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Okay, get a coffee and read this. We'll talk later, I'm sure
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You know in The Animatrix where the robots rise up and kill us all? This is where it starts.


So, you're blaming someone you call Dopey, for following his advice? Hmmm.

I know I'm likely completely missing the mark, but that's how much I don't understand it?

I'm gonna blame the two glasses of wine I've had.
I'll try again with coffee.

So, you're blaming someone you call Dopey, for following his advice? Hmmm."
Bite me.

If you look back you can see that since the Gold Standard was abandoned, the banks have been able to create money without security. Before this you could not lend money that you did not have in gold.
The credit card in your pocket has a set credit limit, that credit limit is free money in the system. The card is actually a money creating object. With Bitcoins and other similar systems, you cannot use them if you don't own them.

So if a bar of gold was worth £1 and you had a million gold bars, then there should only be a million pounds in circulation at any one time.
To be honest I've only got a tiny idea of how it all works but it seems that our economies are currently built on sand and bullshit - everyone is borrowing from each other yet no-one really has enough money to pay it all back.
Imagine if you wanted to borrow £5 from a friend whilst in the pub yet it turned out that your friend had no money on them. They then produce a pen and paper and proceed to write the words 'five pounds' on that bit of paper. You then take that note to the bar and the barman willingly accepts that as payment for the drinks, who then proceeds to use it to pay his staff wages at the end of month.
Now imagine if everyone in the pub was doing the same thing.
Think about the stories you hear of millions of pounds being lost on the stock exchange due to an ant farting in a Siberian jungle. No actual money is lost and the value usually recovers by the end of the day anyway.
It's all about how much confidence - ie, fresh air and unicorn farts - people have in how much something is worth.

If you look back to the hyperinflation that Germany suffered in the 1920s, things immediately got better when they ditched their old currency and created a new one... even though nothing in any tangible sense actually changed - all they did was change the name and appearance of their coins and notes.
It's like everyone hating a book called Barry Notter. The author then changes the title to Harry Potter and suddenly everyone changes their mind about the book.

I was all excited there for a minute.
Think I'll go light a candle in your author thread now...

I read about it in the Daily Mail!"
No, what happened was that Bitcoins became over valued. This is what happens with currencies. If you notice they are now back rising again, but I'll bet that doesn't get headlines in the Mail.

So if they can be overvalued, how are they a better form of currency?
They aren't tied to the gold standard nor anything tangible.
Fcuk it.
I'm gonna start paying for everything with bags of salt.
A tea towel for everyone willing to march to the coast with me!

Because currency is not linked to anything, it goes up and down. Because we only look at the value of our currency, we think that Bitcoins go up and down, they don't, currency does.
If you invest in Bitcoins, their value will always go up in the long term as they have limited supply. It's the classic supply/demand conundrum.
for example, some years ago, someone paid £2000 for a model of the Corgi Yellow Submarine in pristine condition. Unfortunately, the week after, someone found twenty of them in their loft in their original boxes. The price dropped like a stone.

About as much as they do tea towels, it seems.

Because currency is not linked to anything, it goes up and down. Because we o..."
I still don't see how bitcoins aren't as intangible as any other currency.
Sorry. You know how thick I am. :(


The whole point of bitcoins is that you 'create' them if you have the IT know how.
So I've been told.
I'm really not clever enough to understand all this...

The whole point of bitcoins is that you 'create' them if you have the IT know how.
So I've been told.
I'm really not clever enough to understand all this..."
That's how I understood it, apart from them limiting the amount that were allowed to be created.

The equivalent is not possible with Bitcoins.

As for peer to peer networking, there is already an alternative Internet with no hub to disrupt. You may not have heard of it. The authorities don't like it because it provides a (nearly) secure way for criminals to communicate, just like the www did in the early years.
The authorities are always a little bit behind the criminals but they do catch up.
Remember, the success of the wwwis largely down to the fact it became very popular for sharing porn when it was illegal in many places.
New technologies will not be suppressed. They may go underground to develop and then the authorities will find themselves even further behind the loop.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology...