Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin's Volatility
Sparrowvsrevolution writes "Bitcoin's recent spike and then collapse in value has convinced many that it's too unstable to use as a practical currency. But not the founder of Silk Road, the black market drug site that exclusively accepts Bitcoin in exchange for heroin, cocaine and practically every other drug imaginable. Silk Road's creator, who calls himself the Dread Pirate Roberts, broke his usual media silence to issue a short statement that Silk Road will survive Bitcoin's bubble and bust. The market's prices are generally pegged to the dollar, with prices in Bitcoin fluctuating to account for movements in the exchange rate. And Roberts explained that vendors on the site have the option to also hedge the Bitcoins that buyers place in escrow for their products, so that they can't lose money due to Bitcoin's volatility while the drugs are in the mail. As a result, only about 1,000 of the site's more than 11,000 product listings were taken down during the recent crash."
Why blame the victim? The rise and fall in price (PLEASE, not "value". There's a difference, you know) is due to speculation, not to the currency itself. Dollars, euros and other fiat currency are just as vulnerable.
Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
So, you like BTC being unregulated, but you want governments to make certain activities illegal. How is this not regulated?
I blogged about it the other day, in how I wish governments would just make BTC to fiat currency transactions illegal. It would be a great step in reducing volatility and decoupling BTC from the regulated markets.
That sounds to me like a sure way to kill bitcoins. If I accept bitcoins as payment, and no one who sells something else I want to buy accepts them, then the bitcoin has no value for me.
William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
I own my sole to the company store has deeper meaning then just a song lyric. Mine companies used to pay people not just not enough to survive (so they had to borrow credit from the company store and then be forever in debt) but often in company currency, that could only be spend in the company store. It is a way to enslave people, not free them.
But ah... it was the GOVERNMENT that freed these people by enforcing that salaries should be payed in fiat currencies. So basically, you want to reverse that. Here are your wages, in bitcoins. No you can't convert them anywhere, you can only use them to buy goods from my friends, at whatever prices they set.
Nice.
When you meet a libertarian, remember, the oppression of government is not what he objects to, it is that it is the government doing the subjugation and not him. Remember what the south was really about, it was about freedom from a government that told them to stop denying freedom to other people. When a republican wants to make government so small, he can drown it in a bathtub, ask him what is going to replace it. Ten to one he thinks it is going to be him waving the biggest gun around. Libertarians are all against the government because they want to be the one doing the telling. And frankly unless you own a VERY big gun, no matter how bad the government may be, a local warlord is going to be even worse.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
I sell physical goods and accept Bitcoin as a payment method. The volatility doesn't bug me at all. it's only a tiny percentage of overall sales...
That is because your risk is very limited. If you had a significant amount of your sales in Bitcoin you'd probably think differently; since your risk exposure would be much higher.
If a seller is concerned with volatility, they should consider not selling their received BTC for fiat currency.
No, they should immediately convert it so they assume no volatility risk.
It's the number of "we accept bitcoin" sites that accept currency and then immediately convert it to fiat that is one reason for the downward pressure.
That's called market forces.
I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
I'd be happy to throw back just to the 1800s or so -- when poor people could actually save their way to wealth, where credit addiction didn't lead to thrill-seeking behavior addiction, and where the money supply wasn't a medium to fund warfare and welfare entitlements benefiting the rich and powerful.
Business regulations, money regulations and savings dilution aren't modern in any way, but they've become the norm. I'd rather see all 3 go away, or at least just become part of the nanny-state economy, not my economies.
Silk Road's creator, who calls himself the Dread Pirate Roberts, broke his usual media silence
Yegads, man! You're going to scare the horses. Your usual media silence is a wise practice. The general public doesn't know you exist, and doesn't know you use Bitcoins. Those are good things. The first rule of drug dealing is you do not talk about drug dealing. Just 'cuz I don't use your service doesn't mean I want to see more scrutiny aimed at you, or at Bitcoin.
Stop-Prism.org: Opt Out of Surveillance
I'd be happy to throw back just to the 1800s or so -- when poor people could actually save their way to wealth
That is the funniest thing I've read all day, thanks, it makes a change from the death and bombs.
I'd rather see all 3 go away, or at least just become part of the nanny-state economy, not my economies.
There is no separate economy that belongs to you. You are either in society and the actual economy, or you can live on a desert island somewhere and rot.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Besides one obviously fake spike and drop, the value hasn't changed much more than 20% in either direction lately that I've seen. Yeah, the dollar differences are insanely high compared to the last 2 years but from a percentage standpoint, the value hasn't changed much. Overall, it's still up significantly from 3 months ago.