bmks270 said:
So do most Bitcoin holders assume the OG wallet keys are lost or the OG Satoshi is deceased?
Imagine if the early Satoshi wallets started selling.
The Satoshi genesis block rewards are dead. He/they made them unspendable.
bmks270 said:
So do most Bitcoin holders assume the OG wallet keys are lost or the OG Satoshi is deceased?
Imagine if the early Satoshi wallets started selling.
bmks270 said:Definitely Not A Cop said:
Bitcoin
HA!
bmks270 said:
Thought experiment
Which is more useful.
You will be the only owner in the world.
Owning all the worlds:
Land
Gold (and gold mines)
Microsoft Stock
Bitcoin (and Bitcoin mines)
If you're the single owner, which is most likely to have buyers lined up to purchase?
TexasRebel said:
They: Satoshi Nakamoto
Change the genesis block: change the block that the entire blockchain is calculated against
TexasRebel said:
If you're thinking Satoshi Nakamoto is a person, that may explain why you trust bitcoin.
If you're thinking they don't have an exit strategy…
It can be changed.
I've pointed out how before.
The effort just has to be worthwhile.
Especially if their goal is to destabilize the world.
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Donald Trump tells CNBC he "sometimes will let people pay through #Bitcoin" pic.twitter.com/dhbgB2Xep6
— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 11, 2024
bmks270 said:
Because they have to pay for electricity and there are tons of miners. The more miners, the lower the profit of all miners, because they split all of the mines bitcoin.
Also, the algorithm is going to cut the reward in half soon, so it's going to get tougher to be profitable.
TexasRebel said:bmks270 said:
Because they have to pay for electricity and there are tons of miners. The more miners, the lower the profit of all miners, because they split all of the mines bitcoin.
Also, the algorithm is going to cut the reward in half soon, so it's going to get tougher to be profitable.
No their plan is to make people pay more for transactions.
Like Visa.
Only more transparent, and not illegal to hide.
A $10,000,000 pizza will really cost $11,000,000.
Algorithmic Epiphany said:TexasRebel said:bmks270 said:
Because they have to pay for electricity and there are tons of miners. The more miners, the lower the profit of all miners, because they split all of the mines bitcoin.
Also, the algorithm is going to cut the reward in half soon, so it's going to get tougher to be profitable.
No their plan is to make people pay more for transactions.
Like Visa.
Only more transparent, and not illegal to hide.
A $10,000,000 pizza will really cost $11,000,000.
The self-regulating structure of bitcoin allows for natural ebbs and flows between mining costs and incentives, transaction costs, and market value of bitcoin relative to energy/hardware prices.
tysker said:
The funny thing is if the price of BTC stays stable, by its own store-of-value argument, it should be a better performing long-term asset than the government issued currency for which its in primary competition as an asset class.
If you need the price of BTC to go up because it makes you feel cool, or smart, or comfortable explaining your BTC investment to your wife, then you've missed the point
bmks270 said:
Bitcoin code can be changed if enough participants agree. It's been updated and forked in the past.
Miners could decide it's more profitable to keep printing instead of capping the total.
It's all game theory based, expect miners to do what's good for them, whether is selfish mining (only requires 33% of the miners) or adding inflation. If they think it will hurt Bitcoin too much then they may not do it out of self preservation.
tysker said:Algorithmic Epiphany said:TexasRebel said:bmks270 said:
Because they have to pay for electricity and there are tons of miners. The more miners, the lower the profit of all miners, because they split all of the mines bitcoin.
Also, the algorithm is going to cut the reward in half soon, so it's going to get tougher to be profitable.
No their plan is to make people pay more for transactions.
Like Visa.
Only more transparent, and not illegal to hide.
A $10,000,000 pizza will really cost $11,000,000.
The self-regulating structure of bitcoin allows for natural ebbs and flows between mining costs and incentives, transaction costs, and market value of bitcoin relative to energy/hardware prices.
So as energy and hardware costs trend toward zero what happens to the so called'market value?'
Not Coach Jimbo said:bmks270 said:
Bitcoin code can be changed if enough participants agree. It's been updated and forked in the past.
Miners could decide it's more profitable to keep printing instead of capping the total.
It's all game theory based, expect miners to do what's good for them, whether is selfish mining (only requires 33% of the miners) or adding inflation. If they think it will hurt Bitcoin too much then they may not do it out of self preservation.
Miners aren't big enough (height) to pull it off... and a split fork doesn't require you to participate in their spinoff (bitegold).
Think you need to go back and do some research on this preconceived beliefs here... because you're spreading/ participating in misinformation.
First price and value are two different concepts.Not Coach Jimbo said:tysker said:
The funny thing is if the price of BTC stays stable, by its own store-of-value argument, it should be a better performing long-term asset than the government issued currency for which its in primary competition as an asset class.
If you need the price of BTC to go up because it makes you feel cool, or smart, or comfortable explaining your BTC investment to your wife, then you've missed the point
I'm not sure I understand your position
The price has to go up for it to be holding it's value... simply because the value of the usd is going down.
Ie for the longest time (and still true to my knowledge) gold wasn't keeping up with inflation, so youre taking a risk by owning a commodity (instead of keeping dollars), and its worth basically the same in biden bucks as it was in pre bidenflation dollars.
Price is determined by supply and demand. BTC supply is controlled (ie manipulated) by the code.Not Coach Jimbo said:tysker said:Algorithmic Epiphany said:TexasRebel said:bmks270 said:
Because they have to pay for electricity and there are tons of miners. The more miners, the lower the profit of all miners, because they split all of the mines bitcoin.
Also, the algorithm is going to cut the reward in half soon, so it's going to get tougher to be profitable.
No their plan is to make people pay more for transactions.
Like Visa.
Only more transparent, and not illegal to hide.
A $10,000,000 pizza will really cost $11,000,000.
The self-regulating structure of bitcoin allows for natural ebbs and flows between mining costs and incentives, transaction costs, and market value of bitcoin relative to energy/hardware prices.
So as energy and hardware costs trend toward zero what happens to the so called'market value?'
Market value is determined by supply and demand, same as any other commodity.
If cost to do business for a mining company goes down while demand stays the same, it just got more profitable to do business.
If those higher profits attract more miners, everyone gets a smaller pc of the same pot (predetermined in size), thus driving down the value of mining.
There is no problem with this scenario, if you believe there is, then you are misunderstanding the fundamentals...
How many BTC could be mined over the next five years if we didn't have the current restrictionist energy production regimes in place?Algorithmic Epiphany said:
How much bitcoin is a Dyson sphere?
bmks270 said:Not Coach Jimbo said:bmks270 said:
Bitcoin code can be changed if enough participants agree. It's been updated and forked in the past.
Miners could decide it's more profitable to keep printing instead of capping the total.
It's all game theory based, expect miners to do what's good for them, whether is selfish mining (only requires 33% of the miners) or adding inflation. If they think it will hurt Bitcoin too much then they may not do it out of self preservation.
Miners aren't big enough (height) to pull it off... and a split fork doesn't require you to participate in their spinoff (bitegold).
Think you need to go back and do some research on this preconceived beliefs here... because you're spreading/ participating in misinformation.
Nothing is misinformation.
What is SegWit? A soft fork change.
I agree the likelihood of future changes or mass adoption of a hard fork is very low, but it's still non-zero.
These are things I think the Bitcoin advocates brush under the rug and dismiss as impossible, when historically it's not impossible.
Also, there are a few published papers on selfish mining. In some cases it wouldn't be detectable. If one miner has 33% of the hash rate it becomes more profitable to "selfish mine."
I actually haven't seen a counter to why selfish mining isn't possible, so if you have one, please share.
Some miners could collude and selfish mine together. It's game theory. If caught selfish mining what does it mean? Are there regulations against it yet? What's the downside?
I also don't think anyone is likely to selfish mine unless it's like Iran, Russia, and China colluding.
Pumpkinhead said:
We live in a world today where I read some of these Bitcoin influencers on YouTube are making 20-25K a month income just from pushing crypto on their YouTube channel. I read that book 'Going Infinite' by Michael Lewis regarding FTX and SBF's rise and fall and it is hard to not come away with anything but an impression that the crypto stuff is not much more than a huge gambling casino fueled by a new banking universe that is pure wild west. Lewis comments in his book that 'Satoshi Nakamoto' if a person is likely baffled by what his idea actually turned into.
A lot of money is moving from one pocket to another. Some will get rich, some will get ruined. When you have such exorbitant potential returns like this, it is a breeding ground for greed and corruption that rivals anything Wall Street has come up with.
I disagree.Algorithmic Epiphany said:
About the same (difficulty adjustments)