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Online Gambling Site Bets On Bitcoin To Avoid U.S. Laws

SomePgmr writes with a story about an online gambling site planning to use Bitcoin to sidestep U.S. regulations that effectively ban online gambling. From the article: "Michael Hajduk had sunk one year and about $20,000 into developing his online poker site, Infiniti Poker, when the U.S. online gambling market imploded. On April 15, 2011, a day now known in the industry as Black Friday, the U.S. Department of Justice shut down the three biggest poker sites accessible to players in the U.S., indicting 11 people on charges of bank fraud, money laundering, and illegal gambling. ... Infiniti Poker ... plans to accept Bitcoin when it launches later this month. The online currency may allow American gamblers to avoid running afoul of complex U.S. laws that prevent businesses from knowingly accepting money transfers for Internet gambling purposes. 'Because we're using Bitcoin, we're not using U.S. banks — it's all peer-to-peer,' Hajduk says. 'I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong.'"

347 comments

  1. Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yep! This'll stop the government from coming after you!

    Not!

    And good job. Base your business off a virtual currency with ZERO backing and no control whatsoever.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
    1. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by YodasEvilTwin · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It kind of sounds like someone exploiting idiots who have bought into bitcoin, actually.

    2. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Cryacin · · Score: 5, Funny

      And good job. Base your business off a virtual currency with ZERO backing and no control whatsoever.

      And it's worse than US Dollars exactly how now?

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    3. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by diamondmagic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So I pay for a product - someone signs over a certain amount of Bitcoin to my private key - and I receive the product (the ability to do the same to someone else). So I'm sorry, what's the scam, again? It's all there, in black and white mathematics.

    4. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No control? That's an interesting way to look at it. Bitcoin is controlled by the consensus system that underlies it, if you decide you want to violate the rules then you are split off automatically into a parallel universe where whatever you do won't be recognized by your trading partners. That is a much stronger form of control than traditional currencies have. To change the rules requires the economic majority to upgrade (and thus force everyone else to upgrade with them, so trade can continue). It's pretty democratic, in that sense.

      Contrast this to, eg, the US dollar, where control has been deliberately passed to a quasi-private branch of government known as the central bank. Its unelected leader pulls the levers of monetary policy in an attempt to plan the economy.

      So both types of currency are controlled, just in different ways.

    5. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by VAXcat · · Score: 4, Funny

      And platinum...don't forget the platinum...

      --
      There is no God, and Dirac is his prophet.
    6. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about? I bet you're one of those suckers who takes things at face value and doesn't realize, for instance, that you legally don't have to pay income taxes because of some obscure argument that I'll describe to you for just $19.95.

      That said, the laws against online gambling are pure crony capitalism.

    7. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Mitreya · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yep! This'll stop the government from coming after you! Not!

      It should, actually.
      Otherwise, the government could come after anyone who plays Monopoly, too. Or anyone who plays poker with virtual gold coins in an MMORPG.

    8. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US hasn't been able to back its currency with gold since Nixon formally abandoned the gold standard (and in reality, much before that). Land? What currency has ever been backed with land? Can I go to the US government with a stack of $100 bills and say "ok, I'd like the land that backs this currency now please?". Er, no. The US, like most countries, doesn't back its currency with anything. The only thing that people can exchange dollars for with the government is .... more dollars.

    9. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You give them your bitcoins. They give you poker chips. You ask for bitcoins back for your poker chips. They say, "What poker chips?"

      What do you do?

      With banks you can initiate chargebacks and sue them because something of value (money) was lost. With bitcoins, good luck proving bitcoins are of value if you want to sue.

    10. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US has a vast supply of gold and land backing its currency, at least theoretically it has something backing it. I realize what a fiat currency is, i am just pointing out that it could pay creditors.

      The gold standard, really? The USA abandoned the gold standard long ago. The only thing backing the US Dollar is their word.

    11. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Proving Bitcoins have value is trivial - there are exchanges where they are traded against other currencies for non-trivial prices, so they clearly have value. What more proof could you demand?

      Yes, you can charge back with credit cards. This is great for the credit card companies who then lose the incentive to make their systems more secure, because merchants (ie, the poker companies) lose the money. With Bitcoin you cannot, so the deck is metaphorically stacked in favor of the merchant vs the punter. It's a little better than the reverse because most merchants at least have reputations they want to protect and aren't going anywhere, unlike buyers who can disappear in an instant. But Bitcoin does have ways to offer buyer protection - it's discussed in the very first page of the white paper describing the systems design. The protocol allows for dispute mediators who can decide who gets the money (buyer or seller) but who cannot steal the money themselves.

    12. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Hentes · · Score: 1

      People who go to gambling site don't mind risks. At least you don't necessarily lose on btc, unlike other gambling services.

    13. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poker sites are operated off-shore, good luck getting back your real money if one disappears.

    14. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering the large transactions made in Bitcoin every day, I doubt proving they have value would be troublesome.

    15. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by bigkahunah · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The US has a vast supply of gold and land backing its currency, at least theoretically it has something backing it. I realize what a fiat currency is, i am just pointing out that it could pay creditors.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjxY9rZwNGU

    16. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US backs its currency with a fleet of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. That's far better backing than land or gold.

    17. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by chrisautrey · · Score: 2

      And then you and everyone else stops going there and their buisiness goes toes up. As a general rule, you don't stay in buisiness and make money when you fraud your customers. How many times have you picked the 3-star vendor with crappy feedback over the 5-star one?

    18. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is the US going away tomorrow? No.
      Are they going away next year? No.
      Are they going away in 5-10 years? No.

      Is "A. Random H@X0R" going away tomorrow? Who?
      Are they going away next year? Who?
      Are they gone in 5-10 years? Who?

      Essentially currency is based on trust.
      For anyone who's not a complete, gullible rube, Bitcoin fails the "smell test" there.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    19. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a casino decided to used Monopoly money as its "chips", then the government would most certainly consider those transactions to be the same as any other casino real-money transaction.

      The government doesn't care about virtual currencies for a lot of reasons, but one of the major ones is that you can't turn it back into dollars in any reliable way. You can, on the other hand, with casino chips, and those are treated as money for all kinds of legal purposes. If you can turn Bitcoins into dollars in a reliable way, then they'll probably fall under the existing regulations that affect gambling with casino chips. If you can't, then perhaps the government won't intervene - but good luck running a successful casino for US customers with a currency you can't turn into dollars.

    20. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Its not terribly useful in the real world?

      I mean honestly, can I buy food with it? Gas? How many merchants within 50 miles of my home (DC area) are currently accepting bitcoins? What about amazon, or ebay / paypal? Newegg?

      Sure, I could transfer it to other people, but its also a pretty volatile currency. I have no reason to believe the value sent will reflect anything near the value once I exchange it into dollars, if I can even perform the exchange (since it requires Bitcoin exchanges or a willing purchaser).

      Its kind of like trying to transfer money by trading stock: sure, it sort of works, but who really wants that kind of volatility? What supermarket would ever want to do that?

    21. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Rockoon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, like most countries the U.S. backs its currency with the authority to tax .

      The dollar has value because it can pay a dollars worth of taxes.

      When Germany jumped into the eurozone, adoption of the euro was extremely slow until the year that Germany required all taxes be paid in euros, and in that year almost everyone converted.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    22. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US backs its currency with a fleet of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. That's far better backing than land or gold.

      Apparently not if the currency exchange rate is to be believed. Numerous currencies have gained and surpassed the US dollar in the last couple of years.

    23. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      They pay you today's $50 worth of bitcoins. How confident are you that that will be $50 worth of bitcoins tomorrow?

      Youre essentially bartering with stock; if that floats your boat go for it.

    24. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Yoda222 · · Score: 1

      What about people playing poker with poker chips ?

    25. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously never learned about how the US paid off its war debts repeatedly (1776.,1812, Mexico) by selling land from the Louisiana Purchase. They've still got plenty if they ever decided they needed some cash.

    26. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And good job. Base your business off a virtual currency with ZERO backing and no control whatsoever.

      It's like musical chairs. You're hoping you can convert your Bitcoins back into a real currency before the music stops.

      But anyway, you're relying on some distant online gambling site to be honest and give fair odds and payouts. Really? It's like betting on the professional wrestling. The use of Bitcoins is not your biggest risk.

    27. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 0

      Other than the fact that exchanged have been broken into and people have been robbed of bitcoins of supposedly VERY non-trivial worth.

      With the government, a bank, and the dollar, you have some assurance of getting your money back.

      With Bitcoin, it's "Sucks to be you!"

      And that also doesn't account for the fact that many of these exchanges operate with ZERO oversight.

      Sure, they can only do it for so long before trust is broken. But how long is that? And how much is lost during that time?

      And, since starting up a venture online is far more trivial than starting up a physical business, what's to stop the perpetrators from simply spinning up another exchange again later under a new identity?

      Or, what's to stop them from starting up multiple, parallel exchanges and manipulating Bitcoin?

      NOTHING.

      If you're stupid and want to trust a pyramid scheme like this. Fine. I'll simply laugh at you until you lose your "investment".
      Then I'll laugh *harder*.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    28. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      Oh. I never denied that it wasn't crony capitalism.

      I'm just making the point that Bitcoin is a scam. Top to bottom, with greed being its only TRULY cohesive force.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    29. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by complete+loony · · Score: 2

      Most of the currency that is circulating is really just accounting entries at banks, backed by the securities the banks hold for the loans they have issued. What's the most common security? Houses, or the land they are built on.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    30. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pfft i know right, theres tons of control-- like the way the market is manipulated everytime an exchange gets hacked or someone does a huge buy/sell or similar.

      OR

      hah, the afghanni has more stability than your pipe dream currency.

    31. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by GodInHell · · Score: 1

      Instead the U.S. backs its currency with the force of law. You must accept U.S. dollars as legal tender in the U.S. or you are in breach of law. There are penalties. I wonder if anyone's revisited this issue since the price of Gold shot through the roof. There is quite a lot of it at fort nox, and in the treasury's vaults.

    32. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They pay you today's $50 worth of bitcoins. How confident are you that that will be $50 worth of bitcoins tomorrow?

      Youre essentially bartering with stock; if that floats your boat go for it.

      Welcome to the world of currency trading! (forex). Every currency in existence constantly goes up and down in value against all others. The largest trading exchange in the world is not the NYSE or any of the stock markets, its the Forex market. It dwarfs all others in order flow.

    33. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by nedlohs · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Rentenmark was backed by land.

    34. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you could keep your 10 BTC worth of US Dollars. But how confident are you that that will be 10 BTC worth of of US Dollars tomorrow?

    35. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What currency has ever been backed with land?

      It was briefly tried in Revolutionary France.

    36. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 5, Informative

      That isn't what backing means. Every single reply to my post has the same issue. Backing does not mean "the issuing authority has assets they can sell" and it doesn't mean "the issuing authority can force me to use their tokens through the barrel of a gun".

      To say a currency is backed by something has a very specific meaning, which is that there is an asset literally "behind" the currency. The currency itself is merely a proxy for the backing material, one can be exchanged for the other at a specific rate. The gold standard meant you could, at least in theory, go to a bank or the government, hand in some currency and walk out with gold bars.

      So given this clear definition it's meaningless to say a currency is backed by "the authority to tax". That authority might incentivize a large population to obtain these tokens and thus give them some value - but that isn't backing. It's taxation. It's also wrong to say a currency is backed by the ability to sell something like land - OK, so the government sells some land it owns. What does it sell that land for? Oh, right, it sells the land for dollars. So if I lose confidence in the dollar and want to hand them in, in return for the asset that backs them, the government selling land and giving me back more dollars doesn't help. I'd need the actual land itself and there'd need to be an actual somewhat fixed exchange rate between dollars and land. But there isn't.

      If you want to argue that dollars have value because the US government taxes its citizens in that way, go right ahead. That argument doesn't lead to "Bitcoins are worthless because no government taxes in them" though. Bitcoins obviously aren't worthless because they started out having no value when they were first created, and obtained value over time as people learned about them. The system is an existence proof that you'd be wrong.

    37. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

      Not really. In a normal casino, the casino itself trades the money for the chips (or Monopoly money in this example) and they also exchange them back to real currency.

      There is a difference here. The user is not giving the casino real money, and the casino Is not giving the user back real money. All echanges of money to and from bitcoin happen on the users end without the involvement of the casino.

      The US would have to, effectively, say that BitCoin is real currency in order to prosecute. Maybe they will, and will treat it no differently than if the casino were using Euros or Yen.

    38. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Only if a debt is created actually. I can offer to sell anything I own for barter, gold, bitcoins, or even euros, and I can, quite legally, refuse any currenct, including US currency...so long as no debt is created. Should a debt be created, then I would have to accept some amount of US currency to settle it (though I am still not required to exclusively accept it).

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    39. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't get it. What do you have against Bitcoin? Has it killed your dog or something?

      Your post is a stream of non-sequiturs. Yes, the primary exchange was hacked ... once ... and it resulted in a minor loss that the exchange covered from their own profits. Users did not lose any money. Yes, very tiny ad-hoc "one man and his dream" exchanges have also been hacked, but hardly anyone used them, so again, impact was very minimal. Do you think US banks never get hacked or robbed? Think again.

      Many US banks have unbelievably woeful security that results in accounts being routinely emptied. Consumer accounts are insured by the government but business and organizational accounts aren't, yet many of them are protected by nothing more than a password or secret question/answer. That's absurd. Now nothing stops you under-protecting your Bitcoins, but at least you can upgrade to more security if you want. You're not at the mercy of your local bank.

      What on earth makes you think that starting a "virtual business is more trivial than a physical business"? Did you step out of a timewarp from the 70s? Do you think competing with Amazon is inherently easier than competing with your local supermarket? Exchanges, as you note, rely heavily on their users trust in their security (as do all financial institutions). That's what stops them "simply reforming under a new identity". They'd be starting from zero and have no advantage over anyone else. And FYI financial regulations do apply to Bitcoin exchanges as they would any other online currency exchange. That's one reason the big ones all demand government issued ID in the same way a bank would.

      Feel free to laugh at people who are using a next-generation financial system. It's been many years and Bitcoin is still around and doing fine, so I doubt anyone will care.

    40. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1, Troll

      > Is the US going away tomorrow? No.
      > Are they going away next year? No.
      > Are they going away in 5-10 years? No.

      So is there evidence that we should know 5-10 years in advance when the US government IS going to fall?

      You can put your trust where you want, I don't expect anything is so set in stone. Not that they wont go away, and not that they wont fall apart to the point that their own currency becomes untrusted and worthless....it could very well happen, and it could happen in less than 5 years.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    41. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the US going away tomorrow? No.
      Are they going away next year? No.
      Are they going away in 5-10 years? No.

      Small problem: The opposition to your argument has a very high proportion of survivalist wannabe nerds. So, their answers would be more of:

      Is the US going away tomorrow? IT MIGHT!!! I've got the TRUTH right here in this warehouse full of binders that THEY can't get to! Read over ALL of them before you decide if you agree with me or not, because I sure have, and if you don't, YOU ARE WORSE THAN ROBO-YETI-HITLER. Oh, he was real, all right.
      Are they going away next year? Don't be silly, the corporations will have taken over your guns by then. They're the ones really in charge.
      Are they going away in 5-10 years? ZOMG ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE!!!1!

      Is "A. Random H@X0R" going away tomorrow? Who?
      Are they going away next year? Who?
      Are they gone in 5-10 years? Who?

      Is "A. Random H@X0R" going away tomorrow? Of course not. I can really trust him, man, he hooked me up with some awesome hentai torrent sites.
      Are they going away next year? No! That's when he'll get me in on the really sweet movie torrents!
      Are they gone in 5-10 years? ZOMG ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE!!!1!

      Sprinkle in a few pop culture references to "irrefutably prove" all those answers, and you've got yourself all the answers you'll ever get from that audience.

    42. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt a casino could operate in alabama simply by only accepting and giving away jewelry or other valuables instead of dollars.

      the point for this is simply that usa can't order credit card processors to stop payments to this casino. but he would do well to stay the fuck out of USA if he accepts american gamblers in his casino knowingly.

      and I doubt him being the first bitcoin casino either.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    43. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      And how many accept euros?

      Silk road accepts it, so if you don't have a better connection for drugs, there you go. That one site is believed to do about $92,000 US a month in business...all bitcoins.

      Its also useful for some services.

      As for volitility....well its been in existance for all of a couple of years now... but on a day to day basis...its pretty stable. I have been watching it on and off for a while and...while it does fluxuate, it does so slowly.

      So who wants it? Maybe people who care about more than just the economics? People who want to be part of a systsem that excludes coercion (no use of force can ever deprive me of my bitcoins without first getting the private keys that protect them)?

      perhaps people interested in new things? Is anyone saying "invest for retirement in bitcoins?" or "put your life savings into bitcoins"? or "Bitcoins: better buy than land"..... cuz I don't see it.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    44. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a fucking idiot. Like US money never gets stolen, even in "large amounts". You could use sed to replace bitcoin by USD in most of your posts and nobody would notice the difference.

    45. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The dollar has value because it can pay a dollars worth of taxes.

      If that were the case, wouldn't the tax rate affect the value of the dollar? Does the tax rate affect the value of the dollar?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    46. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Federal legal tender laws require creditors to accept payment denominated in dollars, but generally do not require businesses to accept any particular form of payment -- such as cash.

    47. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well,

      in case an exchange is converting dollars into bitcoin and that is used for gambling and then exchanged back, the government could slap all parties involved with money laundering charges.

      so none of the parties would do well to stay the fuck out of USA and the stupidest thing to do would be to be usa based and go on businessweek saying that you have a loophole because another party exchanges your tokens.

      next up someone claiming that you don't have to pay taxes if you bill your clients in bitcoins.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    48. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government only cares if you buy your initial chips with money and sell back your final chips for money.

    49. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, the US is more likely to fail in the next 5 years than Bitcoin.
      Also, Obama's going to take your guns and put you into a FEMA camp.

      Better start hoarding shit in your basement and storing your own urine in mason jars. You know...

      just in case.

      --
      This space available.
    50. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You give them your cash. They give you poker chips. You ask for cash back for your poker chips. They say, "what pocker chips?".

      What do you do?

      It's a problem that has nothing to do with BitCoin, and everything with trust. If you get scammed once, well, you don't go there again, and eventually they run out of people to scam. It's more profitable to maintain a running business so that you get repeat customers. Especially in something as lucrative as gambling. Especially when you're the only player on the market, so everyone with the urge to play comes to you.

    51. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by GrahamJ · · Score: 0

      But you can turn them into dollars. The government can't see where the bitcoins came from so it can't prevent you from exchanging bits for cash.

    52. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      (obviously meant that all parties involved should stay out of usa - the loophole is only that the exchanges can claim they don't know what the tokens/bitcoins are used for and as such they can't be easily ordered to stop transfers to these casinos, however there's already plenty of other ways to move real money to an overseas casino if you want to play)

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    53. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Lehk228 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      you are not even required by any criminal law to accept legal tender in payment of debt.

      should the debtor offer you legal tender and you refuse, then you attempt to collect the debt at a later time the debtor can (and will if they are smart) raise your refusal to accept payment as a defense to your subsequent attempt to collect payment.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    54. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Insightful

      currency has value because its backed by a human society. real human society is a lot more solid than a voluntary internet standard that can impode at a moment's notice. real society isn't going to implode at a moment's notice. well, it can, if an asteroid or epidemic hits. but then nobody will care about your debts and obligations (and assets). but if a voluntary internet standard implodes there will still be guys expecting you to pay your bills

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    55. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by hotdiggity · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Is the US going away tomorrow? No. Are they going away next year? No. Are they going away in 5-10 years? No.

      Is the US going to print 80 billion dollars more next month? Yes.

      Is the US going to print 80 billion dollars more the month after that? Yes.

      Is the US going to print 80 billion dollars more the month after that? Yes.

      Is the US going to print 80 billion dollars more the month after that? Yes.

      It's not the 'going away' part that's the concern.

    56. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      next up someone claiming that you don't have to pay taxes if you bill your clients in bit coins.

      No, I think this is different. You still would need to report your bitcoin winnings on your taxes in equivalent dollar amounts. The same is true for bartering. Say I run a lawn service and you own a hair salon. If we barter that you cut my hair ($20 value) and I mow your lawn ($20 value) we're each supposed to report a $20 income on our taxes (and if you live in a state with a sales tax, collect the sales taxes due on those $20 transactions and remit them to the state). Very few people actually do, but you're supposed to.

