That's fair enough. However, bear in mind that I was referring to categories - plural. That said, from what I can decipher - you're focusing on crypto's which can or will be used as currency. People have different notions as to what success looks like in this regard. Right now, bitcoin is formative as a decentralised store of value rather than a day to day currency. It also is making some in-roads in terms of use as a settlement layer - for settlement of large amounts internationally. As a day to day currency it doesn't scale - although it may still make in-roads via layer 2 solutions.I just would not bank on the category winner having entered the competition yet and i think there is some way to go.
I am of the view that we are still at an incredibly early stage in all of this. This particular bull market started off fairly sober but has given way to a feverishness surrounding nft's, the defi casino and meme coins. NFTs are not my bag but I would say that this development is reeling in a raft of new people who otherwise had no interest in crypto. DeFi is incredibly high risk - and I suspect a lot of fingers are going to get very badly burnt with it. That said, the innovation that ultimately arises from it will likely be much bigger than what bitcoin brings. Meme coins I find completely moronic - but if grown adults choose to involve themselves with that, that's there own doing. I don't think anyone should suggest that anyone has been ripped off in this respect later on...rather people need to take responsibility for their own decisions.If I look at my professional and educated 25-35 year old peer group, a few of us might have a few 100 euros "invested" (due to lock down boredom more than anything, at least in my case) but it is rarely spoken about, whereas there is a bit of an echo chamber effect on social media where you might think everyone had 1000s in it. The viral and hype nature to some of these things of course has also been witnessed in non crypto channels (Gamestop).
My money is on you loosing your moneyMy money is on Bitcoin winning the Ransomware category, if it isn’t closed down
Research has shown that of the 300,000 transactions / $10 billion that the bitcoin network settles each day, illicit use only accounts for 1%. I know you'd like to tar and feather it in that way but it's not going to wash.My money is on Bitcoin winning the Ransomware category, if it isn’t closed down. More likely it will be the only category.
Huge skill that, how researchers can get criminals to openly disclose their money laundering activities.Research has shown that of the 300,000 transactions / $10 billion that the bitcoin network settles each day, illicit use only accounts for 1%. I know you'd like to tar and feather it in that way but it's not going to wash.
Huge skill that, how researchers can get criminals to openly disclose their money laundering activities
Another one of your nice tries Wolfie. All off that quote is observable fact except the conclusion which does involve an element of speculation. Much as I respect Prof Roubini's skills this speculation cannot compare with the researchers cited by @tecate who were able to identify that c. 3,000 of daily bitcoin transactions are illigit. My understanding of how crypto works is that this could only be gleaned by getting criminals to openly admit their crimes.Roubini being a leading researcher
"Cryptocurrencies are routinely launched and traded outside the domain of official financial oversight, where avoidance of compliance costs is advertised as a source of efficiency. The result is that crypto land has become an unregulated casino, where unchecked criminality runs riot."
except the conclusion which does involve an element of speculation
Much as I respect Prof Roubini's skills this speculation cannot compare with the researchers cited
Pretty lazy stuff from you Duke. The research comes from Chainalysis who are disliked by plenty in the crypto space and if anything I would have thought it would be better for their business model if their findings were more in line with what you very much want them to be.Huge skill that, how researchers can get criminals to openly disclose their money laundering activities.
You mean Roubini's complete loss of objectivity on the subject such that he will latch on to anything that's negative about bitcoin regardless of it having even a trace of credibility.Much as I respect Prof Roubini's skills this speculation cannot compare with the researchers cited by @tecate who were able to identify that c. 3,000 of daily bitcoin transactions are illigit. My understanding of how crypto works is that this could only be gleaned by getting criminals to openly admit their crimes.
All he had to do was read my posts earlier addressing this issue. Maybe Musk is afraid that attention will be drawn to the fact that alot of the electricity used to power Tesla cars also come from coal and fossil fuels. On a cold calm day virtually all the electricity produced comes from fossil fuels. Battery technology to store enormous quantities of electricity does not exist and is never likely to either. The head of Eirgrid admitted this recently saying their battery storage can only produce at maximum output for less than an hour so never a replacement for a conventional power station. Now if only we could retrieve all that energy stored in bitcoin for cold calm daysThe bitcoin energy red-flag has been raised for a long enough so it is beyond my comprehension how a company like Tesla could not have been aware of the energy usage issue surrounding bitcoin.
If they were aware of it before, and did some research about it before they bought bitcoin then it obviously wasn't that big an issue to deter purchase of bitcoin. So it would be hard to understand why it is an issue a few months later.
Ok, I see where you're going with this. So essentially you're encouraging Elon to acknowledge that there are a whole host of other things using a bucket load of energy; that his EVs only really become transformative when we greenify the energy supply as a whole. That's precisely where this 'bitcoin boils the oceans' narrative lacks honesty. It's the entire energy grid that needs to go green - not people coming out and dictating who can/can not use energy based on their own bias, ignorance or both.Maybe Musk is afraid that attention will be drawn to the fact that alot of the electricity used to power Tesla cars also come from coal and fossil fuels. On a cold calm day virtually all the electricity produced comes from fossil fuels.
Now this is very interesting. So demand can only be as predictable as the weather and renewables can only be as predictable as the weather and there's no way to deal with the peaks and troughs (the duck curve).Battery technology to store enormous quantities of electricity does not exist and is never likely to either.
