russ_watters
Mentor
- 23,694
- 11,133
[Re-arranging for better flow:]
More generally though, even if it is just a currency, people invest in currencies - some on purpose and everyone else just by the mere fact that they use them. Knowing what your currency is going to be worth tomorrow or a year from now is critical in your decision-making on how to use a currency. People don't tend to think about it that much for dollars or euros precisely because these currencies are stable. Wtih Bitcoin being wildly unstable, it is critical for any user to seriously consider its future value.
The idea that something - anything - is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it is true at a basic level, but it is so vague as to be useless here. What we need to be discussing is why someone is willing to pay a certain value for it. What measures and methodology do they use to decide what they are willing to pay?
-With a Beanie Baby or a Bitcoin, guessing at what the next person might pay is all there is - and there is really no basis at all for the guess beyond their confidence in the value.
-With a share of Boeing stock, the earnings of the company (current and projected future) pay a large part in determining what people will pay (P/E ratio, for example).
-With a house, the fact that you can live in it, its size and location pay a large part in determining what people will pay for it.
For a share of Boeing stock or a house, there are real, physical, tangeable things that impact its value. Beanie Babies and Bitcoins don't have that.
If the makers wanted it to be a proof of concept, they should have run the code on an isolated network somewhere, not released it to the public.
Worse, Bitcoin has two things dragging its value to negative sum:
1. As in the case of Beanie Babies, the maker of Bitcoin has pulled a considerable amount of value out of the market while starting it.
2. Bitcoin mining requires a huge amount of energy, which makes the real value added to the market of each new Bitcoin created much, much smaller than the current market price. Also, FYI, the end of mining (probably in around 2017) is a good place to put a bet on the demise of Bitcoin, if it doesn't happen sooner. Since the value is propped-up by excitement and much of it is due to mining, people will pay a lot less attention to it when the mining stops. And lack of attention is what kills fads.
...and btw, RPG ingame currencies and objects are traded in the real-world. What do you think happens to their value when the games become obsolete and lose popularity and/or the plug is pulled on their universes? They revert back to their intrinsic value: zero.
As I said, Bitcoin is different things to different people - which I think is one of its biggest problems right now. The idea of using it as an investment is all over the popular media coverage and is discussed in a lot of internet discussions of it, including this one. So I'm not sure why would would need to ask where I got the idea.ModusPwnd said:Why do you keep insisting its an investment? Where did you get this idea?
More generally though, even if it is just a currency, people invest in currencies - some on purpose and everyone else just by the mere fact that they use them. Knowing what your currency is going to be worth tomorrow or a year from now is critical in your decision-making on how to use a currency. People don't tend to think about it that much for dollars or euros precisely because these currencies are stable. Wtih Bitcoin being wildly unstable, it is critical for any user to seriously consider its future value.
You misunderstand my reason for saying that. I'm quite content that I'm correct given that one of the sources I already cited uses the word the way I did and another discusses the issue without using the word (and googling key words from it leads you right to "intrinsic value"). But I've seen discussions of this get sidetracked by people wanting to argue over the word instead of discussing the issue. It's a red herring that I don't want to waste time on.The value of a beanie baby is based off of what somebody will pay for it. Thats it. It doesn't matter how much it cost to make, it doenst matter what you think is a fad or speculation. If somebody is willing to pay, it has that value. If nobody is willing to pay then it is valueless. Intrinsic has a specific meaning, no debate is required. A particle's spin is intrinsic angular momentum, the Earth's rotation is not. You have not been using the word correctly and it confuses the discussion. And then when I call you out on your improper usage of the word, you don't want to argue what it means... Ha!
The idea that something - anything - is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it is true at a basic level, but it is so vague as to be useless here. What we need to be discussing is why someone is willing to pay a certain value for it. What measures and methodology do they use to decide what they are willing to pay?
-With a Beanie Baby or a Bitcoin, guessing at what the next person might pay is all there is - and there is really no basis at all for the guess beyond their confidence in the value.
-With a share of Boeing stock, the earnings of the company (current and projected future) pay a large part in determining what people will pay (P/E ratio, for example).
-With a house, the fact that you can live in it, its size and location pay a large part in determining what people will pay for it.
For a share of Boeing stock or a house, there are real, physical, tangeable things that impact its value. Beanie Babies and Bitcoins don't have that.
But probably a lot less than he gained in the 1990s and 2000s and when he lost, he only lost a fraction of the total value and then only temporarily. That's the point here: Becaue the value of stocks are based on something tangible, they almost never lose all of their value. Beanie Babies did because their value was based only on what the next person was willing to pay and when the next person realized he wasn't willing to pay anything, they crashed completely.My grandpa lost a lot in 99 and 08.