      Gambling with bitcoins, though. I don't know. I'm not a lawyer, but if it's a virtual currency that the US doesn't recognize, I don't see how his operation would be any more illegal than, say, playing for World of Warcraft gold. Is it something that CAN be converted to dollars? Sure. But I would venture that Bitcoins are as far outside the purview of the US banking and gambling laws as Warcraft gold.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    57. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      The gambling law does specifically only prohibit bank transactions, so it seems like a good solution to me. The government took care to craft a law that outlawed online gambling while keeping IRL Vegas style gambling legal (because one is immoral and one isn't?). The law was specifically targetting bank transfers because they can't really stop people from gambling on sites hosted overseas, but they can seize the money deposited into US bank accounts. The beauty of bitcoin is that it is not (and can't be) under the control of anybody. Bitcoin works like traditional currency that can be physically possessed and have it's ownership transferred without interference from a 3rd party, but with the ease of electronic money transfer.

      The US government can certainly shutdown US gambling sites, but they can't shutdown sites hosted in foreign countries nor can they seize bitcoins. They only plce they might be able to stop it is by seizing any money that is transferred into a bank account by a entity that is known to exchange bitcoins for US currency, but this would be more like attempting to shut down bitcoin entirely rather than simply stopping internet gambling. If ever bitcoin became a more widely accepted, it might make the ability of the US government to seize money held in US bank accounts less effective, because use of US bank accounts could be avoided entirely.

      I don't expect the US to give up it's control over the world's financial system without a fight, but they might actually lose this fight. Bitcoin or even some future distributed digital currency might turn out to be so much more advantageous that it can't be stopped by anyone (e.g. like use of gold as currency). I think the only thing holding it back now is widespread apprehension in something so radically different.

    58. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep! This'll stop the government from coming after you! Not!

      It should, actually.

      Otherwise, the government could come after anyone who plays Monopoly, too. Or anyone who plays poker with virtual gold coins in an MMORPG.

      And once the line starts to blur between virtual goods and real money, they will do just that. They have been talking about doing that in MMOs for years. That's one reason companies are quick to say that you don't own anything, you don't have the right to anything, and you have no right to sell or transfer anything in online games: it covers them from being sued when the server crashes and you lose you Everbright Armor, and it keeps them from being a target for regulators.

      The dollar does not have magical qualities. It is not the only form of currency used in the U.S., and regulators are not somehow limited to influence only over metal and paper stamped at the Treasury. These people are setting themselves up for a clash they will lose.

      In general, people seem to have this bizarre notion that the law is this static, precise body of words that are completely divorced from basic human judgment. That if you are able to twist words _just_so_, the law magically loses power. It's not, and it doesn't. All law is predicated on a theoretical, reasonable person. "Would a reasonable person consider this misleading? Yep: guilty of fraud. Would a reasonable person expect someone to act to prevent this sort of situation? Yes: guilty of negligence." In this case, there's clearly gambling and they are clearly accepting payment, so the best these people can hope for once they're brought to court -- assuming that happens, since the Kim Dotcom fiasco proved that it's perfectly possible to have a friendly government freeze assets, seize property and perpetually postpone trial -- it to claim that BitCoin is not a currency. That will not go over well.

    59. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a poker game. The payouts and table rake are set by the game. You get the pot minus the rake if you win. The only potential problem would be if the casino has plants at a table that get dealt better cards, or other players collude against you by sharing information. You could gather statistics on the deal to see if you are getting some cards more or less than you should, but this would take thousands of hands to even begin to notice a trend. For collusion, you would have to closely watch how players play against each other and even then it would be very difficult to find.

      Of course if the US would just accept poker gambling as an acceptable thing, they could get records of gambling winnings to collect taxes and reputable sites would be available.

    60. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 0

      Sure the US has land and gold. Someone holding US dollars is not legally entitled to any of it, so how does that do anything to back the currency? The amount of US land and gold you can buy with US dollars are dictated only by the free market. With the termination of the gold standard, that amount of land and gold you can buy if the dollar collapses will be very little.

      The nice thing about bitcoin is that it *isn't* controlled by the US or any government. It can't be easily created, manipulated, or counterfeited. The transaction history of every bitcoin is known to everyone. Traditional centralized currencies are incredibly susceptible to abuse. There is nothing stopping the controller of the currency from inflating it for their own benefit.

      One day bitcoins will run out, mining will stop, and bitcoin supply will be completely static. It will be like gold but without the wasted resources trying to mine it.

    61. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 0

      When the dollar was backed with gold, it meant if the dollar crashed, you could always exchange it for X amount of gold (whatever that's worth). As long as gold was worth something, then that propped up the dollar.

      I don't see how the power to tax does anything to prop up the dollar. The US taxes are in dollars. So how can dollars be propped up by more dollars? If the government promises to give you $1 for every $1 in the event of a dollar collapse, how is this any different than keeping your worthless $1? If the dollar crashes and the government decides to tax me $1,000,000 who cares? I don't need worthless dollars. The government can have every dollar I own, but they are not getting any of my canned soup without a fight.

    62. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The big issue with gambling sites is that you have no way to confirm the risks.

      I could create a poker site to use an algorithmic that favors the house. How would you know? I can have my friends playing at tables and when they are logged in, it tilts the deal into their favor.

      These, and other, cheats only require temporary and slight changes to have a bigger long term impact. You can also use social engineering.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    63. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      last time anyone ever entered fort knox was back in the 70s , stories run around that fort knox is empty , that would create a new enron . . . .

    64. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 0

      It doesn't matter if the currency is physical or digital. It is not backed by anything. If the dollar collapsed, you wouldn't have any legal authority to demand a fixed amount of land from the banks in exchange for dollars. Back when dollars were backed with gold, the value of dollars could never fall below gold, because the exchange rate from dollars to gold was fixed by the US government and the government guaranteed it had enough gold to cover all the dollars in circulation. The dollar were just a substitute for gold. Now dollars are a fiat currency. Just like gold is a fiat currency and bitcoin is a fiat currency. None of them is backed by anything. The only difference being that US dollars can be easily created and manipulated by the government and gold and bitcoin can't.

    65. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by loshwomp · · Score: 2

      How confident are you that that will be $50 worth of bitcoins tomorrow?

      Well, his customers came to his website because they wanted to gamble, didn't they?

    66. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Yes you must accept dollars as legal tender. This does nothing to prop up the value of the dollar. If the dollar collapses, I will still accept the US dollar as legal tender. I will sell my services for either $1,000,000,000,000,000,000 (i.e. more than how much exists) or one can of soup. They can't force me to accept a certain value of the dollar.

    67. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      It ahs no protections and its a pyurmid.
      It also coulod never support a middle class. Byt it's nature it favors on group over others.

      It's like if everyone had a printing press the printed dollars, that kinda of worked. But if you bought 1000's of dollars in equipment, then your printing press works more.

      Which then leads to complete separation of actual work and money.
      It also remove people who can not afford the technology to support it from the equation. I'm not sure how you are going to pay a maid who doesn't have a computer. For example.

      "Feel free to laugh at people who are using a next-generation financial system. It"
      How about I laugh at people who clearly have no clue how macro economies work. You have no protection. If I were to steal your bitcoins, you could not go after me for theft.
      And it has happened with bitcoin before.

      "FYI financial regulations do apply to Bitcoin exchanges as they would any other online currency exchange"
      Someone is lying to you, because they are not regulate like other currency exchanges. Not at all.

      http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/09/hacker-steals-250k-in-bitcoins-from-online-exchange-bitfloor/

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    68. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The US dollar has backing and control. It couldn't be a globe currency without it.

      Slashdot and economics. Never has there been a group of people this confident about a subject they know nothing about.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    69. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by mea_culpa · · Score: 1

      It's not a bad idea to be prepared when a category 5 hurricane is barreling towards your city.
      The storm is dynamic and may change course or fizzle out.
      Yes, there are costs with boarding up windows, moving to safer areas, etc. This is preparation for the physical safety of yourself, family and property.
      Why not do the same when a financial storm is looming?

    70. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      No.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    71. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 5, Informative

      Is the US going away tomorrow? No.

      Is the US government and banks going to continue to manipulate the US dollar for the foreseeable future? Yes.

      Is "A. Random H@X0R" going away tomorrow? It doesn't matter. Bitcoin is a decentralized currency. Bitcoin is not dependent upon "A. Random H@X0R" for it to be trusted.

      Where does the trust in bitcoin come from? Well if you don't know anything about bitcoin, you probably shouldn;t trust it. If you know something about computer science and theory of computability, you'd know that bitcoins are actually much harder to acquire than a government issued currency, and is therefore much harder to manipulate (e.g. like gold). A trillion US dollars can be created virtually with a keyboard stroke. The only thing stopping this from happening is the people in charge. What stops a trillion bitcoins from being instantly created is the laws of physics and math.

      A lot of currencies have collapsed from rampant inflation exactly because the people in charge could *not* be trusted.

      Some people trust government officials more than the laws of physics and math. I personally don't.

    72. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      You're quite right. $50 worth of Bitcoins yesterday is worth $52 today. Darned dollar just can't hold it's value.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    73. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      US Dollars are the only form of money accepted by the US government in payment of taxes. So long as people fear the government enough to think that not paying taxes -> go to jail, that is the value of the US dollar: it's not the power to tax, so much as it is the power to demand payment for those taxes in one specific form.

    74. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by geekoid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Incorrect. Shocking to find an incorrect understand of an economic principle on slashdot~

      Backing means that through the rule of law, a dollar bill is guaranteed to be exchangeable for one dollar's worth of goods and services. If it had no backing, other countries would lend up money.

      bitcoins have value because they are backed by the dollar.

      A fiat-money currency loses value once the issuing government refuses to further guarantee its value. That is also a form of backing money.

      What the poster is talking about, although they don't know it, is Chartalism.

      Read up and get back to me.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    75. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Eskarel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The value of the dollar is what you can buy with said dollar in the united states which barring a bit of inflation here and there(some inflation is a good thing) is about the same as it was last year or the year before.

      If you're talking about the currency exchange rate, that value is set by the currency exchange market and is therefor bound by no sense of reality or sanity whatsoever in much the same way as stocks. The Australian dollar was trading at about 93 cents to the US dollar right before Lehman brothers and two months after it was sitting at 58 cents. Our economy barely had a hiccup and the US one was in the toilet, but the value of the US dollar rose dramatically. The most important factor causing the US dollar to drop has dick all to do with quantitative easing or the trillion dollar coin(which actually won't affect inflation at all since the effect on the money supply is essentially zero), mostly it has to do with the fact that the US economy is in the toilet and US interest rates are near zero, with interest rates being the bigger factor.

    76. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by tompaulco · · Score: 4, Funny

      People who invest in Bitcoins are idiots. It is absolutely worthless. And even though it is worthless, I will still buy your Bitcoins for $10 USD each just so you won't be stuck in a jam of holding onto those worthless Bitcoins.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    77. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 2

      Bitcoin was created in 2009. Given that it is the first real attempt at a decentralized digital currency (something most people are completely unfamiliar with), I wouldn't expect rapid widespread adoption. That said, one of it's advantages is that it does not require maintenance from a central authority to function. Short of destroying the internet, bitcoin will remain a stable and easy to use digital currency for anyone who wants to use it.

      I don't see any reason that there couldn't be places that would start accepting bitcoin as it becomes less scary.

      Yes bitcoin is volatile, like I would expect any new currency to be, but it's not as if other currencies are completely stable, they are just slightly more stable, and that is only for now.

      Why would a gorcery store or amazon take US dollars? Because they have trust in it. People don't trust bitcoin yet, but it's not because it's not trustworthy. If it works well, I don't see why people won't come to trust it. It took backing the US dollar with gold for like 200 years before people trusted it enough that it could be used as a fiat currency.

      The reason people trust the dollar for the same reason that ancient people trusted that the sun would come up tomorrow (because it had done it for as long as the could remember and therefore would probably continue to, especially if they sacrificed some virgins to their god). The reason to trust bitcoin is a much better one. The laws of physics and math make it impossible to easily manipulate it. It will take time for people to realize how good a reason this is.

    78. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Well I hadn't considered snarky remarks and assumptions. It makes so much sense when you put it like that.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    79. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The trust isn't in the who's you're pointing out though, it's trust in math and the BTC source code. The cryptography is good, and I bet there will continue to be plenty of hash power to keep it running.

    80. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is, unless I didn't actually want to be repaid, or am dealing with someone who is ignorant, then I am free to refuse payment as I like. Ok fine, this is true, and very technically I can see how this does not constitute a punishment under the law....

      but its all just splitting hairs at that point isn't it?

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    81. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      The bitcoin deck is only stacked in favor of the merchant if we presume that the merchant is paid before the service or product is given to the buyer, but this is just arbitrary. Some things, like restaurants, work the other way around. In these instances the deck is stacked against the merchant (i.e. dine and dashers). For markets where both sides are sufficiently apprehensive of potential fraud you can just use a mutually agreed upon escrow company to manager the transaction.>/p>

      Ultimately, the credit card system has the same issues and potential solutions, they have merely implemented one of the solutions. They act as a partial escrow company for the money but not the goods. You buy something online. The credit card company holds onto the money (i.e. they give it to the merchant but are free to take it back), you receive the good, and if a certain amount of time goes by without any complaints, the credit card company gives the money to the merchant (i.e. they relinquish their entitlement to take the money back).

      There is no reason that a system like this couldn't be implemented for bitcoin in almost the exact same way. The only difference would be that the merchant would not get the money immediately (as opposed to getting the money immediately with possibility of it getting taken back). The merchant would be getting a conditional promise of wealth, which is ultimately only what US dollars in a bank account is anyway.

    82. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Only if the parties were in collusion with one another. They would have to prove that.

      The bitcoin exchanges can rightfully say they don't know what people will do with the bitcoins, and the casinos can rightfully say they can't control what people do with their fake dollars.

      I mean, look at poker apps like Zynga's poker, which you buy chips with "credits" from facebook or whatever. You "win" credits... and you can probably find people to buy them from you.

    83. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe not Jewelry, since jewels are well recognized valuable items. But bitcoins are not recognized as such.

      A casino that operates only in a fake money you get from others is no more illegal that Skee Ball where you win tickets and exchange them for items.

    84. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though I'm not sure of the law, assuming it operates as described, there is nothing technical about it. Punishment is more than not just getting your way.

    85. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      Satoshi been MIA for years while bitcoin has continued along, because he doesn't matter. Bitcoin is a protocol-esque sort of thing. The mathematics behind it will be around a shitload longer than Earth will.

    86. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Some excellent points.

      And.... one of the most unarguably sucessful bitcoin taking sites.... the silk road.... is little more than... an escrow service! Someone who.... holds the money and hears disputes when they occur. Wikipedia estimates they do several million dollars worth of transactions a month.

      This service that we are talking about, right here, shows that bitcoins have value. Bitcoins have value because.... people can gamble with them, so people will...buy them....to gamble with. Thats value right there. In fact, thats increasing value as increasing numbers of people want to do that.

      You can point out all sorts of problems.... trust issues, etc as to why there are risks, but, people continue to use it and it continues to work. Will it in the future? Maybe maybe not. We will see.... I am betting it will be around for years to come.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    87. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Any time money is successfully stolen, it causes a transfer of wealth.

      If a bank gets robbed, the reason you get your money back is because the bank loses it (i.e. the money comes from shareholders) If the bank is insured against theft, presumably they are paying for this insurance and the money comes from the owners of the insurance company. If the insurance company is the government, then the money comes from taxpayers and current owners of the currency.

      With bitcoin, you are your own bank. You can buy insurance if you were really worried about it. As a bank customer and US taxpayer you are already indirectly paying for that insurance anyway.

      Yes bitcoins have been stolen. It is not impossible to steal bitcoins. It is *harder* to steal bitcoins than US dollars.

      When someone breaks into your house and takes all your stuff, nobody reimburses you unless you had insurance. This is not a new thing. That fact that money can be stolen is not a reason to abandon money. It's a reason to take appropriate precautions to minimize money theft. The fact that bitcoins can be stolen just means that we need to take necessary steps to minimize the threat of theft. In the case of bitcoin this means ensuring that escrow services like bitcoin exchanges have proper security and possibly even insurance against theft. No one is forced to use an exchange that is not insured it would just cost a little more. Based the likelihood of theft, it may or may not be worth it to insure. You don't buy volcano insurance even though some people do lose everything to a volcano from time to time.

    88. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      Someone breaks into your house and steals your cash then they are going to say `Sucks to be you!' too.

    89. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there is nothing that prevents me from converting every dollar I make, immediately to bitcoins, and changing some of my bitcoins back into US dollars only on April 15th to pay my taxes. In fact if I suspected the collapse of the dollar was imminent, this would be exactly the thing to do. Once the dollar crashes, I could buy enough dollars to pay my taxes with far fewer bitcoins. Even if the government recognized runaway inflation and decided to raise everyone's taxes to compensate, I would still be better off than people who kept their wealth as dollars (assuming we all pay).

      If the dollar was backed by gold, the value of the dollar could never fall below a fixed X amount of gold. The value of gold could still crash and if that happened, it would probably take the dollar with it, but it's possible that the dollar could stay up even in a gold crash unless a reverse gold standard were instituted (where the government can confiscate your dollars and pay you the gold value if gold values crash), but I think in that case it would be easier to just print more money to represent all the new cheap gold the government could easily acquire.

    90. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If you know something about computer science and theory of computability, you'd know that bitcoins are actually much harder to acquire than a government issued currency, and is therefore much harder to manipulate (e.g. like gold).

      Harder to acquire? Maybe.

      Harder to manipulate? Not if you're running a shady exchange.

      I'm sure at least ONE of the exchanges out there is trying to run a clean, secure, legit business. Simply because I can't think of one off the top of my head doesn't mean it isn't happening.

      That still doesn't help if all the rest of them are getting broken into, or the people running them are shady.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    91. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, but the taxation often provides the tipping point.

      A national currency is marked by 2 things: that you can (or must) pay your taxes with it, and that the employees of that government (most especially the military) accept it in payment. As long as both of those are true, even with serious inflation, the national currency has value.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    92. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 2

      I don't "have anything against" Bitcoin.

      I simply am not gullible enough to trust it. It's primary revenue generation platform is a pyramid scheme. And it's clearing system is an unregulated free-for-all and an absolute quagmire with no protections at all.

      And look at what I've written. If a bank gets hacked or robbed, you still have your money. You're federally insured.

      You get your bitcoins scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?

      Yes. It's been many years. As for Bitcoin doing fine. Being a clearinghouse for money launderers and drug dealers? Uhm. Okay!

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    93. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 2

      When the dollar was backed with gold, it meant if the dollar crashed, you could always exchange it for X amount of gold (whatever that's worth). As long as gold was worth something, then that propped up the dollar.

      Not always. When FDR needed to print vast sums of money (by the standards of the day) to pay for his social programs, he outlawed ownership of gold by US citizens, to prevent exactl that! Eventually the French called him on it, threatening to redeem vast amounts of US dollars for their gold, even if US citizens couldn't. Shortly thereafter, the dolar was "revalued", and the existing currency was suddenly redeemable for far less gold.

      There's never been a form of currency that the government didn't hstorically start watering down as soon as they has a spending problem. There was a time when British shillings, depsite being silver coins in principle, were so bad they would actually rust. Actual gold might hold value, but gold-based currency has a very long track record of doing nothing to prevent a government from diluting the currency.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    94. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      Except when a bank gets robbed, you still have your money.

      When Bitcoin exchange gets scrubbed, and your bitcoins get stolen you still have...your certainty that you were participating in a "next gen currency system"?

      Yeah. Whatever.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    95. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      Maybe for you it isn't.

      But you're looking at it as some nice, big technology experiment.

      I'm looking at it as what it's claiming to be.

      Currency.

      Sure. The crypto might be nice and all. Interesting as hell.

      But the distributed transaction clearing system is simply ripe for abuse.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    96. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      Yep! This'll stop the government from coming after you!

      Not!

      And good job. Base your business off a virtual currency with ZERO backing and no control whatsoever.

      If he's already invested the money into development of the site and isn't allowed to run it on USD what's to lose. As long as he's an LLC, I think he has almost no risk.

    97. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      People who invest in Bitcoins are idiots. It is absolutely worthless. And even though it is worthless, I will still buy your Bitcoins for $10 USD each just so you won't be stuck in a jam of holding onto those worthless Bitcoins.

      The problem with bitcoins is they're a complete pain in the ass to buy. Unless you take the 200% markup and get em on ebay... well that's ONE of the problems with bitcoin anyway.

