122
|
Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
|
on: January 10, 2015, 11:51:49 AM
|
Surely its not that bearish, i have seen a stock that lost 2/3 its value or even delisted, have you ?
Do you like turtles? Why did you mention turtles? Maybe because he likes turtle ? Did you know that in Russia nobody likes turtles, for turtles like you? What are turtles doing in a country where no one likes them? Maybe they are trying to convince them they come in peace? Don't they fear to end up in many pieces? Perhaps they are in fact fleeing the kitchens of France in a kind of Rise of the Planet of the Turtles ironic march to freedom? Will freedom still be waiting for them when they finally get there? Wouldn't it be ironic if it was? Are turtles a good source of iron? Iron know, do you?
|
|
|
124
|
Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
|
on: January 10, 2015, 01:31:48 AM
|
Surely its not that bearish, i have seen a stock that lost 2/3 its value or even delisted, have you ?
Do you like turtles? Why did you mention turtles? Maybe because he likes turtle ? Did you know that in Russia nobody likes turtles, for turtles like you? What are turtles doing in a country where no one likes them? Maybe they are trying to convince them they come in peace? Don't they fear to end up in many pieces? Perhaps they are in fact fleeing the kitchens of France in a kind of Rise of the Planet of the Turtles ironic march to freedom? Will freedom still be waiting for them when they finally get there?
|
|
|
125
|
Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
|
on: January 10, 2015, 01:11:44 AM
|
Surely its not that bearish, i have seen a stock that lost 2/3 its value or even delisted, have you ?
Do you like turtles? Why did you mention turtles? Maybe because he likes turtle ? Did you know that in Russia nobody likes turtles, for turtles like you? What are turtles doing in a country where no one likes them? Maybe they are trying to convince them they come in peace? Don't they fear to end up in many pieces?
|
|
|
127
|
Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
|
on: January 09, 2015, 10:05:49 PM
|
Surely its not that bearish, i have seen a stock that lost 2/3 its value or even delisted, have you ?
Do you like turtles? Why did you mention turtles? Maybe because he likes turtle ? Did you know that in Russia nobody likes turtles, for turtles like you? What are turtles doing in a country where no one likes them?
|
|
|
129
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: January 09, 2015, 12:36:44 AM
|
Incredibile, questo professore conosce sia l'italiano che il francese! Le Monsieur! Il est plein de ressources! Je suis surpris! Bravo! :-D
Thanks! But I can only read French, not speak it. My parents were from Veneto and I spoke Venetian at home as a kid. I learned Portuguese at school, Italian and Spanish starting at 10 or so, from magazines that my parents bought. Some French a bit later. Then English at school and from reading technical stuff. That's about it.
|
|
|
131
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
|
on: January 08, 2015, 11:33:07 PM
|
Fuck that 50 Beanie Babies bet.
This one buried the fucker for eternity [ bet 7016 BTC at 96.2% and lost ]
Lots of money, but at least he was consciously gambling, with know odds. To me it is not as bad as that other guy who deposited 50 k$ into MtGOX, just before it died, to buy those bitcoins at 80% discount from market. EDIT: on the other hand, maybe he will get 20% of his money back, so it was not that bad...
|
|
|
132
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 11:09:14 PM
|
Note that altcoins are created not because they can be better than bitcoin (which in some cases may be true), but because their creators think: "Why should I buy an existing coin, and see its early adopters become filthy rich at my expense, when I can create my own altcoin, and become filthy rich at other people's expense?"
BCnext launched Nxt for exactly 21 BTC, it was by design as the number 21 was symbolic to him, once he hit that mark he closed investment and launched. BTC was valued at about the same amount as now when he closed funding. So your point is not true. Not everyone is purely money motivated. The people that called his distribution a scam were day traders who were angry they didn't participate during the two months the IPO was open. Of course, Nxt isn't really an alt coin in the true sense of the form, because it's not a clone of anything. I accept that there may be exceptions. I believe my analysis above applies to most of what people call "pump-and-dump" or "junk" cryptocoins. (I called them "altcoins" out of laziness, it is easier to type.)
|
|
|
133
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 10:56:42 PM
|
PS. I find this discussion bizarre, because until a month ago bitcoiners claimed that altcoins would die because they did not have the huge mining network that bitcoin has. Now it is the number of users that matters? Then Auroracoin must have been a success -- didn't they "airdrop" some AUR to every person in Iceland?
|
|
|
134
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 10:32:32 PM
|
There would be no point. Focus on users, not miners, for a monent. The have a choice:
Option 1. Hard forked chain that that pays more to miners
Option 2. Hard forked chain that does not pay more to miners
Users would choose #2. Miners would choose #1
Miners are by definition sellers of bitcoin, users are both buyers and sellers. Chain two would have both sellers and buyers. Chain 1 would have sellers but no buyers, and would therefore have no value. ASIC miners would face the choice to waste electricity mining a worthless coin or shut down.
