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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 20859. (Read 26608265 times)

hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks

Why?? Do you think that pointing you out as a fool should be a monopolized industry as well  Huh

"Speak of the devil...."

Just sayin', dude.  So far you have argued that the definition of cash is 'wrong' and that satoshi got bitcoin wrong day one.

You think everyone is wrong, and you constantly support this by suggesting that we should all just 'educate' ourselves.

But in reality, all you have is your version of what you believe to be true.  Your 'truth' is that bitcoin is fundamentally broken, and the only way to fix it is by going off-chain. And to make that more profitable in the short term, you need a fee market to drive traffic to it - ergo SmallBlocks. Which is fine. But it is flawed.

I contend that:
1. Bitcoin isn't broken.  Its evolving - everything is on the table. There is no 'single' solution.
2. Its utility value far outweighs your ludicrous need to have it solely as a 'store of value'
3. Off-chain solutions provide an invaluable aid to scaling bitcoin, but they must compete on a level playing field with on-chain transactions.
4. Any solution that depends on artificially throttling capacity is flawed.

I can tell you woke up in a good mood  Wink I can count at least 2-3 strawmen just from this one post! Impressive!

I retort that:
1. Bitcoin isn't broken. It will simply never scale to accommodate mainstream consumption levels under existing design. Maybe you wanna try Visa or Square?
2. It's principal utility is absolutely as I've described it: a deflationary, censorship resistant form of money. The inefficient and rather handicapped "payment network" sitting on top is a necessary by-product but unfortunately design with security and decentralization in mind, not worldwide payment processing.
3. False dichotomy here. Both provide their own benefits and trade-offs.
4. It is more of an absolutely necessary throttle on resource consumption to prevent deadly centralization of the system.
legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1014
Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
Some people around here just rely on CCMFs and cheap cheering without even grasp the basics of economics.

Praying the exact antithesis of some moonlading with their small bitcoin holdings.



hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
Bitcoin has an history and infrastructure that cannot be easily replicated.

Newsflash, dipshit: Bitcoin's infrastructure is as a payments network. Bitcoin's history means zip diddly squat if some other alt is backed by a bank with a 50 Billion dollar market cap.


Quote
In crypto 5 might as well be 5000 when referring to the competition.

against another grass roots bootstapped alt, yes. Against an alt backed by a Fortune 500 company or billionaire with a slick multi-million dollar marketing campaign, no.


Quote
Your point about gold's transaction throughput is laughable. The limits on gold transaction and its very real cost is considerable given its physical nature. Even 7 tps accross the world is better than the transportability of gold.

yes, but your fees make the divisibility of BTC much more limited.  I'm pretty sure there are far more than seven global gold transactions per second. Even more when you count micropayments, like buying shots of Goldschlager. And, other than Government thugs, no assholes arguing that we should minimize them.



Quote
Comparing Bitcoin's network effect to MySpace where there is essentially no cost to the users for switching networks confirms you as just another simple noob. Did you buy this account? You can't have possibly registered in 2011 and utter such idiocy.

What's the cost of trading BTC for any alt on any one of a dozen exchanges? A fraction of a percent?  The only costs are paying your goddamn miner fees and waiting for your confirmations. It's not the switchers like me you need to worry about. It's the people who enter crypto going straight to the alt that better suits their needs.

 Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

It's early but that might just deserve our award for stupid post of the day.

Might as well say people will throw themselves at Govcoin while you're at it   Grin

This is just beyond hilarious. Why the fuck would you even think a centralized payment network supported "by a Fortune 500 company or billionaire with a slick multi-million dollar marketing campaign" would bother creating a cryptocurrency. Do you understand the necessity for the blockchain and POW design and why it is totally worthless and ridiculously inefficient under centralized control?

By the way I'm certain Germany would kill to be able to get the Fed to return their gold to them even if they'd have to wait for the next block  Cheesy

And finally of course you would totally miss the point about "the cost" of switching network. I encourage anyone to invest into an alt that suits their needs ...... and it's gone!

"Newsflash dipshit" Bitcoin would be worth absolutely fuck all if it was valued for the success (or lack thereof) of its "payment network". It's only worth anything because people have decided to trust a portion of their wealth into it.

Are you cypherdoc's brother by any chance? This sounds like some of the stupid shit he'd say to hopelessly defend his points.
legendary
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1002
Some people around here just rely on CCMFs and cheap cheering without even grasp the basics of economics.

Praying the exact antithesis of some moonlading with their small bitcoin holdings.


legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1014
Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
In other words:

The value of Bitcoin is its utility,
The utility of Bitcoin is its ability to store wealth.


