I've heard a little chatter about this over the last couple weeks. I don't know much about currency theory, so I present it to TSB for your thoughts.http://www.bitcoin.org/
5/5/2011 12:50:23 PM
move to tech talkthis shit is mind boggling
5/5/2011 2:28:23 PM
5/5/2011 3:59:55 PM
I've been looking into this a lot lately. I'm really excited about the potential of a truly decentralized currency. I think it's a brilliant idea and hope to see it really catch on. I think it will take a while though, I'd imagine most people right now don't understand enough about how money works to trust a currency not backed by any government. Of course, that's exactly its biggest strength IMO, since it is impossible to manipulate for the benefit of those in control like fiat currency is.
5/5/2011 4:17:05 PM
What would this digital currency be backed by? What keeps it from being duplicated? There's something to be said for real, physical material that can't just be brought into existence.
5/5/2011 4:21:59 PM
I just watched one of the most terrible videos ever explaining how this workshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTOhti7wxXk&feature=relatedToo complicated? I think so. If I get interested in monetary philosophy I might read some and write about it. But currently it occurs to me as useless to complete transactions with.The idea seems to be centered around the idea that it creates public and private keys, which defines their "money". I guess each time a transaction occurs a new private key (at minimum) has to be created. But they're throwing around nonsense like the idea that private keys for newly issued money has to be created from scratch, which takes a quantifiable number of CPU cycles so they can be assured a certain rate of discovery. And then somehow this makes incentives for hosting transactions in their distributed network.It would seem that this is validly newly issued money. If that is truly the case, then people would start speculating with it right now. I'm confused about this to be sure, but I also think it will fail. You can't issue new currency. You just can't do it. Governments categorically do not allow it, and I don't think this has a direct backing. Bad idea all around.
5/5/2011 4:24:31 PM
5/5/2011 4:45:48 PM
5/5/2011 7:18:46 PM
5/5/2011 10:02:40 PM
5/5/2011 10:08:33 PM
that's a hell of a commercial, I'll give you that...
5/5/2011 10:41:00 PM
Someone reads forbes magazine...
5/5/2011 10:48:36 PM
Wake me up when either my employer is paying me in bitcoin or I need to buy something that can only be purchased on bitcoin.Otherwise it's currently the equivalent of converting my dollars to yen.
5/6/2011 8:57:08 AM
5/6/2011 9:17:35 AM
The biggest drawback on something like this is competition.You can easily say, fuck Bitcoin, I'm making my own currency.Very very hard to do that with nation backed fiat currency.
5/6/2011 1:32:49 PM
5/6/2011 2:01:36 PM
5/6/2011 3:37:10 PM
5/6/2011 5:56:28 PM
How many things that were supposedly "unhackable" ended up getting hacked?
5/6/2011 6:51:09 PM
All of them?
5/6/2011 7:33:14 PM
All of them^2?
5/6/2011 9:24:03 PM
Doesn't this make dangerous assumptions about innovations in solution methodology? While sudden and unexpected leaps in hardware capabilities are less likely, a significant innovation in solution methodology would completely destroy the currency wouldn't it? That's also not to say that (by 2040 at least) the computational mathematics potential of quantum computers may provide hard to predict improvements in the methods available if not a jump in raw computational power. That is new types of computers such as quantum computers (and DNA computers and others) will not necessarily be faster but can be applied to computational mathematics problems in wholly different ways than current technologies. Combined with clever innovation in software, the use of GPU, QPU, and potentially DNAPU co-processing could render their predictions and their currency meaningless - particularly on the stupidly long time-frame they've given.[Edited on May 6, 2011 at 9:47 PM. Reason : ]
5/6/2011 9:43:06 PM
what I find funny, and it's true about the study of monetary policy and economics in general, is that the discussion is about the MOST IMPORTANT THING IN THE ENTIRE WORLD to a vast majority of people (if not everyone) and the people discussing it treat it like it's a gamemoney is not some game, people easily kill each other for money, people will fuck you and fuck you over for moneyperspective on this is all over the fucking map
5/6/2011 9:46:37 PM
I'm just in it for the flashy YouTube videos, personally
5/6/2011 10:12:28 PM
the linked commercial was pretty spiffy
5/6/2011 10:17:44 PM
Is the value of 50 bitcoins proportional to the computing power required to "mine" them? I don't know how much it costs to run my laptop (I know that's not exactly the optimal way to do computation intensive tasks efficiently), but I can't imagine the value of the 50 bitcoins I would get for finding a valid block would approach the cost of the power being consumed. Also, it damn near burned my dick off.]
5/6/2011 11:35:31 PM
5/7/2011 9:08:12 AM
right, there is a public database that has the codes generated by a checksum or whatever, but the original values required to get that output represented by the public codes are very difficult to get.Granted, you could propose a hacking several ways- pushing a new altered state of the public codes by presenting codes that conflicted with the cloud. If you created your own cloud that appeared to "out vote" the real cloud, then maybe that could work... in theory i mean- just cracking the codes super efficiently. The bitcoin seems to think that mining will go on using their open source software, but ppl could make their own software. How effective are some crackers vs. others? It seems the system is based on the idea that required CPU cycles are immutable and a good grad student could just invent an algorithm that cracked them all 1000x as fastBut I'm more curious about other questions. How well could you break down a coin into smaller denominations, and how would this affect the scaling of the peer checking of public data? More than anything, why are "miners" entitled to free money? I mean, you can bicker about the technical details that don't matter much, but how about the glaring social problem with the system in the first place? This junk isn't charity.
5/7/2011 8:49:53 PM
Bitcoin miners are entitled to "free" money in the same way that gold miners are entitled to "free" gold.
5/7/2011 11:26:42 PM
I just downloaded the client and went to the faucet: http://freebitcoins.appspot.com/
5/8/2011 7:38:38 PM
be sure to transfer 10 bitcoins to me as a finder's fee
5/8/2011 9:15:07 PM
The client doesn't even show my 0.02 that I got from the faucet
5/8/2011 10:37:29 PM
well when the client shows 10 coins, you know where to find me
5/8/2011 10:48:55 PM
5/8/2011 11:38:58 PM
5/9/2011 12:54:37 AM
5/9/2011 3:19:23 AM
OK, how can it be hacked? You don't even have to name all 1000.
5/11/2011 4:15:04 PM
I cant see how they would regulate the rate at which the hashes are discovered. That would seem to be a serious problem as it reduces it to essentially an energy based currency.
5/11/2011 5:31:07 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin#Generating_bitcoins
5/12/2011 10:39:57 AM
What's the exchange rate of Bitcoins to Schrute Bucks? I'm worried about them devaluing with Michael gone.
5/12/2011 12:04:05 PM
whats to stop so schomoe with access to a non-production data center class vm environment from just running the hell out it for 2 weeks before the difficult is jacked up. Or access to one thats under utilize that can hammer on the cpus/memory for a few days. something with say 16 7500 series processes and a terabyte of ram (or 3-6x that)
5/13/2011 6:24:21 PM
5/13/2011 6:44:25 PM
^exactlyI could print up a bunch of aaronburrobucks and I could spend them anywhere that was willing to accept aaronburrobucks in exchange for their goods.
5/13/2011 8:48:36 PM
http://www.virtapay.com/r/geniusxboy
5/15/2011 1:44:45 PM
That seems much much different.
5/16/2011 8:07:59 PM
I don't see this working because major vendors wont accept them for products and services. While you can buy anything on the internet, the company supplying you with the product will have a hard problem turning around and using the bitcons for more supplies.So I sell Ipods for bitcons-then dollars, then buy more Ipods, that extra translation means im now speculating in a currency market in addition to taking the original risk of selling Ipods.Also if a major computational player actually wants to jump in on the game (for example amazon turns their HP to it), it could quickly flood the market with a surge.You might as well as be using WOW currency. It has the same type of system, its generated in limited amounts.Even if it does succeed, banks will eventually have to get involved, because you will want to finance something. Like a house or a car. Which means that you'll need more bitcons or dollars or gold than you currently have. Which means you need a loan. [Edited on May 17, 2011 at 1:34 PM. Reason : dd]
5/17/2011 1:23:06 PM
5/18/2011 8:21:05 PM
I like playing around with Bitcoin. There's no way I'd ever use it exclusively (Dwolla is becoming a favorite way to pay sites that accept it), but it's fun. I look at it the same way I look at other currency trading programs like Forex.
5/24/2011 4:26:04 PM
Do it for the lulz: 176LRX4WRWD5LWDMbhr94ptb2MW9varCZP
6/2/2011 9:47:20 PM
Wow this bitcoin is up 200,000% in the last year. We just missed the investment opportunity of a lifetime holy shit
6/3/2011 12:57:33 PM