    98. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Over and over throughout history, gold-backed (or specie-based) currencies have in fact been diluted by their governments. Government's have a history as old as currency or manipulating currency, no matter what form it took.

      because the exchange rate from dollars to gold was fixed by the US government and the government guaranteed it had enough gold to cover all the dollars in circulation

      No, not so much. Some events leading up to the dollar moving off the gold standard were the outlawing of ownership of gold by US citizens, and then when France threatened to redeem a bunch of dollars, the revaluing of the currency as being redeemable for less gold. And of couse specie-based currencies would always seems to have an arc from "gold" to "goldish" to "gold-colored" as the government overspent.

      The only difference being that US dollars can be easily created and manipulated by the government and gold and bitcoin can't.

      The NSA still measures computing loads in acre-weeks (and acre of datacenter thrown at a problem for a week). The total value of bitcoins in circulation is quite small, compared to national money supplies. The US goverment could quite easily create bitcoins or manipulate their value as much as it cared to. Bitcoins are currently under the radar, and that's all they have going for them.

      Heck, individual speculators with just a few million to throw around could move the price of bitcoins anywhere they wanted to, short term, using very well understood methods of market manipulation (that would be illegal for any normal commodity). If Goldman Sachs wanted to, they could just decide on a day-by-day basis how much bitcoins would trade for, simply by overwhelming the market. And they probably will, eventually.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    99. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I should have said harder to create, but the terminology is different. You create money, and you find or mine bitcoins, but these are essentially the same thing (adding money to the money supply). To create money you just need to have the authority to do it. To create (mine) bitcoins, you need to find the answer to an incredibly hard problem that is guaranteed on average to require a great deal of work (calculations) to be performed to come up with a correct answer. If you have a normal computer you will almost certainly spend more money on electricity to find this answer than how much a bitcoin is worth. The inventor of bitcoin doesn't have a secret way to make them faster. The people running the exchanges can't just edit some files in their own computers to give themselves more money.

      How would you even run a shady exchange? I suppose you could pretend to be hacked and say all the bitcoins were stolen and you don't have enough bitcoins or real money to reimburse everyone, then move to a foreign country and spend the money there. But that's no different than what a shady banker could do with digital US dollars. That's not a failing of the bitcoin system.

      There are 6 cases of theft and fraud listed in the wikipedia entry for bitcoin. How many times has US dollars been stolen from banks or currency exchanges? I have no idea. It has happened enough times where noting individual instances of theft on the wikipedia article for "US dollar" is ridiculous. People do not regard indiviudal instances of theft of US dollars at banks and exchanges by crooks as valid reasons to abandon the whole financial system.

      People are legitimately concerned about bitcoin theft because it is new. The same thing happened when online banking first started and people were worried that it would be possible for criminals to steal all their money over this mysterious internet thing. That actually does happen, it's just not more prevalent than regular theft, so people got over their fears.

    100. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The land may be worth something, but it has been a while since a country lost land on account of debt. That is the sort of stuff wars are fought over. Iceland did not lose land in bankruptcy, Argentinian ship that was captured by US hedge funds was returned etc.

      US has about 8000 -16000 tons of Gold. That would pay for US deficits etc. if Gold price in dollars rose to over $20,000 per ounce (and pay off the entire debt without any taxes etc. if Gold prices rose to about $60,000 per ounce). Current gold price is about $1500 per ounce, so there is no way Gold backs anything - future tax receipts are much better guarantee. On the other hand if US gets close to default, nobody would want dollars, so dollar prices will fall - causing Gold prices measured in USD to rise. At that levels of hyperinflation, maybe Gold can pay of debt, not otherwise.

    101. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 2

      Right, so that is an instance of *saying* the dollar is backed by gold, when it really isn't.

      My point was not that money *was* truly backed by gold at all times before the gold standard was officially abandoned. My point was that the US dollar is currently not backed by *anything*, and that this is in contrast to the idea of a gold standard which is a true currency backing, regardless of whether the US government would have been able to make a 100% gold payout for what it promised at any given point in history.

    102. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, I could transfer it to other people, but its also a pretty volatile currency.

      These are being marketed to Gamblers - they enjoy that sort of stuff. Gambling after all is nothing but paying a small premium to get a very volatile return which on average is less than what you put in.

    103. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      As I mentioned in a previous reply to one of your comments. I am not arguing that the US government always maintained a perfect gold standard (was able to perform a 100% gold payout if needed) at all times before it was officially abandoned. I am pointing out what it means to say a currency is backed with something.

      The NSA does have a large computing capacity. That doesn't mean that they get free bitcoins. They still need to pay for the electricity to run those computers, and every second a computer us being used to mine bitcoins is a second it's not doing something else. It's not about how fast you can mine bitcoins. Computer processing power isn't free. It's about how efficiently you can mine bitcoins.

      Yes the value of bitcoins can be manipulated (like the value of anything). It's harder to manipulate than the US dollar. In order to manipulate bitcoins you need to build a giant NSA size computer farm and use it for that as opposed to something else. In order to manipulate the US dollar the treasury department just prints more. In fact physically printing it might slow them down so they just change a number in a computer to say they have more money without actually needing to use paper or ink.

      I am saying that trying to manipulate bitcoin is like trying to manipulate the gold market. You could spend billions of dollars buying mining equipment and flooding the market with gold, but that's not likely profitable because of the work required to do it. Manipulating US currency requires almost no work for unlimited manipulation power. You just need to be the one in control of it all. Nobody is in control of all the gold on the planet, and nobody is in charge of math and physics.

    104. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Comparing the volatility of USD and BTC is absurd, especially given the last few years. The dollar is a rock of stability compared to bitcoin.

      Over the last 5 years, the peak to trough fluctuation of USD to EUR was in the ~20% zone depending on how you measure it (peak was 1.59, trough was 1.2).

      Over the last ONE year, BTC's value has fluctuated by 300%-- its gone up on one site, but I also remember it drastically PLUMMETING around 300% though I cant find a chart showing that. If I recall, around the same time several exchanges halted their trading.

      Maybe when we get to something like ~3-4% average fluctuation per year, it might be stable. Right now, its an investing / gambling tool depending on how you define those terms.

    105. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=101748.0;topicseen

      Call me when the USD experiences a 50% loss of value in a 2 day period.

    106. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a reason Bitcoins are referred to as 'Dunning-Krugerands'

    107. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      While a bank is solvent, depositors are backed by the assets of the bank. If a bank's asset value drops and they declare bankruptcy, most depositors are guaranteed to get their money from insurance or the government. No you can't directly swap your cash for a fraction of a banks assets, but you can be guaranteed to get more of the same fiat currency. So what is the currency backed by? The bank's assets, and the governments ability to issue more currency. That's not quite the same as saying that the currency isn't backed by anything at all.

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    108. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pleased that this is currently your opinion because in 15 years when A Random H@X0R is still BTC, then i assume you will want to buy some.

    109. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Backing" isn't the important issue, anyway. Currencies have value because they can be exchanged for goods and services. What matters is that they can be exchanged for the same quantity of goods at some point in the future - i.e. how secure they are against inflation. One way to do this is to back them with some limited resource: if you issue one unit of currency per gram of gold that you have in a vault somewhere, the supply of that currency is strictly limited, and so the possibility of that currency to inflate is limited too. Another way is to have a government that promises not to issue too much of its currency - this is less reliable, because the government can always break its promise, but seems to be good enough for most people. And BitCoin is an attempt at using a new way: the ability to issue new units of the currency is limited by the cryptographic principles that underlie the standard. In theory, this should be more secure than even gold-backed currencies - since it's possible that some new mining technologies will greatly increase the supply of gold, but the supply of bitcoins is mathematically limited to some fixed value.

    110. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by ragingbull1965 · · Score: 2

      Backing is for stuff that is not valuable in its own right, such as pieces of paper with pictures of presidents on them. Bitcoin is valuable for its properties, and it has numerous huge advantages over the fiat competition. Notice that these are not tiny advantages, but a large number of giant leaps forward:

      Decentralised and free from control
      Always running 24/7
      International
      No/low fees
      New privacy model
      Transparent system
      Divisible
      Secure
      Fast transfers
      No chargebacks
      Environmentally friendly / efficient
      Digital

      I can spend them on over 2500 websites, donate $1 to wikileaks with no fee, instantly deposit/withdraw from poker/sportsbooks, get 5% off on amazon purchases, and do sub $1000 currency conversions for less than any other method. The IRS doesn't know about it, no one can sue me to take it, my wife doesn't get half of it in a divorce, and I don't have to worry about it being inflated away by the government. It increased in value by 1,750% in 2011 and 186% last year, more than any other asset class. This is a radically superior money compared to pieces of paper and gold, even if you only count what it can do right now, and this is just the beginning. All kinds of cool stuff is getting built into the protocol. The future will show the real potential of this disruptive technology.

      More detail on these points at: http://bitcoinmedia.com/bulleted-advantages/

    111. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've misunderstood the principle behind Bitcoin. If any single random haxor - even the creator of the standard - disappeared tomorrow, or actively worked to undermine it, it would make absolutely no difference to the security of Bitcoin. To subvert it, you'd need deliberate collusion between a majority of the people currently participating in the Bitcoin network. Tens of thousands of people from around, spontaneously coming together and figuring out a way to subvert the Bitcoin standard, before anyone else got wind of it? That's rather unlikely. Even more unlikely, I would say, than that the US suffers a fiscal collapse or hyperinflation within the next 5-10 years.

    112. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you're wrong. Federal Reserve Notes can be exchange for more than their face value in Copper & Nickel bullion wrapped in paper tubes at any local banking branch. http://www.coinflation.com/

      The fractional reserve ratio is alarmingly high, but until we have a "run on pocket change" people are discouraged from pursuing this option because of the practical difficulty of realizing their profit. The energy cost of transporting & laundering these distinctive discs of commodity makes it difficult to do discretely, so banning the practice has made it an unpopular use of machinery & tools.

    113. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      get paid much?

      bitcoins are *easy* to buy.

      https://coinbase.com/ ...and cheap, these days. 1% to buy or sell, free to withdraw or deposit.

    114. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by ncc74656 · · Score: 1

      Land? What currency has ever been backed with land?

      Rentenmarks were backed by land and industrial goods to replace Papiermarks (of hyperinflation infamy). One trillion Papiermarks were tradable for one Rentenmark. It was only a temporary measure, supplanted by the Reichsmark at a 1:1 ratio.

      Rentenmarks were backed by land because Germany had been cleaned out of gold by WWI.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    115. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Currency - or anything else for that matter - has value because people want it. Real society might not implode at a moment's notice, but modern government-issued currencies can hyperinflate too.

    116. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I just sold a bunch for $14.05 so I'll pass on your generous offer.

    117. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol, don't mind him. People who adhere to conventional wisdom get fleeced regularly, but they expend so much less energy in the process there is an argument to be made that predatory parasites are a reasonable tax that should just be accepted. The social constructs that allow these parasites to exist eventually collapse under the weight of all the freeloaders, and then the paranoids are vindicated as they wander the wasteland paying pennies for the cherished valuables of people like Jafafa Hots.

      It's a matter of preference if you want to live like a trap door spider or a lamb. Lambs see more sunlight and spend less money on guns and ammo. Maybe pawning your valuables every couple centuries isn't such a bad survival trait. Genetic switches for sociopathy can't regress very far in so few generations.

    118. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like the people who mocked gold as an investment 10 years ago. Gold is out. Bitcoins are in. Get a few years ahead of the curve and you can profit off the tulip mania instead of holding the bag as the "next greatest sucker" when your greed gets the best of you five minutes before midnight.

      Markets simply grease the wheels of group psychology, and the ones who are most easily suckered in by the "common sense" of the times are always being dragged behind the wagon of the blind herd. Just keep repeating to yourself: real estate always goes up.

      Given the ability to select the window of data, I can make Bear Stearns or Facebook look like great investments or terrible ones. Because you are not a contrarian, your perspective will always be the one put under your nose.

    119. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      First you say that the currency exchange rates are not bound by reality or sanity, then you say the big reason the dollar is down is low interest rates.
      That sounds like a contradiction to me.

    120. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are poker sites with open and verifiable algorithms. Seals With Clubs is one such - and they are Bitcoin only...

    121. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

      I would be interested in seeing a citation for that. The IRS has a very broad notion of what is “valuable”. IIRC the IRS treats airline miles as taxable when it's traded. Why does a bitcoin have less inherent value than that? I don’t see the reasoning.

    122. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      The lowest value I'm seeing in the last year (for mtgoxUSD) is just over $4/bc, the highest value I'm seeing is the current price of approximately $14/bc.

      Now, you could call that a fluctuation but honestly, ever since the "Great crash" (that one that caused all the bitcoin-haters to scream that bitcoin was now totally and completely worthless and useless forever and would never recover (price spiked to over $30/bc or so, dropped back down to under $20/bc and slowly dropped to around $4/bc over the following couple of months)) the value of bitcoins on the various exchanges has been somewhat steadily rising.

      Generally speaking the problem isn't with bitcoin, most major fluctuations in the currency's value have been fairly early on when big exchanges and mining pools have been robbed (a fitting description). As the use of the currency grows so does the stability. At the time of the "Great crash" the market was much more easily gamed than it is now, just a year and a half later (mtgox is no longer The(tm) exchange used by everyone and the economy is larger).

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    123. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      The end of the world is nigh!

      Sure, the US will not always be the dominant nation, and that's a good thing, since we don't deserve it. (Not that any nation does.)

      But you hilariously cowardly nutjobs who can live in the richest most powerful nation the world have ever seen and STILL be freaking terrified are not worth paying attention to. Record-setting cowardice.

      The system is crooked, yes. And we get the scraps. You're silly enough to think that you have more and therefore have more to lose.

      Pawning your valuables every couple of centuries?
      How many centuries do you expect to live, dumbass?

      Cowards. All of you. Me, I LIVE in the collapse of society. I live amongst the ruins, the gutted factories, the superfund toxic waste sites. I live in one of the ten most dangerous cities in America and I STILL am not as cowardly as you.

      Because I actually know what the real threats are.

      --
      This space available.
    124. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by thoth_amon · · Score: 3, Informative

      So don't buy them if you think it's a scam. In the meantime, I can make use of a nice currency that is not under the control of any country, both as a consumer and a merchant. It's fairly anonymous / not easily trackable. It sets a stoploss, like cash -- if you cheat me in a Bitcoin transaction, you get at most the Bitcoins I sent you and no method to get more of my money. We don't need a bank to use Bitcoins -- they can be sent over the Internet with no third party intermediary, and there are Bitcoin escrow services to verify I received the product before I release the payment to you. Political systems routinely use currency as a way to control people. If people do not need the currency of a political system, that particular weapon becomes impotent. That's why the establishment opposes Bitcoin. I personally think Bitcoin is a great currency that helps me right now, so I'll continue to use it, "gullible rube" or not.

    125. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by RevSpaminator · · Score: 1

      This guy needs to take a sober look at US money laundering laws. I don't think this will work out well for him or BitCoin.

    126. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In what way are bitcoins backed by the dollar?

    127. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      The value of the dollar is what you can buy with said dollar in the united states [...]

      Don't forget you can buy oil--most oil producing nations accept dollars for their oil.

    128. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      read this thread
      https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=101748.20

      And you will understand why it is a bad currency. The price fluctuated ~50% in about 2 days. Thats not a "problem" its unviable. If that happened to the USD, Im not really sure what the ramifications would be but it would be "dire".

      Not to mention that "unregulated" means "government cant do jack when someone pulls a massive ponzi and drops the value of everyone's BTC". Starts to look a lot less good at that point.

    129. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Except that these fluctuations are just that, fluctuations. And they get smaller as bitcoin use grows (and thus the possibility for a single person to disrupt the entire economy decreases).

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    130. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Time_Ngler · · Score: 1

      With bitcoin, you are your own bank. You can buy insurance if you were really worried about it. As a bank customer and US taxpayer you are already indirectly paying for that insurance anyway.

      How could you buy insurance for an anonymous currency?

      You: "Somebody stole my bitcoins!"
      Insurance company: "Prove it!"
      You: "Well, there's the rub..."

      I suppose cash may be considered anonymous, too, and I guess you can insure that... but at least there would be some evidence of a break in. With bitcoin, it's simply gone, or it's not and the owner simply lied about it.

    131. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Time_Ngler · · Score: 2

      Greed, huh? You know what happens to things that are based on greed, right? They grow..

    132. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The value of the dollar is what you can buy with said dollar in the united states which barring a bit of inflation here and there(some inflation is a good thing) is about the same as it was last year or the year before.

      Barring a bit of inflation here and there? Seriously, what? Do you know what's happened and how much currency debasement there has been in the last five years? No inflation is ever a good thing. It massages the egos of humans into believing that their investments are going up and paint over that everything else is as well.

      Our economy barely had a hiccup and the US one was in the toilet, but the value of the US dollar rose dramatically.

      Comparing the price of one currency to another when they are all being debased is a fallacy. Over the last five years it is pretty clear that dollar has declined markedly in value. In case you hadn't noticed there are a lot of dollars around. Everyone has them and that doesn't make it terribly valuable.

    133. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 1

      When FDR needed to print vast sums of money (by the standards of the day) to pay for his social programs, he outlawed ownership of gold by US citizens, to prevent exactl that!

      FDR did that because the US was short of gold. Those who kept their mouths shut made gains as gold went up from the $35 an ounce FDR had set it at.

      That's not going to happen today because the US cannot ultimately set the price of gold (although they think they can) because the whole world now buys gold where once it didn't. Outlawing gold would also be the worst thing to do today because it would be a crystal clear admission that the dollar was toilet paper. Since there are more dollars outside the US than in it they would lose any influence they have in the world overnight.

      Actual gold might hold value, but gold-based currency has a very long track record of doing nothing to prevent a government from diluting the currency.

      That's a bit of a nonsensical argument really. The Romans debased over five hundred years. We have debased by more in less than one hundred. The lesson is clear that your currency has to be backed by a stable money supply otherwise it can only go to zero.

    134. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 1

      Is the US going away tomorrow?

      Probably not.

      Are they going away next year?

      Possibly.

      Are they going away in 5-10 years?

      Almost certainly. The dollar is being debased at such a rapid rate that it will never survive for that long. Power will be based on how much gold you have in your vaults because no country or central bank currently trusts each other. No country is going to accept dollars or treasury IOUs where there are so many they are worthless and no one can trust something pulled out of thin air. Other countries will send representatives to the US to completely verify their gold otherwise the US won't be able to afford anything. It will be an excruciatingly painful process.

      Essentially currency is based on trust. For anyone who's not a complete, gullible rube, Bitcoin fails the "smell test" there.

      Currency is based on what people think they can get for it. Once a currency is debased to such an extent that all value is lost all trust is lost. Bitcoin is not being debased to the extent that the dollar is. I wouldn't use it as a store of value mind, but as trust fades more ridiculous capital controls come in you'll see it used more and more.

    135. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by ranulf · · Score: 1

      There's never been a form of currency that the government didn't hstorically start watering down as soon as they has a spending problem. There was a time when British shillings, depsite being silver coins in principle, were so bad they would actually rust. Actual gold might hold value, but gold-based currency has a very long track record of doing nothing to prevent a government from diluting the currency.

      Maybe the US government, but historically European governments have issued bonds to raise capital, although this has the unfortunate consequence that a substantial portion of all future taxes just goes to pay the interest on previously issued bonds. It's only relatively recently that "quantative easing" has been seen as a viable option by governments over here, but even then it's reserved for emergencies because if overused it would inevitably result in massive currency devaluation and then hyperinflation.

    136. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by migloo · · Score: 1

      a vast supply of gold

      Where is the gold?
      Not in Fort Knox apparently.
      Tungsten maybe?

    137. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      The *deposits* are backed in the sense that if the bank mismanages the money of the depositors, the bank is legally responsible to pay back depositors through bankruptcy or even FDIC insurance. The dollars themselves are not backed.

      If you deposit $100,000 in the bank and the bank becomes insolvent, you are reimbursed for the $100,000 by the FDIC.

      If you deposit $100,000 and the dollar collapses, the bank's only obligation is to give your $100,000 worthless dollars back to you.

      If the gold standard was being honored and the dollar collapses, you could still trade in your $100,000 for $100,000 worth of gold. The fact that you could do this actually pegs the value of the dollar at the value of gold, preventing it from collapsing unless the value of gold collapses.

    138. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How good is the crypto backing it? I know we don't have quantum computers capable of breaking encryption today, but we may well do in 5-10 years, is there any possible attack on Bitcoin that could be enabled by quantum computing?