Any alarm bells ringing?

Circular argument, anyone?



Seems like you're twisting things a bit. Maybe I ought to clarify?

The value of Bitcoin is in being deflationary, censorship resistant form of money.

I don't see what's so hard to grasp about this  Huh

Not twisting, clarifying. "I don't see what's so hard to grasp about this  Huh"
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1007
Hide your women
Bitcoin has an history and infrastructure that cannot be easily replicated.

Newsflash, dipshit: Bitcoin's infrastructure is as a payments network. Bitcoin's history means zip diddly squat if some other alt is backed by a bank with a 50 Billion dollar market cap.


Quote
In crypto 5 might as well be 5000 when referring to the competition.

against another grass roots bootstrapped alt, yes. Against an alt backed by a Fortune 500 company or billionaire with a slick multi-million dollar marketing campaign, no.


Quote
Your point about gold's transaction throughput is laughable. The limits on gold transaction and its very real cost is considerable given its physical nature. Even 7 tps accross the world is better than the transportability of gold.

yes, but your fees make the divisibility of BTC much more limited.  I'm pretty sure there are far more than seven global gold transactions per second. Even more when you count micropayments, like buying shots of Goldschlager. And, other than Government thugs, no assholes arguing that we should minimize them.



Quote
Comparing Bitcoin's network effect to MySpace where there is essentially no cost to the users for switching networks confirms you as just another simple noob. Did you buy this account? You can't have possibly registered in 2011 and utter such idiocy.

What's the cost of trading BTC for any alt on any one of a dozen exchanges? A fraction of a percent?  The only costs are paying your goddamn miner fees and waiting for your confirmations. It's not the switchers like me you need to worry about. It's the people who enter crypto going straight to the alt that better suits their needs.

hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
Warning: Confrmed Gavinista

Why?? Do you think that pointing you out as a fool should be a monopolized industry as well  Huh

"Speak of the devil...."

Just sayin', dude.  So far you have argued that the definition of cash is 'wrong' and that satoshi got bitcoin wrong day one.

You think everyone is wrong, and you constantly support this by suggesting that we should all just 'educate' ourselves.

But in reality, all you have is your version of what you believe to be true.  Your 'truth' is that bitcoin is fundamentally broken, and the only way to fix it is by going off-chain. And to make that more profitable in the short term, you need a fee market to drive traffic to it - ergo SmallBlocks. Which is fine. But it is flawed.

I contend that:
1. Bitcoin isn't broken.  Its evolving - everything is on the table. There is no 'single' solution.
2. Its utility value far outweighs your ludicrous need to have it solely as a 'store of value'
3. Off-chain solutions provide an invaluable aid to scaling bitcoin, but they must compete on a level playing field with on-chain transactions.
4. Any solution that depends on artificially throttling capacity is flawed.
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
In other words:

The value of Bitcoin is its utility,
The utility of Bitcoin is its ability to store wealth.


Any alarm bells ringing?

Circular argument, anyone?



Seems like you're twisting things a bit. Maybe I ought to clarify?

The value of Bitcoin is in being deflationary, censorship resistant form of money.

I don't see what's so hard to grasp about this  Huh
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
We should absolutely avoid the danger of instilling into Bitcoin users some kind of belief that they have a right to free transactions.


 Undecided

This post is full of misguided assumptions.

It should come as a rational observation considering the shortcomings you have pointed out that there exist absolutely no incentive to purchase bitcoins to make purchases.

As is yours. Making the assumption that bitcoin was never intended to be a transaction system is probably the biggest assumption of them all.
 

Were do I mention that Bitcoin is not intended for transactions?

see above

I see. Maybe that came off wrong but that wasn't my point. The point being it makes little sense for the average consumer to have to jump through all the hoops of buying bitcoins just to make a purchase. Now don't get me wrong it might serve some niche use cases but this is simply not something you can sell to mainstream consumers, even if they can make 100000000000000 transactions for free.
legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1014
Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
do we really want Bitcoin to compete with Visa or is there another, possibly more valuable, use case for Bitcoin? What about digital gold? That sounds like an area where Bitcoin could thoroughly outcompete other players in its current state, with little to no change necessary. Why are we targeting to replace payment processors when we could somehow attract the incomparable value that resides in precious metal markets, offshore saving accounts and general safe havens? That sounds like a much more interesting moonshot if you ask me.

Gold has utility value. Even so, it has become a financial backwater. A "barbarous relic".   At least gold can be used for jewelry, dental fillings, electrical connections, etc.  It's been a poor store of value this century.

