Elon Musk: Bitcoin Structure is Brilliant, But Has Its Cons; Paper Money is Going Away (ark-invest.com)
Elon Musk, who among other things, is a pioneer in the payments industry, has weighed in on one of the most divisive topics in finance today: Bitcoin. In a podcast with Cathie Wood of ARK Invest, Musk, the co-founder and chief executive of electric car maker Tesla, was asked to "go off topic" and offer up some thoughts on the most famous cryptocurrency. From a report: "I think the bitcoin structure is quite brilliant. But I'm not sure that it would be a good use of Tesla's resources to get involved in crypto," he told Wood. Musk, who founded PayPal, added that the days of paper money are numbered and digital currencies could offer a more efficient solution to shifting value. "Paper money is going away and crypto is a far better way to transfer value than pieces of paper, that's for sure, but it has its pros and cons," he said.
If he means money made of paper, then he's probably right, but wrong otherwise. There's plenty of people who don't, won't, or can't have a credit card and more who wouldn't have a personal computing device to do their daily transactions with.
Lucky numbers: 1, 2, 5, 15, 20, and the power ball is 100
Sure thing!
... on power. If there's ever a power outage of any significance your "economy" is fucked. Doesn't seem very sound to have such a point of failure. It would make it trivially easy to fuck up anyones economy in case war broke out. Seems like a recipe for disaster.
Normally that is how I would respond. But in this case there are some mitigating circumstances. Elon was involved with Paypal, some sort of payment tracking system. And it is mentioned to be off-topic. So I am going to be a little forgiving here.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
I think the bitcoin structure is quite brilliant.
The blockchain technology might be brilliant. Bitcoin very definitely is not. We shouldn't confuse the two. The jury is still out on blockchain but I think the more interesting uses of it won't be for currency. Bitcoin is an interesting but ultimately flawed experiment which might also be a pyramid scheme either intentionally or unintentionally.
Paper money is going away and crypto is a far better way to transfer value than pieces of paper, that's for sure, but it has its pros and cons
This is just idiotic. Paper money isn't going away any time soon and neither is fiat currency. Maybe in the far future but even then I doubt it. There is simply too much utility in paper money for a lot of transactions. Asking everyone to either carry an expensive computer with them or carry some means to interact securely with one in order to facilitate even the most basic transaction is unrealistic. Not everyone can get a credit card or afford a smartphone and even if they could it still wouldn't be practical some of the time.
If he actually thinks the dollar is trading bits of paper he has no idea what money actually is. (I doubt he's that naive) The vast majority of currency is nothing more than digits in a ledger somewhere. Paper currency is a tiny fraction of the total amount of money in circulation. Somewhere less than 10% of the total.
Cryptocurrencies are dependent upon our tech infrastructure being stable enough to validate them. If government-backed currencies die then that tech infrastructure wouldn't be far behind (if at all.)
when you pry it out of my cold dead mattress. /s
Especially when I can get a discount for using cash instead of the seller having to pay a transaction fee if a credit card or some other method of payment is used.
He has two bachelor's degrees. One in economics and one in physics. His experience with PayPal aside, Bitcoin is firmly within his areas of expertise.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
Wide swings in value is not a "con" - it's a non-starter for the general public. Ask the Weimar or anyone unfortunate enough to live in Venezuela.
I use contactless debit cards for all brick&mortar shops, Paypal for any online purchases(yey for refunds) and wire transfers for bills and sending money/from to family. Paper cash might be dead, but I fail see how Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency killed it.
Yes, let's please put all our faith in cryptography we know will become 100% obsolete with the proper implementation of quantum computers.
Paper may be the foundation of civilization, but it can get wet and burn so it must not be nearly as safe or secure.
crypto (...) has its pros and cons
Translation: a number of those pros excel at using crypto to pull cons on the rest of us.
We already see credit card companies trying to take advantage by raising transaction rates as more people stop carrying cash, to me that's a bigger reason to avoid using cards. Not only will you pay sales tax but you're paying a credit card tax and it will be passed on to you as part of the MSRP. If we are to go paperless we need free transactions, not more expensive ones.
What really needs to go away are credit cards. Having a 3% or higher tax paid on every transaction is a huge drain on the economy and pocketbooks. No way we should be paying that kind of extortion.
...and dump. Watch those coins burn.
Chewbacon
The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
shoved down their gullets. I know a few guys with fucked up finances and crap jobs. They don't get checks, they get money on a debit card every week or two.
It's sucks of course. There's fees and it's a major pain to use. But here's the rub: nobody really cares about these people. I mean, the current administration just rolled back a ton of consumer protection and anti-payday loan rules and nobody batted an eye. I only know about it because the crazy left wing sites I like complained about it (the kind that run articles on "The high cost of being poor".