    139. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Bitcoins cannot be stolen without your private key. Keeping your private keep a secret is basically up to you. You can be tortured into giving it up or hacked, etc, but that wasn't what I was talking about insuring. The instances of theft were at exchanges where a people were trading bitcoins for US dollars. They signed ownership of the bitcoins to the exchange and before they received their US dollars, it was discovered that the bitcoins were stolen from the exchange. The exchange was going to get the dollars to pay you by selling the bitcoins that were stolen from them. This means that they can't give you dollars or bitcoins. Proving that you gave an exchange bitcoins and never received your money is pretty easy. They fully admit they were hacked and tied to pay as many people back as possible already.
      "With bitcoin, it's simply gone, or it's not and the owner simply lied about it." This is true with regular US dollars too. People commit insurance fraud all the time. They pretend something is stolen from them, when really they simply sold it, and they are reimbursed by the insurance company. Bitcoin is no different in that respect.

    140. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      The US dollar is backed by trust in the US government. Trust that they will accept tax payments in it, trust that they won't just suddenly print a lot of it for no reason, trust that they will honor their debts in it, etc.

      If it was backed by gold, what would gold be backed by? Gold is just adding another turtle to the system (turtles all the way down, you know)... sooner or later it's backed by some sort of trust (or, if we keep the metaphor, just hanging there in space).

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    141. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And who decides what is "one dollar's worth" of any good or service? Duh, the person selling the good or service.

      There is no guarantee that you'll be able to obtain what you think you're entitled to with your one dollar. It's entirely upon others agreeing to exchange their good or service for the same value you believe you deserve. If they believe they deserve 2000 dollars rather than your one dollar, you aren't getting anything from them, and there is no 'rule of law' that is going to force them to give it up for less than what they want for it.

      Even more damning of your argument is the fact that there is no law forcing a seller to even use the dollar to trade with you. The seller can insist on 5 llamas and a bucket of pig crap in exchange for what you want. If you don't have 5 llamas and a bucket of pig crap, you will walk away empty handed.

      Thus, you can only trade your dollar if the person you are trading with agrees that it has value. There is no 'rule of law' backing anything; the very statement is non-sensical, as the GP pointed out.

      A fiat-money currency loses value once the issuing government refuses to further guarantee its value.

      If government guarantees were truly the dominant factor in currency value, hyperinflation would never occur because a government could just "guarantee" the value and the economy would magically stabilise. The problem is, currencies and governments are also subject to the laws of supply and demand, the production possibility frontier, and other fundamental forces of economics. Hyperinflation will consume them too - because other governments no longer believe their currency has any value.

      Once again, it's the opinion of the governments that a particular government trades with that determines value - the opinion of that particular government has no bearing on the situation. That particular government providing a 'guarantee' has as much worth as a salesman 'guaranteeing' you that the car they're trying to unload on you really is top notch. Or those ads I saw from Greece a few years ago offering 6.5% interest on 6 month term deposits to the Greek government. "It's an investment of a lifetime! We'll totally pay you back!" Yeah, sure buddy.

      I'd expect someone with your kind of attitude to be a little more knowledgeable on the subject.

    142. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Bitcoin is backed by trust in math. Specifically, in the algorithms by which they are created and transferred.

      Also, the important thing is that you do not actually trust the people that are sending you bitcoins. Once they send them to you, you know they don't have a copy. No trust in one specific person needed.

      Contrast this to the USD, where you have to trust that US central bank wont print any more. Good luck with that.

    143. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by expat.iain · · Score: 2

      No, but the taxation often provides the tipping point.

      A national currency is marked by 2 things: that you can (or must) pay your taxes with it, and that the employees of that government (most especially the military) accept it in payment. As long as both of those are true, even with serious inflation, the national currency has value.

      That is only pertinent to the internal market value of the currency and only to a limited degree. The North Korean won and Libyan dinar are pretty worthless outside of their native nation states. However a national currency can even internally spiral out of control even where there is still the requirement to pay ones taxes from it and have it accepted as payment (think Zimbabwean dollar).

      Any currency can be massively devalued by the creation of more of itself in excess of the perceived value of the currency. The more notes that are printed, the less the value of those in circulation becomes. This is why quantitative easing and similar solutions will not work. Come back in 5 years if you do not recognise this fact today and we'll talk then.

      The strength in Bitcoin in this matter is that one cannot just run a shell script to create a few million more Bitcoins. Because the release of the unit of exchange is fixed there is a certain degree of security to it. Okay, so there is no major tax-raising government entity behind the currency. Does that mean it is worthless as a medium of exchange? Of course not. A medium of exchange is just that and no more. The value of a one hundred dollar bill is only what you are able to exchange it for, which is entirely dependent upon the environment you find yourself in.

      Personally I would even argue that the claimed weaknesses of Bitcoin (decentralised, no government backing) could be a foundational key strength of the currency.

    144. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Uh, the euro never existed alongside the former currencies "Deutsche Mark" (DM), "Österreichischer Schilling" (ATS), and the others, it replaced them. And it was never really a separate currency - the euro initially simply was a different unit system to express money value in. One euro was, for example, defined to be 1.95583 DM, 13.7603 ATS and the same for every other currency it replaced.

      Introduction of the euro thus actually happened not when the actual euro bills and coins where introduced in 2002, but rather when those conversion factors where set, which was in 1999 (1st of January, to be precise). From that moment on, the euro existed, and it inherited whatever backing (or non-backing) the individual currencies had had.

      The subsequent introduction of the euro as a physical currency was then simply a formality, it didn't have any economic significance. (It had psychological significant, though, since it made it more obvious that europe now really did use one single currency). To ease the transision, people paying cash could chose for a year (throughout 2002) whether to use the old (DM,ATS,...) bills and coins, or the new (€) ones. But whatever their choice, they always used the same currency, which was euros! And since Banks stopped handing out the old bills and coins per January 1st, 2002, most people didn't have much of a choice anyway - unless that had huge amounts of cash hidden under their mattress, that is.

      Your argument is thus completely without merit - the old currencies and the euro never existed alongside each other, you never had a choice of currency when it came to paying taxes, and the german goverment thus never needed to require you to pay them in euros.

    145. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

      and don't forget the gold-pressed latinum.

    146. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

      You get your bitcoins scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?

      "You get your USD scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?" - If you're stupid with your money, that's your own damn fault. No one said you must convert your entire life-savings into bitcoins. But if no one participates with small amounts, the institutions that run the bitcoin exchanges will never get equal protection under law. So quit being a douche, and at least participate with small amounts so that Bitcoins can take off. Bitcoin institutions may not have the same legal protections under law and they never will unless "non-gullible" people like you take a tiny leap.

    147. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

      But if no one participates with small amounts, the institutions that run the bitcoin exchanges will never get equal protection under law. So quit being a DOUCHE, and at least participate with small amounts so that Bitcoins can take off.

      Here's some reading for you:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy#Perfect_solution_fallacy

    148. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

      Please ignore "Chas". He has a very big, illogical, bone to pick with Bitcoins for some odd reason.

    149. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do they get the bitcoins to do the massive selling to drop the price?

    150. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are talking about bank deposits, not currency.

    151. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      You think the government issued all of those dollars you have in your bank account? Do you pay for your day to day living expenses by swiping a credit card?

      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    152. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Is the US going away tomorrow? No.
      Are they going away next year? No.
      Are they going away in 5-10 years? No."

      Come back in 30 years, and we'll talk.

    153. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      You get your bitcoins scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?

      "You get your USD scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?" - If you're stupid with your money, that's your own damn fault. No one said you must convert your entire life-savings into bitcoins. But if no one participates with small amounts, the institutions that run the bitcoin exchanges will never get equal protection under law. So quit being a douche, and at least participate with small amounts so that Bitcoins can take off. Bitcoin institutions may not have the same legal protections under law and they never will unless "non-gullible" people like you take a tiny leap.

      Wait, anybody who doesn't buy into bitcoins is a douche? Wow, that's a great slogan for getting people to join. And it sounds like the same slogan you'd use to get someone to join a pyramid scheme.

    154. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by harks · · Score: 1

      There are a number of services that will exchange Bitcoin for Amazon gift cards. This one does Amazon, Sears, Newegg, and a few others: http://www.btcbuy.info/

    155. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except when a bank gets robbed, you still have your money.

      When Bitcoin exchange gets scrubbed, and your bitcoins get stolen you still have...your certainty that you were participating in a "next gen currency system"?

      Yeah. Whatever.

      It isn't black and white. Illicit transactions have been reversed before, it's not quite like how you describe it.

    156. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by dabadab · · Score: 1

      The dollar has value because it can pay a dollars worth of taxes.

      That's a typically American belief and not really true. The dollar has value because it is accepted as having value - and, BTW, the same is true for gold. If there were some kind of hyperinflation in the USA the dollar would become worthless (as in no shopkeeper would accept it) despite the fact that you still would have to pay taxes in it.

      When Germany jumped into the eurozone, adoption of the euro was extremely slow until the year that Germany required all taxes be paid in euros, and in that year almost everyone converted.

      That's utter bullshit. On 01.01.2002 the Euro became THE German currency and that was it, period. And before that there was no Euro in cash form, so no, there was no "adoption period".

      --
      Real life is overrated.
    157. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kokojie · · Score: 1

      yes, quantum computers can possibly break today's Bitcoin. But Bitcoin protocol will get updated long before quantum computers are commercially available.

    158. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kokojie · · Score: 1

      unless we have miners on Mars or some other planet, Bitcoin will end by the time Earth ends.

    159. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kokojie · · Score: 1

      Sure, currently it doesn't have much use in daily life. BUT it has its uses, for example you CAN'T gamble online with your US dollar, but you could with Bitcoin.

    160. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I just sold a bunch for $14.05 so I'll pass on your generous offer.

      Careful, the sheer scale of a transaction like that could plunge the world economy into chaos.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    161. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by kokojie · · Score: 1

      You mean when USD de-coupled from gold? it lost 50% value over night.

    162. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It sets a stoploss, like cash -- if you cheat me in a Bitcoin transaction, you get at most the Bitcoins I sent you and no method to get more of my money.

      How reassuring.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    163. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You will not buy my bitcoins for $10 USD! If you're going to buy them at all, you will pay me the current exchange rate, which as of yesterday was over $14 USD. Look at the curve and you'll see bitcoins rising in value on a weekly basis. I bought my first BTC back last summer when they were only $2 each.

    164. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bitcoin cannot implode "at a moment's notice" unless the entire internet does so. If you understood the first thing about bitcoin, you'd know that it is run by a vast worldwide network of peer-to-peer nodes. For the system to implode, as you suggest, would require a lot of the internet to instantly disappear, which I don't think is very likely unless the proverbial asteroid hits. An epidemic is even less likely to have any effect on bitcoin.

    165. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US doesn't have to "fail" for its currency to lose value. There are arguably more fundamental reasons for the USD to lose value over the next 5 years than for bitcoin to do so.

    166. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      My whole point was - only currency "said to be" back by gold has ever existed. Givernment always cheat, eventually. If you're worried about the government cheating with the money supply, history shows that a "gold standard" is always a lie, and never actually prevents government cheating with the money supply. There's no upside there, really, and some downsides, so why do people keep thinking it's the silver bullet (silver slippers, Dorothy!) for this problem.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    167. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by luther349 · · Score: 1

      wait till oboma care kicks in and health care skyrockets. not to mention all the new taxes it brings.the usa economy is pretty much done i will be surprised if it doesn't crash in the next 5 years. the job market is dead it all in china now we don't make anything anymore maybe some cars but all the parts are from china. its simple math you cant keep buying new things when jobs are shrinking and paying less due to higher taxes or lower wages because they know people are despret enough to work for them. when people figure accept this realty maybe then will they out these tax and spend and fix nothing people from office.

    168. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      The NSA does have a large computing capacity. That doesn't mean that they get free bitcoins. They still need to pay for the electricity to run those computers, and every second a computer us being used to mine bitcoins is a second it's not doing something else. It's not about how fast you can mine bitcoins. Computer processing power isn't free. It's about how efficiently you can mine bitcoins.

      You're thinking in terms of you or I buying power from our wall socket. That doesn't apply to a government with the power of taxation (not to mention the ablilty to build nuclear power stations to its heart's content).

      Yes the value of bitcoins can be manipulated (like the value of anything). It's harder to manipulate than the US dollar. In order to manipulate bitcoins you need to build a giant NSA size computer farm and use it for that as opposed to something else. In order to manipulate the US dollar the treasury department just prints more. In fact physically printing it might slow them down so they just change a number in a computer to say they have more money without actually needing to use paper or ink.

      Your pretty far off about economics and commodities here. The amount of actual dollar currency in circulation, billas and coins, is a small percentage of the money supply. The Fed can do all sorts of things to increase the money supply, to a vast extent, but it can't literally print money. The amount of physical currency in circulation only matters if it's to small, and the problem with bitcoins is the total pool is too small.

      I am saying that trying to manipulate bitcoin is like trying to manipulate the gold market. You could spend billions of dollars buying mining equipment and flooding the market with gold, but that's not likely profitable because of the work required to do it.

      There is vastly more value in all the worlds silver, or all the worlds gold, than in all the world's bitcoins, and the silver market has been cornered in my lifetime. You're being naieve if you think that has anything to do with minig equipment. A couple of speculators effectively controlled all the worlds silver markets for weeks, driving the price of silver through the roof for their profit. They were shut down because of an existing legal framework to prevent that sort of thing - a framework that does not protect bitcoins.

      Seriously, it's really easy to manipluate commodity prices, without a legal defense, and there are speculators out there with more money to leverage than the current value of all bitcoins combined. It's completely trivial for either these specualtors or any large governement to just decide what price bitcoins will be. When central banks start playing currency manipluation games, their games are several orders of magnitude bigger than the bitcoin supply.

      Which, BTW, has been a recurring historical problem for most specie-based currencies. When you base your currency on a limited supply, you open yourself to all sorts of commodity games. Governments can protect you from commodity games by passing laws, but nothing stops the government from playing those games.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    169. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by CodeArtisan · · Score: 1

      The big issue with gambling sites is that you have no way to confirm the risks.

      I could create a poker site to use an algorithmic that favors the house. How would you know? I can have my friends playing at tables and when they are logged in, it tilts the deal into their favor.

      These, and other, cheats only require temporary and slight changes to have a bigger long term impact. You can also use social engineering.

      Online poker sites are full of geeks. There are well documented cases where said geeks have analyzed millions of hands of data to prove that cheating and fraud was occurring. Google "Absolute Poker" for one such example.

    170. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Where do they get the bitcoins to do the massive selling to drop the price?

      Depends who the "they" are. And what their goal is. Drop the price, or simply make the currency unwanted? Someone like Goldman Sachs would quitely acquire a bunch of bitcoins, then corner the market, sending the price through the roof, then dump their supply, then repeat.

      Someone like the US Government wouldn't need to be so gentle. Send some guys with guns to acquire every server used to host a Bitcoin exchange - now they have all the bitcoins formerly in exchanges. Have the NSA mine an absurd amount. Grow $1billion in weed on government farms (or sieze it from all the farms the feds usually ignore) and sell it for bitcoins until they have most of them. Or easier than any of those - just start rumors about doing those sorts of things. You'd be amazed how powerfual of an effect credible romors have on commodity markets - it's only regulatory protection that makes any commodity market function in the first place.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    171. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its a scam. Think about who is the guy that wrote the paper? ah, a pen name a fake named person. How then did the "software" magically appear?
      when the paper never went into any mathematical detail?

      magic beans.
       

    172. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by WaywardGeek · · Score: 1

      I heard stories about how the requirement to pay taxes in a currency can damage a society. I heard that in Kenya, most people did not use money until the British came and instituted a property tax on all land. Villages around the country had to send their young people to work for the British at insanely low wages, just so they could send their money back to their villages to pay taxes. I probably screwed up this story horribly, but the person telling it seemed to think it resulted in a lot of grief for the people of Kenya. Heck, I could even have the country wrong, but I suspect it was an often repeated pattern.

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    173. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only means by which Bitcoins gain value is economic growth. Much like stocks and unlike pyramid schemes, one's returns are directly proportional to investment and don't depend on who you are or your connection to other investors.

      Pyramid schemes:
      If you convince people to buy in, you benefit. If they convince more people, you benefit. If you don't convince anyone to join, you gain nothing.

      Bitcoin/stocks:
      Even if you sit on your ass and do nothing, your % gains are the same as someone who actively encourages new parties to invest.

      Regarding protections, I would rather take the risk of loss and pay for my own protection than pay for everyone's protection, as is the case with most other currencies and banking systems. I am not held accountable for your (or your bank's) poor security. If it makes you any more comfortable with the idea, think of Bitcoin like a highly decentralized PayPal with better ToS, and invest (or not) as you would PayPal stock (which could also evaporate overnight).

    174. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      Value is categorically subjective.

      The fact that gold is priced so astronomically high means actual people do not value the dollar very much right now.

    175. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      society is the illusion of individuals blurred together

    176. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its not terribly useful in the real world?

      I mean honestly, can I buy food with it? Gas? How many merchants within 50 miles of my home (DC area) are currently accepting bitcoins? What about amazon, or ebay / paypal? Newegg?

      Sure, I could transfer it to other people, but its also a pretty volatile currency. I have no reason to believe the value sent will reflect anything near the value once I exchange it into dollars, if I can even perform the exchange (since it requires Bitcoin exchanges or a willing purchaser).

      Its kind of like trying to transfer money by trading stock: sure, it sort of works, but who really wants that kind of volatility? What supermarket would ever want to do that?

      you can use bitcoin to buy from amazon ---- look here

      http://www.btcbuy.info/GiftCards.cshtml

    177. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      The mathematics behind it won't. Hence what I wrote.

    178. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And greed is NOT the cohesive force behind the Central Banking system or Wall Street investment houses? Where did you ever get that idea?

    179. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      No gold is not adding another turtle. It's adding a different animal. You don't need to trust governments not to print more gold. The amount of gold available on the planet is limited, and it is continually getting harder and harder to mine as it becomes more scarce which roughly matches the fact that we are getting better and better at it, but eventually gold production will approach 0. it will cost more money to make more gold than the gold is worth.

      Gold is a fiat currency just like dollars, but it comes with the guarantee that more can't be made easily. Barring a giant gold meteor crashing into the earth, the supply of gold is fairly predictable. Bitcoin is modeled in a similar way. Bitcoins get harder and harder to generate as more are created and eventually it will hit a cap and no more will be made.

    180. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      I never advocated for the gold standard. I was just saying what a gold standard is, and what it means for a currency to be backed. Whether any currency has ever been truly backed is not something I think is even important.

      The fact that governments cheat the gold standard is all the more reason that bitcoin is better than a gold standard. We could just go back to using gold rather than a gold standard and this kind of manipulation would disappear, and we'd run into a whole new set of problems. We'd all have to buy devices to measure gold dust to buy things. It would be a giant waste of time and resources. Bitcoin has most of the advantages of gold without most of the drawbacks. It has the convenience of credit cards (not having to carry gold bars with you to buy things) with the safety of a gold standard (can't be easily manipulated by a central authority).

    181. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Bitcoin has the one gigantic disadvantage that it's followers seem to overlook: a currency is merely the most convenient commodity to trade in, and speculators will destroy any unregulated commodity market given time. Americas commodity markets are "free markets" in the normal sense of the phrase, but they only work becuase of ciritical structural protections backed by the government's monopoly on force. As I've mentioned elsewhere in this thread: the total value of all bitcoins is significantly less than the total value of all silver, and the silver market has been cornered in my lifetime (and only the pre-existing legal framework forbidding that was able to restore sanity to that market). A "central authority" is needed here.

      Also worth remembering is that markets need physical protection - bitcoins can be stolen not just through hacking Mt Gox, but also by sending guys with guns to take all servers and all backups. A "central authority" with an army could do this at any time unless another "central authority" with an army stood in its way (and for much of history that sort of military invasion to secure resources in limited supply was the norm, after all).

      tl;dr: the technical details of a currency matter little, you can't have one at scale without a government to protect it.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    182. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to mention the later part in the post that mitigates or eliminates that potential problem:

      and there are Bitcoin escrow services to verify I received the product before I release the payment to you

    183. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      You're thinking in terms of you or I buying power from our wall socket. That doesn't apply to a government with the power of taxation (not to mention the ablilty to build nuclear power stations to its You're thinking in terms of you or I buying power from our wall socket. That doesn't apply to a government with the power of taxation (not to mention the ablilty to build nuclear power stations to its heart's content).

      I am not saying the government doesn't have the ability to make a lot of bitcoins. I am saying that it will be very expensive. Why would the government spend a bunch of money to make roughly the same amount of money? This is like spending $1 million dollars to get $1 million dollars worth of gold. What's the point? It only makes sense when you can print money and spend $0 dollars to make $1 million.

      Your pretty far off about economics and commodities here. The amount of actual dollar currency in circulation, billas and coins, is a small percentage of the money supply. The Fed can do all sorts of things to increase the money supply, to a vast extent, but it can't literally print money. The amount of physical currency in circulation only matters if it's to small, and the problem with bitcoins is the total pool is too small.

