Mt.Gox is completely down now "502 error". DDOS?
Maybe putting up new servers or something? I'm not sure they would waste the time if the platform isn't trading at the moment.
Mt.Gox is completely down now "502 error". DDOS?
Say I have a coke in a glass bottle. I let you drink the coke. Then I take the glass bottle and shove it up my ass. Then I film this for YouPorn.1. Say I have $10k in cash. I want to buy gold, privately. The guy I want to buy from is on the other side of the planet. So I exchange cash for bitcoin, pay the guy, get the gold (or whatever) shipped and the entire transaction is pseudo-anonymous. I value privacy. Because I couldn't make this transaction anonymously without bitcoin, would that give it intrinsic value just based on utility?
Since my above answer was more nuanced than "no" let me try this one on too.2. Assuming the answer to the above question is "no"... Do you think there could ever be a sound currency similar to bitcoin? There are a lot of digital commodities that do have intrinsic value. Links, traffic and domains come to mind. Could a cryptocurrency ever become sound money if somehow backed with a digital commodity? Maybe links. Maybe credits on a traffic network, or bandwidth/data, I dunno.
Abstractions are very fucking confusing. Very few people try to unravel them (let alone acknowledge them).The whole digital aspect of everything is where it gets complicated for me.
I don't think it would be far fetched for major treasuries to drop a pretty penny and obtain a ton of bitcoins.
Say I have a coke in a glass bottle. I let you drink the coke. Then I take the glass bottle and shove it up my ass. Then I film this for YouPorn.
So now I have the physical gold in my home, and I have receipts for all that gold. I trade the receipts with you. By making the receipts (abstractions) have I actually doubled the amount of gold I have? Of course, not. They are only REPRESENTATIONS of the gold in my possession. Each piece of paper, is linked to a real thing, a gold bar or coin.
The paper is the currency, the gold is the money.
So now we come to Bitcoin or any virtual coin. Is it a thing, a real thing, or is it an abstraction?
There is no effective scarcity in the digital realm. Bitcoin thus far is like fiat money, except the government isnt involved. It has none of the attributes of sound money. It is entirely an abstraction. The minute BTC becomes unpopular it will become relatively worthless because it has only one purpose, and that is that it is a currency. The minute silver becomes unpopular as money it will still be used in industrial manufacturing. Or in jewelry, or in medical instruments.
This duality of value between a "real" application and the application as currency is what protects someone who uses a currency to store value in.
Abstractions are very fucking confusing. Very few people try to unravel them (let alone acknowledge them).
hth
Say I have a coke in a glass bottle. I let you drink the coke. Then I take the glass bottle and shove it up my ass. Then I film this for YouPorn.
Instead of rolling eyes, demonstrate my error."There is no effective scarcity in the digital realm."
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I adopted her yesterday with Bitcoin earnings. She's one of the most expensive purchases I've ever made. I'm thinking of naming her Bubble.
Instead of rolling eyes, demonstrate my error.
By the way, the minute gold becomes unpopular, like during the late 90s - early 2000s, it also drops in value like a fucking rock. Anybody else remember $300/oz?
I hope it does drop to $300. I'd spend every dime I have and buy like 100 or so grams. Ballin, bro.
Well that "sound money" is dropping in value against massively inflated QE influenced fiat right now.
Turns out supply and demand affect the price of all commodities, digital or otherwise.