TL;DR; If you're well enough off that you matter you're already getting away from cash because going to understaffed banks and waiting in line is a drag. If you're poor enough to depend on cash you're gonna get dragged into the cashless economy and taken advantage of by it, but nobody care.
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We are already past ten toes over that line. When there is a power outage most businesses shut down, because they cannot process credit cards. Many cannot even process cash.
When there is a power outage there are plenty of business that keep going just fine. The reason many shut down isn't just because of payment processing, though that certainly is one significant consideration for some like large retailers. Smaller ones can usually get by for a while. My company shuts down in a power outage because we are a manufacturing company and our equipment requires power to be useful. Payment processing isn't really a big issue for us and we don't depend on it to function day to day. A company like a lawn service might not really even notice a power outage of just a few hours.
Of course, this larger ominous question is why the banks were bailed out with the 2008 meltdown
Because there really was no option to not bail them out unless you wanted the next Great Depression. The banks need/needed to be regulated more than they were but that's a separate issue.
Because if all the big banks were suddenly forced to file for bankruptcy, would the credit cards still work?
Under what circumstances is this anything besides a ridiculous rhetorical question?
Physiccal currency always works no power, no connection to the internet / cloud,
no payment processor extorting a cut skimming off of every transaction, no need for a third party at all to facilitate the transaction, no lost or forgotten passwords, no hacked virtual wallet.
Why would anyone give away 2% of the profits to a payment processor?
You think processing cash is free? ALL forms of payment processing cost money, including cash. You have to pay people for their time to track it, organize it, deposit it, secure it, etc. Not to mention the fact that cash is rather easy to steal. None of this is free. In some cases it might cost less than what a credit card company charges but sometimes it costs more.
While I don't think it is a given, moving to a cashless society in the US is a possible future. But the only way I see it happening is if the government stops subsidizing cash and pushes the costs on those who decide to use cash. The cost of printing money, storing money, disposing of money, investigating counterfeit money, investigating tax evasion from off the books transactions, etc. costs tens of billions of dollars a year. If the US Treasury started offloading those costs to banks who request cash, who would then transfer those costs to consumers, cash usage may drop significantly. Instead of offering a discount for using cash, companies may charge extra for cash transactions.
Credit card transactions are only more expensive because of credit card rewards and because the government subsidizes cash. If you remove the subsidies things my become far more even.
If Congress then changed the law so companies do not need to accept cash for transactions, a cashless society becomes even more likely. Once again, I'm not saying it is certain, just that it is possible.
-- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
Tired of hearing is massive premonitions, especially when most of them WiLL NoT CoMe To Be
I do not know with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones! ~ Albert Einstein
Even if we eliminate it now, when the above time comes, physical money or exchanges of goods will no doubt come back.
Slashdot groupthink hates it when you point out the groupthink.
All we need is a story about Musk, Bitcoin, and global warming for the perfect storm of clickbait.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
Good job Rei sneaking in a story about ARK Invest. I can't wait until Tesla hits $4000 a share. We are all going to be rich (and save the planet too!)
I trade exclusively in nuka cola caps.
He managed to squat on a domain that people wanted to buy, and he traded it for stock instead of cash.
Thats pretty amazing that having bachelor degrees in economics and physics makes you an expert in Bitcoin (or anything). Who knew?
Musk's expertly correct on jew media "he said the Jewish media was slimy\dishonest" https://dailystormer.name/eter... and Jew history does the rest with their beliefs all non jews are nothing but cattle to be robbed, killed and raped https://yro.slashdot.org/comme...
I'll be dead when you pull the real money from my hands. Fuck you you little toadying fascist cocksucker!
Nowhere did musk say those things.
Slashdot groupthink hates it when you point out the groupthink.
I know, right? The unofficial logo for Slashdot is a bunch of panties crumpled into a tight ball. Maybe a black hole with a constant stream of panties swirling outside the event horizon.
All we need is a story about Musk, Bitcoin, and global warming for the perfect storm of clickbait.
Yep, closer every day! I can almost feel it coming, the Clickening.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
"I think the bitcoin structure is quite brilliant. But I'm not sure that it would be a good use of Tesla's resources to get involved in crypto,"
He obviously does not mean brilliant, as/like bitcoin is well worth investing!
(He is already clear he does not invest in bitcoin!)
All scams are very brilliant/clever, because/since many of their victims are often quite smart & educated people!
Bitcoin, as global internet scam, more brilliant/clever than maybe all other scams in history!!!
when there is no power, physical money is your only option.
I have also not seen paper money in years.
p.s.: I'm Canadian.
#DeleteFacebook
I wish you were an expert in shutting your goddamned mouth you fucking streak of piss.
