The difference is the dot-com stocks had some theoretical value - even Pets.com, people buy pet supplies online after all.
Unlike commodities, equities and so forth, cryptocoins have no value whatsoever. So to try to make it sound like it has worth, its pushers have to cast about for anything they can and finally come upon the only thing they can - the dollar. In fact, they say, it's even better than the dollar.
It would take too long to explain here why the Bitcoin is not like the only thing they have left to compare it to, the dollar. Also, an explanation won't sway anyone who has already had a drink of the kool-aid any how.
May I recommend another message board for all those high on cryptocoins here - 4chan ( http://boards.4chan.org/biz/catalog ). 4chan /biz/ is filled with uneducated, poor kids all looking to get wealthy with little work on the cryptocoin get rich quick schemes.
I think it's a much better message board for all of you of this bent. Here on HN there are still some people who believe in studying math and science and engineering and CS at universities, and then going and doing a lot of hard work and creating wealth. 4chan is mostly filled with your types - the get-rich-quick scam artists. Go read 4chan /biz/ right now - it's filled with no work, no study, get rich quick types like yourself. Leave and go there. HN will be stuck with those "out of it" old fogies who actually believe in study, hard work, that commodities need value to have worth in the long-term, and old-fashioned, out of touch ideas like that.
This is not to say that there isn't an absurd amount of hype and froth right now, but if nothing else cryptocurrencies will continue to serve a purpose for anybody who needs to send money outside capital controls.
If you read the thread you find out that the Venezuelan guy lives in the US has never done what he described and knows no one who has used it as he described.
/biz/ has been great for me, I bought some MOONCOINS at 1 satoshi and I will sell next week at 5 sat at least once the current sell walls have been broken. There also is a very active community behind MOONCOIN.
Why are you so dismissive of this new technology? Can you expand on your idea?
> Why are you so dismissive of this new technology?
I'm skeptical of the idea that Bitcoins have value in the way commodities and other things which can be traded and exchanged have value.
People might find some use for blockchain technology, but the speculation around the value of Bitcoins is ridiculous. It's a bubble like any other bubble. The notion that a Bitcoin can remain at a $2000 value is absurd.
The current top comment says "Internet companies during the dotcom bubble had market value of several trillion dollars. The total market cap of crypto-currency is still only ~$70 billion. I agree with the principle, but this boom is still pretty modest." Well there you go. I have an old worn sock with a hole in it that I am throwing away. It is worth $500. It is worth $500 because I am willing to pay $500 for it. I am capable of creating a bubble of that size. Even a $70 billion bubble can be created apparently. Once it reaches a certain point it will pop. Your point about Mooncoins points to it - as a Bitcoin is worthless, clones like Mooncoins can be created as speculative bubbles. Eventually it will no longer be a micro-economic oddity like my $500 sock, but will bump up against the market as a whole and collapse like every other speculative bubble.
It's not blockchain technology, which may or may not have worth at some point. It's the speculative bubble on cryptocoin choice.
As I said, Pets.com and Webvan made sense on some level. Just not the valuations they had at the time. And Bitcoins valuation is even sillier than theirs, since Webvan was not a bad idea, it just had a few problems including being ahead of its time.
I agree with your skeptical sentiment, for the most part.
However, dismissing Bitcoin as a bad commodity (because it cannot be used for anything) misses the mark. Instead, look at Bitcoin not as a commodity, but as money. Money (particularly paper money) has no intrinsic worth. What makes it valuable are its properties, and functions bestowed on it by consensus: counterfeiting resistance, fungibility, medium of exchange for payments, storage of value, unit of account.
Can Bitcoin fulfil those functions? That remains to be seen, and I'm skeptical on storage of value (too volatile) and unit of account (too volatile, nothing is denominated in it), but it works to an extent as a payment mechanism (though worse and worse now, with the increasing transaction fees).