      First of all I said "the treasury" not "the fed", and second of all it doesn't matter whether the money is digital or physical. The pool size of bitcoin doesn't matter. the number of dollars in circulation doesn't matter. If every 50% of US dollar were destroyed randomly, the value of the dollar would double and everyone would have the same amount of money (i.e. the same amount of represented wealth). The only thing that is required of a currency is that there is enough granularity to accomodate small transactions. It doesn't matter if I have $100,000 or 100000000 yen or 100000000 euros or 100000 bitcoins. Those are just units that are arbitrary. The value is determined by the supply. If there is less supply, then each one is just worth more.

      There is vastly more value in all the worlds silver, or all the worlds gold, than in all the world's bitcoins, and the silver market has been cornered in my lifetime. You're being naieve if you think that has anything to do with minig equipment. A couple of speculators effectively controlled all the worlds silver markets for weeks, driving the price of silver through the roof for their profit. They were shut down because of an existing legal framework to prevent that sort of thing - a framework that does not protect bitcoins.

      Why is there more value in gold and silver than bitcoins? It's just perception. If there was more gold, then the gold would be worth less per ounce. Gold prices change. Bitcoin prices change. If bitcoin prices go up to $1 billion then the total value of bitcoins will be $21 quadrillion dollars and represent more value than the total gold in the world. Why are people willing to pay so much more for such a small amount of gold? It's only because they feel confident they can sell it for that amount. It's arbitrary.

      Seriously, it's really easy to manipluate commodity prices, without a legal defense, and there are speculators out there with more money to leverage than the current value of all bitcoins combined. It's completely trivial for either these specualtors or any large governement to just decide what price bitcoins will be. When central banks start playing currency manipluation games, their games are several orders of magnitude bigger than the bitcoin supply.

      Maybe it's easy to manipulate commodity prices by your definition of easy. It's orders of magnitude easier to manipulate currency.

      Which, BTW, has been a recurring historical problem for most specie-based currencies. When you base your currency on a limited supply, you open yourself to all sorts of commodity games. Governments can protect you fro

    184. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      And you base all this on a few statements? Wow you know your assumptions about me and how I think so well... its impressive.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    185. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Urine is a useful source of phosphorus for dyes.

    186. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You get your bitcoins scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?

      "You get your USD scammed or stolen? Your recourse is...what?" - If you're stupid with your money, that's your own damn fault. No one said you must convert your entire life-savings into bitcoins. But if no one participates with small amounts, the institutions that run the bitcoin exchanges will never get equal protection under law. So quit being a douche, and at least participate with small amounts so that Bitcoins can take off. Bitcoin institutions may not have the same legal protections under law and they never will unless "non-gullible" people like you take a tiny leap.

      Wait, anybody who doesn't buy into bitcoins is a douche? Wow, that's a great slogan for getting people to join. And it sounds like the same slogan you'd use to get someone to join a pyramid scheme.

      XcepticZP called Chas a douche for demanding that someone (the US taxpayer) reimburse him when he falls for a scam, not for not buying bitcoins.

      Even if he did, and the slogan was "buy into our amazing pyramid scheme, Bitcoin!", that still wouldn't qualify as evidence that it is; there is no hierarchical structure like with pyramid schemes.

    187. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      like most countries the U.S. backs its currency with the authority to tax .

      Only since 1913...

      From then until 1970 the currency of the United States was TREBLE backed: by gold/silver, by income-taxation and by fiat of the Treasury.

      Now, the currency is only backed by the fiat of the Treasury. Our yearly taxation can't even pay the 'interest' on the money we 'loaned' from ourselves to make the money we 'loaned' ourselves. We probably used our gold reserves to pay Europeans on a bunch of debts.

      The only thing left is Faith strikeand Credit/strike in the United States Government.

    188. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Bitcoin is not a commodity because it has no utility. It is a currency. Also there is a limit to how much the value can be increased by speculators. The fact that bitcoin can be mined means that if the price ever gets too high, it will become profitable to mine it and sell it at the inflated higher price, therefore driving the price down.

      You can't steal all the botcoins by taking "all the servers". I feel like you don't understand how bitcoin works. The data describing who owns which bitcoins is on every single computer with a botcoin wallet. You'd have to steal every computer from every person who deals in bitcoin. There is no central server. Even if you stole every computer, you couldn't transfer any money without the private key (which is not stored on the computer). You don't even need to steal this data, it is publicly available. The only data stored is the the complete transaction history of bitcoin, not the keys needed to make more transactions. The thing that gives you the ability to steal bitcoins is knowing the private key of someone with bitcoins. This however is no different than knowing someones bank account information and sending yourself money through western union.

    189. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Bitcoin is not a commodity because it has no utility. It is a currency

      You might want to read that again. Currency has utility as currency, or it's just seashells. My definition was the accepted practical one, however: in practice whatever commodity (even fiat currency) is the easiest to exchange and store is what folks use as currency. Right now bitcoins flourish on the black market for just that reason.

      Also there is a limit to how much the value can be increased by speculators. The fact that bitcoin can be mined means that if the price ever gets too high, it will become profitable to mine it and sell it at the inflated higher price, therefore driving the price down.

      All of which is true of silver, and yet the market on silver was in fact cornered in modern times, and there's vastly more dollars-worth of silver out there. When theory and facts conflict, it's never good to try to hand-wave the facts away.

      If GoldmanSachs decided to fuck with bitcoins for fun and profit, with no legal restraint to their huge and proven bag of tricks, they could easily destroy the market. We have significant structural legal protection in place for markets for exactly that reason: markets are otherwise fragile, and there's a long history of speculator-driven market crashes documenting the details.

      I feel like you don't understand how bitcoin works.

      Think of it this way: Mt Gox has already had security issues that have pushed it (and thereby bitcoin) to the brink of collapse. If Mt Gox hadn't made people whole after their last intrusion, things would have been pretty desparate for bitcoin. Bitcoins in your wallet are safe, sure, but they're nearly useless without a trusted exchange, and you give the exchange the ability to rob you in order to use it, so withoiut that trust there's no exchange.

      The thing that gives you the ability to steal bitcoins is knowing the private key of someone with bitcoins. This however is no different than knowing someones bank account information and sending yourself money through western union.

      The government can't easily take cash buried in your back yard (until they know you have it), but money in a bank account? They don't need the account info ahead of time, the bank will give it to them, or the bank will cease to exist. The same will be true of any bitcoin exchange (unless a government friendly to bitcoins and not to the government that wants your info offers haven, but then you're just choosing which government is in control).

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    190. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Why would the government spend a bunch of money to make roughly the same amount of money? This is like spending $1 million dollars to get $1 million dollars worth of gold. What's the point?

      What's the point of a $1 million cruise missile? Sometimes the government expresses its dislike of something, or exerts control through the power to destroy.

      A bank can't exist if there's a nation that dislikes it, unless there's a strong nation that protects it. The same is true of a bitcoin exchange. If bitcoin continues to grow in significance, it will eventually be controlled/regulated by some government. And almost every currency that collapesed in history started out as the sensible way to prevent the government from doing what led to the previous collapse. The story of government control of any currency seems to have the same ending.

      Why is there more value in gold and silver than bitcoins? It's just perception. If there was more gold, then the gold would be worth less per ounce.

      You missed my point entirely. Bitcoins are very small scale right now. They're a bigger currency than the favor bank in a retirement community, but really small on the scale of a national currency or major commodity (in terms of current exchange rates, the one source of objective value). And speculators have a proven (and disasterous) record of trashing much larger markets than bitcoins, when structural regulation was lacking.

      Seriously, markets just don't work without a government to forbid the outrageous shit speculators have actually done in the past.

      That's my point here: you need goverment regulation/control of any signficant currency, commodity, market, bank, whatever, to protect it: both from speculators and from the first government that takes a dislike to it.

      The supply of a currency is meaningless.

      In the context of specie-based currency that's flat wrong, as proven repeatedly by history. It's purely a logistical issue: the money supply limits the economy, but in avery practical way economies and nations will collapse if the average guy wanting to buy or sell simply can't get his hands on any currency. Bitcoins are infinitely divisible, and fiat currencies infinitely inflatable, and fractional reserve banking vastly inflates the effective money supply, but if all you have is gold coins then there had better actually be some physically left in your country, and that's not at all a safe assumption.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    191. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Barring a bit of inflation here and there? Seriously, what? Do you know what's happened and how much currency debasement there has been in the last five years? No inflation is ever a good thing. It massages the egos of humans into believing that their investments are going up and paint over that everything else is as well.

      Yes, he probably does know. And, no, there really hasn't been any major inflation. The CPI has gone up some, but all of the spikes were related to oil prices (which always fluctuated), and the small but general increase is the same as its ever been. There has been no major increase in inflation despite the large increase in the money base. Which is, of course, what you'd expect, if you were in a liquidity trap.

      To rebut your other point, yes, some inflation is a good thing. Lots of inflation is bad, hyperinflation more so, but a small amount of inflation acts as a minor natural tax on cash. It incentivizes spending, which generally promotes growth. I'm curious - would you prefer deflation? Or that the monetary base remain constant in value? The former is actively detrimental to a healthy society, as it promotes hoarding of cash. One is less likely to spend cash today, because it buys more tomorrow. Extended across an economy, and growth is stunted. No inflation or deflation does not naturally pressure in either direction, but that does mean its not providing an optimal environment for growth.

      Comparing the price of one currency to another when they are all being debased is a fallacy. Over the last five years it is pretty clear that dollar has declined markedly in value. In case you hadn't noticed there are a lot of dollars around. Everyone has them and that doesn't make it terribly valuable.

      Do you actually have a metric by which you're arguing that the dollar has lost value? Anecdotally, it seems to be buying me the same that it did two years ago, within a margin of error. Wider, looking at any of the currency conversions (looking at 'healthy' European economies (1), as well as some the other economies(2)), it doesn't seem to have declined in any particular manner either. I'm going to have to say that what you're arguing is just false. While the dollar has not remained static in value, it certainly still buys a lot, the minor difference in either direction (i.e. buying more than it did $n years ago, or less) is going to vary based on the specific comparison.

      1 - Dollar vs. Pound, note that its been relatively steady: http://www.google.com/#hl=en&tbo=d&sclient=psy-ab&q=conversion+between+dollar+and+pound&oq=conversion+between+dollar+and+pound&gs_l=hp.3..0j0i8i30l3.1797.5460.0.5523.35.17.0.14.14.0.135.1273.12j4.16.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.BXGwBfwILfw&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&bvm=bv.1357700187,d.dmQ&fp=efd2c8fa9c025d66&biw=1231&bih=949

      2 - Dollar vs. Euro, note that the dollar has (generally) increased relative to the euro, with the falls in value preceded by a larger spike in value: http://www.google.com/#hl=en&tbo=d&sclient=psy-ab&q=conversion+between+dollar+and+euro&oq=conversion+between+dollar+and+euro&gs_l=hp.3..0i30j0i8j0i8i30l2.141204.141466.1.141723.4.4.0.0.0.0.184.469.3j1.4.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.-yY-krCSrUQ&pbx=1&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&bvm=bv.1357700187,d.dmQ&fp=efd2c8fa9c025d66&biw=1231&bih=949

    192. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      You might want to read that again. Currency has utility as currency, or it's just seashells. My definition was the accepted practical one, however: in practice whatever commodity (even fiat currency) is the easiest to exchange and store is what folks use as currency. Right now bitcoins flourish on the black market for just that reason.

      Currency has utility as currency, or it's just seashells. Yes but dollars and bitcoins *only* have utility as a currency. This is what separates dollars and bitcoins from other commodities like corn, which can be used regardless of the perceived value.

      All of which is true of silver, and yet the market on silver was in fact cornered in modern times, and there's vastly more dollars-worth of silver out there. When theory and facts conflict, it's never good to try to hand-wave the facts away.

      The market can't become cornered on bitcoins (at least not yet). The fact that other are mining bitcoins, doesn't hinder you from doing the same. In fact if speculators drive up the price of bitcoin, it becomes all the more profitable to mine it yourself and try to sell it before the market crashes. Unlike precious metals, the "bitcoin mines" can't be monopolized because they are virtual. No hand waiving here. This is just economics 101.

      Think of it this way: Mt Gox has already had security issues that have pushed it (and thereby bitcoin) to the brink of collapse. If Mt Gox hadn't made people whole after their last intrusion, things would have been pretty desparate for bitcoin. Bitcoins in your wallet are safe, sure, but they're nearly useless without a trusted exchange, and you give the exchange the ability to rob you in order to use it, so withoiut that trust there's no exchange.

      There is nothing inherent about bitcoin that causes exchanges that deal with it to be insecure. It's just the case that currently the bitcoin exchanges have less security because they are smaller. There is no reason a more secure exchange can't be made, or that an already trusted exchange could add bitcoins.

      The government can't easily take cash buried in your back yard (until they know you have it), but money in a bank account? They don't need the account info ahead of time, the bank will give it to them, or the bank will cease to exist. The same will be true of any bitcoin exchange (unless a government friendly to bitcoins and not to the government that wants your info offers haven, but then you're just choosing which government is in control).

      The government can absolutely take money you have buried in your backyard. They can double the money supply and now half the money in your backyard is gone. They can also seize your money from your bank account without your consent. They can not take your bitcoins. You only need a bitcoin exchange to change to other currencies controlled by governments. If you can spend bitcoins at the super market and amazon, you'd never need to exchange your bitcoins for money. If bitcoin only ever amounts to a proxy for US dollars, I would say it failed. Luckily the idea is out there and if botcoin doesn't succeed, something else will. The fact that you think a currency requires government control to function, I believe is simply lack of imagination.

    193. Re: Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by dropadrop · · Score: 1

      As long as somebody borrows the money for fuel and ammo it will work well. After that things could change rapidly (no, I'm not saying it will soon, on my logic it should have happened ages ago).

    194. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      What's the point of a $1 million cruise missile? Sometimes the government expresses its dislike of something, or exerts control through the power to destroy.

      A $1 million cruise missile gives you power to impose your will on others and/or prevent someone else from imposing their will on you (the same as any other weapon).

      A bank can't exist if there's a nation that dislikes it, unless there's a strong nation that protects it. The same is true of a bitcoin exchange. If bitcoin continues to grow in significance, it will eventually be controlled/regulated by some government. And almost every currency that collapesed in history started out as the sensible way to prevent the government from doing what led to the previous collapse. The story of government control of any currency seems to have the same ending.

      Bitcoin *can't* be controlled by a government. It's an inherently decentralized design. Aside from arresting anyone they catch using bitcoin, shutting down the internet, or taking people's private keys through coercion, they can't stop people from issuing signed transactions. If you have an internet connection and a working computer, you can use bitcoin without any government sanction. The only thing limiting you is the number of people that will accept it as currency and be willing to pay you with it.

      Seriously, markets just don't work without a government to forbid the outrageous shit speculators have actually done in the past. That's my point here: you need goverment regulation/control of any signficant currency, commodity, market, bank, whatever, to protect it: both from speculators and from the first government that takes a dislike to it.

      Bitcoin is no more prone to speculation that gold or silver. And before you say it, the bitcoin market can't be cornered like silver (not yet). You can mine bitcoins without owning a bitcoin mine. All you need is a computer. The price of bitcoins is capped by the power of computers. The price of a bitcoin can't be driven up to $1000 by speculation (today) because I can just spend $3 to mine a bitcoin and sell it for $1000, and if enough people do this, it will drive the price of bitcoins back down to $3.

      In the context of specie-based currency that's flat wrong, as proven repeatedly by history. It's purely a logistical issue: the money supply limits the economy, but in avery practical way economies and nations will collapse if the average guy wanting to buy or sell simply can't get his hands on any currency. Bitcoins are infinitely divisible, and fiat currencies infinitely inflatable, and fractional reserve banking vastly inflates the effective money supply, but if all you have is gold coins then there had better actually be some physically left in your country, and that's not at all a safe assumption.

      Bitcoins are near infinitely divisible. Each bitcoin can be divided into 2.1 quadrillion units. Thats way more than the number of pennies in existence. Why can't the average guy wanting buy or sell something not get any bitcoins? Does he not have access to a computer or the internet? Thats all you need. Bitcoins aren't physically anywhere. Countries are irrelevant in the context of bitcoin. A person in russia can mine or transfer bitcoins just like someone in kenya or the US. You don't need to physically find them. You find them in the realm of mathematics (which everyone has access to).

    195. Re: Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by dropadrop · · Score: 1
      The US dollar is not just a national currency, if it where they would be in way more trouble for their recless spending. The dollar has it's current value because it was chosen as the international trade currency that almost all countries use while trading between each other. To do this they have to have a large dollar reserve allowing the US to sell treasuries with very low interest. If more and more countries start trading with other currencies the value of the dollar would drop very quickly, and the interest you pay for loans would double (or more) before you know it.

      Most comments on a currencies valuation are correct, but it's not the reason the dollar is valued as high as it is.

    196. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      I selected "1 year" because there doesnt appear to be any reliable data for bitcoin before that; however I recall a massive crash earlier than that.

      I was attempting to be generous to bitcoin, but if you like we can look at average USD volatility over the last decade vs bitcoin over the last 3 years; I think it will just further prove my point.

    197. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      Okay. So, to make a scam feel more legit, I should participate in said scam?

      What kind of fucking drugs are YOU on?

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    198. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      Uh huh...

      Links?

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    199. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      If you get your funds stolen or scammed via a bad site, it's called a CHARGEBACK.

      You don't have the same recourse with Bitcoin.

      So stop the stupid act (unless it's not an act). Then just...stop.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    200. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Chas · · Score: 1

      So recognizing a pyramid scheme and a means for illegal money laundering is illogical?

      Okay....

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    201. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by akihabara · · Score: 1

      LOL. You've so bought into the sucker system that's been sold to you, and you don't even know it.

      What is guaranteeing your $50 today is worth $50 tomorrow? No-one, and the fact is it won't be; it'll be worth less.

      Get it in Bitcoins and it'll be worth more $ tomorrow. But meanwhile enjoy your fiat. After all, it's backed by that military that couldn't beat a bunch of peasants in Vietnam, right?

    202. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there is nothing that prevents me from converting every dollar I make, immediately to bitcoins, and changing some of my bitcoins back into US dollars only on April 15th to pay my taxes.

      Sure there is. market forces prevent people from doing this. If everyone did it, bitcoins would crash just before tax time every single year.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    203. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Backing it with aircraft carriers means we ARE backing it with land -- it's just land in other countries.

    204. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Just quick notes:

      All of which is true of silver, and yet the market on silver was in fact cornered in modern times, and there's vastly more dollars-worth of silver out there. When theory and facts conflict, it's never good to try to hand-wave the facts away.

      The market can't become cornered on bitcoins (at least not yet). The fact that other are mining bitcoins, doesn't hinder you from doing the same. In fact if speculators drive up the price of bitcoin, it becomes all the more profitable to mine it yourself and try to sell it before the market crashes. Unlike precious metals, the "bitcoin mines" can't be monopolized because they are virtual. No hand waiving here. This is just economics 101.

      I thought I was being clear with "All of which is true with silver": does it surprise you that people can mine silver too, and more do when the price goes up? Doesn't matter for the day-by-day market: it takes time to mine either, and the amount of new silver or bitcoins that can be mined each day is small by comparison to the "float" in the market. In fact, aren't bitcoins self-limiting? Don't more than half the bitcoins that can every exist already exist, or am I misunderstanding that?

      There is no reason a more secure exchange can't be made, or that an already trusted exchange could add bitcoins.

      There's no proof that anything online can be safe against an "advanced persistant threat" (like a well funded government attack). Online theft from banks (mostly by ID theft) is only held to low levels because it's illegal, and a government would get pissed if it caught another government doing it.

      They can also seize your money from your bank account without your consent. They can not take your bitcoins. You only need a bitcoin exchange to change to other currencies controlled by governments

      Sorry, you missed my point here - let me spell it out. The goverment can sieze money in a bank because it controls the bank. The goverment controls the bank because it can destroy the bank. Any large government can currently destroy any bitcoin exchange - when they care enough to exert control, they will have control, because that's what the power to destroy gives you.

      The fact that you think a currency requires government control to function, I believe is simply lack of imagination.

      Not my point at all not talking abotu currencies here. A market, bank, or exchange can't survive a determined attack without the sort of defense a government provides - defense back by considerable force. And governments more than anything else don't tolerate non-governments wielding that sort of force.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    205. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by lgw · · Score: 1

      I mostly replied to you on the other thread, but:

      In the context of specie-based currency that's flat wrong, as proven repeatedly by history ... Bitcoins are infinitely .... but if all you have is gold coins then there had better actually be some physically left in your country, and that's not at all a safe assumption.

      Bitcoins are near infinitely divisible. ... Bitcoins aren't physically anywhere.

      Perhaps you see you're not disagreeing with me here? Specie-based currency, beloved by gold nutters who rail against bitcoin for not being back by anything, is a worse choice for a national currency. I think bitcoins would work fine as a national currency! But it wouldn't solve any problems, because the government doesn't need to print new money to double the money supply. Limiting the supply of the "physical" currency itself (as long as there's enough for practical trade) is almost meaningless, when you have a zero-reserve banking system as we do.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    206. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you can sell for whatever currency you want, if your business practice results in customers incurring a debt or bill paid after services rendered or materials delivered, you can no longer demand payment in a different form.

      tldr version: if you don't want legal tender get paid up front

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    207. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about amazon, or ebay / paypal? Newegg?

      http://www.bitcoinstore.com/

      It's actually cheaper than Amazon and Newegg for most of the products that it provides.

    208. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      It was a simple example. Also the crash (if it happened) wouldn't prevent me from doing it, it would only discourage me. If everyone knew the crash was going to happen, it wouldn't be an abrupt crash. There would be a sharp jump in bitcoin prices the day after tax day and then a gradual decline until just before the next tax day, then another sharp jump (i.e. a sawtooth pattern).

    209. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      If bitcoin were adopted widely enough, we wouldn't need physical money anymore. In fact it is arguable that we don't even need physical money right now. The government can limit the supply of dollars by simply raising interest rates and halting the creation of money through the treasury and fed (i.e. halting the creation of debt). But it cannot do these things for bitcoin.

      And really when the government decreases the money supply and/or raises interest rates, they are only able to do this by undoing the artificial increase in the money supply. If they were not able to create money, their would be no increase to back away from. The money supply would just always be at some base level.

      I don't even think it's necessarily a bad system. Using debt as currency and raising and lowering interest rates and money supply to control the amount of investment vs. savings of the whole economy. I think it is actually quite an elegant system. I just don't necessarily trust the people in charge not to manipulate it for their own benefit.

      Bitcoin is just a better version of gold. It provides protection from from easy manipulation. But unlike gold it can be transferred electronically. The fact that the US dollar is backed (i.e. controlled) by the US government does not in my mind make it a safe investment. Rather, it guarantees that it will be constantly and easily manipulated by the people in charge. It's like betting on a Pro wresting match. You can still win or lose, but the whole thing is rigged and some people already know whats going to happen. With bitcoin, there is nobody pulling all the levers. Everybody is pulling a small lever (although some levers are smaller than others).

    210. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      I do so love the people who insist that there's been some ridiculous amount of inflation when it's patently obvious and provable that there hasn't. The value of any given currency is at it's core, about what you can buy with it, and in a country like the US it's what you can buy locally(exchange rates impact countries that buy goods from overseas as opposed to the US which manufactures them overseas but sells them in US dollars). How many dollars there might or might not be really has no impact beyond the degree to which it affects the previously mentioned ability.

      In addition to this, you have to separate out places where the cost of something has increased or decreased as compared to how your buying power has been affected. As a specific example which I'm sure, as a fiat currency is evil nutter, is near and dear to your heart, the cost of gold has skyrocketed over the last decade or so. This is not an issue of the dollar being worth less gold, but an issue of gold being worth more dollars. Whenever the economy gets a bit shaky nutters like you purchase large amounts of shiny gold metal to make themselves feel safer, and the Chinese government, for a lot of the same largely insane reasons, is doing the same thing. Demand for gold goes up against a relatively fixed supply and so prices increase. When the economy gets back on track of course, as always, gold will start to lose significant value and all the paranoid nutters will end up broke, but they won't notice because the economy will have picked back up and they'll decide it was inflation all along.

    211. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      The foreign exchange market is a market just like the stock market. This means it's full of wildly irrational people and ultra fast trades done by computers. There are underlying factors which affect the value of a currency(most importantly a combination of the interest rates you can get for buying bonds in said currency and the overall strength of that economy), but the actual fluctuations in price are just as irrational and insane as any other market. People buy currency X with currency Y at price Z and this determines the value of said currency. It doesn't matter how many of currency X or Y there are or how Z relates to the actual buying power of either currency.

      This means that yes, the current state of the dollar is both irrational and based on sound economic principles and is fundamentally a contradiction in terms. Welcome to the modern markets my friend.

    212. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 1

      I do so love the people who insist that there's been some ridiculous amount of inflation when it's patently obvious and provable that there hasn't.

      Errrrrrrrr.....whatever. The rest of your post is a shocking ignorance of how a monetary system works, or indeed what supply and demand does to value.

    213. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 1

      The CPI is crap. The only barometer for inflation is by measuring what you can purchase with gold.

    214. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by segedunum · · Score: 1

      This is not an issue of the dollar being worth less gold, but an issue of gold being worth more dollars.

      This is the central point the majority don't get. No, that isn't the case. The dollar is worth less than gold because the dollar is being debased. Gold isn't because you have to dig enormous holes in the ground and dig it up.

    215. Re:Another idiot buying into the bitcoin scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I bother arguing formally with a troll who doesn't bother doing the same?

      When money at your bank is stolen, it's insured and paid back. Which is the same with bitcoin, except the exchanges don't enjoy the same protection yet due to the early age of the currency. That doesn't make it a scam unless you want it to be one. Bitcoin can be exchanged for real money and has always been, and the comparison you made makes no damn sense because you could ALSO get insurance for that much bitcoin if you bothered.

      So was your point that you're too incompetent to run a good exchange? You've successfully made that point. Was your point that Bitcoin is an early currency and that it could benefit from more law support and better institutions? You've made it too.

      But the point where Bitcoin is a "scam" (a scam requires an actual scam, not just something you disagree with and want gone because you're a totalitarian fuckwit) has never been successfully made by anyone because it just isn't true.

  2. Rulers, not rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Betting on some legal loop hole is folly. The laws suit the law makers and if they want to go after you, no technicality is going to change that.

    1. Re:Rulers, not rules by hguorbray · · Score: 4, Insightful

      yep -and I am sure that Vegas, Atlantic city and the mob are putting their money and politicians into making sure it stays illegal regardless of the currency used

      -I'm just sayin'

    2. Re:Rulers, not rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No. They are actively trying to get online poker/cards legalized, but only for states that have already approved it (ie: Nevada and New Jersey). They want to control the online gambling market.

  3. Sweet by SleazyRidr · · Score: 3, Informative

    It'll be nice to have an established poker site taking Bitcoins. Not that I want to disparage the current bitcoin poker sites (I like seals with clubs) but they just don't have the polish and finish to which I've become accustomed.

  4. Betting on Bitcon is risky enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Without even bringing in games of chance.

  5. Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can anyone remind me as to why gambling is illegal?

    1. Re:Unrelated, but still by Cryacin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because the right people don't make money with it.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    2. Re:Unrelated, but still by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2

      Because it doesn't involve horses?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    3. Re:Unrelated, but still by WillgasM · · Score: 2

      It makes Jesus cry

    4. Re:Unrelated, but still by Bigby · · Score: 2

      It is selectively illegal. Games of chance are only illegal for those not associated with the government (in most areas). Investment/insurance gambling is legal but regulated enough that you need to be rich to be the "house" (on the good end).

      Amazingly, casino games give house odds of 0.1%-20% per roll/hand. But PowerBall games give more than 50% house odds. Make the better ones illegal or limited in availability. And when they are there, tax the crap out of them and make them advertise gambling addiction prevention stuff.

    5. Re:Unrelated, but still by ThePeices · · Score: 1

      How do you know* this?

      * Please note that I am using the word "know", not "think".

    6. Re:Unrelated, but still by Miamicanes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Can anyone remind me as to why gambling is illegal?

      To ensure a never-ending supply of new daytraders to supply Wall Street's liquidity needs?

    7. Re:Unrelated, but still by gl4ss · · Score: 2

      Can anyone remind me as to why gambling is illegal?

      it doesn't provide industrial meaningful benefit, so it's free game for the government to tax to hell(and to build monopolies on, just another way of taxing to hell) since there's no productivity involved in it in the first place. it doesn't create eggs for anyones omelet, it produces no milk, it produces no steel girders to be used in building butchering facilities.

      you could argue any entertainment to go into this category though.. and largely it's all taxed to hell anyways, whilst some other fields are actively subsidized.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    8. Re:Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it hurts people besides the ones who actually participate?

    9. Re:Unrelated, but still by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Such as?

    10. Re:Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'cause He told me so, duh

    11. Re:Unrelated, but still by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      Because I saw Jesus and his brother Juan at the track in Miami, and when they lost all their money betting on Castro's Little Bastard to place, Jesus cried like a baby.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    12. Re:Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alcohol consumption does the same, yet that's legal.

    13. Re:Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Such as the poor loan shark that really doesn't want to break any fingers, but is left with no recourse due to gambling addicts.

    14. Re:Unrelated, but still by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Gambling doesn't cause broken fingers, loan sharks do.

      And if you make gambling illegal, do you seriously think that loan sharks go away? Gambling will still happen, it's just that now it's all illegal, and so all lenders are finger-breaking loan sharks - and their victims have no recourse, since they would be confessing to a crime if they were to go to the police.

      The war on gambling is about as societally useful as the war on drugs (and about as successful). The only sane approach is legalization and regulation.

    15. Re:Unrelated, but still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      * Please note that I am using the word "know", not "think".

      Good, because "think" would not fit there.

    16. Re:Unrelated, but still by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      make them advertise gambling addiction prevention

      Reminder: Addiction treatment is no substitute for a policy to prevent addiction in the first place. Addiction treatment is extremely expensive, and of limited use. It rarely works and recidivism rates are high. It is essentially emergency medicine. This goes whether the addiction is to a substance or an activity.

      Taxation is also just prohibition light. Any negative consequence from outlawing an activity/substance, you also get with taxation, although probably at a somewhat lower level (see also: garlic smuggling in Europe). People who believe "prohibition never works!" (which, by the way, is a silly thing to believe) cannot honestly promote taxation as an alternative.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  6. So... It's an Arcade by CanHasDIY · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sounds like a dumb idea, until you realize that Chuck E. Cheese and similar businesses have, for decades, been using a similar tactic to avoid running afoul of gambling laws: You're not playing for gifts or money, you're playing for worthless tokens!

    The fact that said worthless tokens can be exchanged for things with monetary value is, apparently, non sequitur.

    --
    An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    1. Re:So... It's an Arcade by bitt3n · · Score: 3, Interesting

      this is also how pachinko parlors in japan work to get around japan's gambling laws, except you exchange the trinkets for actual money at an establishment next door to the pachinko parlor.

    2. Re:So... It's an Arcade by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a dumb idea, until you realize that Chuck E. Cheese and similar businesses have, for decades, been using a similar tactic to avoid running afoul of gambling laws: You're not playing for gifts or money, you're playing for worthless tokens!

      I doubt the Feds would allow Japanese style Pachinko gambling, where one business sells/buys the steel balls and another has the gaming machines.

      Maybe you could do something online, with a non-US company selling/buying Entertainment Bucks and online casinos accepting/paying out with the same.

      The Feds would probably call it all money laundering and make your life hell.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    3. Re:So... It's an Arcade by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Pachinko balls are just a type of token, like Chips used in a casino.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:So... It's an Arcade by geekoid · · Score: 1

      In most states, the machine a Chuck E. Cheese, and other places, ARE regulated like gambling. You know thos crane machine? the need to meet a criteria of winning.
      Lets say, for this example they must have the odds of 1:10.
      form 9 out of 10 tries, there isn't enough force in the grip to win.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:So... It's an Arcade by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      No, Chuck E. Cheese and similar businesses (like carnival midways) run games that are (at least theoretically) games of skill rather than games of chance - because it's the latter than run afoul of the gambling laws. What you're playing for is irrelevant.

    6. Re:So... It's an Arcade by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      No, Chuck E. Cheese and similar businesses (like carnival midways) run games that are (at least theoretically) games of skill rather than games of chance - because it's the latter than run afoul of the gambling laws. What you're playing for is irrelevant.

      Apparently, there are exceptions - last time I was in a Chuck E. Cheese type establishment (less than a year ago), I noticed a "game" that was, essentially, an overgrown one-armed bandit. You would put a token in, pull the comically large arm, and watch as the big, single slot wheel turned and turned, before eventually stopping on a random value of tickets. Another nearby "game" had a circle of lights, that would, after inserting tokens and pushing a button, illuminate in sequence before stopping on a random value.

      No skill required.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    7. Re:So... It's an Arcade by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      In both of those cases though, the player has control over when or how strong the pull is, therefor it's a skill based game. With the giant wheel, the harder/faster you pull the lever determines the strength of the spin. With the spinning light, when you press the button determines where the light lands. There is no "randomness" to either game.

      With a slot machine, there is no skill in winning. It's based solely on a random number determined once the lever is pulled (or button is pressed).

    8. Re:So... It's an Arcade by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      In both of those cases though, the player has control over when or how strong the pull is, therefor it's a skill based game. With the giant wheel, the harder/faster you pull the lever determines the strength of the spin. With the spinning light, when you press the button determines where the light lands. There is no "randomness" to either game.

      The spinning light game I can see that being the case (didn't actually play it myself), but I did play the slot game and I can assure you, the speed/force with which the lever is pulled has absolutely no bearing on the end result; We played it for about an hour (had good payouts, little bugger made out like a bandit), taking turns between myself (fairly little guy), my nephew (standard issue 6 year old, non-obese), and my brother (6'5", 280 lb hulking beast of a man). The payouts came up randomly regardless of who was playing. Then again, maybe it was malfunctioning, I couldn't say.

      With a slot machine, there is no skill in winning. It's based solely on a random number determined once the lever is pulled (or button is pressed).

      Leading me to wonder, could someone legally operate a casino type business in a region with anti-gambling laws, if they used the "game of skill" loophole? I'm going to guess no, since the only way for the house to profit in that case is to rig the games, and from what I can tell only Carny folk are allowed to get away with that sort of behavior.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    9. Re:So... It's an Arcade by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a dumb idea, until you realize that Chuck E. Cheese and similar businesses have, for decades, been using a similar tactic to avoid running afoul of gambling laws: You're not playing for gifts or money, you're playing for worthless tokens!

      I doubt the Feds would allow Japanese style Pachinko gambling, where one business sells/buys the steel balls and another has the gaming machines.

      Maybe you could do something online, with a non-US company selling/buying Entertainment Bucks and online casinos accepting/paying out with the same.

      The Feds would probably call it all money laundering and make your life hell.

      I suppose the thing to do, in that case, would be to start a bank.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
  7. Doomed to fail by Dishwasha · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not too long after Black Friday I had the same idea of using Bitcoin currency instead of real moolah. A site called Betcoin had already done this using the jpoker/jspoker library. I frequented the site for a while and even went back to it months later. In both cases the volume of people on the site was extremely low and the amount of bitcoin compared to real USD value was paltry even in comparison to the Full Tilt Poker $0.25/$0.50 tables. There just wasn't enough money in circulation on the site and not many people wanted to stake their futures on the volatile Bitcoin currency in the poker world. Plus, anyone that did any decent research just found various overseas and Indian-owned online casinos (harder for the US Gov to prosecute Indian territory casinos in Canada) and could exchange money by select Visa merchants, cash proxy sites, or by money order.

    1. Re:Doomed to fail by Lord+Strongpants · · Score: 1

      This is a good point. All this froth about Bitcoins being a scam or worthless or illegal or blah blah is a very useful smokescreen for people with a business model that's falling apart at the seams. If a U.S. citizen wants to gamble online despite the legal restrictions they can. That market is already filled. What's this guy got that the other's don't? Bitcoins? Is that it? Wow. I wanna invest.

    2. Re:Doomed to fail by Zadaz · · Score: 1

      Why do I have a feeling that on this online gambling site there will be a higher than normal chance of playing against a bunch of bots?

  8. And plutonium. by bdwoolman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We should not forget about the plutonium.

    --
    "No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy
    1. Re:And plutonium. by m.ducharme · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or the depleted uranium.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    2. Re:And plutonium. by tibman · · Score: 4, Funny

      D.U. is typically sent to people for free. At a high velocity : )

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    3. Re:And plutonium. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Polonium.. just in case...

    4. Re:And plutonium. by schlachter · · Score: 1

      with a significant exchange rate upon arrival!

      --
      My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
  9. Dragon's Tale does this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Dragon's Tale, an mmo/casino hybrid, has already been doing this for two years. As does seals with clubs(an eu betting site, sealswithclubs.eu).
    If you're looking for hold'em style poker, Seals is awesome.

    However Dragon's tales(http://www.dragons.tl/) is a bit unique in that it has a LOT of different styles of games. There's the standard "luck" based games, some slot machine style, some complex paytables with various interesting things. Coconut trees are roulette style red/black odds. But they also have quite a few games of skill, which means there are behaviors you can learn about the game to improve your odds, and price adjusts to reflect the average level of play. So if you're good and careful with betting, making money there on a regular basis is possible. I'll also point out they have a rakeback policy that goes up as you play, which they also use to encourage older players to teach younger ones (in the form of the house giving a small part of its share to mentors).

    All in all, bitcoin has proven itself to be quite versatile for online gambling. And at $14USD per btc, you can't really say bitcoin is a failed experiment. :P Stop on by dragons or seals if you doubt and i'll show you around. Both have free options (seals does hourly free tournaments, and dragon's offers free seed money through various activities)

    1. Re:Dragon's Tale does this by Umuri · · Score: 2

      whoops, the above is me, just to put my reputation a bit on the line so it's not thinking the above anon is a paid shill.

      Dragon's Tale, an mmo/casino hybrid, has already been doing this for two years. As does seals with clubs(an eu betting site, sealswithclubs.eu).
      If you're looking for hold'em style poker, Seals is awesome.

      However Dragon's tales(http://www.dragons.tl/) is a bit unique in that it has a LOT of different styles of games. There's the standard "luck" based games, some slot machine style, some complex paytables with various interesting things. Coconut trees are roulette style red/black odds. But they also have quite a few games of skill, which means there are behaviors you can learn about the game to improve your odds, and price adjusts to reflect the average level of play. So if you're good and careful with betting, making money there on a regular basis is possible. I'll also point out they have a rakeback policy that goes up as you play, which they also use to encourage older players to teach younger ones (in the form of the house giving a small part of its share to mentors).

      All in all, bitcoin has proven itself to be quite versatile for online gambling. And at $14USD per btc, you can't really say bitcoin is a failed experiment. :P Stop on by dragons or seals if you doubt and i'll show you around. Both have free options (seals does hourly free tournaments, and dragon's offers free seed money through various activities)

      --
      You never realize how much manually made unmanaged "linked" lists suck, till you have src.link.link.link.link...
    2. Re:Dragon's Tale does this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would be happy to serve as your paid shill for bitcoin. Please send donations to 19DSVWqoGmJRRhY36egQM4MXad3i647ork. Thank you!!

  10. Uh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Michael Hajduk had sunk one year and about $20,000 into developing his online poker site

    Doing it wrong. Oh so very wrong.

  11. It's all good bro! by alphatel · · Score: 1

    Hajduk says. 'I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong.'
    Tell that to the US Federal Marshal, FBI, CIA ('I' stands for "It's National" not 'International'), and every other ATF-related or unrelated agency that every existed when they come knocking at your door with handcuffs. With 15 years defending yourself, maybe, just maybe, you'll get out before 2030.
    Bitcoin forever, oorah.

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    1. Re:It's all good bro! by JazzHarper · · Score: 1

      Hajduk says. 'I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong.'

      Then, why does he call himself "Hajduk"?

    2. Re:It's all good bro! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      The I stands for Intelligence in CIA.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:It's all good bro! by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > ('I' stands for "It's National" not 'International')

      Actually, the I in FBI stands for Investigation, and, relatedly, the I in CIA stands for Intelligence (by which they mean data acquisition, not the quality of being intelligent). And, indeed, the FBI continues to Investigate, and the CIA continues to gather information.

      Admittedly, the CIA was originally conceived and chartered to acquire said "intelligence" regarding foreign (potential) enemies, complementary to the FBI's domestic bailiwick, and in practice this distinction has not always been maintained entirely rigorously. (Although, it is also arguable that the blurring of this line to some extent at least was inevitable in the real world.)

      And yeah, I can't imagine they'll be very deeply impressed by this sophistry. "Our customers don't gamble with _money_ officer, heavens, no, that would be illegal, haha. No, we only allow our customers to bet poker chips. See? They're just little pieces of plastic, that's all. No real money is involved." What is it about replacing poker chips with bitcoins that will make this argument fly?

