Luke, read this.All money originates out of barter as a commodity. The regression theorem explains why money, e.g, the paper dollar, has value today.
The Origin of Money and Its Value - Robert P. Murphy - Mises Daily
Luke, read this.All money originates out of barter as a commodity. The regression theorem explains why money, e.g, the paper dollar, has value today.
The Origin of Money and Its Value - Robert P. Murphy - Mises Daily
Sorry, haven't been on the silk road, just read about it in that rolling stone article that helped make BTC famous.Do you have a silk road invite? I've wanted to check it out for a while. That seems to be the only place I hear about that actively has sellers that accept bitcoins.
It's not that hard to check it out... Here's the designer's PDF on it:How do I know that it can't/won't be manipulated. I haven't looked at it in detail (as in, source code) but most people won't. How is someone who does not even have the ability or desire to check it personally able to trust BC?
They got change for a $1,600 gold 1 ounce gold coin? Lulz... Not very practical. He'd have to keep weights and stuff to value a lot of gold, and worry about low-quality gold from ppl he doesn't know, too!Can you imagine buying a few eggs from your local farmer with BCs? No way. But I am sure they will take gold.
It's all open source!Without having looked at the setup, I don't trust BC. I don't trust things that are free with no commercial intent somewhere. I would not be surprised if there is a backdoor somewhere. How do you know they run the exact code they published?
Of course, I don't expect it to happen over night... But since more people adopt it every day now, and accepting BTC is so damn easy and has such invisible fees, it catches on across many industries, even just as an investment.(Please remember that I am fairly ignorant about BC, but even more so is the average person that will have to adopt it for it to become useful as currency)
Read it. I agree with every bit of it.Luke, read this.
Sorry, haven't been on the silk road, just read about it in that rolling stone article that helped make BTC famous.
I have shopped at one or two of these thousand or so merchants though:
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Trade
Can anyone find a niche market where you CAN'T use bitcoin right now? Shit's grown!
It's not that hard to check it out... Here's the designer's PDF on it:
http://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
There's some tech stuff in there that admittedly is over many peoples' head, but I've yet to hear of a programmer say "I looked at the code and this can be cracked" or anything similar. -It makes instant Fans of every coder who looks at it.
Here's the community of BTC techie users/updaters... See what they think about it for yourself.
They got change for a $1,600 gold 1 ounce gold coin? Lulz... Not very practical. He'd have to keep weights and stuff to value a lot of gold, and worry about low-quality gold from ppl he doesn't know, too!
Meanwhile, right this very moment you can use Bitcoin or Paypal on your cell phone to send them PP USD$ or BTC... In both cases they just need a (free) account to receive.
It's all open source!
You can actually see every BTC transaction take place in real time. Everybody sees the money move but no one knows who owns the wallets its' moved to.
Of course, I don't expect it to happen over night... But since more people adopt it every day now, and accepting BTC is so damn easy and has such invisible fees, it catches on across many industries, even just as an investment.
I especially like its' fee structure. Free to give and receive, unless you're in a hurry. If you are, you pay 0.01 BTC for a "jump in line" fee!
Read it. I agree with every bit of it.
But where does it say that an electronic Fiat currency can't be as good or better as a paper fiat currency?
I would assume that if the Fed had issued BTC instead of FRNs they'd still serve as money today, right?
The medium isn't the issue. It's not market money.But where does it say that an electronic Fiat currency can't be as good or better as a paper fiat currency?
I would assume that if the Fed had issued BTC instead of FRNs they'd still serve as money today, right?
No.Seems like a sticking point with considering it money is that it isn't a commodity.
It needs to be scarce, it needs to be fungible, it needs to be malleable, and it needs to be durable.If you look at a couple of the underlying characteristics of what makes something suitable as money it is that it is scarce (so a small amount of money can store a lot of value) and is not easily produced (so that it remains scarce and cannot be easily debased).