If we look at the past 10,000 years of history - commodities are useful things, objects with utility. Currencies are commodities which people begin to favor for use in trading. Currencies are commodities which have properties that make them good currencies - they have properties such as uniformity, durability, divisibility, portability. This is why precious metals like gold have been favored as currencies through history - gold is uniform, durable, divisible and portable.
The paper dollar bill is, and always has been, completely worthless in and of itself. It is just a piece of paper. Just like Confederate bills were and are pieces of paper, just like the Papiermark was and is a piece of paper. US bills have a history, just as German bills do.
In 1914, the German Mark, or "Goldmark" was redeemable for gold. The Mark/gold link was broken in 1914 and the Mark became the "Papiermark". By 1923, hyperinflation had made the Papiermark near worthless and it was replaced by the Rentenmark and then in the next year this was replaced by the Reichsmark.
Swinging back to the USA, the words "redeemable in gold" were removed from the hundred dollar bill in 1934, and then by 1971 Nixon had closed the gold window entirely. Sort of. Because if he really had, he could have just taken the thousands of tons of gold in Fort Knox and paid down the US debt. But he couldn't. Because that gold still backs the dollar. The dollar was an abstraction of gold before 1934 and 1971, a promise. Then it became an abstraction of the abstraction. It's still on some level backed by the gold in Fort Knox, Trump and the Fed chair could just reopen gold/dollar reconversion if need be, and a hard floor would suddenly appear under the dollar.
Bitcoin has no such floor. There are no thousands of tons of gold waiting in the wings for Bitcoin, no nuclear armed #1 (going on #2) world economy with the power to tax and receive tax payments backing it. We don't even know who created Bitcoin.
It's an odd argument - the only commodity people can find which has no apparent value is the dollar (or euro), so that's what people compare it to.
If this was 1917, you might be asking me why the Papiermark had worth when it was not backed by something, and thus Bitcoins must have value. What people found out was that the Papiermark unhooked from gold did not have value, as the German government of the time didn't give a damn about its value. It's kind of the same argument - Papiermarks in 1917 had value, so Bitcoins must have value. People found out in the 1920s that Papiermarks didn't have value as the implicit promise of government gold conversion went away.
I believe that the deflationary nature of cryptocurrencies is the real problem in replacing money. Also the fact that a trail is left behind transactions is unlike it is with cash. This property is cool for the government, but the users may not want to have it.
On question that bugs me, but don't have enough knowledge bout Bitcoin: are the transactions public? (I believe they are). So anybody could map the wealth of the members of the bitcoin network? If it were used instead of cash my money movements could me monitored by anyone, eg. my employer?
Deflationary is not a bad thing at all - though I realize that most of mainstream economics thinks it is.
A few thoughts on that:
- Real wages rise when the currency deflates (good for working class, think about the effect of wealth inequality)
- Debt becomes a problem (bad for indebted, such as government)
The main official reason why deflation would be a bad thing is that it discourages spending. I think it discourages non-necessary spending. People will still eat, they just wait a few months more to buy their TV. However, they can buy more TVs now or other things because they have more disposable income.
I don't think forcing people to spend is in any way a good thing, neither economically nor ecologically.
But enough of this, I want a non-inflationary currency to save in. If there are enough of me, that's sufficient to make something "have a value".
Re the public transactions, I assume that sooner or later it can be tracked to a high probability. However, I also think this is the case with other non-cash transactions, so while it's not relatively better than fiat in that sense, it's still not worse either. For me that's ok since I'm not in the money laundering or tax evasion business.
I agree with the traditional view about deflation. It is bad, especially for the workers, who have almost no money to save, thus they do not get any of the benefits, but they take the most burden, as they must spend almost all of their income on survival. On the other hand others with more income have their savings growing in value, thus not spending, making consumption fall, which renders workers unneeded, etc...
about public transactions I beleive this is a real privacy problem. The government can track my spendings every day (well, not cash, but eletronic transactions which are the bulk of my money movements) even now (when a judge has signed a permit for them). The problem is if anyone can do that. I have given up some privacy to the government, but not to the random guy.