Bitcoin doesn't even have those advantages. Without the blockchain, Bitcoin is just another crypto and those are in infinite supply. How can a cryptographic token be a store of value without any utility value?  No micropayments? No remittances? no irreversable consumer payments?

The thing about Swiss bank accounts was that they were bank accounts, only secret.  There are several cryptocoins that are better at anonymity: Monero, Dash, etc.

The thing about gold is that it is not in alpha or beta, but has a five thousand year history.  After Gox, Silk Road and all the other thefts and scams, you really think Bitcoin can be seen as a safe haven?  With no utility value?? Are you fucking insane? 

 Undecided

Still don't get it do you.

Discussing gold's "utility" value is absolutely a non-starter. Such a thing was scarcely considered in its history of human adoption as a store-of-wealth.

How can you pretend Bitcoin has no utility value? Censorship resistant deflationary store of wealth is not good enough for you?

You sound like a troll bringing up Gox & Silk Road against Bitcoin. Whatever happened to the people who lost any Bitcoin from these event is entirely up to them. It was their responsibility to properly secure their wealth and by all accounts, against all principles of Bitcoin, they didn't. Too bad for them but fortunately some people are smarter.

At the risk of repeating myself, "a cryptographic token" gains value by attracting trust in its sound economic nature as digital gold. Why is it this trust can not be replicated in just any other altcoins you ask? Because: "Trust is a very organic process which takes an enormous amount of time". Bitcoin has 5 years of history for that trust to build on.



In other words:

The value of Bitcoin is its utility,
The utility of Bitcoin is its ability to store wealth.


Any alarm bells ringing?

Circular argument, anyone?

legendary
Activity: 1639
Merit: 1006
We should absolutely avoid the danger of instilling into Bitcoin users some kind of belief that they have a right to free transactions.


 Undecided

This post is full of misguided assumptions.

It should come as a rational observation considering the shortcomings you have pointed out that there exist absolutely no incentive to purchase bitcoins to make purchases.

As is yours. Making the assumption that bitcoin was never intended to be a transaction system is probably the biggest assumption of them all.
 

Were do I mention that Bitcoin is not intended for transactions?


see above
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


You do realize bigger blocks encourage mining centralization don't you?

We've discussed this ad nauseum. GPU mining caused centralization. Pools caused centralization. ASICS caused centralization.  Capitalism causes centralization because capital increases productivity and there are fewer people with capital than without. The only way around that is to leave the free market and that causes an even worse form of power centralization.
 
Growth causes centralization. I think you know this, but unlike you I think a certain degree of centralization is preferable to no growth.  

There is an important distinction. The existing mining centralization comes at little cost to nodes precisely because the blocksize cap is there to limit the resources required to process the blocks mined by miners.

You are perfectly correct that the hash rate centralizing is already a reality but lifting the cap or increasing the limit by too much too soon only precipitate and encourages this phenomenon at the loss of individuals running nodes.

This is important because it increases the cost to access governance of the network and consequently centralizes it into the hands of more wealthy people.

legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1007
Hide your women


You do realize bigger blocks encourage mining centralization don't you?

We've discussed this ad nauseum. GPU mining caused centralization. Pools caused centralization. ASICS caused centralization.  Capitalism causes centralization because capital increases productivity and there are fewer people with capital than without. The only way around that is to leave the free market and that causes an even worse form of power centralization.
 
Growth causes centralization. I think you know this, but unlike you I think a certain degree of centralization is preferable to no growth.  
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
Discussing gold's "utility" value is absolutely a non-starter. Such a thing was scarcely considered in its history of human adoption as a store-of-wealth.

That's because no other metal was as recognizable, divisible, rare, etc.  Cryptocoins are all more or less equally fungible, recognizable, divisible, portable and rare.

That's absolutely not true. For starters, no other coins can rival Bitcoin security which is what basically guarantees its fungibility property. At this point in time, any POW coin that suggests to be a threat by Bitcoin could be trivially attacked by the network of Bitcoin miners.

ALL cryptocoins are censorship resistant and some are more so and also more deflationary.
 

See response above. Bitcoin has an history and infrastructure that cannot be easily replicated.

At the risk of pointing out the obvious: 5<5000              
also, there are no limits on gold transactions/second.   A throttled network capacity makes Bitcoin digital fool's gold.

At the risk of repeating myself also: Network effects didn't save MySpace.  I'm starting to think all those talking heads on the idiot box who said Bitcoin was too new, experimental and would be replaced by a better crypto  maybe had it right.

Yes. Obvious is obvious. In crypto 5 might as well be 5000 when referring to the competition.