No, see above.So then, can a non-tangible thing be real money? I think the answer is yes if it has the same characteristics as traditional real money.
How are bitcoins durable?Bitcoin is scarce and durable, those features are obvious.
Divisible? Convenient?Malleable? That assumes it must be tangible which I assert is not a requirement.
Apparently you also didn't read the article posted.Definitely disagree on these points. Seems to me that money need not be tangible.
You can't use Bitcoins for any other reason than money
How are bitcoins durable?
Divisible? Convenient?
Has a secondary purpose other than for use as money?
Apparently you also didn't read the article posted.
How are bitcoins durable?
Divisible? Convenient?
Has a secondary purpose other than for use as money?
Apparently you also didn't read the article posted.
A bitcoin is more durable than gold?Not sure if serious actually since they can never wear out and are just retired voluntarily, but I don't understand it very well actually but they are infinitely more durable than physical money.
I didn't know that.Divisible to however many decimal places your computer can compute.
How convenient is it when you don't have electricity? How convenient is it when you don't have access to a computer?More convenient than a bag of gold coins.
Actually, that is a large part of this discussion. There is no such thing as money qua money created outside the market.And since the subject is "money" then whether or not it has another purpose would not be part of the discussion of whether or not it is money.
The traditional definitions of money apply to money.The traditional definitions of money apply to tangibles only so that's why I'm asking if something can perform all the functions of money without being tangible.
A consequence of living with fiat money so long, folks don't understand what real money is, and how it achieves such utility.After all, that's what we do these days, most often just shuffle around numbers in accounts and now and then convert them to something tangible.
If you can cite any example of such, I will give you a cookie.Gorilla needs to accept that stuff Mises economists wrote years ago maybe isn't relevant today such as focusing on money being tangible.
Any exchange. Mt Gox is the most popular Bitcoin exchange, there are several others that specialize in Bitcoin too.I haven't looked at all your links yet, but I will when I have time. Where can someone send someone cash via PP and get BC in return?
You really should look into how many bitcoin miners there are and what percentage of the world's computing power they represent."if honest nodes control a majority of CPU power"
It all comes down to this lukep... Botnets come to mind...
Wow, there are many reasons. Where to begin...If you want something that is easily transferable, why not use a virtual currency that is backed by gold (or something else)?
Agreed completely. It's up to us to pick the one that we like the most each... That's called being the market, and the currencies that survive will have been chosen by the market.But in the end it is not up to us to decide what the best currency is. Let them compete and one (or multiple?) winner(s) will arise.
It will be if the market chooses it. So far it's been growing in worth for years, why do you thing it can't be market money? Was that growth all artificial?It's not market money.
BTC can be backed up, exist in the cloud, fit on a jump drive, and you can even take a picture of your BTC wallet and destroy your data entirely except for that picture, and still get access to your wallet again on the next computer.How are bitcoins durable?
Awesomely divisible. One Bitcoin is divisible down to eight decimal places. There are really 2,099,999,997,690,000 (just over 2 quadrillion) maximum possible atomic units in the bitcoin design.Divisible?
Paying for anything anywhere by phone seems convenient to me. Of course there ARE physical bitcoins too, I doubt that will catch on because the physical seems to inconvenient nowadays.Convenient?
No, but neither does any fiat money.Has a secondary purpose other than for use as money?
As time marches forward those two scenarios grow less and less likely to happen to anyone.How convenient is it when you don't have electricity? How convenient is it when you don't have access to a computer?
I'd like to humbly suggest that the Fed created the FRN outside the market.There is no such thing as money qua money created outside the market.
Those of us who do understand though, SHOULD WANT SOMETHING BETTER.A consequence of living with fiat money so long, folks don't understand what real money is, and how it achieves such utility.
The FRN was a receipt for gold until Roosevelt confiscated gold. Gold was $20 an ounce for a long time in the US and you could go to any bank to exchange your notes for the yellow metal.I'd like to humbly suggest that the Fed created the FRN outside the market.