I absolutely agree that the Wright Brothers' flight was a successful proof of concept. But you just highlighted critical differences between it and the Bitcoin launch that make Bitcoin wildly - possibly even criminally - irresponsible. Yes, the Wright Brothers took no passengers on the first flight? Why? Because it was dangerous and they didn't want to hurt anyone if it didn't work! But Bitcoin was released on the public with no (as far as we know) testing, using the general public as the guniea pigs to work out the bugs. And guess what: real people have gotten hurt.Quite easily. I already explained to you what a proof of concept is. When/if bitcoin fails the lessons learned from that will be implemented in the new protocols.
As I mentioned in my previous post... I measure its success as a proof of concept. Its like the wright brothers flight at kitty hawk. It was short, expensive, transported no cargo and only carried a person a small distance. By your metric here that flight was a failure. By my (and others) metric, it was a success. A success as a proof of concept. [emphasis added]
If the makers wanted it to be a proof of concept, they should have run the code on an isolated network somewhere, not released it to the public.
Er, well, no - you just said it was just a proof of concept and you stated correctly that a proof of concept costs money, it doesn't make money. I'm not sure the users of Bitcoin really recognize that they are paying the inventor to be his crash test dummies!I hope the inventor is rich. He created a new innovative technology that has facilitated free trade and empowered individuals.
Well, we certainly agree on the second part except of course that a proof of concept should never, ever be sent to a market. Still, based on the paper and comments from users it appears that Bitcoin isn't just a piece of technology, it is an attempt at creating a new economic system. Perhaps that's why it wasn't just tested in a lab - they needed it to be released to the public to see if the market would work. And in my opinion, the success of the piece of technology is much less important than the failure of the economic system.Successful as a proof of concept for cryptocurrency. A proof of concept doesn't need to be successful in the market to be a success, that is not how proof of concepts work.
We're not talking about "wealth", we're talking about Bitcoins. Some markets/transactions/vehicles are zero sum and others aren't. Currency exchanging is zero sum because the purpose of a currency is to be a carrier vehicle for the value of something else, not to have a growing value itself. The thing you do with the Bitcoin may be a positive sum activity, but the Bitcoin (or dollar) you use to facilitate it is not.Nope. As you mentioned before, wealth is not a zero sum game. When trade is facilitated through new economic means then both parties in the trade can win.
Worse, Bitcoin has two things dragging its value to negative sum:
1. As in the case of Beanie Babies, the maker of Bitcoin has pulled a considerable amount of value out of the market while starting it.
2. Bitcoin mining requires a huge amount of energy, which makes the real value added to the market of each new Bitcoin created much, much smaller than the current market price. Also, FYI, the end of mining (probably in around 2017) is a good place to put a bet on the demise of Bitcoin, if it doesn't happen sooner. Since the value is propped-up by excitement and much of it is due to mining, people will pay a lot less attention to it when the mining stops. And lack of attention is what kills fads.
Setting the bar a bit low, aren't we? Of course any number greater than zero is an increase!Regardless, BitCoin has been successful at getting wider adoption. The amount of stores and people using BitCoin to facilitate trade has gone up, not down. BitCoin is already a success.
Um...ok. So you think PayPal is a bad idea, but not bad enough to keep you from using it? Aren't you arguing against your own success criteria for Bitcoin? Anyway, well, I think that Bitcoin is a bad idea and as a result, no later than 2017, no one will use it.So what? I think using PayPal is a bad idea. Still, there is a market need for PayPal and it does get used. I use it sometimes when I have too.
I don't know why it was invented, but I know never to trust someone who is hiding something - you never know what else they are hiding.How do YOU know why BitCoin was invented?
I read the original paper. Take a look;
https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
Just read the first two paragraphs in the introduction and you can see why BitCoin was invented. You need not agree to understand.
Perhsps not, but there an awful lot of people who stand to lose an awful lot of money because they are treating it like one.Not that its relevant though, because BitCoin is not and was never designed to be an investment vehicle.
You are aware of where the comparison to Magic cards comes from, aren't you...?Your comparisons to mutual funds, beanie babies and magic cards are not relevant at all...
I agree there are some comparisons to be made there and I agree that because it is somewhat unique it takes bits and pieces of comparisons from many things and none are necessarily perfect. I never claimed any were. But clearly, an investment collectible is one of the things it is like...The better comparison would be to gift cards, paypal, western union and RPG ingame currencies. But of course its new and innovative so no comparison is complete accurate - BitCoin is the first of its kind.
...and btw, RPG ingame currencies and objects are traded in the real-world. What do you think happens to their value when the games become obsolete and lose popularity and/or the plug is pulled on their universes? They revert back to their intrinsic value: zero.