Time for you to ask a better quality of question, Joe. What could be established to utilise the excess energy at source when it comes to irratic renewable energy production? We could have central government continue to subsidise renewable energy projects OR could something else benefit from that excess energy whilst making such a project financially viable?Now if only we could retrieve all that energy stored in bitcoin for cold calm days
Of which only 1% is for criminal purposes, which is at least a genuine utility. How much can be spent on lattes? It leaves an awful lot of money in daily speculation on this price discovery journey. In fact does Chainanalytics tell us how much is spent on utility transactions? Criminal activity would probably amount to about 50% of that.And that figure again just in case you missed it...$10 billon settled on the Bitcoin network every day.
I don't get the dislike of Bitcoin, do people commit fraud with it yes but is that not the same with Fiat.Huge skill that, how researchers can get criminals to openly disclose their money laundering activities.
Yes exactly that could be it, we know that the whole green lobby and ESG investing has become a huge thing and alot of Tesla profits come from selling carbon credits, another arbitrary accounting token . There is alot of cherry picking of narratives going on in the green area now especially as it has becoming a huge political and now financial issue. Oil and Gas companies have to pay Tesla for carbon credits even though those cars cannot run without that energy in many cases.As for Elon's reasons, not having the info at hand beforehand can't possibly be one of them. Having to backtrack due to people buying into this cherry picked narrative is one. There has been mention of carbon offset business being significant for Tesla so it could be that.
I am quoting you out of context here and what follows is not a criticism of your post....to solve complex maths equations which at the end produces a bitcoin.
You can try and label use of bitcoin as right or wrong all day long Dukey - the fact remains that when this debate opened on AAM, there wasn't anywhere near $10 billion in daily settlement on the Bitcoin network. Its network effect is growing and whilst I don't take anything for granted I suspect that it will continue to grow. Otherwise, the sands are shifting beneath your perennial reliance on the notion that it's all just speculation. Billionaire investor and entrepreneur Mark Cuban pointed to that change earlier this week:Of which only 1% is for criminal purposes, which is at least a genuine utility. How much can be spent on lattes? It leaves an awful lot of money in daily speculation on this price discovery journey. In fact does Chainanalytics tell us how much is spent on utility transactions? Criminal activity would probably amount to about 50% of that.
It varies - there can be pragmatic objections. However, in these parts I suspect its political. The constant reference to 'cultists' is the giveaway. Bitcoin is the first financial instrument that wasn't conceived by Wall Street or their ilk. It sticks in the craw of many that cypherpunks drove this and even though it's being embraced by all manner of stakeholders now, there are many that won't accept it.I don't get the dislike of Bitcoin
I think maybe the point I was trying to make above was lost on you. So rather than fight against the laws of physics/thermodynamics, why not embrace bitcoin mining and harness it for the betterment of all? Here's an example. Lets say you are the proposer of a renewable energy project. You run the numbers and its not feasible (due to the irregular nature of the energy capture/production). You lobby central government to subsidise the project but they don't have the $ to do so. You decide to partner with a bitcoin mining co. to utilise at source the excess energy that is being produced at times. This is your subsidy - and now when you run the numbers, the project is viable.I know I jokingly referenced retrieving all the energy used to produce a bitcoin, so alot of energy is used to solve complex maths equations which at the end produces a bitcoin. What if we reverse the process unsolve the equations reabsorb the bitcoin and release the energy, however that is impossible because of the laws of physics and thermodynamics. There is a hierarchy of energy that you can only move in one direction, once you burn oil to produce heat you cannot retrieve that heat to create oil again.
I see. So what's important to you Duke is not that the bitcoin mining algorithm should provide the most robust network security on the planet but that it should only dare to do so in a manner you deem to be 'intellectual'. Sit with that notion for a while - hopefully you will see how obnoxious a view it is. If you can't, then I'm lost for words.It really sticks in the craw this metaphor of "mining" and "solving complex math", the former creating a gold illusion and the latter sounding very sophisticated and even productive. All part of the cult mythology.This is the correct metaphor. I have locked a €50 note in a box and closed it with a combination key. The box is left out in the open for the first person who can guess the combination. And they can have as many tries as they can fit in until someone opens the box. Note there is no intellectual content in these tries, they are pure random quickpicks.
Your metaphor is wayward. You're suggesting that there's no need for network security. That's the whole point of the algorithm.The locking of the box was totally unnecessary.
2. There is absolutely no sophistication whatsoever in the race to open it.
No I understand perfectly well your point, that the Tesla shareholders and the green lobby are cherry picking narratives to suit their viewpoints and that now bitcoin falls outside of that due to the energy consumption . However I don't subscribe to your view that excess energy created from renewables from time to time should be used to produce bitcoins. I think trying to come up with a technology to store energy on the scale of what power stations produce continuously is enormously difficult and maybe impossible, I think your suggestion that excess renewable energy should be used for bitcoin is a sideshow. The central effort should be concentrated on energy storage not on bitcoin.I think maybe the point I was trying to make above was lost on you. So rather than fight against the laws of physics/thermodynamics, why not embrace bitcoin mining and harness it for the betterment of all? Here's an example. Lets say you are the proposer of a renewable energy project. You run the numbers and its not feasible (due to the irregular nature of the energy capture/production). You lobby central government to subsidise the project but they don't have the $ to do so. You decide to partner with a bitcoin mining co. to utilise at source the excess energy that is being produced at times. This is your subsidy - and now when you run the numbers, the project is viable.
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