Your point about gold's transaction throughput is laughable. The limits on gold transaction and its very real cost is considerable given its physical nature. Even 7 tps accross the world is better than the transportability of gold.

Comparing Bitcoin's network effect to MySpace where there is essentially no cost to the users for switching networks confirms you as just another simple noob. Did you buy this account? You can't have possibly registered in 2011 and utter such idiocy.
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1007
Hide your women
Discussing gold's "utility" value is absolutely a non-starter. Such a thing was scarcely considered in its history of human adoption as a store-of-wealth.

That's because no other metal was as recognizable, divisible, rare, etc.  Cryptocoins are all more or less equally fungible, recognizable, divisible, portable and rare.





Quote
How can you pretend Bitcoin has no utility value? Censorship resistant deflationary store of wealth is not good enough for you?

ALL cryptocoins are censorship resistant and some are more so and also more deflationary. 


[quote
At the risk of repeating myself, "a cryptographic token" gains value by attracting trust in its sound economic nature as digital gold. Why is it this trust can not be replicated in just any other altcoins you ask? Because: "Trust is a very organic process which takes an enormous amount of time". Bitcoin has 5 years of history for that trust to build on.
[/quote]

At the risk of pointing out the obvious: 5<5000             
also, there are no limits on gold transactions/second.   A throttled network capacity makes Bitcoin digital fool's gold.

At the risk of repeating myself also: Network effects didn't save MySpace.  I'm starting to think all those talking heads on the idiot box who said Bitcoin was too new, experimental and would be replaced by a better crypto  maybe had it right.
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
#1 smoking gun problem with Bitcoin, not enough distinct miners make up 75% of hashing power. It is making me want to no longer be a HODLER as I think about it.

I'm thinking the same thing. I can't decide if these cripplecoiners are really that stupid or just plain evil. My inner conspiracy nut suspects that they are just waiting for us hodlers to dump and then they will suddenly see the light about block size and scalability. 

You do realize bigger blocks encourage mining centralization don't you?
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


Who wants brg444 coins?


 Huh

Did Fatman sell his account to Lambchop or something?

Why?? Do you think that pointing you out as a fool should be a monopolized industry as well  Huh

"Speak of the devil...."
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1007
Hide your women
#1 smoking gun problem with Bitcoin, not enough distinct miners make up 75% of hashing power. It is making me want to no longer be a HODLER as I think about it.

I'm thinking the same thing. I can't decide if these cripplecoiners are really that stupid or just plain evil. My inner conspiracy nut suspects that they are just waiting for us hodlers to dump and then they will suddenly see the light about block size and scalability. 
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 504
Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks
do we really want Bitcoin to compete with Visa or is there another, possibly more valuable, use case for Bitcoin? What about digital gold? That sounds like an area where Bitcoin could thoroughly outcompete other players in its current state, with little to no change necessary. Why are we targeting to replace payment processors when we could somehow attract the incomparable value that resides in precious metal markets, offshore saving accounts and general safe havens? That sounds like a much more interesting moonshot if you ask me.

Gold has utility value. Even so, it has become a financial backwater. A "barbarous relic".   At least gold can be used for jewelry, dental fillings, electrical connections, etc.  It's been a poor store of value this century.

Bitcoin doesn't even have those advantages. Without the blockchain, Bitcoin is just another crypto and those are in infinite supply. How can a cryptographic token be a store of value without any utility value?  No micropayments? No remittances? no irreversable consumer payments?

The thing about Swiss bank accounts was that they were bank accounts, only secret.  There are several cryptocoins that are better at anonymity: Monero, Dash, etc.

The thing about gold is that it is not in alpha or beta, but has a five thousand year history.  After Gox, Silk Road and all the other thefts and scams, you really think Bitcoin can be seen as a safe haven?  With no utility value?? Are you fucking insane? 

 Undecided

Still don't get it do you.

Discussing gold's "utility" value is absolutely a non-starter. Such a thing was scarcely considered in its history of human adoption as a store-of-wealth.

How can you pretend Bitcoin has no utility value? Censorship resistant deflationary store of wealth is not good enough for you?

You sound like a troll bringing up Gox & Silk Road against Bitcoin. Whatever happened to the people who lost any Bitcoin from these event is entirely up to them. It was their responsibility to properly secure their wealth and by all accounts, against all principles of Bitcoin, they didn't. Too bad for them but fortunately some people are smarter.

At the risk of repeating myself, "a cryptographic token" gains value by attracting trust in its sound economic nature as digital gold. Why is it this trust can not be replicated in just any other altcoins you ask? Because: "Trust is a very organic process which takes an enormous amount of time". Bitcoin has 5 years of history for that trust to build on.

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