Bitcoin - Part 2

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Anyone holding bitcoin right now will soon understand that putting profits in the tin is essential.
Bitcoin will bounce from 5000, offering one last chance to bank profits.
 
Wow. Satoshi Nakamoto is not only a computer geek but psychic and can control the future too!
No; but he could make bets on it, and increase the odds in his favour by designing the enterprise to be attractive to a targeted category of victims: millions of libertarians are still being sucked in by this Ponzi scheme that masquerades as a better alternative to 'fiat' currency". I think that's what's being argued. If that is what happened it is poetic justice.

The main force we have to protect us from swindlers and assailants is the government, with its repressive and regulatory legal and enforcement powers. In a democracy deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Libertarians see this as tyranny, and refuse to offer their consent. Not only, therefore, can they not resist swindles designed to negate and usurp the social functions of government - they positively embrace them. They have for example elected an "anti-President" in the USA.

Is bitcoin a scam intentionally conceived, and cleverly designed, to exploit this ideological prejudice?
 
No; but he could make bets on it, and increase the odds in his favour by designing the enterprise to be attractive to a targeted category of victims: millions of libertarians are still being sucked in by this Ponzi scheme that masquerades as a better alternative to 'fiat' currency". I think that's what's being argued. If that is what happened it is poetic justice.
Bitcoin is NOT a ponzi scheme and it doesn't "masquerade" as anything other than exactly what it is.

The fact that you have to consistently find new adjectives to make bitcoin seem worse than it is is your problem.
 
Bitcoin is NOT a ponzi scheme and it doesn't "masquerade" as anything other than exactly what it is.
Good. So what's your reasoning. Is this it?
The fact that you have to consistently find new adjectives to make bitcoin seem worse than it is is your problem.
I'm not at all impressed with that argument. Recall mine? Bitcoin and Ponzi schemes have a prime essential similarity. They are both arrangements for taking money out of an enterprise without putting any new real value into it.

All you have to do to refute that, is to show the value added, or revenue generated, by Bitcoin. As you have been invited to do: tell us what its price to earnings ratio is, for example. That would settle the matter.
 
Good. So what's your reasoning.
You should have paid attention the last time I explained why they are totally different.

All you have to do to refute that, is to show the value added, or revenue generated, by Bitcoin. As you have been invited to do: tell us what its price to earnings ratio is, for example. That would settle the matter.
Give it up! Bitcoin is nothing more than buying something at one price and selling it at another. It has more similarity to stamp collecting than any of the nefarious schemes that you want to shoehorn bitcoin into.
 
Bitcoin now the biggest bubble ever. RTTV

https://www.rt.com/business/412944-bitcoin-biggest-bubble-ever/

To the moon! updated chart from Convoy Investments showing #bitcoin surpassing all other previous financial bubbles in recorded history

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DQ33ZyIX4AYLeli.jpg


Max Keiser interviewed Michael Pento. See episode 1170. Max has been pushing Bitcoin for years, and still is. Pento was very skeptical.

While I am pretty much in agreement with Max on a number of issues, Bitcoin is one I am not.
 
You should have paid attention the last time I explained why they are totally different.


Give it up! Bitcoin is nothing more than buying something at one price and selling it at another. It has more similarity to stamp collecting than any of the nefarious schemes that you want to shoehorn bitcoin into.
I suppose there could be a speculative bubble in the price of old or rare stamps. If Bitcoin is as you say, then you are admitting that it is a bubble.

Because current stamps used to cover postage charges don't behave like bitcoin. Things providing a service don't shoot up in price to that degree; because the extent of the service gives them an intrinsic measurable value, which Bitcoin doesn't have.

Pure speculation. "Buying at one price and selling at another" can create a bubble, if it gets out of hand and becomes a mania unrelated to the object's value, assuming that it has a value in the first place.
 
What stops hackers from hacking exchanges to steal crypto-currency? Including bitcoin?


https://www.rt.com/business/410479-bitcoin-tether-theft-safety-cryptocurrency/

Hackers have robbed the wallet in the 19th largest cryptocurrency tether. The company behind the dollar-pegged cryptocurrency blamed "malicious action by an external attacker" for the theft of $30,950,010 on Monday.

Tether would not redeem any of the stolen tokens. The cryptocurrency’s market cap is $674 million, with the value of one tether equal to one US dollar.
 
I suppose there could be a speculative bubble in the price of old or rare stamps. If Bitcoin is as you say, then you are admitting that it is a bubble.

Because current stamps used to cover postage charges don't behave like bitcoin. Things providing a service don't shoot up in price to that degree; because the extent of the service gives them an intrinsic measurable value, which Bitcoin doesn't have.

Pure speculation. "Buying at one price and selling at another" can create a bubble, if it gets out of hand and becomes a mania unrelated to the object's value, assuming that it has a value in the first place.
So what? I have always said that bitcoin is in a bubble and that it has gone through many bubbles in its lifetime. Some were minor and some were spectacular. It is your assertion that bitcoin will go through a final bubble then have no lasting value that is without merit.

Collecting cancelled stamps that have no "intrinsic value" (whatever that means) and have practical use whatsoever is an exact analogy. Many stamp buyers are only in it for the money (ie speculators). There seems to be no end in sight to the number of "greater fools" who are willing to buy rare and expensive stamps.
 
Collecting cancelled stamps that have no "intrinsic value" (whatever that means)
It does have a meaning, believe me.
and have practical use whatsoever is an exact analogy. Many stamp buyers are only in it for the money (ie speculators). There seems to be no end in sight to the number of "greater fools" who are willing to buy rare and expensive stamps.
I agree with all that. It's the degree of social consequence that distinguishes the two kinds of speculation. I can't think of a case in which Joe Kennedy was advised by his shoe shine boy: buy Penny Blacks, and then Joe said, "when the shoe shine boy is giving advice on stamp collecting, it's time to get out."

Then the price of penny blacks crashed and brought the economy down with it. :D Not likely. But it is the same thing, one on a socially and economically insignificant scale, the other not. Bitcoin, like 1840 penny stamps, has no intrinsic or use value giving it any particular price at all.

Also unlike old cancelled stamps, Bitcoin has been made the darling of the extreme libertarian right, who support it on ideological grounds. Nobody treats stamps like that, AFAIK.
 
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millions of libertarians are still being sucked in by this Ponzi scheme that masquerades as a better alternative to 'fiat' currency". I think that's what's being argued. If that is what happened it is poetic justice.

Oh. Sounds like you're not as caring as I thought. Surprise.

The main force we have to protect us from swindlers and assailants is the government, with its repressive and regulatory legal and enforcement powers. In a democracy deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Libertarians see this as tyranny, and refuse to offer their consent. Not only, therefore, can they not resist swindles designed to negate and usurp the social functions of government - they positively embrace them. They have for example elected an "anti-President" in the USA.

What happens when the swindlers run the monetary system, and the government?

Is bitcoin a scam intentionally conceived, and cleverly designed, to exploit this ideological prejudice?

I don't know, what happens? Why don't you tell me? You're putting in a lot of work around here. Are you getting paid?
 
Oh. Sounds like you're not as caring as I thought. Surprise.
The only thing surprising is that you think the expression "poetic justice" is an indication of lack of concern. It isn't. It merely indicates that the punishment is deserved and appropriate, not that it mustn't excite sympathy.
You're putting in a lot of work around here. Are you getting paid?
Are you?
 
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I am researching some of the issues about currency, and taking one issue at a time.

Here is a false claim:

https://steemit.com/cryptocurrency/...s-money-created-by-work-how-a-bitcoin-is-born

The second is even more mind blowing: American dollars are created by debt. In stark contrast, cryptocurrencies are created by work. If there was ever a scam at work in the world of currencies, creating new dollars out of debt would seem pretty high on my list. Mining Bitcoin or curating Steem? Not so much.


When a person buys a house and takes out a loan from the bank, the debt is backed by a physical asset. The house. The bank can ask the Reserve Bank for cash and use the debt/asset. The dollar cash is backed by an asset.

When a bitcoin is created, electricity is used which creates nothing but a number. That is not "work". It is the same as burning down a tree and getting nothing but smoke and carbon dioxide as proof or work.
 
Looks like it might have reached its peak and starting to drop. If is is a DCB then the peak should not exceed the previous one.
Last small bounce peaked at $15,803, now around $14,750.

It's holding up quite well, rising from a level of around $13,500, which it held for a day or two. Is this the credit card-funded last gasp, or a do or die holdout by libertarian anarchocapitalists? Or is there a higher peak beyond $20,000 to be attained? Perhaps, but I rule out the fantasy levels of $100,000.
 
This whole crypto-currency craze is remarkable. I am seeing articles on how to develop your own currency.

I just checked out Ripple. They decided that they would start with 100 billion coins and kept 20 billions coins for themselves "as a fee".

At the beginning of 2017 the value price was about USD 0.006. On 4 Dec 2017 it took off from a price of 0.23 and has now reached about 2.47.

Wow. Crazy. :eye-poppi :jaw-dropp

People taking REAL money and buying this and that hoping to get rich. It sure is entertaining to watch it.
 
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