Indeed regulation can work both ways as we’ve all seen in the real world. But crypto regulated by its algorithms means is still regulated outside the control of the general user. Making up your own currency only works if other people find it useful to use. Most of us aren’t buying, trading or even using shit coins people make. There’s plenty of claims of usefulness and anonymity for various coins but as time goes on these get proven wrong.
Gold was used because it had value other than just currency. Same with silver. Bartering works because the objects or service bartered has intrinsic value in and of themselves. The paper currency most of us use is fucked with by governments and shadow cabals, but it has the security of being useful anywhere in the country it’s issued, and generally slower change in purchasing power. Crypto can be worth a lot or at least something and be worthless when you wake up the next day. We’ve tarred and feathered and beheaded politicians and rulers in the past. Someone you’ve never met online who created a shit coin and ran off with the useful money is much harder to bring to that, ahem, special justice.
But crypto regulated by its algorithms means is still regulated outside the control of the general user.
Outside any control of anybody. Just like a physics law. It is much better than any other currency.
Most of us aren’t buying, trading or even using shit coins people make.
That is because its algorithm have fundamental flaws, like long transaction time, big transaction costs, etc. Once that flaws would be fixed, most people will prefer it at least over over bank accounts.
Don't forget, that current cryptocurrencies is just a beta version. And even first beta version with all its bugs and problems gain enormous popularity. That means there is a huge demand for an independent currency.
There’s plenty of claims of usefulness and anonymity for various coins but as time goes on these get proven wrong.
That was never proved worng. Crypto is clearly usefull as a way to avoid government control and it is really anonymous, since you don't need any documents and approval to create an account. Crypto is traceable, but anonymous. Traceability does not mean lack of anonymity. It is different things.
Crypto can be worth a lot or at least something and be worthless when you wake up the next day.
Just like any other currency. Gold/silver could be just prohibited for personal owning, like plutonium. And that's all. Since it is physical object, so you will be caught and jailed immidiately if you will try to use it.
However, crypto can't be instantly made worthless by any government. That is why it is still worth something. That is one of the unique property of crypto that makes it valuable.
Someone you’ve never met online who created a shit coin and ran off with the useful money is much harder to bring to that, ahem, special justice.
Creator of shitcoin can do absolutely nothing with your coins. He can do nothing with coin network, since it grow out to other people. You could easily ignore him and use your coins as you wish. You even could take his code and run your own instance of network, completely independent. That's the point.
As for "run off" - just don't be so dumb and don't transfer your coins from your own wallet to any shitty exchange or service you don't trust. You don't give your cash to a stranger promising something, so why you do it with your crypto? Who force you to create "your" wallet on some shitty services instead of your own PC? If your crypto wallet with coins is not on your own computer - it is not your wallet. Just like cash. Nobody can run off with your coins if you don't give them out willingly by yourself.
Sorry but I feel you missed a few things with this reply.
First you say the algorithm is the regulation, but then you go on to talk about how the shit coins have flawed algorithms. You also address the long wait times and cost per transaction, thank you for your honesty and genuine intellectual approach to them. These are huge issues that require fixing for as you say this beta version.
Gold and silver could drop to zero as a currency but they haven’t totally lost value. My electronics can still be plated in the gold for corrosion resistance. My water blocks in my computer can be silver coated for thermal transfer. My gold can be turned into ear rings and bracelets and traded for a cow. My silver can burn melted and made into silver bullets in case my mother in law gets a little werewolfy. In their natural as is state, they have a use. And therefore a value. Crypto does not. It replaces a different currency, adds the value of ease of online and therefor global transactions, and some claim true anonymity. But the bitcoins only value is as a currency. It’s worth X USD. Convertible to your fiat of choice as well, but taking it out of wherever tends to require a fee. If you can even get it out.
I have friends trading coins on online markets, I’ve stayed out of that. Not going to say their experience is the same as everyone’s but I honestly got tired of listening to the bragging over some huge deals and the bitching over the losses, the pump and dumps, whale watching, movements at 3am, you name it. Plus all these coins are only increased in value when people buy them with either fiat currency from one nation or other, or with a different coin that was either purchased with again fiat or mined at great cost of electricity which is still having its bill paid in fiat. Very few self sustaining power plant based crypto mining facilities out there.
