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Uh, so wait. If the IRS/Interpol becomes an effective source of truth on which coins may be legally transferred and who rightfully owns them, what was the point of the blockchain?



We are all going to find out.

At the very least, the blockchain provides a degree of global immutability that was previously impossible.


That immutability is terrible feature. Type one letter wrong on your wallet address and your money is gone forever.

I myself have experienced something similar when a bank teller provided me with a routing number from a chase bank in a different state then I originally set up my account. Thus, my entire direct deposit pay for a month of $6,000 went to an account set for a chase routing number in a different state. Fortunately, I went to the bank soon after and they fixed it by putting the money in my proper account.

If they had used a cryptocurrency, I would have lost an entire months pay.


You have something like a 1 in 4 billion chance of entering a valid bitcoin address if you made a typo, whether it's "one letter wrong" or some other combination of changes (there's a 32 bit checksum). So actually this never happens.


This sort of thing happens all the time. Hackers routinely attack web sites and change wallet addresses [1]. They setup fake Twitter accounts, fake web sites, muck up exchanges with fake listings, and in some cases even hold fake investor meetings. By some estimates hackers have stolen $400m from ICOs [2]. All of this nonsense is possible precisely because crypto transactions are irreversible so the currency users have absolutely no recourse.

[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2017/07/17/coindash-website-hacked-7-mi...

[2] http://fortune.com/2018/01/22/ico-2018-coin-bitcoin-hack/


Yes, cryptocurrency institutions get hacked and their customers lose money (more often proportionately, it seems, than their dollar equivalents). I was replying, however, to the ill-founded claim that people lose money by mistyping a single wrong letter in a bitcoin address.


Does a BTC address that does not exist cause an error or does it go into oblivion until someone happens to generate a key that matches it?


Goes into oblivion. How would you send funds to a newly created address if that wasn't the case? The bitcoin network doesnt know which addresses are ready to be used on the network and which aren't since there isn't any setup the address does with the network prior to being operational.


So the money goes into oblivion. In the meantime, I'm still out my month's pay, and I can't get it back.




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