What do you mean by BitCoin isn't instant? The acquisition of the coin, the use of the coin or the cash out of the coin?
I thought the use of the coin is instant and the value of the coin is time stamped locking in the value of the coin, the moment it was used. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Even in the best of times it can take at least ten minutes to confirm a transaction because the system creates a new block of transactions only once every ten minutes or so. And the more subsequent blocks that are validated, the more statistically likely it is that an earlier block is valid. For a large transaction it's recommended to wait for at least six more blocks. So the actual transaction time is about an hour.
But the recent huge increase in transactions is overwhelming the network, and the miners can't keep up. In order for the miners to even bother to put your transaction into the next block, you have to bribe them with a transaction fee. I've seen it reported that it costs $20 to spend $100 lately, and the settlement times can be several hours or more. Bitcoin has totally failed as a currency. Its enthusiasts don't care, they say it's not a currency, it's a "store of value." I don't believe that either but that's what some people think.
And what's the marker here? This exact thread. Now I've known a lot of people here from the old PF times, and I know that they are interested in philosophy and perhaps current topics. But not investing or currencies. The whole existence of this thread on a Philosophy Forum tells me that the hype is on. And reading the views here just reassures me. — ssu
I'll take the other side of that proposition. What's going on is deep, important, and philosophical.
When Descartes receives a letter from his friend, he might well ask: How do I know an evil demon working at the French post office hasn't altered the contents of this letter?
Today we have an answer: The contents of the letter are
cryptographically secure.
There is a revolution in human affairs about to take place. The revolution is about
trust. End-to-end trust between and among strangers on the Internet, without the need for intermediaries.
Crypto is about certainty. About what is, and how we can know what is. Crypto-ontology and crypto-epistemology if you like. I hope some of the younger philosophers are looking at this.
As an example of what I mean, there are proposals for
prediction markets on the blockchain. That's like a gambling parlor on political events. Will Trump make it through his first term? Will Brexit actually happen? There are prediction markets right now run by companies, but on the blockchain you don't need a company, just a decentralized blockchain network.
Now, how does a prediction market pay off? That is, how do they know for sure whether Trump is still president or whether Brexit has happened? In a centralized system, the people running the betting pool determine what's true. On a blockchain-based prediction market, the users say what's true and the system determines crypto-consensus.
The blockchain determines truth.
There's a crytpo already doing this, called
Auger. Great name for this concept.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augur
This is why I say the blockchain revolution is philosophically deep. Social revolutions are always the subject of philosophy. And this particular revolution is about trust and disintermediation. That's philosophy.
What do you think?
Why it is similar to Tulip mania and not the "ordinary" housing-bubble is that there is no reason why Bitcoin would have touched $20k, or go to $40k or $100k. It's a huge disadvantage for any currency to rise so much in price. Actual currencies ought to be somewhat stable. What kind of currency would cost nearly $20k? It's an awfull currency to use, if it would be an actual currency. — ssu
Of course, but look past bitcoin.
Bitcoin's a proof-of-concept engineering experiment that's taught us a lot about how to build these kinds of networks. It's a tragedy that the public is allowed to bet on early-stage engineering experiments. That introduces distortion and inefficiency into the design process. If bitcoin was a project in an engineering lab it would be shut down and the designers would get to work on the next iteration of the idea.
But that's how the world is so we have to accept it.
The price rise of bitcoin makes no rational sense. But it's not tulips, because tulips were not the leading edge of a huge social revolution. Bitcoin is. That's my belief. Of course if one doesn't believe blockchain is going to profoundly change the world, then my thesis makes no sense and bitcoin is tulips. But I don't think so. Bitcoin stands in for the revolution to come. The public senses that. Or they're a bunch of greedy fools. Bit of both.
EDIT: VISA doesn't transfer a bitcoin, it immediately enters into a bitcoin-USD trade and settles the USD in the account of the vendor. So it actually doesn't run any risk on price fluctuations of the bitcoin. It does run a settlement risk should the bubble burst, in which case their bitcoin-USD trade might not settle successfully. — Benkei
Yes and it's worth noting that the businesses that claim to "accept bitcoin" actually don't. Their customers want to pay in bitcoin so businesses accept bitcoin as a service. They immediately exchange bitcoin for the local legal currency and write off the transaction costs. Nobody actually accepts bitcoin for anything. As a currency the idea has already failed. But my thesis is that the failure of bitcoin is irrelevant to the coming blockchain revolution. Am I drinking too much blockchain Kool-Aid? I don't think so. Global trust without intermediaries. This is going to be big.
Do you think it is every worth considering the moral content of taking wealth out of the economy without working for it? — charleton
Interesting point of view.
If you buy a house and a few years later it's worth more money because the central bank blew up a housing bubble, and you happen to sell your house for a profit, do you give the money to charity or what? It's the same house, four walls and a roof. Provides shelter for a family. Its value hasn't changed at all. Is it immoral to pocket your profit?
How about stocks, bonds, jewelry? Are they morally compromised too? If you see the Fed about to print money so you buy stocks and the price of the stocks goes up, is that a problem? I am not clear about your moral orientation in asking this question but I'm curious to know. It's not like dealing weapons or dope. You're just buying low and selling high by paying attention to the world. Is that immoral?
Even in the case of a speculative frenzy you are definitely "working for it." If you buy in you are making a judgment about mass psychology. You base your judgment on following the news, reading history, thinking, studying. If you are right AND you are smart enough to get out in time, you make money. How is that different than making money by being good at your day job?
These are good questions, I'd agree! Not sure I know the answers myself. Marx predicted the conditions of late-stage capitalism and he was right about a lot of things But Marxist governments have been a disaster for the people forced to live under them.
The idea that cryptocurrencies will replace government-backed currencies is laughable. In fact, unless I am mistaken, that was the raison d'être of bitcoins creation. — Maw
Yes that was the techno-libertarian reason for bitcoin, but it's the wrong reason! The crypto revolution is about much more. Cryptos-as-money can fail yet cryptos can still transform society. The crypto revolution is not primarily about money. IMO of course. The banks might still control the money. They are thousand-year incumbents after all, not that easy to dethrone. The disintermediation revolution is still huge. It's not necessarily about destroying the bankers. They're doing a pretty good job of that by themselves.