Options 1 and 2 are different coins, that will have different market prices and different expectations of survival. Each old bitcoin user starts out with the same number of coins in both chains. There is no option for him to take: if he does not spend or sell the coins in one chain, they will simply sit there, as if he had decided to hoard them. He could burn them, but that would mean throwing some value away -- and would make the price of that coin to rise. So the question is not "which coin would the users choose", but "what will happen to the market price of each coin". Coin 1 is just the same old bitcoin, with the same network and protocol, minus a reward halving that was scheduled to occur and will be postponed. It will keep working smoothly through the transiiton. Its price may fall considerably, but it is unlikely to become insignificant. Coin 2 is a brand new coin that happens to start with the same coin assignments, but has yet to build its network. There is a bunch of rich guys out there -- the old bitcoin miners and their investors -- who have hundreds of millions of dollars at stake invested in coin 1, and therefore are quite interested in having the price of coin 2 crash so that it will not steal market value from coin 1. So, except for the ideologues, if someone wanted to invest some money in "bitcoin" after the change, which of the two bitcoins would he choose? Except for the ideologues, once the cartel has announced his plans, how many bitcoiners would still wish for the Red Button to be pressed? If the button is pressed, how many will do whatever they could to kill coin 2? Perhaps, as you say, there will be smart guys who will wait for the cartel to stop jamming coin 2 and then will start mining it, or buy tons of it as penny stock, counting on its recovery. But, if that strategy turns out to be profitable, what would stop other people from forking other Red-Button-style clones of bitcoin? Note that altcoins are created not because they can be better than bitcoin (which in some cases may be true), but because their creators think: "Why should I buy an existing coin, and see its early adopters become filthy rich at my expense, when I can create my own altcoin, and become filthy rich at other people's expense?" It seems that you believe that the Red-Button coin 2 will prevail (or at least survive) for a similar reason, namely it would give to ordinary PC owners the opportunity to become early miners of "bitcoin" again, and amass a hoard of "bitcoin" with little cost. That cloned "bitcoin" would have a low price perhaps, but all users of the old bitcoin would automatically be its users too, and (by your belief) it would have a nonzero chance of conquering the bitcoin market. But, if so, what will stop people from creating more such clones, independently of any 51% threat? These possibilities with two or more clones of bitcoin are already too confusing for me to reason about them. After all, I am already unable to see why bitcoin would survive in the long term, even with no clones and no 51% shenaniigans. Lucky for you that your beliefs a priori exclude the possibility of protocol changes, 51% attacks, hard clones, and anything that might be a problem for bitcoin.
|
|
|
135
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 09:17:27 PM
|
a non-conforming cartel would simply be removed from the pool
Please go back and read the plan I outlined. The one with chains (1), (2), (3). Then please show me how the non-conformant cartel would be "removed from the pool" (?).
|
|
|
136
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 09:13:21 PM
|
Exceptional societies were the few that rejected this and relied on self reliance and responsibility of the individual. I've read about them, but have never seen one in my lifetime.
Could you name them please? I am not aware of any minimally developed society that would not have some sort of government backed by some sort of police. I have seen people cite ancient Ireland (which seems to be false, false, the tribes had chiefs and there was even a "High King" at some point) and Iceland (where the population was all isolated farmers and the first village formed in the 18th century). Do you mean some other?
|
|
|
137
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 09:02:19 PM
|
There is no cartel on the Red Button hard forked protocol. Anyone has equal access to the ability to mine. The fact that someone was a cartel previously does not grant any vested status in the future. Deepbit, for example, has no greater ability to show up today and be a mining cartel than you or I do.
Come on, you know that "the cartel" there means "the cartel of old-chain miners who want to force a change in the block schedule". It is not "a cartel of rebel-chain miners". Yes, and what I'm saying is there is no cartel. A cartel implies there is some barrier to entry (for example by limited capacity of equipment). There is none here; everyone can mine. And, again, I never said that they would be a cartel of rebel-chain miners. They would still be a cartel of miners of the old chain and the cartel chain. In fact they would have 100% of the active ASIC miners on their side, because the old chain miners would have no other viable option except join them.
|
|
|
138
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 08:39:02 PM
|
Well, the cartel will want to be the first in that line [to mine a modified protocol]. There is no cartel on the Red Button hard forked protocol. Anyone has equal access to the ability to mine. The fact that someone was a cartel previously does not grant any vested status in the future. Deepbit, for example, has no greater ability to show up today and be a mining cartel than you or I do. Come on, you know that "the cartel" there means "the cartel of old-chain miners who want to force a change in the block schedule". It is not "a cartel of rebel-chain miners". Assuming that "the cartel" wants to kill the value of the rebel chain, it will try to put enough CPU power working on the rebel chain to jam it. That should not be hard at first, because the rebels and opportunistic miners will not all start mining all at once. If the cartel acts quickly, then the rebels who try to use or mine the rebel chain will be frustrated, and (so the cartel hopes) they will give up before others join the rebellion. Note that, while this struggle is going on in the rebel chain, the cartel's chain (with old protocol except for halving) will operate normally all the time for everybody who upgrades to it, except perhaps for some temporary variation in the block rate.
|
|
|
139
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 07:11:08 PM
|
Just curious if you've checked out other protocols, POS, POI, Ripple? Thoughts?
Know nothing about PoS or PoI (or PoB), sorry. My understanding of Ripple is that it is two things: * The Ripple Network is a system for interbank settlements that uses some cryptocoin technology, but is centrally managed by RippleLabs and/or a bank consortium; * The Ripple Coin (XRP) is a cryptocurrency, also managed by RippleLabs. The coin could be used by the Ripple Network as an intermediate step when converting between two minor currencies, but the same role could be performed by a major currency such as UDS or EUR. Success of the Network does not imply success of the coin, and vice-versa. Is this understanding correct?
|
|
|
140
|
Economy / Speculation / Re: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.
|
on: January 08, 2015, 05:12:19 PM
|
Are you on Holiday break right now, you seem to have endless amounts of time to write here. Not trying to discredit you, just jealous of your free time Yes, it is school vacations here.
|
|
|
|