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301  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 25, 2015, 11:39:44 AM
How many people committed suicide (or were thrown back into abject, inescapable poverty) when the Brazilian command and control fiat monetary system last collapsed (for the umpteenth time in a row)??

Why do you bring that up whenever bitcoin's faults and miseries are pointed out?  Do you think that somehow bitcoin will be a better monetary system than the Venezuelan bolivar or the Zimbabwean dollar?  Do you think that it will end economic exploitation of the poor by the rich?  Looking at its history and economy, I see no reason to expect those things.  Why are you so sure that the 21 million limit will never be lifted, or that there will never be a negative interest tax on blockchain accounts?  Why are you so sure that it will not be superseded by some other cryptoscam in a few years time?
302  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 25, 2015, 10:33:50 AM
What the hell is going on? I woke up, switched on my computer, checked bitcoinwisdom and I couldn't believe the charts I was seeing.
Any specific trigger the last few hours? Is the space ship finally taking off?  Cheesy Wink
No no of course this is great but let's see how far it goes.I learned not to get too excited over the last year.I hope the baby is not going up full throttle.3rd gear would be ok for now.

If the rise is indeed due to MMM's "Republic of Bitcoin" ponzi, it may continue for a while, unfortunately. Mavrodi's previous scams are estimated to have moved 10 billion dollars.  Turnout was 50 million dollars per day at one point -- 50 times what bitcoin miners are sucking from bitcoin buyers at present. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MMM_(Ponzi_scheme_company)

Something tells me that the Bitcoin Alliance, created to cleanse bitcoin space from criminals and scammers, will pretend not to see that one.

By the way, note that 50 people committed suicide when MMM finally collapsed.
303  Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question. on: October 25, 2015, 10:15:48 AM
You guys both off-topic, derailed, I would take all the bets and end up with $11,100 but weren't we talking about sports?
thats unfair, its like betting on all the horses, dont you do bet on sport ?
Do you all agree that this thread is more fun in the old pyramid format?

You call repairing this thread fun?

What if we craft this thread into a pyramid for the glory of the almighty illuminati?
where are you taking this thread ? theym*** is an illuminati ,what if he bans you after seeing this ?

Is that an ordinary cone, or is it the mythical Round Pyramid of Akhenaton?  
304  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 23, 2015, 10:47:31 PM
Then what is your explanation for that rise?
Pretty god damn obvious, at least 500 billion dollars attempting to leave China, some of which is going into Bitcoin, and the halving is just beginning to start to have an initial price effect.  Negative interests rates gaining steam + more China fever + halving all at the same time = the perfect storm beginning.
http://www.armstrongeconomics.com/archives/38474

I wonder if anyone would see bitcoin as a good way to protect one's money from a 3% devaluation of the Yuan...

But the huge buys in China are probably related to this, interpreted as bullish news (authorities friendly towards bitcoin):
https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/chinas-cyberspace-administration-acknowledges-bitcoin/
But the CAC is NOT the PBoC, so it was kind of "buy the rumor" thing. I expect sometime in the next weeks an official statement of the PBoC on this. Wink

That report may have had more impact in the West than in China.  Back in mid-2014, some PBoC official was quoted as saying that the bank had no objection to bitcoin ownership and trading, and compared it to trading rare stamps.  I can't see in the CAC report (through Google translate) a more positive attitude.  I don't see it as signalling a relaxation of the current restrictions (e.g. as suggesting that financial institutions could start investing in it).  Instead, I read the report as saying "bitcoin is connected to illegal activities, more regulation may be needed".

I wish that there was a real translation by someone fluent in Chinese.
305  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 23, 2015, 04:45:16 PM
I would guess the MMM had between 0 and 0/1 effect on price.
Then what is your explanation for that rise?
Demand (is about to become) > Supply

Demand has always been exactly equal to supply; otherwise you would see unwanted bitcoins scattered on the ground around the bitcoin mines, or kings on their knees begging in vain for bitcoin holders to sell them a single satoshi for all the gold in their kingdoms and the hands of their princesses too.

You mean that more people are now more willing to pay more dollars for 1 BTC.  Fine, but why?  Saying that "the price rose because of supply and demand" is like saying that the weather is hot because the temperature got higher...

306  Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question. on: October 23, 2015, 03:59:16 PM
Will you give me an high five if I agree with you?
Wouldn't an "F" of "Fail" be fair and fitting for failing to follow the familiar format?
307  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 23, 2015, 03:52:33 PM
I would guess the MMM had between 0 and 0/1 effect on price.

Then what is your explanation for that rise?
308  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 23, 2015, 01:15:56 PM
The poll should be changed to:
What exactly caused this bull run ?

My guess is that the month-long rise from ~220 to ~270 was due to MMM's "Republic of Bitcoin" ponzi, while the spike to ~280 over the last two days was due to the VAT decision.

It seems that the VAT news have already been forgotten.  "Wat VAT?"  Cheesy
309  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 23, 2015, 01:09:51 PM
Posting guild lines:
 Please lets keep this thread clean. ( I will be removing any off topic posts )
The only reason why this thread has outlived all the others on bitcointalk is that the "topic" extends from the walls at least fifty miles in every direction, so it is pretty hard to get "off" it.
310  Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question. on: October 23, 2015, 01:00:54 PM
You guys both off-topic, derailed, I would take all the bets and end up with $11,100 but weren't we talking about sports?
thats unfair, its like betting on all the horses, dont you do bet on sport ?
Do you all agree that this thread is more fun in the old pyramid format?
311  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 05:42:35 PM
AnCaps favor market based decision-making. For example two parties to a conflict can either choose a mutually agreeable third party to resolve disputes or choose to fight it out (but only with their own resources!).  Common law and emergent practices guide collective action. 

Thanks for the lesson! But how would that work, for example, if a village needed to decide the path of a road to a nearby town?
312  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 03:39:36 PM
But smart doesn't always mean right. Karl Marx, for example.

Smart means left, not right, of course.  Grin
313  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 03:37:56 PM
maybe Prof. Jorge think that libertarian means anarchist.  were it was the same, we shouldnt make 2 word out of it isnt ?

Indeed I confess that I do not know the difference between the two when it comes to this issue: what decision process they advocate, in place of democratic vote and majority rule?
314  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 03:28:38 PM
If nobody is forced to do anything then those that are willing to carry things forward can do so. Linux is a simple example of this. Nobody is forced to use Gnome yet there is no consensus on using it. The minority might not like it. But they are not being forced to use it. They can come up with their own GUI or accept it if the majority puts all of the work into Gnome.

Ahem, that is what Gavin and Mike tried to do with BitcoinXT.  But it seeems that "come up with their own implementation" is not allowed in bitcoin space...
315  Economy / Speculation / Re: SecondMarket Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer on: October 22, 2015, 03:19:15 PM

What about Gr[ae]yscale -- is it included in the deal?

EDIT: Apparently not, Greyscale is owned by Barry's  Digital Whatever
316  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 01:22:45 PM


(Without some automatic and economically sound fee adjustment mechanism, a workaround would be to have a governing body like the international commission that defines and updates (by voting) the Metric System: with no legal power, but with effective moral power derived from competence and representativity.  But try telling that to the libertarians...)

What makes you think libertarians would object to that? Our problem is the initiation of force. Our core value is the NonAgression Principle.

Because those international committees (IERS, IUPAC, ISO, IEC, etc.) are formed by representatives of countries, usually appointed by the national standards bodies; and reach their decisions by voting (after years of technical discussion).  Correct me if I am wrong, but libertarians despise voting, because it means the majority imposing its decision on the minority. 

Libertarians prefer "consensus" instead; because, by definition, a consensus decision must please the minority parties too.  A pity that they can't explain how consensus could be achieved when the minority does not like what the majority proposes...
317  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 12:03:11 PM
Your first mistake (of many) is your assumption that value of assets is based on it's current use, where in actuality especially for small caps 99% of it is based on potential think WhatsAp, twitter etc... The other point is just because you can't think of a solution doesn't mean no one else can. In my opinion raising transaction to 0.25 USD/tx would be equivalent of shooting a fly with a bazooka. But the funny thing is, even in that worst case, I think bitcoin can still prosper.

I explicitly said "expectation of future usage".  That was THE selling point in Nov/2013 when I first learned about bitcoin.

And I also did not say that the "proper fee" question is unsolvable. I said that there is no solution (known, or within sight) and that it would  requires another brilliant invention. 

(Without some automatic and economically sound fee adjustment mechanism, a workaround would be to have a governing body like the international commission that defines and updates (by voting) the Metric System: with no legal power, but with effective moral power derived from competence and representativity.  But try telling that to the libertarians...)
318  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 11:31:50 AM
This price surge seems to be led by the Western exchanges, and must be due to the European VAT ruling.

Were there any countries where bitcoin trades were already paying VAT (or inhibited because of it)? In Sweden maybe? In the UK?
319  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: October 22, 2015, 10:48:04 AM
I am what I would consider a Bitcoin fanatic. Beyond the idealistic reasons that I choose to use Bitcoin, I have plenty to lose (financially) if Bitcoin drops in value (and plenty to gain if it increases in value). If I am concerned about my ability (as a Bitcoin fanatic) to run a full node with the current anti-spam (has spam been fixed by the way?) 1MB block size limit in place, what is going to happen when the data I need to share with my peers doubles (or increases 8-fold, wtf!)? When Bitcoin fanatics have doubts about running a full node, I would imagine that the robustness of the decentralized network has been harmed.

Yes, I am of the opinion that I absolutely must run a full node to take full advantage of Bitcoin.

The price of bitcoin has been, and still is, determined by the expectation of its demand being high in some future time.  

Until recently, that high future demand was supposed to come from its use as a currency for internet payments.  The current level of use (maybe 5 million USD/day, by optimistic estimates) is too low to produce that demand, by orders of magnitude.  To justify a price of 2500 USD/BTC (say) one would need 100 to 1000 times as much use.  

The current "normal" traffic T, ignoring the recent "stress tests", is about 120'000 tx/day, or about 0.45 MB/block on average; and has doubled in the last 12 months.  That is too close to the effective capacity C of the network, currently ~200'000 tx/day or ~0.80 MB/block. (C is not 1.00 MB/block because of the inevitable empty blocks).

Granted, much of that traffic is not payments (bitcoins changing hands in exchange for other goods and services).  Lots of it is gambling, wallet housekeeping, tumbling, notarizing, testing, and possibly fake traffic meant to give the illusion of increasing adoption.  How much of T is due to those "non-essential" uses?  Guesses vary; my own guess is 90% or more.

But even if 90% of T was "non-essential" and could be eliminated, to get to 2500 USD/BTC one would still need 10 to 100 times more traffic than there is today.  If running a full node is not viable for home users today, it will be quite impossible by then.  In other words, if the proper working of bitcoin depends on home users running full nodes, then bitcoin is not a viable competitor for PayPal or Apple Pay, much less for VISA.

Back to the present, the block size limit would not be such a pressing issue if that "non-essential" traffic were excluded.  IMHO, the best way to do that would be to set a significant fee and a significant minimum transaction value -- say, 0.001 BTC (~0.25 USD) per output.  That is how Charlie Lee solved the spam problem in Litecoin; but his suggestion to the Bitcoin devs to do the same fell on deaf ears.  (So much for the old claim that "Bitcoin will not be superseded by a better altcoin because it can itself incorporate any good features of the latter".)

By my guess, a significant fee and value threshold would reduce T to 1/10 of the present value.  It would also make stress tests and spam attacks much more expensive to the attacker, hence much less likely. (We still haven't seen a real spam attack, but it is estimated that an effective one could be sustained for a couple of days for maybe 100'000 USD/day, or less.)  Note that 0.25 USD/tx is still less than 10% of the per-transaction cost of mining.  On the other hand, it would not prevent the hoped-for 100x or 1000x increase in adoption that would be needed to drive the price up.

Unfortunately, raising the fee is politically impossible, for several reasons.  "No fees" has been a pillar of the "marketing" of bitcoin since the drive for general adoption started in 2013, and is still part of the discourse of important players like Coinbase and BitPay.  A fee raise would probably break gambling compaies like SatoshiDice, and several other companies that are politically powerful in "bitcoin space" (e.g. by sponsoring the "bitcoin media", events, and avertising in mainstream media.)  A large drop in T would also expose the fact that adoption for e-payments is not growing, and probably declining.

A large minimum fee has been opposed also on "ideological" grounds, because it would need some governing body to decide the proper value, and change it from time to time based on the current market price and the state of the economy.  Thus, the small-blockians claim that letting the "fee market" define the fees would be an "ideologically pure" solution.  But the 1 MB block size limit was not chosen for that purpose.  "Market" fees that result from an arbitrary block size limit would be just as arbitrary as fees set directly.  A governing body would still be needed to impose a block size limit, and revise it from time to time, to achieve the best fee and volume numbers.

So, what is the solution?  In my view, there is none; hence my signature.  As most of you know by now, I think that bitcoin should never have been marketed to the general public. It was started a technical experiment to test whether the protocol worked in practice, as it seemed to work in theory; and should have remained such.   The protocol mostly works, but the result is not a viable currency for several problems that were not foreseen.  Fixing those problems seems to require another couple of brilliant inventions, like the PoW blockchain.
320  Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question. on: October 22, 2015, 09:46:05 AM
who made you legendary this sooner ,with such low quality posts and majority of them in off-topic.?
I'm impressed, you are really saying that you read the majority of my posts?
Given that only 822 of your 1664 posts were off-topic, how could he claim "majority"?
Would you be so kind as to recount to confirm that that 822 fig is accurate?
do you need to put his post into blockchain to make it more accurate or would you like a tuna sandwich and salad instead ?
My post is still unconfirmed; was it malleated?

Depends, have you "Gone Full Cryptsy"?
why dont you just go and confirm it by clicking the link 'Show general statistics for this member' under his profile. ?

Shouldn't you be sure that I don't post very relevant and meaningfull things in off-topic threads instead of trusting the counting machinery?


"Do we really need to go there?"

What are you a parrot?


"Do parrots taste like wabbit?"
You mean pawwots, right?
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