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41  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 23, 2014, 02:11:28 AM
Someone noted that COIN will be insured against theft.  Do they already have an insurance arrangement?

It would be interesting to know the premium and the safety procedures that were/will be required by the underwiter. 

The precautions that an individual should take to guard against theft of his personal coins seem to be well understood and adequately safe.  It is less clear what a company can do to guard against insider theft (technically embezzlement, right?), which could be committed by anyone, including its chief officer(s).

The unique features of bitcoin seem to make the risk of theft from the firm's cold wallets more severe than the risk of theft of ordinary money from its bank accounts.  All it takes is to get copies of the private keys.  Even Trezor-like hardware wallets could have secret factory-istalled backdoors or be swapped for malicious counterfeits...
42  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 23, 2014, 12:25:57 AM
You may have discussed some of these principles with someone on this forum.  It was not me.

I see it exactly the opposite way from you:  The regulations you believe are necessary for a free market (ironic, if you think about it) are always and everywhere used to subvert market forces, and give preference to whichever entity has the most political control over the 'regulators'.
Yeah, sorry, it must have been in some other thread.

The "free" in capitalism's "free market" does  not mean "free from regulations", but rather that "suppliers and customers can freely choose each other, and new suppliers and customers can freely enter the market if it seems advantageous to them". Thus, even a highly regulated market can be free as long the regulations do not prevent the entry of competitors.  Theory says that such a free market will tend to achieve a fair price -- cost plus a small percentage of proft -- that makes it as profitable as any other market.

However, a strong government and proper regulation is necessary to keep a market free; because otherwise the leading suppliers will use their position to keep competition away, e.g. by dumping, controlling the supply of raw materials, false advertising, lobbying for exclusive laws, etc.. Without adequate antitrust and consumer protection laws, every market quickly becomes  a monopoly or oligopoly, that converges to a price that will maximize the suppliers' net revenue -- usually much higher than the fair price of a free market.

43  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: BFL fucks us over again on: July 23, 2014, 12:02:10 AM
Sorry to restate the obvious, but once you realize that someone has been trying to dupe you, you should not give ANY weight to ANYTHING that he says or promises.  You must try to base your conclusions and decisions only on information that you get from independent and reliable sources.

A scammer is necessarily an expert in the art of disarming his victims and leading them astray with bogus explanations, plausible lies, and empty promises that cannot be easily checked.  A scammer will paint himself a victim of his victims and dismiss incriminating facts as lies or misunderstandings.  Here is a fine example of the art: http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/232v5n/the_full_picture_from_danny_brewster/  

A scammer will not lose any sleep because of public exposure, no matter how widespread and strident.  Even if 1000 customers are turned away by bad press, there will be 10 who will trust the scammer, and he will still make a profit from them.    Hundreds of blogposts and articles did not stop people from depositing tons money into MtGOX after it became a roach motel, for example.  
44  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 22, 2014, 11:20:27 PM
So your definition of 'ultra-capitalism' is plutocracy?  I think the more plutocratic a society is, the less possible free markets are - and the lack of free markets is antithetical to any kind of real capitalism.  I would call such a country 'faux-capitalist', not 'ultra-capitalist'.

Crony capitalism is no more representative of "capitalism" than rigged elections are representative of "democracy".
Hm, we have been through this discussion before, haven't we?

People seem to mean very different things by "free market".  The Libertarian definition seems to be "totally unregulated market" which in my experience instantly degenerates into oligopoly or monopoly market, typical of crony capitalism.  If "ultra-capitalist" is not that, what would it be?

I believe that a relatively free market can only be sustained if it is regulated by a government that is commited to it and is stronger than any individual supplier (or consumer), or any small group thereof. 

That is visibly no longer the case in the US, for many markets (such as TV, energy, banking, operating systems, ...)  It has always been worse in Brazil...
45  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 22, 2014, 10:06:52 PM
What exactly do you define as 'ultra-capitalist'?  Could you name a few such countries, just so I understand what you mean here?
Mine, for example.  A little bit less now than 20 years ago perhaps, but still much more plutocratic than the US.
46  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: BitcoinWisdom.com - Live Bitcoin/LiteCoin Charts on: July 22, 2014, 09:20:07 PM
Yet another suggestion: in the 1h to 12h charts, especially with compressed (2-pixel) bars, the time scale at bottom skips several days, even a whole month, between tic marks.   The label at the bottom end of the cursor shows only the hour, and one has then to guess the day of the month by eyeball.  If the time tic interval is 30 days, that is nearly impossible.

Should that cursor label perhaps display the day and the hour, in those cases?
47  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: BitcoinWisdom.com - Live Bitcoin/LiteCoin Charts on: July 22, 2014, 09:12:11 PM
Why not see LakeBTC appear on it?
LakeBTC is full of fake trades, at least 90% of whole volume. for every minutes, it contain more than 3 BTC fake volume.
Actually, any exchange may be faking its data; perhaps lakeBTC is just not as clever as the others.  Grin

Perhaps you should post a small-font disclaimer, e.g. in one of the drop-down menus or the home page. Something like "All data is provided by the exchanges and is not independently verified or verifiable.  BitcoinWisdom does not guarantee its significance or truthfulness in any way." 

48  Economy / Economics / Re: Bitcoin will plummet to $10 by first half of 2014 on: July 22, 2014, 08:59:26 PM
You can spot them a mile away so avoid those people, but putting you faith in the likes of the IMF who make a precondition of lending $3.5 billion on condition you start a civil war and create income inequality as a business makes me think the obnoxious bitcoiners are the heavenly in comparison.
I grew up and still live in a country that was plundered by the IMF, with corrupt banks and politicians, and all that.  I have experienced runaway inflation, high taxes, stupid prohibitions, rotten public service, unfair justice, and more.  But I would still choose all that to the libertarian "Mad Max" utopia, and I put more trust in my government than in the Shrem Karpelès & Pierce Global Cryptobank Inc.
49  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 22, 2014, 08:48:34 PM
Ha! Try using any ultra-capitalist third-world country instead of East Germany, and you will reach the opposite conclusion...
50  Economy / Economics / Re: Bitcoin will plummet to $10 by first half of 2014 on: July 22, 2014, 08:32:08 PM
For practical reasoning being wrong it's about as effective a doubling your 0 Bitcoin investment every day.
At least professor Bitcoin had enough doubt in his competency to actually invest USD and buy some Bitcoin.
I don't stay bitcoin-free because I trust my competency, but because (among other things) it seems to turn those who own it into religious fanatics, obnoxious salesemen, or worse...

51  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 22, 2014, 08:23:04 PM
The eventual approval of the COIN fund is obviously likely to increase the price.  However, the magnitude of the increase does not seem so easy to predict.  Some complicating factors:

(1) I expect that, at first, the fund will buy the bitcoins that it needs from the Winklevosses and other investors like Tim Draper (and the eventual DPR  coins auction).  That is presumably why the Winklevosses are after that fund.  So the demand on the exchanges is likely to be indirect, from people who expect the price to rise because of the ETF, rather than from buys by the ETF itself.

(2) Granted that SMBIT and PBP are less glamourous than COIN, but they do not seem to have had much success, or much effect on the price.  SMBIT holdings have grown only 2000 BTC, from ~105 BTC to ~107 BTC, over the last two months.  They grew ~30 kBTC from December to April, but the price dropped almost 50% in that period.   

(3) Bitcoin's only intrinsic value is its utility as a method of payment.  Its value as an investment depends entirely on that utility.  Bitcoin is a high-risk invstment because no one can tell what the demand for that use will be, and there is a positive probability that such demand (and therefore its value) will go to zero at some point.   Approval of the ETF will not affect the expected demand for that use, nor that probability of failure. Therfore COIN shares will be just as risky an investment as bitcoin itself.  If large institutional investors do not trust bitcoin now, why would they trust COIN?
52  Economy / Economics / Re: Distribution of bitcoin wealth by owner on: July 22, 2014, 07:54:56 PM
I would assume the 19 with more than 100kBTC could just be thrown out.  Other than that it looks logical.

Indeed.  But the lower end is unreliable too. People who own less than 0.1 BTC probably don't bother to read /r/bitcoin, and that may hold also for those in the 0.1-1.0 range.


You would be surprised the amount of BTCeers who have less than 0.1 BTC and are active at places like here, Reddit and online gambling chat websites.  I can name easy 20 -40 who have less than 0.1 BTC who are daily BTCeers.

No extra education needed for that conclusion - just straight mfering truth.
I can name one.  Wink  But what are those people doing in /r/bitcoin then?
53  Economy / Economics / Re: Bitcoin will plummet to $10 by first half of 2014 on: July 22, 2014, 07:52:30 PM
This professor could not have been more wrong about this one.
Well, he could have said "50,000 USD by the end of Q2".  Grin
54  Economy / Economics / Re: How profitable are exchanges? on: July 22, 2014, 07:48:21 PM
Don't forget owners who operate an exchange that turn scammer will have a permanent marker on their forehead.
In the case of BTC-e, it is not known whether the owners have foreheads.  Cheesy

He was referring to the movie where the special forces team go into Germany and capture Naizis, they kill most of them, but they usually let one go, but before they do they use a knife to draw the nazi sign on their forehead, giving them a permanent scar
Oh.  But, as far as I know, that hasn't happened to a singe one of the many exchange-owners-turned-thieves.  AFAIK, the only such case where justice may be done was in China, where the police arrested the culprits.  Have there been any others?

And, last time I checked, no one knew who the owners of BTC-e were.  That may complicate the revenge plans a bit.
55  Economy / Economics / Re: Distribution of bitcoin wealth by owner on: July 22, 2014, 07:36:43 PM
I would assume the 19 with more than 100kBTC could just be thrown out.  Other than that it looks logical.

Indeed.  But the lower end is unreliable too. People who own less than 0.1 BTC probably don't bother to read /r/bitcoin, and that may hold also for those in the 0.1-1.0 range.
56  Economy / Economics / Re: How profitable are exchanges? on: July 22, 2014, 04:37:37 PM
Don't forget owners who operate an exchange that turn scammer will have a permanent marker on their forehead.
In the case of BTC-e, it is not known whether the owners have foreheads.  Cheesy
57  Economy / Economics / Re: How profitable are exchanges? on: July 22, 2014, 04:03:17 PM
I think that most exchanges need to have a lot of AML employees to verify their customers' identities and to monitor accounts for suspicious activity. 
That may not be a big item in the budget of that particular exchange, I suppose.  Wink

Are there companies that offer customer identity verification services for other businesses?
58  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: BFL fucks us over again on: July 22, 2014, 01:11:08 PM
Imagine that a car maker takes payments from thousands of clients, builds the cars, but then opens a taxi company that uses those cars for a year, ostensibly to "test" them, before sending them to the clients.  How would the Law see that?
59  Economy / Economics / Re: How profitable are exchanges? on: July 22, 2014, 08:27:18 AM
The profit is very big
Example (BTC-E) :
1 month fee : 3.542 * 30 * 615 USD = 65349 USD

I see no mistake in the calculation; but that is the revenue, not profit.  Considering that they have to pay salaries an other expenses, the profit from fees may be ratehr modest.

But they also make money from withdrawal fees; and the may be trading against their clients, with the advantage of knowing the orders of all traders before each trader knows those of other traders. (AFAIK this is illegal in stock exchanges, but there are no regulations for bitcoin exchanges, so why wouldn't they do it?)
60  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: July 22, 2014, 07:29:01 AM
[ COIN ] will also be eligible for pension accounts -which neither SMBIT or PBP are.
Thanks! I thought that the main advantage of SMBIT over bitcoin itself was that it could be used for retirement accounts, some of them at least (Roth?)
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