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Topic: The only way that governments will successfully compete with Bitcoin - page 2. (Read 658 times)

newbie
Activity: 19
Merit: 1

Most people are fine with using things like credit cards, bank autopayments, bank-linked payment apps, etc. They're easy enough, and since the payments are reversible, they're highly forgiving of the average person's absolutely abominable security practices. These people are not going to switch to either Bitcoin or FedCoin any time soon, and they can be ignored for now.


I wish more people realized that, it seems like most bitcoiners actually believe that in the next years everyone and their grandma will stop using banks and switch to Bitcoin. A lot of people will get so disappointed in 5-10 years that there's no "mass" adoption. They like to compare Bitcoin with Internet, electricity and other inventions to somehow make an argument that Bitcoin will have the same adoption curve, which is completely wrong because Bitcoin's innovation is very different from those examples.

Yeah I agree. A lot of crypto users have their heads up in the clouds when it comes to the the real life application of the currency. It's easy to dream of it achieving word domination in the realm of finance, but the real question is how?

Bitcoin needs many more features to be inherent in it to be usable, namely those mentioned above. It has great potential, but we need actualization for it to work. It doesn't just flood through and then everyone magically makes the shift over to crypto. There has to be a good reason for it, and a strong enough guarantee to make people feel safe. Try asking someone to pay you in bitcoin, and watch the look on his/her face. The majority aren't ready to trust it yet.
legendary
Activity: 2954
Merit: 2145

Most people are fine with using things like credit cards, bank autopayments, bank-linked payment apps, etc. They're easy enough, and since the payments are reversible, they're highly forgiving of the average person's absolutely abominable security practices. These people are not going to switch to either Bitcoin or FedCoin any time soon, and they can be ignored for now.


I wish more people realized that, it seems like most bitcoiners actually believe that in the next years everyone and their grandma will stop using banks and switch to Bitcoin. A lot of people will get so disappointed in 5-10 years that there's no "mass" adoption. They like to compare Bitcoin with Internet, electricity and other inventions to somehow make an argument that Bitcoin will have the same adoption curve, which is completely wrong because Bitcoin's innovation is very different from those examples.
jr. member
Activity: 667
Merit: 1
Actually I think that the best way that the government can try to overpower Bitcoin is to create a cryptocurrency that will be more stable and less volatile unlike Bitcoin. Its a good thing if they try to achieve this as it means that they have seen the relevance of cryptocurrency. Unfortunately, they might not want to follow the decentralization route which is why i think they wouldn't defeat Bitcoin as it has gone a long way being decentralized.
member
Activity: 462
Merit: 13
This is actually a great news and good idea. This shows in their own way they are trying to buy the idea of cryptocurrency, well they will be warmly welcomed into our world. This will also create a lot of awareness and trust me many other nations will follow suite. Let's cross our legs and watch if it will be able to stand the test of time.
newbie
Activity: 19
Merit: 1
This is a great thread. You know, they have a great potential with that kind of anonymous payment system to centralize everything and keep it all under lock and key, so what's stopping them? I think that they have this in mind and are already slowly moving towards it (Sweden is something like 98% cashless now) just by getting people used to the fact that they don't need physical currency anymore. Then what? Slip them across from the Swedish Krona to the e-Krona, and just change the terms slightly. Many more countries will begin to follow suit. And I don't think it will necessarily be fully anonymous, in fact, they might even sell the information to the highest bidding market research firm.
full member
Activity: 854
Merit: 104
Yes, one of the ways to confront bitcoins on the part of the states is to create their own digital centralized money. In any case, this will happen. However, if we are confident in the strength of the decentralized Crypto currency, then we have nothing to fear. In addition, the creation of such a crypto currency by the state will raise interest and the general popularity of the crypto currency.
administrator
Activity: 5166
Merit: 12850
Do you think satoshi read this paper? Was it an inspiration for his ideas?

I can't imagine that Satoshi didn't know about this, since it was one of the main ideas in achieving electronic cash before Bitcoin, but I can't find any references to it from him. Bitcoin is only very loosely similar to this system (called blinded bearer certificates or chaumian e-cash), though.
hero member
Activity: 1638
Merit: 756
Bobby Fischer was right
How To Make a Mint (which I often like to evangelize).
I'm so glad that you do like to evangelize this Smiley what a cool read... who could expect such a useful piece from this agency?
However the fact that this paper was disclosed tells us the whole story, they wont utilize this particular idea. Absolute morons at the top of the food chain, no surprise there. Basically they rejected the golden eggs laying hen... typical but... were we lucky?
Do you think satoshi read this paper? Was it an inspiration for his ideas? (tinfoil hats on) Laurie Law, Susan Sabett, Jerry Solinas was this satoshi?  Cheesy After their work was dismissed, left unappreciated maybe they got somewhat rouge and open source with the on-line version only of this work? How does their mathematics compare(if at all) with the blockchain?   
copper member
Activity: 2870
Merit: 2298
Quote
Because the average person can't handle security, the system is either going to be forbidden to the average person or it's going to be reversible
I think this is more of a problem for bitcoin than a “FedCoin”.