As for the “run off” part I’m referring to people who create then push a shit coin, get early adopters and people to invest, claiming high value and future speculation, then when they have enough money soaked, drain the value through their chosen method and leave everyone else holding the bag full of worthless shit coins. These situations do nothing to remove the Ponzi scheme look for a lot of crypto’s. Mark Cuban famously lost millions in crypto not that long ago, and there’s many other such cases but this is a comment not an essay and i don’t want this to be too long to ever read.
Lastly storing your crypto offline on a wallet on a hard drive in your physical possession. Great. Kinda like hoarding physical gold and silver, in your house. Except the precious metals may decay a few protons but still be there for 10000 years. I’ve had hard drives fail. Two within a month of each other(never buying Seagate again because of it, personal choice due to it pissing me off that much. Was my main computer running 2 drives, both purchased the same day.) People have accidentally lost their drives with their wallet, drive internals fail, solder joints crack, etc. It’s much less secure than a home vault or even a wall safe hidden behind grannies portrait.
To most of us, crypto simply feels like online stocks, with extra steps, and a few more headaches. Sure bank notes have serial numbers but 99% of us never care. An old farmer can give me 5 $20, i give 4 to a pot dealer, who spends one at 7/11, and each time even though the bill is traceable no one records the serial number or even cares. As long as it’s not a fake bill, it’s handed over and transaction done.
First you say the algorithm is the regulation, but then you go on to talk about how the shit coins have flawed algorithms.
So what's wrong with that statement? Flawed algorithms regulate coins in flawed manner, that is why they are not as popular as could be.
Gold and silver could drop to zero as a currency but they haven’t totally lost value.
They will drop it's value if they be allowed only as appliances. Hardly people will exchange gold-plated PCBs, if it will be illegal to have and exchange gold in raw form. Like plutonium. It is useful and even expensive, but you can't use it as a mean of exchange.
Plus all these coins are only increased in value when people buy them with either fiat currency from one nation or other,
Because there is a flaw in algorythm that regulate that coins to be useful mostly for trader games or as long-term savings.
or with a different coin that was either purchased with again fiat or mined at great cost of electricity which is still having its bill paid in fiat.
That is another flaw - proof-of-work coins need a lot of computing power. However, even in that version, I know few people who use mining rigs as heaters that not only heat their houses as ordinary heater, but also return some part of paid electric bill in coins. They even don't care that miners does not pay for itself, any amount saved on heating is good enough, because usual heater will return absolutely nothing with the same electricity consumption.
As for the “run off” part I’m referring to people who create then push a shit coin, get early adopters and people to invest, claiming high value and future speculation, then when they have enough money soaked, drain the value through their chosen method and leave everyone else holding the bag full of worthless shit coins.
Don't use that shitcoins, what is the problem? Nobody force you to fall in new coin with suspisious creator.
I’ve had hard drives fail.
Do you know about backups on different hard drives and other media? Do you know that you could even print your walllet as QR codes on paper and put it in a safe just like cash? Inability and laziness to use accessible ways to save your coins is not a coins fault.
People have accidentally lost their drives with their wallet, drive internals fail, solder joints crack, etc
It is only that people fault, nothing more. I'm shure that kind of people permanently loose different digital info again and again but still don't want to do backups.
To most of us, crypto simply feels like online stocks, with extra steps, and a few more headaches.
Exactly. And that is why current version of crypto will never replace cash. But that does not mean that idea of cryptocurrency is bad and wrong. We are on the earliest stages of cryptocurrencies development, just like ancient people who are trying to use a rare sea-shells as money.
Firstly, if the algorithms are flawed and they are the regulator, that means to most of us that the regulator is flawed. Same as current fiat grant you, but we’ve had thousands of years and trillions of transactions with fiat and it’s flaws are mostly understood. Explaining fraud and theft to someone is rather easy. Explaining proof of work crypto to someone who’s a complete newbie is much harder.
A government prohibiting the use and trade of an item is dealt with by the ruled over people getting mad enough to demand change or remove and replace those leaders. Revolutions have happened for less.
People using proof of work coins to heat their home and not care is their choice, perhaps the coins they mine will be valuable, perhaps not. I guess it’s like buying quarter lotto tickets. You don’t care if you win, you do it for the fun and if you win, bonus. But as far as heaters go, it’s the worst solution. Tying up that many resources for the heat output is like buying a national park to make a single box of tooth picks. A simple space heater is cheap, effective and shuts off when desired temp is reached, the miner is 24/7. The electricity to power the mining rig comes from somewhere be it coal plants, hydroelectric nuclear or solar, all of which have costs nevermind the copper and steel lines to connect everything. I’ve had to use electric heaters in my old house even with a gas furnace for main heat, I would have needed 4 or more mining rigs to keep my water from freezing rather than one easy to replace space heater. But at least they get some use out their mining rig I guess. Until summer when it becomes excess load on their A/C.
No one forcing us to use shit coins, this is true. I’m not using any. But how do you know which is a shit coin and which is the next bit coin? Average Joe doesn’t have time to sit on his phone or computer 24/7 researching and looking for scams.
Printing off your bitcoins for backup is an okay backup, but it completely erases the point of them in the first place, being a digital means of exchange. Cloning the hard drive for a backup is agreed the best option, that’s why when my drives failed I didn’t lose anything but a few recent files, I still had my old pre-upgrade drives and had backups of all the important things. It’s still like pulling teeth to get smaller businesses to even do that’s much for critical files sadly, speaking from experience. Hard drive recovery utilities are awesome but not failure proof, total agreement with you when it comes to backups.
But printing off a wallet and cloning a hard drive is another step average people aren’t willing to do. I get the impression you’re tech savvy, as an I but the average consumer is not. Most people want a computer to be like a fridge or a toaster. Plug it in, it works. Use whenever I want. Make my toast. Chill my milk. Load those memes. It’s not so much the coins fault as it is the coins flaw the time it requires more work to use properly. People are LAZY. Devices and services that aid them to be lazier do well. More intensified use of something falls to niche markets.
Government banning things doesn’t tend to work out well either. Alcohol prohibition failed miserably. The war on drugs is a joke and weed is legal here and in several us states as well as other countries. China has banned crypto currency. But the black market always thrives. Plutonium is banned because of its use for nuclear weapons and reactors, and because of the sheeples fear of such things they’re okay with the that’s. But for the previous examples, they keep drinking, smoking and mining crypto. Laws are only a barrier when enforced and most only stop honest criminals.
I don’t see crypto in current form changing form the better. Too useful for the traders and “supreme intellectuals” who see it as a way to remove government control from their lives, as they use it on government installed internet infrastructure. Too many people able to swindle and Ponzi scheme and cheat others for their own end to make its current incarnation perfect. You basically have to start from scratch, only now you have the albatross around your neck of all this mess that’s come before.
Indeed regulation can work both ways as we’ve all seen in the real world. But crypto regulated by its algorithms means is still regulated outside the control of the general user. Making up your own currency only works if other people find it useful to use. Most of us aren’t buying, trading or even using shit coins people make. There’s plenty of claims of usefulness and anonymity for various coins but as time goes on these get proven wrong. Gold was used because it had value other than just currency. Same with silver. Bartering works because the objects or service bartered has intrinsic value in and of themselves. The paper currency most of us use is fucked with by governments and shadow cabals, but it has the security of being useful anywhere in the country it’s issued, and generally slower change in purchasing power. Crypto can be worth a lot or at least something and be worthless when you wake up the next day. We’ve tarred and feathered and beheaded politicians and rulers in the past. Someone you’ve never met online who created a shit coin and ran off with the useful money is much harder to bring to that, ahem, special justice.
Outside any control of anybody. Just like a physics law. It is much better than any other currency.
That is because its algorithm have fundamental flaws, like long transaction time, big transaction costs, etc. Once that flaws would be fixed, most people will prefer it at least over over bank accounts.
Don't forget, that current cryptocurrencies is just a beta version. And even first beta version with all its bugs and problems gain enormous popularity. That means there is a huge demand for an independent currency.
That was never proved worng. Crypto is clearly usefull as a way to avoid government control and it is really anonymous, since you don't need any documents and approval to create an account. Crypto is traceable, but anonymous. Traceability does not mean lack of anonymity. It is different things.
