust to your friends would be much less problematic. I don't see anything problematic there.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
Ripple gateways would be e-money dealers which are already existing, have known regulations and requirements concerning audits, full reserves etc. Bitcoin exchanges don't.

Why do you say this?  I thought anyone who runs a ripple server can act as a gateway, with varying levels of success in interfacing with the traditional financial system.

Becoming an entity that is creating funds that can be converted to and from real-world currencies is something where a LOT of scams can/will/did happen. Beyond simple vouchers/gift cards there's a lot of regulations on that. check your local bank regulation website (e.g. FinCen) for more info.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
In Hashrate We Trust!

A distributed example - bitstamp is down currently. The bitstamp IOUs are still trading on ripple.

Cool, thats what bitcoin also should do: trade IOUs.
legendary
Activity: 1137
Merit: 1001

A distributed example - bitstamp is down currently. The bitstamp IOUs are still trading on ripple.
donator
Activity: 129
Merit: 100
Swimming in a sea of data
Ripple gateways would be e-money dealers which are already existing, have known regulations and requirements concerning audits, full reserves etc. Bitcoin exchanges don't.

Why do you say this?  I thought anyone who runs a ripple server can act as a gateway, with varying levels of success in interfacing with the traditional financial system.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
They won't increase XRP count because they don't need to currently, they don't want to hurt trust/reputation they earned and because I say so...

And the same kind of monkey business will be away from your all decentralized and open network, because...?
See my next line that you quoted.

Quote
Ripple gateways would be e-money dealers which are already existing, have known regulations and requirements concerning audits, full reserves etc. Bitcoin exchanges don't.
What's preventing all the bitcoin exchanges from jumping in? Who is going to stop them from doing so? More importantly, the possibility that they can be submited to an aproval process is the problem. I thought we were trying to fix the problem of needing to trust many people.
My bitcoins are just there, they're just a piece of information that only I have access they are protected from theft by the laws of physics, not because I trust somebody.
MtGox is dealing with it's crappy trade engine, approving people, withdrawal limits and whatnot - I guess they have other priorities. Bitstamp already uses and supports Ripple, others probably will follow. Ripple is also rather a competitor to BitInstant, Dwolla etc. by the way.

I guess Bitcoin exchanges, especially considering them dropping like domino pieces after MtGox went down last week, currently just have other priorities than jumping on board early on a beta project that might even cause them some trouble in their business and that needs to be evaluated + secured well. Also I don't know what's happening in the back already...

I submitted a statement to bitbet.us, so maybe you can bet soonish that there actually will be more than 100 billion XRP issued before the source code for a Ripple server is published. Wink
full member
Activity: 194
Merit: 100
It's kind of irrelevant what 'will be' when in fact it is already pretty much the opposite. So, you admit that ATM opencoin reserves the right to print money for itself for the time being, but supposedly debunk my point by saying that in the future that will be controlled by network consensus.
Don't be ridiculous. If I admit I'm capable of hitting my son in the head with a hammer, does that mean I've "reserved the right" to hit my son in the head with a hammer?
You omitted "for myself" from your analogy, making it non valid.
But yes, that is the problem... parents  do have responsibility and authority over their children and if they don't do it properly consequences are tragic. This happens everyday. It is possible for a parent to hit his son with a hammer in the head, that is my point, yes.

You cannot reduce the education of a child to a mathematical problem like bitcoins did to money, so unfortunately there will still children being victims of their parents violence.
Contrary to the hype, you cannot reduce transactions to a mathematical problem either. You, the people putting ripple up are aware of this. What I dislike is the way ripple is announced as if it would solve this problem. This problem has no solution, if you engage in a transaction, you have to either have to trust someone or someone has to trust you.
full member
Activity: 174
Merit: 101
It's kind of irrelevant what 'will be' when in fact it is already pretty much the opposite. So, you admit that ATM opencoin reserves the right to print money for itself for the time being, but supposedly debunk my point by saying that in the future that will be controlled by network consensus.
Don't be ridiculous. If I admit I'm capable of hitting my son in the head with a hammer, does that mean I've "reserved the right" to hit my son in the head with a hammer?

The analogy is more akin to being capable of "draining your bank account". In which case, I much prefer you neither have the capability nor "reserve the right".
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
isn't ripple a hobo wine too?