If people lose money because their bitcoin is stolen, they will be less likely to use it in the future and if many people lose money for these reasons some will not be interested in starting to use bitcoin out of fear of loss.

The government can implement regulations that make it more difficult to screw things up that result in losses, such as requiring hardware wallet manufacturers to ship multiple backups when selling said wallets, requiring certain security standards that make losses less likely.

I don’t think the US government will make any coin that allows for anon payments in unlimited value out of money laundering concerns. Further, this would make it more difficult to enforce sanctions, which has the potential to lead to more armed, violent conflicts. There are numerous laws in place and a lot of resources that are used to track and monitor large financial transactions within the banking system and I don’t see the government giving that up.

Quote
Pull-based payments are inherently insecure.
 - Payments based on shared secrets like credit card numbers are inherently insecur
The market has innovated somewhat in this regard. So called “chip” cards effectively make it so cards must be present at the time of the transaction and the card cannot be charged a second time if it is not present the second time. Many banks offer temporary card numbers that have short expiration’s and limits near the amount of a transaction at a merchant, making them effectively “one time use” card numbers for purchases online. ApplePay and AndroidPay have similar security protections as chip cards, but with addded protections via a users phone, such as a pin or a users fingerprint being needed to make a purchase.

Overall, I find it very unlikely any 1st world government will ever attempt any kind of fedcoin
administrator
Activity: 5166
Merit: 12850
In the recent US House hearing on digital currency, most of the lawmakers were worried that a cryptocurrency would out-compete the US dollar, and so they were interested in creating an official USD cryptocurrency to preempt this. (Mainly they were worried about a cryptocurrency created by a different government, but some also contemplated Bitcoin achieving dominance.) This sort of "FedCoin" is a hilarious effort doomed to fail.

Most people are fine with using things like credit cards, bank autopayments, bank-linked payment apps, etc. They're easy enough, and since the payments are reversible, they're highly forgiving of the average person's absolutely abominable security practices. These people are not going to switch to either Bitcoin or FedCoin any time soon, and they can be ignored for now.

Of course, the above-mentioned traditional payment methods have a huge list of problems. Listing just a few:
 - Pull-based payments are inherently insecure.
 - Payments based on shared secrets like credit card numbers are inherently insecure.
 - The person you're paying has to know your personal information.
 - Your intermediary has to know your payment history. Most credit card companies actively sell this information to advertisers, all of them are probably vulnerable to Equifax-like breaches, and all of them are open books to government agencies.
 - USD is inflationary, and its future is highly unpredictable and (depending on your viewpoint) maybe dubious.
 - Accepting payments is costly due to fees and chargeback risk.
 - Accepting payments requires significant set-up time, and is impossible to do privately.
 - The entire thing is debt-based and filled with intermediaries. If $5 is moved, then multiple parties are simultaneously borrowing $5. It's fragile and inefficient.

If you're in the minority of people who runs into these problems, then you're probably going to use cash if possible, which solves most of those problems. If you're online, then you'd be interested in accepting BTC, which also solves most of those problems.

But any FedCoin likely to be created is going to solve few of those problems, if any:
 - Banking protocols have historically almost never been designed securely, and I doubt that any FedCoin would change this pattern.
 - Because the average person can't handle security, the system is either going to be forbidden to the average person or it's going to be reversible.
 - Governments hate privacy.
 - The very last thing that governments would give up is their power to print money.

So any FedCoin is just going to be another credit card system. But people who already like credit cards will just continue using their credit cards. There's no market for it.



Now, a smart statist might recognize all of the above, and abandon all of their other money-related goals just in order to maintain their power to print money. This could be done by implementing the 1996 NSA paper How To Make a Mint (which I often like to evangelize). The Federal Reserve would run some powerful timestamping servers which everyone would use, and then the rest of the system would be based on public-key crypto directly between payers and payees, probably aided by dedicated hardware. This would be better than Bitcoin in several ways:
 - It would be 100% anonymous. Not even the government could unmask you. (*)
 - Payments would be instantly irreversible and nearly free.
 - There would be no need for anyone but the Federal Reserve to run any heavy full nodes.
 - The value would be tied to USD, and therefore less volatile than BTC currently.
 - More complicated smart contracts could be implemented, since the Fed could act as a built-in smart-contract oracle.

The only thing that BTC would have going for it vs this type of e-cash would be its decentralization and finite supply. Valuable properties IMO, but I would never expect BTC to out-compete this e-cash as long as the USD was reasonable stable, whereas I do think that BTC can out-compete either today's USD or any likely hypothetical FedCoin over a long period of time.

But I would be shocked if any government tries this. Many will try the pointless FedCoin-type thing, but they are too arrogant, anti-privacy, and incompetent to create an actually-useful e-cash system like this.

(*Note that it would be possible to design the system such that certain backdoor keys could be used to unmask payments. Everyone would know about this in advance; it wouldn't be a secret backdoor. Maybe something like this could be made tolerable to the average person, though no matter what measures are in place at the start, if any backdoor is tolerated at all, then it's only a matter of time before the NSA is looking through every transaction's history.)

(There is absolutely no need to shoe-horn a block chain into such a system, BTW.)
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