Just like any other currency. Gold/silver could be just prohibited for personal owning, like plutonium. And that's all. Since it is physical object, so you will be caught and jailed immidiately if you will try to use it. However, crypto can't be instantly made worthless by any government. That is why it is still worth something. That is one of the unique property of crypto that makes it valuable.
Creator of shitcoin can do absolutely nothing with your coins. He can do nothing with coin network, since it grow out to other people. You could easily ignore him and use your coins as you wish. You even could take his code and run your own instance of network, completely independent. That's the point.
As for "run off" - just don't be so dumb and don't transfer your coins from your own wallet to any shitty exchange or service you don't trust. You don't give your cash to a stranger promising something, so why you do it with your crypto? Who force you to create "your" wallet on some shitty services instead of your own PC? If your crypto wallet with coins is not on your own computer - it is not your wallet. Just like cash. Nobody can run off with your coins if you don't give them out willingly by yourself.
Sorry but I feel you missed a few things with this reply. First you say the algorithm is the regulation, but then you go on to talk about how the shit coins have flawed algorithms. You also address the long wait times and cost per transaction, thank you for your honesty and genuine intellectual approach to them. These are huge issues that require fixing for as you say this beta version.
Gold and silver could drop to zero as a currency but they haven’t totally lost value. My electronics can still be plated in the gold for corrosion resistance. My water blocks in my computer can be silver coated for thermal transfer. My gold can be turned into ear rings and bracelets and traded for a cow. My silver can burn melted and made into silver bullets in case my mother in law gets a little werewolfy. In their natural as is state, they have a use. And therefore a value. Crypto does not. It replaces a different currency, adds the value of ease of online and therefor global transactions, and some claim true anonymity. But the bitcoins only value is as a currency. It’s worth X USD. Convertible to your fiat of choice as well, but taking it out of wherever tends to require a fee. If you can even get it out.
I have friends trading coins on online markets, I’ve stayed out of that. Not going to say their experience is the same as everyone’s but I honestly got tired of listening to the bragging over some huge deals and the bitching over the losses, the pump and dumps, whale watching, movements at 3am, you name it. Plus all these coins are only increased in value when people buy them with either fiat currency from one nation or other, or with a different coin that was either purchased with again fiat or mined at great cost of electricity which is still having its bill paid in fiat. Very few self sustaining power plant based crypto mining facilities out there.
As for the “run off” part I’m referring to people who create then push a shit coin, get early adopters and people to invest, claiming high value and future speculation, then when they have enough money soaked, drain the value through their chosen method and leave everyone else holding the bag full of worthless shit coins. These situations do nothing to remove the Ponzi scheme look for a lot of crypto’s. Mark Cuban famously lost millions in crypto not that long ago, and there’s many other such cases but this is a comment not an essay and i don’t want this to be too long to ever read.
Lastly storing your crypto offline on a wallet on a hard drive in your physical possession. Great. Kinda like hoarding physical gold and silver, in your house. Except the precious metals may decay a few protons but still be there for 10000 years. I’ve had hard drives fail. Two within a month of each other(never buying Seagate again because of it, personal choice due to it pissing me off that much. Was my main computer running 2 drives, both purchased the same day.) People have accidentally lost their drives with their wallet, drive internals fail, solder joints crack, etc. It’s much less secure than a home vault or even a wall safe hidden behind grannies portrait.
To most of us, crypto simply feels like online stocks, with extra steps, and a few more headaches. Sure bank notes have serial numbers but 99% of us never care. An old farmer can give me 5 $20, i give 4 to a pot dealer, who spends one at 7/11, and each time even though the bill is traceable no one records the serial number or even cares. As long as it’s not a fake bill, it’s handed over and transaction done.
So what's wrong with that statement? Flawed algorithms regulate coins in flawed manner, that is why they are not as popular as could be.
They will drop it's value if they be allowed only as appliances. Hardly people will exchange gold-plated PCBs, if it will be illegal to have and exchange gold in raw form. Like plutonium. It is useful and even expensive, but you can't use it as a mean of exchange.
Because there is a flaw in algorythm that regulate that coins to be useful mostly for trader games or as long-term savings.