Now my question is: is this concern of mine about public traceability existing with bitcoin technology, or not? (only the technical aspects please. the philosophical side is out of scope here)
So I am no expert in this field but I think the traceability by the random guy is not necessarily a problem because:
- until an amount in your possession has been spent, you can avoid that anyone knows who the corresponding BTC belong to (= you) by just using a new address when receiving the coins. Public knowledge about "having possessed coins" is only after a transaction and only if the random guy new that at least one of the last sources belonged to you.
- when you send BTC somewhere, nobody knows if these still belong to you if all outgoing amounts are sent to new addresses.
- There are "mixing services" that intend to "mix" amounts of several addresses, so traceability can be mitigated but IMO people have mixed feelings about them.
- There might be legal issues in case traceability becomes much better. E.g., coins might be blacklisted because they were gained illegally. Since you can trace those coins, it could be legally possible (though technically challenging) to "forbid" these coins and accuse of money laundering whoever accepted them anyway.
- There are other coins that are more concerned with this, I think monero (See sibling comment) is the most popular. You can always check what the dark market accepts to see what's good for you :)
- Finally, one mitigation is to keep only small amounts in many addresses, so all your counterparties only know a subbranch of your "transaction DAG" ("directed acyclic graph").
My own take is that all this means that nobody can ever track with certainty how much you have, only your "turnover". This holds as long as your counterparties (e.g., exchanges or employer) are not compromised and sufficiently well intended.
Oh and regarding deflation (I know, you didn't ask for this):
If prices deflate 5%, a worker can buy 5% more of his salary, making him effectively richer (ceteris paribus). There is no need for savings, future income is sufficient.
Secondary effects like unemployment are likely to occur but still you'd need to show that 5% of deflation cause 5% workers dismissed so that the net effect is the same. If only 3% of the workforce are dismissed, the poorer got effectively richer.
Tech products have been deflating constantly, yet no one stopped buying them (to the contrary, they got cheap enough so that a lot of people were able to buy them, think smartphones).
So you might not agree with me on a general rule but bear in mind deflation has positive effects. All innovation causes deflation.
I think I can answer your question, because I asked an identical one on bitcoin.stackexchange.com about a year back.
The transactions are public because that's the only way account balances can be tracked in this system. There's no 'amount' associated with an account id at any point in time, as there is for a banking database. In Blockchain, all the money an account has to spend is the net of the transactions made to and from that account. In traditional banking, even if you deleted the transaction history, it would work, because the account balances would be correct. This incentives people to fudge the history and the final balance via fraudulent transactions. Blockchain prevents that, since it never stores the balance, and old transactions are set in stone.
As to your second point, yes, mapping the wealth is possible. But so is obscuring the account holder's ID. To get your money, you just need a private key, a little string of characters, to verify that account. Also, account creation is incredibly easy (literally just a function call returning a 256-bit hash). So, no one knows who is who on the network. Some transactions may go from a person to themselves, others may go from a person to another for services rendered. It's basically impossible to tell once the transaction volume grows large enough.
I think you're right mostly but missing a key point. Crypto's value is inversely proportional to faith in government backed currencies in places with high internet penetration. So in the US, it's actual value is quite low because we have an extremely strong currency and well developed payment systems. In China, faith in the government-backed currency (renminbi) and the investment options available in that denomination are relatively low. Coupled with reasonably high access to internet connections and government restrictions on expatriating capital, crypto becomes a valuable alternative denomination.
Crypto has no inherent value except as a policy failure. At least so far. I have yet to see a large scale proof, but potentially at least block chain tech has value for reducing transaction costs in shipping or other fields.
