| Thread Closed |
Bitcoin, alternate currency |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Jan21-13, 03:59 PM | #1 |
|
Blog Entries: 1
|
Bitcoin, alternate currency
I recently heard about bitcoin, but don't know that much about it. I read the Wikipedia article, but it wasn't particularly enlightening. What are the prospects of an alternate currency, like bitcoin, being viable. My guess is probably not much since it lacks the coercive power of a government. The concept of alternate currencies is extremely fascinating to me because it shows that the value of money is only in the eye of the beholder.
|
| Jan22-13, 09:15 PM | #2 |
|
|
Bitcoin is illegal.
You use a computer to generate the coins, for a person getting into it now it's pretty hard to make any real coin unless you're trading goods for it. Currently it's mostly only used by people sourcing illegal supplies and material from places like: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk_Road_(marketplace)) It's also highly used in the human exploitation world and on the under-net of TOR networks. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tor_(anonymity_network)) I think the prospects of an alternate currency gaining any ground are VERY slim - though in the black market world it could take over to a certain extent since it offers anonymity and can't be controlled via the current global market powers. |
| Jan23-13, 12:41 PM | #3 |
|
|
|
| Jan23-13, 05:11 PM | #4 |
|
|
Bitcoin, alternate currency
There are a great number of problems with Bitcoin. Which are thoroughly understood by macroeconomics, especially deflation and inflation.
The current Bitcoins have the drawback, that they stop being produced at some point. When more people enter the Bitcoin market this leads to increasing prices which leads to hoarding, which leads to price increases. This is what happens with gold. Most gold is sitting in the central banks vaults for the sole purpose of hoarding. Nobody uses it for purchasing. And on a side note I don't see why I should make the few people rich who started minting early. But that is a moral point not a technical one. The Bitcoin people produce a lot of hogwash, that deflation is only bad when you are not prepared for it and some similar nonsense, but deflation will kill Bitcoins. The second problem is that Bitcoins are not very unique. Once the Bitcoin currency takes off, nothing prevents other people from opening their own Bitcoin copy, possibly connecting it to their own legal or illegal markets. I can already see all the great new currencies in my mind Flipcoin, Bitcash, Cryptocoin... you can have them with inflation, without inflation, self destroying. Maybe someone even convinces the people to change their Bitcoin client program, if you control the majority of the clients then you could even mint Bitcoins anew. |
| Jan24-13, 05:18 AM | #5 |
|
|
There are quite a few alternative "currencies" that lacks backing by government, while seem to work:
Somalian shilling that exists long after collapse of its country http://www.economist.com/node/21551492 (used for small transactions or in big bundles, its value is low enough to make forgery not specially profitable business) Transfers between phones in Africa is also not dramatically far from effectively becoming a currency on it's own, and I've seen an idea to calculate that money also within money aggregates. |
| Jan26-13, 03:03 PM | #6 |
|
|
Bitcoin has many strengths. Its peer to peer with no central oversight needed or wanted. The prospects of it being viable are 100% because it already is viable. The black market supports it and that isn't going anywhere anytime soon.
Of course there are caveats to it as well. Its new and there for risky. If it gets popular its going to be under attack from banks and governments for the freedom it allows. Even if/when bitcoin goes under, cryptographic electronic currencies are not going anywhere. Not as long as there is still an internet. I would not be surprised if in a few hundred years peer-to-peer cryptocurrencies are an important part of the global economy. |
| Jan26-13, 07:36 PM | #7 |
|
|
It's not even currency, it's simply a medium of barter. You could just as well buy rocks and then trade them. Without a banking system, the supply can grow only by producing and selling more. You can't loan them, they don't provide economic growth.
|
| Jan26-13, 07:39 PM | #8 |
|
|
|
| Jan26-13, 07:43 PM | #9 |
|
|
|
| Jan27-13, 01:06 AM | #10 |
|
|
There was currency long before there was fractional banking though. I have never heard of fractional banks being a necessary requirement for something to be "currency".
Currency is a medium of barter. It has nothing to do with whether your bank holds fractional reserves. |
| Jan27-13, 07:32 AM | #11 |
|
|
|
| Jan27-13, 11:44 AM | #12 |
|
|
|
| Jan27-13, 11:48 AM | #13 |
|
|
|
| Jan28-13, 01:17 AM | #14 |
|
Blog Entries: 1
|
I don't understand what Alan means by "real" money. Money is a made up concept it is only as real as the people who use it agree that it is. If you only have two people using a currency, it's not real, but if you can get a billion people to use it is definitely real. How real or fake a currency is really only depends on how many people agree to use it.
|
| Jan28-13, 03:57 AM | #15 |
|
Mentor
Blog Entries: 1
|
|
| Jan28-13, 01:46 PM | #16 |
|
|
Wasn't segniorage a form of fractional reserve banking?
|
| Thread Closed |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: Bitcoin, alternate currency
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Free Market Currency 'Bitcoin' | Social Sciences | 5 | ||
| new reserve currency? | Social Sciences | 8 | ||
| Currency | Social Sciences | 6 | ||
| currency exchange | General Discussion | 7 | ||