MIT May Help Lead Bitcoin Standards Effort
gthuang88 writes: With everyone from PayPal merchants to Rand Paul starting to accept Bitcoins as payment, the race is on to develop technical standards for the virtual currency. Now MIT Media Lab director Joi Ito is getting ready to unveil a plan for MIT to become an independent, neutral home for standards development. Ito is enlisting cryptographer Ron Rivest and economist Simon Johnson to help with the effort, which could provide an academic alternative to the Bitcoin Foundation for conversations about the currency's future. Ito says, "I’m not pushing it, but I’m offering MIT as a neutral academic home for some of the conversations and the technical coordination. Which I think will give a lot more stability to Bitcoin, which right now is a little bit fragile."
1) I'm a "Paypal merchant" and I'm not accepting them;
2) Of course Rand Paul accepts them. He's just the kind of clueless that would. Yay let's go back to C18 banking! everyone was so rich and everything so stable.
Bullshit.
They just want a piece of the cake and get some control of something that was developped outside any institutional oversight.
MIT is as legitimate as Beijing' university.
MIT, the front man as usual....
Is MIT going to be extending the same "neutral" academic collegiality to the fiercely independent Bitcoin community which it so notably extended to the free-thinking Aaron Schwartz. If the Justice Department or other government agency starts seriously investigating Bitcoin, are we seriously expected to believe that MIT will have the currency's back?
If this passes without comment, we'll be better off with Dogecoin.
What that intrinsic value might be is anyone's guess.
My guess, the price of gold denominated in rolls of toilet paper will plummet by multiple orders of magnitude if society collapses ...
Aaron Swartz might have a different opinion.
Bitcoin has major value in sending money worldwide without fees.
Bitcoin's lack of fees is temporary. As the awards for mining become less and less miners will need to make more and more off of transaction fees. Miners are essential to the Bitcoin ecosystem, they don't just generate new coins, they also create and validate the block chain. Without sufficient miners the block chain becomes untrustworthy and the system collapses.
As block awards diminish and mining hardware and overhead costs increase fees will have to increase.
Merchants can "accept" bitcoins without ever seeing or touching a bitcoin. Doing all their pricing and accounting in fiat, receiving only fiat.
They simply contract with a 3rd party bitcoin exchange that provides a payment address to the user, accepts the coins, converts to fiat and pays the merchant. The exchange operates like the credit card companies, processing the buyers payment.
Bitcoin is like the various other private currencies created in the last several hundred years. They're all *designed* to be fragile, with whoever owns the mint beint the controlling player, and to avoid taxation by the existing banking and money control system. They're all aimed at, effectively, laundering money and sidestepping those controls.
I've personally seen three companies try to set up private barter systems in different cities, and they *always* fail in the long run, because they get caught money laundering, because the business owners take too large a cut, because they fail to protect their currency, and it's usually a combination of all three factors. Bitcoin is no different in any of these senses. The only difference is that the role of the "mint", to limit and control publication of currency, has been replaced by the Bitcoin exchanges. And they are facing *exactly* the same three problems.
They're about to get their asses stomped by the IRS, the SEC, and the EU equivalents. Bring popcorn and watch the fun!