> China...government restrictions on expatriating capital, crypto becomes a valuable alternative denomination
Money is expatriated via Bitcoin from the PRC to, say, Vancouver. The point is that with a currency, people would be comfortable leaving it as Canadian dollars or US dollars. This is not what happens though, the Bitcoin is converted to Canadian dollars, and is then perhaps converted into other things, such as real estate.
It is more like a concert ticket or gallon of milk in this case - something which might be valuable for a time, but then loses its value. The Papiermark in the early 20s could be used to move money around as well.
>Money is expatriated via Bitcoin from the PRC to, say, Vancouver. The point is that with a currency, people would be comfortable leaving it as Canadian dollars or US dollars.
No one is OK leaving their money in hard currency. That's why we invest it, or put it in interest bearing accounts. Leaving it under your mattress leads to losses to inflation. In that sense, currency is very much like a gallon of milk or a concert ticket, though it loses its value much more slowly in a healthy economy.
With BTC, we actually have the opposite problem, deflation. It is increasing in value every day, whereas with a normal fiat currency it is more efficient to have a low, stable rate of inflation (where the individual unit of currency loses its value over time).
So I don't disagree with you completely. You're right that BTC should be more like a concert ticket than it is. The important question is why it isn't.
Why do diamonds have value then? They have no intrinsic value. They are not a scarce resource. They don't have many industrial applications. Labs can grow diamonds that look pretty much identical to the real thing. Yet people still pay a ton of real money for diamonds.
Diamonds have value because we all have agreed that they have value. That's a really powerful concept to internalize. Similarly why does Gold have any value? Why does the American Constitution have any power?
I have no personal position in bitcoins or any other cryptocurrency but it seems to me bitcoin is the first internet native "money like thing". Based on how powerful and distruptive the internet has been to various industries in the past few decades I'm not sure I would bet against an internet native version of "money".
Actually, only the -coin currencies have no actual value aside from transactions, which as can be shown, is very easily duplicable. I would say that Ethereum is an application platform, and that does have value (see WordPress, AWS etc).
Ripple also has value for ForEx settlement, which currently can take on the order of days. Also, it can function as a universal liquidator.
The -coins though, are ephemeral. Only the underlying Blockchain tech is of any use.
One value of Bitcoin is keeping money save from the authorities. For anonymous donations and microdonations it is also usefull. Speculation or insurance against the Fiat money economy is another usecase.
Uneducated poor kids? The ironic thing is a lot of people have become rich from /biz and are now millionaires. Seems like your version of hard work is to pay out the nose for a degree to be a debt serf in this stagnant, corrupt economy... suddenly buying into this crypto meme sounds like a much better alternative. Once again, 4chan is prescient. Sure things will probably return to earth soon and some crypto-memers will be holding some heavy bags, but in the long term I think this hype has created some real value, and cryptocurrencies may end up being a real way out of the fiat scam
Unlike commodities, equities and so forth, cryptocoins have no value whatsoever. So to try to make it sound like it has worth, its pushers have to cast about for anything they can and finally come upon the only thing they can - the dollar. In fact, they say, it's even better than the dollar.
It would take too long to explain here why the Bitcoin is not like the only thing they have left to compare it to, the dollar. Also, an explanation won't sway anyone who has already had a drink of the kool-aid any how.
May I recommend another message board for all those high on cryptocoins here - 4chan ( http://boards.4chan.org/biz/catalog ). 4chan /biz/ is filled with uneducated, poor kids all looking to get wealthy with little work on the cryptocoin get rich quick schemes.
I think it's a much better message board for all of you of this bent. Here on HN there are still some people who believe in studying math and science and engineering and CS at universities, and then going and doing a lot of hard work and creating wealth. 4chan is mostly filled with your types - the get-rich-quick scam artists. Go read 4chan /biz/ right now - it's filled with no work, no study, get rich quick types like yourself. Leave and go there. HN will be stuck with those "out of it" old fogies who actually believe in study, hard work, that commodities need value to have worth in the long-term, and old-fashioned, out of touch ideas like that.