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    4. Re:It's all good bro! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because he obviously is into football :P

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HNK_Hajduk_Split

      "ooooo hajdue....."

  12. Please place sociopolitical ramblings under this. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course the government has to outlaw gambling. It is dangerous and addictive, encourages crime and exploits the poor. Except the state lotteries, of course - those are somehow none of the above.

  13. I predict the future by bitt3n · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong

    shortly to become

    I didn't believe we were doing anything wrong

    1. Re:I predict the future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The great thing about bitcoin (possibly the only thing that makes it interesting) is being essentially engineered from the ground up to permit strong anonymity when used correctly. See Silkroad for the most well known proof of this. If the man decides to take a heavy handed approach about the only thing they could do is ban it altogether, and good luck with that.

    2. Re:I predict the future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong

      shortly to become

      they didn't care that we didn't do anything wrong, changed the law retrospectively, ceased our assets/defence fund and offered a plea bargin, 15 years or life.

    3. Re:I predict the future by DrEldarion · · Score: 0

      Knowing how bitcoin schemes tend to work, one of two things is going to happen:

      1) The poker site will be a scam and will steal everyone's bitcoins.
      2) The poker site will be hacked and everyone's bitcoins will be stolen.

  14. bitcoins should be fine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It really doesnt matter if bitcoins dont have anything backing them. Im pretty sure the whole backing thing is a sham. Currency is worth whatever the public puts confidence in them. If OPEC stopped using dollars to trade for a crude oil, they dollar would be lost as we know it. Bitcoins can be used in many ways that normal currency cannont so i think they will keep their value

  15. coming 7/19/2013: by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    blah blah blah
    blah blah blah
    you don't have to pay taxes because it's unconstitutional, but the IRS doesn't want you to know that.
    blah blah blah

    Wesley, they let you have internet access there?

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:coming 7/19/2013: by logjon · · Score: 0

      woosh

      --
      The stories and info posted here are artistic works of fiction and falsehood.
      Only fools would take it as fact.
  16. Re:Another idiot by Frobnicator · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is more to online gambling law than that.

    There are different laws for making bets, taking bets, facilitating payments (this is what usually gets prosecuted), accepting advertising for gambling, displaying advertising for gambling, and even differences in regulation between types of gambling (sports betting, gambling machines, card games, etc.)

    Then there are issues with corruption (throwing the game), and money laundering. For better or worse, organized crime loves gambling because it is easy to casually shift funds from one account to another without a paper trail.

    On top of that, the government wants their cut in tax revenue.

    --
    //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
  17. Poker is a game of skill by Todd+Palin · · Score: 1

    Poker certainly has chance elements to it, but the game involves choices as a hand progresses. You can call, raise, or fold depending of your assessment of the hand and your opponents. Those are choices that take skill if you plan to come out ahead. Make bad choices and you lose overall. Make better choices than your opponents, and you win overall. It is mostly, but not totally, a game of skill.

    1. Re:Poker is a game of skill by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      While I agree that Poker is a game of skill, it's not for the reasons you mention.

      Let's take a casino game such as Let it Ride. In that game, you also make choices as the hand progresses. There is also skill involved, but it's entirely a game a of chance in reality.

      The difference is that poker players play against each other, and not against the house. The house just takes a cut, called the Rake.

      Gambling comes in a lot of forms, though. For instance, sports betting requires skill as well, and information. There is of course elements of luck, but it's still considered gambling.

      What about betting on who wins a poker game? ;)

    2. Re:Poker is a game of skill by Ricwot · · Score: 1

      In Britain, we call it investing in horses and dogs.

  18. im guessing Goldman Sachs probably already does by decora · · Score: 2

    have a whole department gaming the bitcoin system.

    funny how gambling is illegal -- unless you do it with other peoples money

  19. I think this is the one useful app. for the things by sirwired · · Score: 2

    I think BitCoins were poorly designed (from an economic standpoint), and will never be a serious form of payment for anyone NOT wanting to engage in currency speculation on the volatile rate, but for gambling, they totally make sense. That is, as long as they realize that their BitCoin exchange rate will be an additional element of their bet.

  20. bitcoins disruptive technology by faustoc4 · · Score: 1

    Who could have thought that bitcoins were a disruptive technology and could bypass international banking oversight, like economic blockages or sanctions. Maybe Iran will accept bitcoins for their oil.

  21. Bitcoins aren't a scam, but they do suck by sirwired · · Score: 1

    BitCoins aren't really a scam. They are a perfectly valid currency, by any definition of the word. Few currencies these days are backed by anything, so that's not much of a criteria. And the supply of BitCoins is very tightly controlled; it's just done with an algorithm instead of a central bank.

    However, the expansion curve was designed by somebody with utterly no understanding of economics, and the built-in deflation inherent that would come with expansion in BitCoin use guarantees they'll never become widespread for mainstream transactions because of widespread volatility in the exchange rate vs. stuff you actually want to buy. (You'd have to be utterly nucking futs to take out a loan in BitCoins... this kind of prevents a credit market. And credit is the lifeblood of any modern economy.) The volatility is important because the acceptance of BitCoins is, and will remain, too low, so knowing what kind of value you can get for your bitcoins in the real-world is not really possible.

    1. Re:Bitcoins aren't a scam, but they do suck by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      However, the expansion curve was designed by somebody with utterly no understanding of economics, and the built-in deflation inherent that would come with expansion in BitCoin use guarantees they'll never become widespread for mainstream transactions because of widespread volatility in the exchange rate vs. stuff you actually want to buy.

      This argument is both very common and wrong. So I'd like to address it here.

      Firstly, let's put aside the appeal to authority. Conventional economic theory/monetary policy has led to an absolute clusterfuck - a worldwide recession that shows no signs of ending any time soon. If the current understanding of economics leads to this, then it's time to question that understanding from bottom to top.

      Secondly, let's also set to one side the arguments that are contradicted by reality. Empirical evidence shows that deflation does not lead to depression. If the Minneapolis Feds study doesn't convince you, look at Bitcoin itself. Despite a dramatic increase in the value of the currency, the Bitcoin economy has grown equally dramatically. BitPay went from 1000 to 2000 merchants in the space of only a few months, and that's only a small subset of Bitcoin-accepting entities. So the system is, again, an existence proof that this common belief is mistaken. Likewise, Bitcoin has been remarkably non-volatile this year. It spent almost all of 2012 at one of two price points: $5 per coin in the first part of the year and somewhere between $10 and $13 per coin in the latter part. Hardly different to the volatility you'd expect from any other currency.

      Thirdly, let's address the idea that credit is the lifeblood of the economy. Any economist will tell you that growth comes from innovation. Improvements in productivity, in technology, reductions in the cost of doing business. Wealth - the things we have around us, the quality of our food, our healthcare, the stability of our society ..... none of this comes from credit. It comes largely from technological innovation and good governance. If anything, history shows us that massive amounts of cheap credit has a destabilizing effect on the economy, that's why classical economics says that very low interest rates cause "overheating" and an increasing number of commentators place our current woes on many years of ultra-cheap credit. All that money had to go somewhere, and after the stock market bubble of the late 90s popped, it ended up flowing into real estate speculation. Now that bubble burst too, the only question is where all the cheap money is going now ...

    2. Re:Bitcoins aren't a scam, but they do suck by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      Conventional economic theory/monetary policy

      Which one was that, Mike? I see many, but not one that has consistently ruled the world. Right now the "inflation must be avoided at any costs" school has a lot of influence, and is responsible for a lot of the damage it seems.

      You don't belong to that school, you're further out in the "inflation must be avoided at any costs, deflation isn't a problem" camp, which I didn't even know existed. But sure, go ahead and think you prove anything with your microcurrency.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
  22. Re:Inaccurate Bitcoin Diatribe by DanielRavenNest · · Score: 2

    Bitcoin uses a global distributed transaction history and account book, known as the "block chain" (because it is a series of blocks of transactions). There are many copies of the transaction history - each user of the official client gets one. Therefore it is more secure against accidental loss or forgery than a typical bank database. Transactions have to be cryptographically signed by the account owner, or they get rejected. There also has to be enough balance in that account number, or they also get rejected. To say the Bitcoin network has no control whatsoever clearly shows you don't understand it. Distributed control is still control.

    Most US dollars exist in electronic form in various accounts in the banking system. The majority of the backing of Federal Reserve Notes (the paper currency) is by Treasury debt which also only exists in electronic form (the Federal Reserve and the Treasury stopped using paper T-bonds decades ago). Therefore to attempt to say bitcoins are "virtual" being any different than the official US currency clearly shows you don't understand our monetary system either.

    You claim Bitcoin is a scam. In that case, someone must be perpetrating a fraud. Who, exactly? The people verifying blocks of transactions (ie miners)? They are performing a useful service, one that every bank has to do. The exchanges that convert bitcoins for other currencies? How is that different than every stock exchange and bank foreign currency desk? For that matter, how is it different than any other commodity that is bought or sold? The network that makes it possible to send funds internationally with low fees? PayPal, Western Union, and bank wires have done that a long time. Bitcoin just does it cheaper.

    What it seems like, to me, Chas, is you are projecting your failure to understand Bitcoin onto others. What gives it value is the ease of moving funds, and, for a business, the lower chance of getting ripped off by PayPal or chargebacks. Even if it is not perfect, if it is better than the alternatives, people will tend to use it.

  23. Re:Another idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government may 'want their cut in tax revenue' but they do not 'need their cut in tax revenue'...at least not to pay any government bills, the only benefit of taxes is to control the money supply in the economy, increase taxes & the money supply decreases and vice versa...so what you mean to say is 'the government wants control of the money supply'...that may or may not be a good thing with the current US government in power (both parties, their equally to blame & complicit in the current problems)...

  24. Naive by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    The law is what they say it is. Don't try to use logic to determine what is legal and what is not. See the TV Show "Law and Order" to get the idea. Watch the prosecutors stretch and massage the law to cover anything they want covered, criminalize anyone they want in jail. I believe that represents reality. If he's really going to create and maintain a bitcoin gambling site Michael Hajduk should stock up on cigarettes and practice keeping his mud together because he's headed to jail sooner or later, probably sooner. Being clever with the law isn't clever, it's just stupid.

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
  25. Won't work, because . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    . . . "Infiniti Poker" is a business, and they accept transfers of bitcoin money for gambling purposes. So, they still break that law - at least if authorities decide to accept bitcoins as a form of currency.

  26. Tor Sites Already Do This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are [at least] 2 onion sites already using bitcoin for gambling. Found them in August.

  27. Karma by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    indicting 11 people on charges of bank fraud, money laundering, and illegal gambling

    Gambling period runs a very high profit margin, to try and increase that through illegal means is just well... messed up. The use of bitcoin shows that the owners of these websites will do just about anything for even potentially earning a buck.

    1. Re:Karma by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Gambling period runs a very high profit margin,

      Actually, the net profit on gambling is always zero (taking all participants into account), which in the business world is not generally considered a high margin. Casinos, therefore, only have two ways to stay in business.

      The main way is of course by stacking the odds to guarantee that everyone else (on average) comes out significantly on the negative side of things, so that despite the average being zero the casino itself makes a positive net profit. This is what they do for most games, including blackjack and roulette, and it really REALLY ought to be illegal. Incidentally, this is also what the state lotteries do. When you play any of these games, your expected net profit is negative.

      For poker, however, the casinos don't gamble at all. They let _other_ people do all the gambling, and the casino just takes a percentage, which is the same no matter who wins or loses. Thus, they don't make their profit by gambling. They make their profit by providing a venue. So when you play poker, your expected net profit is theoretically zero (assuming that you and your opponents have equal skill and equal ability to cheat, which should theoretically hold true over the long term if you are average; of course, virtually everyone who plays the game does so because they believe they will be better than average). Poker is thus somewhat less exploitative, because everyone is on essentially equal footing. I'm still not interested in playing, and it doesn't _bother_ me that the thing is illegal, but I feel less strongly about it than I do about the more exploitative types of gambling where the odds are heavily stacked.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  28. Bitcoin is not the problem. by cait56 · · Score: 1

    The use of a dubious currency just distracts from the real problem - gambling with an online site that is not certified by anyone. Regulated casinos have to document exactly how much they rigged each game in their favor. An unregulated online site can cheat you anyway it wants to.

    1. Re:Bitcoin is not the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This article refers to poker where the house doesn't play. The house cut is nearly always clearly indicated, I can't even imagine how a rake could be taken without players knowing how much it was.

    2. Re:Bitcoin is not the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that betting with Bitcoin has the potential to be less prone to being cheated by the house than regulation ever could be. The technology that makes Bitcoin work also has the capacity to provide 'Provably Fair' gaming. The technology is young as is the concept but I'm guessing it's likely to spread like wildfire to such an extent that nobody would dream of gambling without it (regardless of whether the websites are 'state approved' or not) in a few short years.

    3. Re:Bitcoin is not the problem. by jfengel · · Score: 1

      A poker site doesn't need to cheat. Their cut is specified. They attract two categories of players:

      1. Skilled players who want to take money from suckers.

      2. Suckers.

      Category 2 comes because they heard that players in category 1 were making a lot of easy money. Category 1 comes because they believe that the site is playing fairly, which is what allows them to take money from the Category 2 players. And they pay the site for the privilege on each pot, knowing that they'll be able to cover it from the money they take from the suckers.

      The site may get greedy, and that's a risk the players take, but they'll do better by just continuing to skim each pot. They only run out when the suckers run out, and the world keeps manufacturing more suckers.

    4. Re:Bitcoin is not the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's "provably fair gambling" for that: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2012/08/31/bitzino-and-the-dawn-of-provably-fair-casino-gaming/

  29. Something I don't understand...Please enlighten by Karem+Lore · · Score: 1

    How does betting my money on the results of a card deal any different than gambling on a stock market? It's all gambling...why is stock market ok, but not cards?

    Even betting on currency fluctuations is gambling...And if you want to see about criminal activity due to gambling...Look at the BANKS...

    --
    When all is said and done, nothing changes...
    1. Re:Something I don't understand...Please enlighten by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Control and regulation.
      And the stock market isn't gambling like gamin is gambling. The fact that you don't understand the differences tells me you haven't read anything beyond headlines on this issue.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Something I don't understand...Please enlighten by coldsalmon · · Score: 2

      Here is the difference between investment and gambling. When you gamble, you win or lose money arbitrarily. There is no net gain in value from a gambling transaction, only a transfer of wealth. When you factor in transaction costs, gambling becomes a deadweight loss to society. Gambling is a negative-sum game. Investment, by contrast, is expected to be a positive sum game, and to create wealth. The ideal investment will be Pareto efficient -- something that can never happen with gambling. This is why investing in a business is different from a casino. If I invest $100 in a business and that business grows by 10%, I make $10 and the business owner also makes money. If I win a $10 bet with you, I make $10, you lose $10, and we have both wasted the time it took to make the bet and roll the dice. The end result of all of this is that investments gain money in the aggregate over time, and gamblers always lose money in the aggregate over time.

      When you get into derivative trading and actively managed funds, things start to look a lot less like investments and a lot more like gambling. Wealth is transferred (minus commissions), but it's hard to see where wealth is created. Indeed, actively managed funds tend to under-perform the market in the aggregate. Here's a nice little parable by Warren Buffet: http://davidatwood.com/files/The%20Gotrocks%20Family.pdf

  30. I didn't say Inflation led to Depression. by sirwired · · Score: 3, Informative

    1) I didn't appeal to authority.

    That would have required me mentioning an authority. I said that the designer had no understanding of economics. Not that he/she was ignorant of the writings of this or that particular set of economists or economic theory.

    2) I didn't say deflation led to depression.

    What I did say is that the use of BitCoins was going to be constrained by their inherently deflationary nature. As in, if acceptance of BitCoins rises, deflation will occur as demand increases. Expectation of that deflation encourages hoarding, which discourages their use, and therefore, acceptance. Geek Translation: BitCoins are stuck in a Deflation/Acceptance/Supply race condition.

    3) Credit IS the lifeblood of modern economies.

    Improvements in productivity, technology, agriculture, lifestyle, etc., all require access to capital. There are three ways to accrue capital:
    A) Save until you can buy it. While this sounds all wholesome and good, it makes, say, the expansion of a business, the research necessary to bring a new drug to market, or the purchase of an automobile required to transport yourself to a better job rather difficult. Puts you in kind of a Chicken and Egg problem without credit. (I can't make money until I buy/build X, but I can't buy/build X until I have money.) Therefore capital spending of all kinds would be reduced drastically.
    B) Borrow it. Bonds, banks, your buddy down the street, whatever.
    C) Acquire investors. Wow, is that expensive. Even the most brain-addled MBA can explain that selling a portion of your business is usually the most expensive way to raise money. There's a reason that companies rarely execute stock offerings past their IPO... You only sell stock to either execute an IPO (so your other investors can bail) or to raise money you cannot raise by borrowing it.

    Just because a bunch of bankers lent out more money than they should have to unworthy borrowers at unsustainable rates does not mean credit is a bad thing.

    1. Re:I didn't say Inflation led to Depression. by Orgasmatron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sorry, but your entire post is wrong from top to bottom. Don't take it personally, it isn't like they teach this stuff properly in schools.

      First, you did appeal to authority, and continue to do so. That you didn't do it in a way that is obvious to you is your problem, and yours alone. I will give you a hint: economics is not a science. There is no proof, there is no truth. If you take physics as your standard for avoiding self-delusion, economics doesn't have theories either. Citing "economics" as a source is automatically an appeal to the prestige of a collection of untested speculation.

      Second, you ignore velocity and divisibility. If we assume that the hoarding hypothesis is correct, then you end up in a situation where deflation is forestalled, but acceptance is not. I'm going to skip my angry rant about people not understanding the dynamic equilibrium, but the short version is that virtually everything in your experience is the product of a balance of opposing forces. To the extent that hoarding can raise the exchange rate, the exchange rate tempts people to divest their funds. Acceptance is a product of utility and familiarity. Utility is very high and getting higher every day, while familiarity is very low, but also growing fast.

      Third, you appear to have weak grasp on the distinction between money and wealth, and also on the Janus nature of credit and debt. I'm not sure how useful it would be to try explaining how much of your third section is wrong. From your point of view, your analysis appears to be completely correct, but it isn't, because your mind is wrong. In our current system, borrowing money is really damn cheap because most of the cost of your borrowing is paid for by other people (mostly through currency inflation). If you ignore the external costs, then yes, borrowing is the cheapest way to go.

      Capital is wealth, you cannot borrow it unless someone has already produced it and is willing to lend it to you. You cannot buy it unless it has already been created and someone is willing to sell it to you. You can, however, create it yourself, but specialization says that your efforts are likely to be better spent doing whatever it is that you do well instead.

      Money on the other hand, is merely a system for accounting and exchange. Since it is ruled not by laws of the universe, but by laws of men, it does whatever we say it does. We can create and destroy it at will. And by "we", I mean special people. You and I don't got a vote. Bitcoin is an attempt to more closely approach the platonic ideal of money-ness, and part of that is by deciding up front the answers to the questions "how much money?", "who gets it?" and "when?".

      Bitcoin is an agreement among men, made real through software. We agree to follow certain rules, and give up any chance at special privilege, in return, we know that everyone else also has to follow the same rules, and are prevented from ever trying to claim special privileges for themselves (like the ability to shave a bit off of other people's money to make new money for themselves).

      I tend to come off a bit harshly, but I hope this post was educational rather than offensive. I hope you (and everyone else) will ponder carefully on what is real, and what is imaginary.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    2. Re:I didn't say Inflation led to Depression. by thoromyr · · Score: 1

      Hmm... "credit is the lifeblood of modern economies" is true, according to historical economists, back to at least the middle ages (the earliest economic analysis I've read is for that period). In medieval europe there was plenty of gold but little silver. In fact, there wasn't enough silver to cover currency needs which led to constant debasement of the currency which led to easily predictable consequences for trade and commerce.

      But if there was so much gold, why wasn't there a gold currency? Because it was there, but not available. At first, it existed in hordes maintained by lords. By the medieval church set great stock in gold and sucked it up -- and while a lord might use up some gold the church was a one-way street. Simply put, the only gold that existed as currency came from other regions, either east or south. Not much, and not of good quality.

      What permitted trade and commerce to grow was the practice of credit.

      You can throw around words like "velocity" and write a fairly comprehensible reply, but anyone espousing bitcoin as more than a boutique currency (whether it is an appeal to philosophy as you attempt, or some other method) is either attempting to fool others or has been fooled. I use one (a boutique currency) myself -- it has very low circulation (but used by others than myself), the supply is limited to the tokens I arbitrarily add to it, and it is a fiat currency. Still, it technically *is* a currency. Just like bitcoin. The fact that bitcoin has different features and greater adoption doesn't change anything -- it isn't like there is some bar that you cross that makes a currency "real" it simply is what it is.

      What seems to offend most bitcoin fans is when the extremely limited circulation of their favorite currency (a simple fact) is pointed out, or the futility in investing in it. Get rich quick schemes are always popular and the people who buy into them do not take kindly to having this pointed out. It doesn't matter if its a life insurance/investment pyramid scheme, Iraqi dinars, or whatever else. There are cons and there are marks.

      If someone derives satisfaction from "sticking it to the man" by using bitcoin, feels empowered by "mining", manages to launder a relatively small sum of money with it, manages a minor transaction that would not have otherwise been feasible for them due to external constraints --- great, they are deriving value from their use of bitcoin.

      Maybe, some day, bitcoin will actually achieve a level of circulation associated with "real" currencies. But it doesn't seem likely, no matter what spin, hype and hyperbole the fans pitch. In that respect it is rather reminiscent of the Amiga and "the Amiga is coming back" and the fleecing of the faithful. But don't try telling that to one of the few faithful remaining who still uses (or at least dreams about using) an Amiga.

    3. Re:I didn't say Inflation led to Depression. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm posting this message from an Amiga, you insensitive clod!

    4. Re:I didn't say Inflation led to Depression. by import · · Score: 1

      1) don't care

      2) i agree basically with what you've said except I see it as a damping effect, something which makes growth more difficult. Although there is an argument to be made about what effect people's expectations will have - e.g. if people know the future, they can plan for it - as well as counterexamples in goods that are already subject to deflation - e.g., computer parts.

      3) There can still be fractional reserve banking and therefore credit. If they use bitcoin directly, i.e. deposits, withdrawals, loans, bonds in bitcoin, then there will be problems with liquidity in times of distress and no one to bail anyone out. Hence, we will not likely see the same sort of growth in credit that we have seen in the past 100 years. However, some people might think this is a good thing!

      Bitcoin just represents a new choice...

  31. $hit... typo in reply topic by sirwired · · Score: 1

    I meant to type: "I didn't say Deflation led to Depression"

    Damn Slashdot's lack of an edit button!

  32. The US Constitution bans torture, not gambling but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US Constitution bans torture, not gambling but guess which one the occupational government prefers?

    It says no cruel or unusual punishment - even if somebody is found guilty but the occupational government tortures on a regular basis.

    It also says no state shall make anything other than gold or silver legal tender in payment of debt. The US Constitution was amended to provide for an income tax but it was never amended to allow the 'Federal' Reserve scam. Coins are issued by the US Treasury but they are not made of gold or silver.

    It says the right to bear arms shall not be infringed. To put that in perspective - all the way up until the Wilson administration (who gave us income tax, the Federal Reserve and WWI under false pretenses) it was legal to own ships with cannons.

  33. Money Laundering... by bmo · · Score: 1

    Money laundering doesn't have to be done with money. Any exchange of value used to obfuscate verboten activity is per-se money laundering

    Transferring a bag of coconuts from the trunk of one car to the trunk of another, representing an exchange of value, when done to obfuscate illegal activity, is money laundering.

    That's US law, and it's the law in a bunch of other countries too.

    "It can't be money laundering if it's not money"

    Yeah, enjoy prison, guy.

    --
    BMO

  34. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    U.S. regulations effectively ban online gambling.

    Not effectively, I'd say, based on the number of free-to-play games in Google Play and the Apple App Store with in-game purchases of "coins" and "gems". If that isn't gambling, what is?

  35. HAHA, you sure arew doing something wrong by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Casinos seldom use cash. Some never use cash. It's all tokens called chips.
    The fact that you can turn bitcoins into dollars means that, yes, the US regulates it.

    You should really have a lawyer look into the governments view of token when gambling.

    Ever wonder what prostitute don't take a token that can be exchanges elsewhere as cash. A place that also sells tokens?
    Cause it's still illegal.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:HAHA, you sure arew doing something wrong by PPH · · Score: 1

      The fact that you can turn bitcoins into dollars means that, yes, the US regulates it.

      You can turn practically every currency on this planet into dollars. Now ask all of the sovereign governments whether the US regulates them.

      Reality: The US regulates YOU, the US citizen. For all intents and purposes, you live behind an economic iron curtain. Have fun traveling around the globe. But when the DoJ wants your ass, its theirs. Read your Thirteenth Amendment and weep.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  36. /. readers anti-bitcoin by sandwall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm pretty shocked by the generally disparaging remarks regarding bitcoin. Nearly *all* currencies are speculative to some degee, just think of the exchange market. Investing in euro's doesn't seem like such a great idea at the moment but that certainly wasn't the case before the credit crunch. As long as the supply is limited (which it is) and there's a demand, bitcoins will have value. Many of you are assuming there is no demand, clearly you haven't visited the silk road. Bitcoin serves a purpose, it's digital cash, pure and simple. As long as people value *relative* anonimity in digital transactions (and there will always be a section of the population that does), there will be a demand.

    1. Re:/. readers anti-bitcoin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly!

      Currency is valued by the idea that someone else will accept it but is devalued by loose constraint on supply.

      BitCoin has a formidable solution to the second part and the community of users is slowly solving the first.

      In 10-20 years, we will all wonder why so many people doubted it so aggressively.

    2. Re:/. readers anti-bitcoin by ruir · · Score: 1

      I wouldnt be so socked. Bitcoin smells like a pyramid scheme to me (but I am no financial guy, so take my personal opinion with a grain of salt).

    3. Re:/. readers anti-bitcoin by coldsalmon · · Score: 1

      Currencies are only speculative if you are a currency speculator. Currencies are not supposed to be investments, which is why Bitcoin is not a good currency. Currencies are meant to facilitate exchange, not to store value. This is why currencies are designed to be slightly inflationary. We want to encourage people to go do useful things with their time, not sit at home on top of a pile of cash. Bitcoin is generally treated as a commodity rather than a currency. See, for example: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/07/golden-cyberfetters/

    4. Re:/. readers anti-bitcoin by sandwall · · Score: 1

      Again. You are clearly ignorant of the silk road and other such marketplaces that actually use bitcoins as currency.

    5. Re:/. readers anti-bitcoin by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Nearly *all* currencies are speculative to some degree

      Yes, but not to equal degree.

      > I'm pretty shocked by the generally disparaging remarks regarding bitcoin.

      Yeah? Try talking asking people how they feel about the peso or the naira or the real.

      Of the (somewhere between 150 and 200) currencies in the world, there are really only half a dozen that get any serious respect, and except for the Euro (which inherited its position of respect mostly from the Deutsch Mark) they've all been essentially stable *and* influential on the world economic scene for more than half a century. Also, every single one of them is backed by at least one government that has been stable at least since the end of WWII.

      The investment community regards new things generally as risky. This doesn't mean they can't be hot investment items (hedge funds and venture capitalists LOVE new things), but it does mean that investing in them is generally regarded as unsafe in isolation. (By "in isolation" I mean "not as part of a well-rounded investment portfolio".) When it comes to currencies, Bitcoin is very new, *and* it's not backed by the fiat of any major government.

      So yeah, people aren't going to view Bitcoin as on part with the pound sterling and the US dollar and the Swiss franc. Not for a while, anyhow.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  37. Re:Inaccurate Bitcoin Diatribe by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Its' a scam becasue by it's nature, it can not be a large economic currency but people who are doing it consistently push it as the next thing, and everyone should get in.
    You also have no legal protections with bitcoin.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  38. Famous last words. by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    "I don't believe we'll be doing anything wrong." Federal Judges really go for that kind of sentiment. It's the old Steve Martin excuse: "I didn't KNOW it was illegal not to pay your taxes!" - part of his comedy routine in the 70's.

  39. Why would method of payment matter here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not that bitcoin matters in this at all, One would still be playing a game of chance for a prize of some percieved value. This is still illegal gaming. If it cuts into regulated gaming then it will not be tolerated.

  40. Wrong... again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just by avoiding "U.S. Dollars" does not mean that you are avoiding 'currency'. If that were true you could use French Francs, or British Pounds.
    As Bit coin has been described and defined as a 'currency' it would also fall flat on these grounds.

    Just because you wish something were so does not make it so. Just like parallel universes and Christian Democrats, they don't exist.

  41. Are they going to have fair games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    4 guys with Skype at a table?
    (or 1 guy with 4 proxies:)

    That aside, in my brief survey of a few major online poker sites (back in the day) it seemed the operators did everything they could to increase action and keep passing money around. Larger Pots= Larger Rakes. And poor players winning more than they should keeps them coming back for more. I care not what the sites claim. There deals don't appear "random" in the usual sense of the word.

    Gambling is a crooked business. Online gambling? Forget about it!
    Send me your money instead. I will return 2/3 of it to you while ringing a bell proclaiming you WINNER.

  42. Slashdot - The Contrarian Indicator Of The Decade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget the wise and sage people here on slashdot panned the first iPod.

    I'm sure they've got it right this time with bitcoin.

    *snicker*

  43. A coherent (and polite) response by sirwired · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Firstly, if you didn't mean to be offensive, perhaps you should have avoided directly insulting my intelligence and education.

    I had a much longer rant planned, but then I realized you misunderstand the nature of my objection to the economic understanding of the BtC designers. (And, to be fair to you, I didn't mention it in my original post.) I have no problem with the idea of an electronic currency of fixed, limited, pre-determined, supply. While unsuited as a national currency, (there's a reason every single modern economy uses fiat currency; though some economies do it better than others) it can, nonetheless, be a very useful tool, and the idea is certainly a worthy experiment in technology and economics. I merely believe that the particular expansion curve chosen was a stupid one. I believe that it ramped up too quickly, leveled off too soon, and the long-term increase in the supply is too low. A better-chosen curve would have struck a better balance between staving off deflation and inflation. (It started too quickly, and then became deflationary/economic growth limiting.) They were too optimistic about the uptake of BtC's, and did absolutely nothing to account for any kind of significant long-term growth in their use after the "intro" phase was complete. This is why the value of BtC's has been so unstable and deflating so much.

    Now, on to my (now) shorter rant:

    While a large portion of economics is indeed a large pile of untested bullshit, the same could be said about any branch of science. Just as we do not seriously question classic Newtonian mechanics as a useful model for predicting the behavior of masses, nobody seriously doubts things like the fundamental relationship of Supply and Demand (used as a general model.) Conversely, there are many unproven branches of physics (i.e. String Theory) for which the evidence is little stronger than the abstract theories produced by the egg-headed economist of your choice. We CAN do economic experiments to test theories (such experiments are done all the time at the micro level, and are also done at the macro level by central banks, although the results of those experiments take much longer and the results aren't usually very clear-cut.)

    I ignore divisibility for the simple reason that I do not argue (as many BitCoin skeptics do) that BitCoins are illiquid simply due to the relatively high value of 1BtC. I know that is incorrect.

    I ignore velocity (which is certainly a legitimate means of expanding an economy without increasing the supply of currency the economy is denominated in) because BitCoins have given us no reason to believe that their velocity will be higher than any other currency, (and reasons to think it would be lower, namely the lack of a functioning credit market.) and there is an upper bound to how much of an increase is possible. As a side-note, since the supply curve has leveled off too quickly, and will continue to get even flatter, almost ANY economic growth (over the small value of the BtC expansion curve) will have to come through velocity increases... that rather limits the total size of the economy, and therefore BtC adoption. The ability to adjust the money supply based on the current and expected size of the economy is why every modern economy uses fiat currency, although, as earlier mentioned, some do it better than others.

    I don't know if you are one of the people that believe this (I'd like to think you aren't), but large increases in the value of a currency are NOT a good sign if you want it to be a viable currency. Increases ARE good if you are investing in said currency. A currency is most useful when it is STABLE, and, barring that, reasonably predictable and not severely deflating. That is, if you want a credit market at all. (Inflation of a steady doubling per year could theoretically be baked into interest rates, you can't do that with a currency deflating by a similar proportion, like BtC's did last year.) And the current intra-day volatility of several percent make it utt

    1. Re:A coherent (and polite) response by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      This story is off the front page, and I don't know if anyone will read it. Also, this post is far too long, and I haven't got the time to make it any shorter. As a result, I'm not putting a lot of effort into polishing it. Some parts are detailed, other parts are just bare comments on parts of the parent post. If you get lost, read it along with the parent post and you should be able to get context by following along with what I was reading as I wrote each section (sometimes each sentence).

      You dislike the generation curve chosen. Can you demonstrate an objective measure of the goodness of such curves? I personally can't think of any arbitrary curve where someone can't raise objections similar to the ones you raised. Oh, and don't forget that the acceptable inputs to the curve generating function are necessarily limited to verifiable objective facts, like block height.

      Simply put, a curve had to be chosen. Every possible curve has good points and bad points, with no way to predict the future, and no way to collect feedback from the outside world. The curve we have has advantages above and beyond most curves in that it depends on two very simple integer math operations that no one can possibly mess up.

      By the way, this comes up on the forums pretty often. Every single one so far has been at least as "stupid", and most are far stupider.

      Science is that which is testable. If something isn't testable, it is by definition part of that "large pile of untested bullshit", and thus, not science. We are concerned with the nature of the things, not the names people like to call them by. "Computer Science" is mostly not science (but parts are). "Political Science" is not science at all, unless I've missed some recent developments. "String Theory" is a funny one. We aren't really sure if it is testable or not, so it currently exists in an indeterminate state. Eventually, we will either prove that it is untestable, or find a way to test it.

      And no, we can't do economic tests. Not macro, not micro, maybe gedanken. For an amusing experience, read some papers claiming to have tested various economic theories. Count the controls that the authors acknowledge ignoring. Now find five more that they ignored, but didn't know or admit to ignoring. Now imagine someone finding five more that you didn't find...

      As for macro, the central banks don't do experiments, they fiddle with knobs. When things go the way they wanted, they claim success. When things don't, they claim a confounding factor. What is really happening is that the confounding factors are always there, but they are just as much responsible for the successes as the failures. Since the "experiments" are unable to distinguish, they are not tests, and no science happens.

      Your opinions on velocity are not needed, the data is public. Everyone in the world can see for themselves exactly how fast bitcoins are moving. Lack of a credit market does not in any way impede money velocity. Why on earth do you think it does? Also, there is absolutely no reason why credit markets cannot work with bitcoin. Don't take this the wrong way, but you are taking features of the specific financial system that we are currently using, and confusing them for universal constants. A lack of credit markets would be the death of the dollar because the dollar *is* the credit markets. Bitcoin is not built upon (that kind of) credit.

      There are soft and hard constraints on bitcoin velocity, but we are nowhere near either of them. When you think of "Supply and Demand", you must always keep in mind that the market only acts on "effective supply" and "effective demand". In bitcoin, "effective supply" is "coins not hoarded" multiplied by velocity multiplied by value. I'm using value here as an abstraction, rather than any particular exchange rate. Velocity is practically unbound because the system is fairly efficient. Value is practically unbound because the currency supports division down to very small units. Put them together, and t

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
  44. Bitcoins and the stock exchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wondering...

    If bitcoins gained wider usage and became accepted as a currency in the stock exchange, would it make things like insider trading easier?

  45. One more side-note by sirwired · · Score: 1

    When I said "it" when discussing capital in the GP, I meant "Capital Goods", not capital itself. As in: "Save [capital (usually in the form of money)] until you can buy capital goods." Or "borrow [capital (usually in the form of money] to buy capital goods." Etc. While this is syntactically unclear, it should have been apparent from context.

    Of course I don't think capital itself appears out of thin air. I don't know why you believed I thought that way.

  46. Re:Another idiot by drkstr1 · · Score: 1

    I'm guessing you didn't think that one through all the way. Taxes do not controll the money supply at all. All taxes do is move money around (presumably in a less efficient way than how the free market would move it around, depending on your definition of efficient, but that is a topic for another conversation). In keynesian economics, the money supply is controlled by a central bank, which creates and destroys money by lending it to other banks (more or less).

    --
    Fanboy Status: Apache Flex, C#, Eclipse, KDE, Pirate Party, Ron Paul, Slackware, Windows 7
  47. Re:Inaccurate Bitcoin Diatribe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, right.

    "You also have no legal protections with bitcoin."

    The only legal protection you have with Dollars (or any other 'approved' national currency), is having more of them than the entity you require protection from.

    There's a lot of fancy two-dollar thoughts and three-dollar words on this thread; but reality is I can buy stuff I want with Bitcoin - and I'm willing to sell stuff I have for it, too. It's a currency, and it's a store of value: it works as well as any other between those who are willing to use it. Better, if you deal across national borders.

  48. One little word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool.

  49. The government just has to regulate gambling by elucido · · Score: 1

    It just has to be regulated. That is unless they want tontines and ghoulpools.

  50. Re:Inaccurate Bitcoin Diatribe by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

    But if no one participates with small amounts, the institutions that run the bitcoin exchanges will never get equal protection under law. So quit being a DOUCHE, and at least participate with small amounts so that Bitcoins can take off.

    Here's some reading for you:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy#Perfect_solution_fallacy

  51. Re:Please place sociopolitical ramblings under thi by luther349 · · Score: 1

    i think it had more to do with the mass crupption of those online gambling sites.

  52. Re:Please place sociopolitical ramblings under thi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm in the Philly area. Growing up you had two options for casinos. Las Vegas and Atlantic City.

    Within a one hour drive, there must be 5 to 10 casinos near me now. I guess those are OK now too.

    The important thing is that you pay your taxes. Frankly, that's the only thing.

    If you substitute "government" with "local mob lord" everything makes perfect sense.

  53. Re:Please place sociopolitical ramblings under thi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget horse and dog races, those are also noble, honest, and good.

  54. Re:Inaccurate Bitcoin Diatribe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but you're very wrong. Everyone should not get in to Bitcoin and people who don't understand it would be foolish to do so. Bitcoin requires users to learn a bit about cryptography and peer-to-peer networking to use the system effectively. If you don't have the patience to do that, you'll never see any benefit from the system.

    The bitcoin community is a voluntary association of geeks who choose to use it. While there are BTC enthusiasts who encourage more people to try it out, no one is forcing you to conduct business with bitcoins -- unlike most governments of the world whorequire you to use their own debased inflationary fiat currency under the threat of arrest or imprisonment.

  55. Already lots of gambling with Bitcoin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of sites allow gambling with bitcoin. If anything this guy is late to the party. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Trade#Gambling

  56. Re:The US Constitution bans torture, not gambling by rpstrong · · Score: 1

    Not to nit pick, but the ban is on cruel AND unusual punishment. A punishment may be cruel (most are) OR unusual (e.g., requiring a DUI convictee to wok in a morgue), but not both.

  57. Re:The US Constitution bans torture, not gambling by jonadab · · Score: 1

    > A punishment may be cruel (most are)

    Punishment is, ideally, not supposed to actually _be_ cruel; but the problem is, no matter how non-cruel you design your punishment to be, the person who is being punished will tend to *perceive* it as cruel if he hasn't yet repented of the behavior for which he is being punished.

    Yes, historically there have been some punishments that were objectively very cruel. Making a man watch while you kill his children and then immediately gouging out his eyes so that's the last thing he saw with them, for example, is undeniably cruel. But that does not make it a good punishment. In fact, I don't think they did that to Zedekiah to punish _him_ (they were carting him off in chains afterward anyway), but to make a poignant example for others.

    But you can take a decidedly non-cruel (even restorative) punishment, like having to do a couple of hundred hours of community service to repay society for the harm your vandalism has caused, and it can _feel_ cruel to the person being punished if he still doesn't want to admit, even to himself, that he did anything wrong. This is unavoidable, because the emotional reaction that the punished person is having is not to the specific mode of punishment but to the mere fact of being punished. And you can't maintain a functioning society without punishing crime in some manner or another.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  58. Re:Please place sociopolitical ramblings under thi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, the Government hates competition.

  59. Re:Another idiot by JimsonJ · · Score: 1

    If the US DOJ wants to shut down an online gambling site, they will. Agreed, there is far more recourse they can take beyond the Bitcoin "loophole".

  60. Not for me, but can see the value... by JimsonJ · · Score: 1

    This is just a temporary solution that will end up buying his site time if the US DOJ decides to shut it down. While I personally think the security risks of Bitcoin outweigh the conveniences, considering that online poker probably isn't going to be regulated anytime soon in the States - http://onlinecasino.net/blog/united-states-online-gambling-bills-update/ I can't blame him for trying. As long as his poker site doesn't get as big as Poker Stars, it probably won't become a target for the U.S. government. Bovada will be the first if the DOJ decides to still go after operators....although I think they are finished following the DOJ's new stance on the Wire Act.