They should have called it Nightrain.
legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1012
Democracy is vulnerable to a 51% attack.
It's kind of irrelevant what 'will be' when in fact it is already pretty much the opposite. So, you admit that ATM opencoin reserves the right to print money for itself for the time being, but supposedly debunk my point by saying that in the future that will be controlled by network consensus.
Don't be ridiculous. If I admit I'm capable of hitting my son in the head with a hammer, does that mean I've "reserved the right" to hit my son in the head with a hammer?
full member
Activity: 194
Merit: 100
No, it can NOT be increased past current limits without consensus from the Ripple network. Currently this is only OpenCoin, in the future you will be able to run your own Ripple server and enforce the current limits of XRP just like anyone running bitcoind enforces the 21 million BTC limit.
It's kind of irrelevant what 'will be' when in fact it is already pretty much the opposite. So, you admit that ATM opencoin reserves the right to print money for itself for the time being, but supposedly debunk my point by saying that in the future that will be controlled by network consensus.

Quote
BTC24 was/is on the same "professionalism level" as bitcoinica...
And the same kind of monkey business will be away from your all decentralized and open network, because...?

Quote
Ripple gateways would be e-money dealers which are already existing, have known regulations and requirements concerning audits, full reserves etc. Bitcoin exchanges don't.
What's preventing all the bitcoin exchanges from jumping in? Who is going to stop them from doing so? More importantly, the possibility that they can be submited to an aproval process is the problem. I thought we were trying to fix the problem of needing to trust many people.
My bitcoins are just there, they're just a piece of information that only I have access they are protected from theft by the laws of physics, not because I trust somebody.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
No, it can NOT be increased past current limits without consensus from the Ripple network. Currently this is only OpenCoin, in the future you will be able to run your own Ripple server and enforce the current limits of XRP just like anyone running bitcoind enforces the 21 million BTC limit.

BTC24 was/is on the same "professionalism level" as bitcoinica...

Ripple gateways would be e-money dealers which are already existing, have known regulations and requirements concerning audits, full reserves etc. Bitcoin exchanges don't.
full member
Activity: 194
Merit: 100
I could make also a system and give to everybody 1 trillion of scamcoins, which doesn't cost anything.

If you have no moral objection to that, then by all means, this is a recipe for profit. Bitcointalk is weird mix of people genuinely interested in bitcoin and a huge number of people begging to be scammed. I can ensure you, if yo do make a trillion scamcoins and put them for sale here on the forums, you will get a good amount of bitcoins for it.

On a more serious note...
I don't like the way opencoin is trying to 'sell' us the concept.

The word "decentralized" is abused. So much free credit trying to getting people to believe that what hapened with MTGOX and more seriously with btc24 can be prevented by using ripple. This doesn't sound very honest. So if mtgox or btc24 had gateways on ripple, how exactly would things be different? Not much, what happened with btc24 would still happen if it would be a ripple gateway.

Also, trying to avoid telling people that xrp is indeed a currency so people don't think that it boils down to yet another coin, except that this one can be literally minted till value exhaustion.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1007
You can get free ones in the giveaway thread or buy just few (1000 XRP last for a LONG time!)
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 500
I think Ripple is simply a get rich quick scheme for the principals involved, and is essentially antithetical to the spirit of Bitcoin.
Ripple has the potential to be an excellent way of easing the government money -> bitcoin upgrade path. Whether or not this potential will be realized is an open question.
If something doesn't work it has always the potential to get work one day.
Bitcoin has not only the potential but already works.
I cannot beleave that some people are giving 1 bitcoin for 50.000 Ripple what you cannot use for anything.
I could make also a system and give to everybody 1 trillion of scamcoins, which doesn't cost anything.
This Ripples didn't cost anything but every bitcoin was mined with computing power and energy.
Coins like Ripple can make anybody with absolutely no cost in any amount.
What stops you from issuing and selling your own coins then?
Some people can't "beleave" that some other people are paying some amount of USD for Bitcoins...

Would it be better if Ripples were just called "Megatransactions" (1 XRP = 1 million(?) transactions) instead of "currency"? Then you'd just pay 1 BTC for 50 gigatransactions on Ripple...

Edit:
I'm still unclear about performance of the actual built-in "Ripple exchange" (= exchanging currencies automatically within Ripple itself, not withdrawing to e.g. Bitstamp, trading and depositing a different currency) - what are the bottlenecks besides block timers, how many transactions per second can it really handle and what's the trade lag?
Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin
OK
Good point. Let's try. it.
At least registration worked now. I already tried longer time ago but didn't worked for some reason.
As I see I cannot do anything without Ripples.
Pages:
Jump to: