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Bitcoin Misinformation


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2020 Nov 10, 10:01am   136,337 views  2,177 comments

by Onvacation   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  



In my opinion, it’s a colossal pump-and-dump scheme, the likes of which the world has never seen. In a pump-and-dump game, promoters “pump” up the price of a security creating a speculative frenzy, then “dump” some of their holdings at artificially high prices. And some cryptocurrencies are pure frauds. Ernst & Young estimates that 10 percent of the money raised for initial coin offerings has been stolen.

The losers are ill-informed buyers caught up in the spiral of greed. The result is a massive transfer of wealth from ordinary families to internet promoters. And “massive” is a massive understatement — 1,500 different cryptocurrencies now register over $300 billion of “value.”

https://www.vox.com/2018/4/24/17275202/bitcoin-scam-cryptocurrency-mining-pump-dump-fraud-ico-value

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1592   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 5:48am  

FJB says
Bitcoin is more like gold

I reject your premise. Gold only has to be mined once, a store of value, while Bitcoin has to be "mined" over and over or it disappears. Gold is an element. Bitcoin is a scam.
1593   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 5:50am  

FJB says
we might discover gold causes ovarian and testicular cancer

LOL!
Really?
1594   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 5:52am  

FJB says
Why haven't you answered a single one of my questions Bill?

I'm not bill.
1595   clambo   2022 Feb 1, 5:53am  

None of the guys who like Bitcoin bought it for $65,000, but some did and they are biting their fingernails waiting for other guys to bid it back up.
1596   mostly reader   2022 Feb 1, 8:10am  

FJB says
Also, bitcoin is significantly different than most other cryptocurrencies. The energy required is what protects it. The others may be quicker and cheaper but less secure among other things. Different niche. Bitcoin is more like gold. I believe it now does smart contracts natively recently though.
Right, "the energy required is what protects it." There's a flip side to that: small transactions are irreversible. If you used bitcoin to buy something for an equivalent of $10, and not satisfied, it's cheaper to just forget about it than to get a refund. Then, there may be another network which makes transactions easier but at the cost of security.

I understand that this is a built-in feature which comes with it's own benefits, but a fare comparison chart should at least mention it.
1597   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:41am  

mostly reader says
but a fare comparison chart should at least mention it.


Yeah, agree with everything you said. I'm just not sure what this comparison chart is you're referring to.
1598   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:42am  

Onvacation says
I'm not bill.


Come on Bill. It all makes sense. The affinity for Florida, the sail boat, the pirate picture...
1599   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:51am  

Onvacation says
Gold only has to be nined once


To keep gold requires a lot of energy. Storage, transport among others. The no energy after mining argument is a cannard.

Onvacation says
Gold is an element.


People literally get rich on vibrating air molecules. Music royalties. They don't own the air molecules themselves, just the vibrations.
1600   mostly reader   2022 Feb 1, 8:55am  

FJB says
mostly reader says
but a fare comparison chart should at least mention it.


Yeah, agree with everything you said. I'm just not sure what this comparison chart is you're referring to.
There was a chart few posts above mine, the type which compares crypto against other financial instruments (fiat/gold/etc.) and crypto comes out ahead in all metrics. I don't see it any longer.
1602   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:58am  

mostly reader says
There was a chart few posts above mine, the type which compares crypto against other financial instruments (fiat/gold/etc.) and crypto comes out ahead in all metrics. I don't see it any longer.


Oh, yeah, I recall seeing those but I didn't look at them closely / didn't post them. I like the others too. I don't understand why there is a debate amongst sound money people.
1604   Bitcoin   2022 Feb 1, 9:11am  

clambo says
None of the guys who like Bitcoin bought it for $65,000, but some did and they are biting their fingernails waiting for other guys to bid it back up.


Clambo in 2019: Someone bought the Bitcoin top at 20k!
Clambo in 2022: Someone bought the Bitcoin top at 65K!
Clambo in 2024: Someone bought the Bitcoin top at 150k!

There will always be the-glass-is-half-empty type of guys.... trying to shit on your investment is what they do in their free time.
Bitcoin has been the best performing asset over the last 10years.
1605   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 9:52am  

FJB says
To keep gold requires a lot of energy

Not if you put it in a chest, bury it and make a map. Or you can make it into jewelry. When you hold Bitcoin it is a flash drive worth only what you can get a rube to pay for it AND it requires an unsustainable amount of energy to maintain.
1606   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 9:54am  

FJB says
Onvacation says
Gold is an element.


People literally get rich on vibrating air molecules. Music royalties. They don't own the air molecules themselves, just the vibrations.

Are you equating gold to air? Really?
1607   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 9:57am  

mostly reader says
to.
There was a chart few posts above mine, the type which compares crypto against other financial instruments (fiat/gold/etc.) and crypto comes out ahead in all metrics. I don't see it any longer.


1608   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 9:58am  

Take your flash drive and a gold coin to a pawn shop and see which one they want to buy.
1609   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 10:00am  

FJB says
I don't understand why there is a debate amongst sound money people.

Definition of sound money

: money not liable to sudden appreciation or depreciation in value : stable money specifically : a currency based on or redeemable in gold — compare paper money.
1610   Onvacation   2022 Feb 1, 10:01am  

Bitcoin is neither sound nor stable.
1611   Bitcoin   2022 Feb 1, 10:32am  

Onvacation says
FJB says
To keep gold requires a lot of energy

Not if you put it in a chest, bury it and make a map


That's correct FJB. Its much more cost effective, safer and easier to store Bitcoin than it is to store gold.
No need to buy a chest and bury it in the ground. No need for a map either.
With Crypto you simply store your wealth on a cold storage/hardware wallet. Keep your private keys at a different place.

A hundred years ago burring your wealth in the ground was maybe a thing but this is 2022.
....Bill still uses a landline and overpays for matchbox cars :)
1612   clambo   2022 Feb 1, 11:08am  

Ha ha so the guy who bought Bitcoin in 2021 for $65,000 and is $30,000 underwater in 2022 is gonna have $150,000 in 2024?

That’s a neat trick.

Gold bugs can easily trade GLDM but lose the expense ratio 0.18%.
1613   Bitcoin   2022 Feb 1, 11:24am  

clambo says
Ha ha so the guy who bought Bitcoin in 2021 for $65,000 and is $30,000 underwater in 2022 is gonna have $150,000 in 2024?

That’s a neat trick.


no tricks here. Bitcoin started ten years ago with less than $1. That's what happens if you have limited supply of Bitcoin. You cant print more.
People like you thought 20K was the forever top and Bitcoin will never reach 20k again. If I would have told you Bitcoin will be trading for 38k on 2/1/2022 you would have laughed and declared me crazy. $150k seems unbelievable to you in 2022. Lets talk in 5 years from now :)
1614   clambo   2022 Feb 1, 12:57pm  

Actually I never thought about Bitcoin until my friend bragged about her nephew having it recently.
1615   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:27pm  

Onvacation says
Not if you put it in a chest, bury it and make a map. Or you can make it into jewelry. When you hold Bitcoin it is a flash drive worth only what you can get a rube to pay for it AND it requires an unsustainable amount of energy to maintain.


If you bury it you cannot use it. Burying it and making a map is not secure either. I don't recommend it but you could make jewelry out of bitcorn wallets. It does not use that much energy relatively speaking. That's just FUD someone convinced you is true. Gold mining alone uses more energy so do coffee machines. If you shut down the legacy banking system it's a huge net plus in energy savings, it's not even close.
1616   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:28pm  

Onvacation says
Are you equating gold to air? Really?


You're damn right I am but I'm not making a comparison of equivalence, quite the contrary I'm showing you that people have decided vibrating air has value and in some cases A LOT of value.
1617   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:29pm  

Onvacation says
Take your flash drive and a gold coin to a pawn shop and see which one they want to buy.


I don't hang out in dirty pawn shops.
1618   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:34pm  

Onvacation says
Definition of sound money

: money not liable to sudden appreciation or depreciation in value : stable money specifically : a currency based on or redeemable in gold — compare paper money.


We all saw the dictionary companies change the definition of many things over the past 2 years. 'Vaccines' etc... The person who coined the phrase was Aristotle as far as I know unless someone before him did. Here is a gold bug blurb about it:

https://www.bullionvault.com/gold-news/money_aristotle_050120092?source=patrick.net

Notice there isn't anything in there about gold or volatility?

On that note I DO agree with you and the dict, sound money shouldn't be volatile. I did not say bitcorn was sound money. I suggested I'm a sound money proponent and that's the upside to bitcorn: It's volatility is generally positive (good!) and at some point it'll flatten out and become sound. I'm guessing that'll be true when there are a few billion people using it.

I think the days of insane overnight gazillionaires are over and there is much less upside but I think a 10x is given and likely much much more. I'll be happy if it beats the USD inflation plus some sort of decent premium over the long term. I expect I'll be happily surprised.
1619   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:37pm  

Onvacation says


I'd (for now) put asterisks next to bitcorn being 'durable' and 'secure' simply because it hasn't existed for very long. Many people make the mistake that bitcorn has been hacked which isn't true. Those were essentially bank robberies or the feds scrapping aws ec2 instances because morons left their bitcorn up there.

I do believe it's durable and secure though - we shall see.
1620   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:40pm  

clambo says
Actually I never thought about Bitcoin until my friend bragged about her nephew having it recently.


You don't have to. You've made great choices with your mutual funds and it paid off. I'm afraid younger generations (I'm X, younger than moi) won't be able to recreate your success.

This is one way for some of millennials and zennnials to catch a break. It's a somewhat short term period before things flatten out for good. Last I read >95% of crypto was held by those two generations. Lots less with X -> Boomers -> Silent in that order.
1621   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 8:43pm  

clambo says
Gold bugs can easily trade GLDM but lose the expense ratio 0.18%.


I've been staring at the gold and silver markets for nearly a year. Feels like I should have stacked some last summer. I do think they are something people should have. Cannibal Anarchy could happen. The sun could decide to EMP the earth and shut down the internet for an extended period. I think gold and silver are great for that situation despite the lackluster performance over the past decade. Even if they don't do as well this year as I think they might.

But that damn premium just kills me. For silver in particular it's like 50% over spot. If you try to buy a monster box of silver it's more expensive per coin that just buying singletons. WTF is up with that? I know it's heavier/$ and takes workmanship and shipping but damn.
1622   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 1, 9:12pm  

People chided those new fangled electric candles at one point. Candles worked just fine for thousands of years.

FJB says
bury it


If I buried it I couldn't make 100,000 $10 loans which expire in 24hrs and automatically irrevocably retrieve the interest and principle I charged as per the smart contract.
1623   Patrick   2022 Feb 1, 11:26pm  

It all depends on no one ever being able to figure out how to reverse the md5 or whatever hashing algorithm they are using.

That is, if someone figures out a quick way to say "given this input block, what unknown string must I tack on to the block to get the hash of the string to come out with a certain number of zeros at the end?"

It's totally possible someone might figure that out, then it's game over and all bitcoin will belong to that person. It will then take about zero energy for that person to mine coins, and it will be very fast. Whoever can do the calculation first gets the vig from the validation of that block.

Currently, people who want to mine coins have to just try all possible unknown strings until they get a hit. That's what's using up all the energy and making it slow.
1624   Onvacation   2022 Feb 2, 5:52am  

Patrick says
That's what's using up all the energy and making it slow.

By design.

If people start mining too fast the puzzles get harder, by design.

"Mining", "coin", "digital gold" it's all a big scam to lure in the gullible, by design
1625   Onvacation   2022 Feb 2, 5:54am  

FJB says
If I buried it I couldn't make 100,000 $10 loans which expire in 24hrs and automatically irrevocably retrieve the interest and principle I charged as per the smart contract.

So you rent out your digital gold? You've got to explain that one.
1626   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 2, 8:49am  

Onvacation says
So you rent out your digital gold? You've got to explain that one.


No I don't personally do that but that's an example of what someone can do.
1627   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 2, 8:57am  

Patrick says
It all depends on no one ever being able to figure out how to reverse the md5 or whatever hashing algorithm they are using.


https://www.movable-type.co.uk/scripts/sha256.html?source=patrick.net

"SHA-256 is one of the successor hash functions to SHA-1 (collectively referred to as SHA-2), and is one of the strongest hash functions available. SHA-256 is not much more complex to code than SHA-1, and has not yet been compromised in any way. The 256-bit key makes it a good partner-function for AES. It is defined in the NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) standard ‘FIPS 180-4’. "

This is upgradeable if say, super duper computers become common. Reality that's what everyone has been trying to do for the past decade - break it. Nobody has. There is something called a 51% attack that is more likely but it would require a nation state to buy up all of the high end compute over maybe a 6 month period costing billions. People would notice and the network could be hardened.
1628   Bitcoin   2022 Feb 2, 8:58am  

FJB says
Onvacation says
So you rent out your digital gold? You've got to explain that one.


No I don't personally do that but that's an example of what someone can do.


Crypto allows you to lend out your funds (peer-to-peer lending) for an interest payment and/or to stake your crypto for a reward.
I stake my ADA and Dot and earn between 5% for ADA and 12% for DOT (on Kraken). But I get the staking reward payout every 5 days, so the staking rewards are like an compounding interest payment (staking rewards on staking rewards) :)

If you burry your gold, you dont earn any staking rewards. You can also not lend buried gold to anyone. You might also not find your gold again if you lose your map. Also, your gold does not really appreciate in value. Bitcoin is up more than 10,000% in the last few years. Gold has remained at the same value. Gold is a terrible inflation hedge. Stocks, Crypto and RE are an excellent inflation hedge.

Its no surprise to me that the guy (Bill) who pays 10k for a matchbox car also thinks about buying gold to burry it.
1629   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2022 Feb 2, 9:00am  

Bitcoin for Corporations:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdgP25UcHB0&source=patrick.net

It's long and I haven't watched it all but the last segment starting at 3:00:00 is Saylor and Lyn Alden and can bring people up to date with the latest. Lyn has great macro analysis for lots of things not just bitcorn.
1630   Bitcoin   2022 Feb 2, 9:05am  

FJB says
This is upgradeable if say, super duper computers become common. Reality that's what everyone has been trying to do for the past decade - break it. Nobody has. There is something called a 51% attack that is more likely but it would require a nation state to buy up all of the high end compute over maybe a 6 month period costing billions. People would notice and the network could be hardened.


spot on. Its more likely that we will see a zombie outbreak or an alien invasion before someone hacks Bitcoin. But, if someone manages it, more power to that person (pun intended). That would be a nice way to go down in the history books. So, get on it, hack Bitcoin! Best of luck and let us know how it goes!
1631   clambo   2022 Feb 2, 9:08am  

I mentioned it elsewhere but I bought some of an ETF of Swiss stocks, which I consider my defensive investment, rather than gold or similar.

I have no doubt that the Swiss Franc will be a strong currency, and the few Swiss companies in the index are likely to be around for a long time (e.g. Nestle).

FLSW has a low expense ratio.
The time I visited Switzerland 🇨🇭 I bought 3 Swiss Francs for $1 USD. Today $1 USD doesn’t buy 1 Swiss Franc.

My problem is I don’t have new money coming in so I will have to sell something to buy more.

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