Some cryptocurrencies offer significant more privacy (Monero, Zcash etc) but at a cost.
However my question is more fundamental: How 'much' privacy do we really need for a widely-adopted cryptocurrency?
I believe Bitcoin as-is won't get adopted for everyday transactions. Nobody would want showing his buying habits to the whole world (imagine how many ads and flyers you would get).
On the other hand, I don't believe cryptocurrencies that offer too much privacy will get adopted either, since they will be used for criminal activities and eventually get banned.
My feeling is that we want a currency that offers privacy to some extent, without revealing our transaction to the world but still be possible for law-enforcement to track illegal activities.
What do you think?
100% privacy suits me perfectly. Exactly the same privacy that all the rich guys on the Panama papers and other lists were enjoying.
Great response. Biggest criminals, politicians, businessman always had the anonymity. Bitcoin is in all aspects there just to give to the people what the powerful already had, the control of the money supply, ownership of the actual funds, anonymity, no censorship of transactions and etc.
If I can point out, the Panama papers are no longer anonymous, since everyone knows about them... Also, the whole "what the powerful have" narrative is getting very old. While I am by no means rich, why do bitcoin fanatics always put the rich in the same caricature/box? You don't have to be rich to have access to this "anonymity", which is not really anonymous, since a company or group of people are holding all your information and you've off-loaded the risk onto them and you better pray they know how to truly hide things.
I would argue that bitcoin gives everyone access to a better mechanism, if they know how to use it. Money can surely make a big difference, but it's knowledge that truly makes the difference at the end of the day. Money will buy you someone else's knowledge, but it will never beat you having the knowledge yourself.
There's nothing stopping you from becoming rich, if you are willing to put in the effort and time, most people aren't and therefore will never be rich. It's trite to always blame the rich for everything. You may live in a country where they are more controlling and oppressive, but there's nothing stopping you from re-locating to a place that respects competition and will allow you to rise if you put in the effort. Is it easy? No, but it's better than complaining about the rich.
I imagine that depends on your definition of rich. I don't think advocating action is wrong for seeking success, but the ludicrous wealth typically used for the "rich" in most people's minds (billionaires and such) is not a result of simple "put in X work, get out Y money." Far more variables come into play, such as creativity, connections, etc. A successful person is one that can create opportunities for themselves, yes.
Absolutely no disagreement on that! I'm also not exonerating everyone, there are for sure unfair practices used to gain a competitive advantage, but I feel that this usually gets diluted in casting a bad image on all the wealthy people as an excuse for people's own inaction.
Bitcoin is a tremendous innovation, but people may find a false sense of security in it, making it as some sort of holy grail, which it cannot be. Bitcoin will not make everyone rich, by definition only a minority of players will succeed in this market at the expense of most other participants. However, if people learn to look at bitcoin rationally, they can all derive some sort of advantage from it. I think we need some better debates about what bitcoin can mean to different people, because a lot of people think of it as their path to wealth and riches and most will likely be disappointed, but that's something that will only be proved in time. For now, almost everyone is enjoying a smooth ride up in price! Time is the ultimate test.
Cheers for the input!