That is another flaw - proof-of-work coins need a lot of computing power. However, even in that version, I know few people who use mining rigs as heaters that not only heat their houses as ordinary heater, but also return some part of paid electric bill in coins. They even don't care that miners does not pay for itself, any amount saved on heating is good enough, because usual heater will return absolutely nothing with the same electricity consumption.
Don't use that shitcoins, what is the problem? Nobody force you to fall in new coin with suspisious creator.
Do you know about backups on different hard drives and other media? Do you know that you could even print your walllet as QR codes on paper and put it in a safe just like cash? Inability and laziness to use accessible ways to save your coins is not a coins fault.
It is only that people fault, nothing more. I'm shure that kind of people permanently loose different digital info again and again but still don't want to do backups.
Exactly. And that is why current version of crypto will never replace cash. But that does not mean that idea of cryptocurrency is bad and wrong. We are on the earliest stages of cryptocurrencies development, just like ancient people who are trying to use a rare sea-shells as money.
Firstly, if the algorithms are flawed and they are the regulator, that means to most of us that the regulator is flawed. Same as current fiat grant you, but we’ve had thousands of years and trillions of transactions with fiat and it’s flaws are mostly understood. Explaining fraud and theft to someone is rather easy. Explaining proof of work crypto to someone who’s a complete newbie is much harder.
A government prohibiting the use and trade of an item is dealt with by the ruled over people getting mad enough to demand change or remove and replace those leaders. Revolutions have happened for less.
People using proof of work coins to heat their home and not care is their choice, perhaps the coins they mine will be valuable, perhaps not. I guess it’s like buying quarter lotto tickets. You don’t care if you win, you do it for the fun and if you win, bonus. But as far as heaters go, it’s the worst solution. Tying up that many resources for the heat output is like buying a national park to make a single box of tooth picks. A simple space heater is cheap, effective and shuts off when desired temp is reached, the miner is 24/7. The electricity to power the mining rig comes from somewhere be it coal plants, hydroelectric nuclear or solar, all of which have costs nevermind the copper and steel lines to connect everything. I’ve had to use electric heaters in my old house even with a gas furnace for main heat, I would have needed 4 or more mining rigs to keep my water from freezing rather than one easy to replace space heater. But at least they get some use out their mining rig I guess. Until summer when it becomes excess load on their A/C.
No one forcing us to use shit coins, this is true. I’m not using any. But how do you know which is a shit coin and which is the next bit coin? Average Joe doesn’t have time to sit on his phone or computer 24/7 researching and looking for scams.
Printing off your bitcoins for backup is an okay backup, but it completely erases the point of them in the first place, being a digital means of exchange. Cloning the hard drive for a backup is agreed the best option, that’s why when my drives failed I didn’t lose anything but a few recent files, I still had my old pre-upgrade drives and had backups of all the important things. It’s still like pulling teeth to get smaller businesses to even do that’s much for critical files sadly, speaking from experience. Hard drive recovery utilities are awesome but not failure proof, total agreement with you when it comes to backups.
But printing off a wallet and cloning a hard drive is another step average people aren’t willing to do. I get the impression you’re tech savvy, as an I but the average consumer is not. Most people want a computer to be like a fridge or a toaster. Plug it in, it works. Use whenever I want. Make my toast. Chill my milk. Load those memes. It’s not so much the coins fault as it is the coins flaw the time it requires more work to use properly. People are LAZY. Devices and services that aid them to be lazier do well. More intensified use of something falls to niche markets.
Government banning things doesn’t tend to work out well either. Alcohol prohibition failed miserably. The war on drugs is a joke and weed is legal here and in several us states as well as other countries. China has banned crypto currency. But the black market always thrives. Plutonium is banned because of its use for nuclear weapons and reactors, and because of the sheeples fear of such things they’re okay with the that’s. But for the previous examples, they keep drinking, smoking and mining crypto. Laws are only a barrier when enforced and most only stop honest criminals.
I don’t see crypto in current form changing form the better. Too useful for the traders and “supreme intellectuals” who see it as a way to remove government control from their lives, as they use it on government installed internet infrastructure. Too many people able to swindle and Ponzi scheme and cheat others for their own end to make its current incarnation perfect. You basically have to start from scratch, only now you have the albatross around your neck of all this mess that’s come before.