Already happened. Our "money" is now mylar. It does not disolve in the washing machine.
Bitcoin is not going to be replacing paper money anytime soon unless they can make it cheaper to process transactions.
Last time I checked was a year or so ago, they were wanting what $40 per transaction? Are you kidding me?
What if I wanted to buy a pack of chewing gum that cost $2? Am I to pay $40 processing fee + $2 + tax? I don't think so.
You're a boring faggot Ken Doll.
Musk is an very rich idiot who made his fortune running a payment processor, I think he know more about money than you and I.
but it doesn't really surprise me. Still, if you make good money it would be easy enough to fix. If you're paycheck to paycheck though nobody cares, and that's 60-80% of the population (depending on how you run the numbers).
Also, Mod parent up. I know we're not supposed to complain about the Mods, but everything you said seemed on topic and without exaggeration.
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In my experience, bachelor degrees make you an "expert" in jack shit.
you can't really afford to travel, especially if you're being responsible. And if you're not traveling and you live in a major city power outages are extremely rare in most places.
The other thing to remember is that virtually all of the growth in the last 11 years was in about 20 American cities. See here for more about that. That means the folks who matter are never far from those amenities.
America pounds the notion of equality in your head when you're young, so folks don't really notice how stark the divide between even the top 20 and the bottom 80% is, let alone between the 1% and the rest of us.
The link posted shows otherwise. Jews are mad they can't steal his paypal idea as Zuckerberg stole the winklevoss twins code (fact they lost a lawsuit over) so the controllers at SHUL hate Musk. He outsmarted them and they can't STEAL HIS SHEKELS like they do everyone else's kicked out of numerous nations over the ages for it. Do you deny that also? I see you can't and downmoderated posts I did asking you a fair question to hdie them too. An admission of guilt for you jews.
my buddy got a few grand from a class action but then the company continued to do the stuff that caused the class action. The only reason he got that is a lawyer smelled money. It was better than the nothing he was gonna get anyway though.
There's an old Dilbert cartoon where the mean little Dog (Dogbert?) sets up a phony government office to take advantage of people (the "Bureau of Dogs") and Dilbert says he's complain about it to whoever manages that sort of thing.
The last panel had Dogbert telling an aggrieved man that it cost $50 to file a complain and $10 bucks to borrow a pen.
The world is like that. The Right Wing took over state legislatures and used that to stop funding the government agencies that protect people. They sold this to the public as "shutting down those stodgy bureaucrats". The result is things like labor and consumer protection first only exist on paper. They're not funded, so there's nobody there doing the work and nobody to complain to.
Along with changing the bankruptcy laws so that you can't discharge debt under $100k this was one of the biggest shifts in power in American history. And nobody's said a word about it (except those aforementioned left wing sites barely anybody reads).
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By "paper money" he probably meant "money made of paper". Just a guess though.
You need paper money to buy it legally. Thought he would have known that.
I personally pay credit/debit card fees for my business. They're about 3% of gross, when all is said and done. That's a lot of fucking money, that's not, in my opinion, worth 3%. Personally, I always use cash, when possible, because I refuse to give those Visa/MC leeches one more penny.
I don't respond to AC's.
Bit = One
Coin = Coin
This is really more of a SHELBYVILLE idea.....
Since this is a podcast, it should be noted that the cryptocurrency question is asked around the 25:40 mark.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
They make you an expert in writing checks and running your mouth about topics above your head.
Elon Musk is a profoundly stupid man, with all of his AI robot brain lets live on mars and spend bitcoin horseshit.
"Hurf durf im selling flamethrowers twitter LOL huehuehuehue Boaty McBoatface! Huehuehuhhue the stock price is 420 weed dude!"
The penultimate twitter expert.
He's an expert in getting other people to invest in his business ventures, even the government.
I wonder what stock he's planning to start selling to venture capitalists this time.
What is sad is there are sane and coherent logical arguments to support a subset of what you are saying. You and those like you are a sort of strawman that lets those sane and coherent arguments appear to be easily defeated. You are a character that results in actual rational debate ending because anything associated with anything you'd say is laughable.
Personally, I don't think it is an accident. It's like The Colbert Report except the Colbert's don't even know they are a mockery of actual rational and educated people meant to discredit them.
expert in Bitcoin
Bitcoin isn't exactly hard to understand
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
Paypal not aside he is the founder of the largest digital payment system (some would argue currency) on earth.
It seems to me like paper money will go away the day a government declares it so. In the U.S. right now, it would be entirely possible to issue some sort of government "cash card" to everyone, and dissolve the U.S. mints and all of their operational costs to offset the expense of issuing them.
All of this talk of paper money never going away because "the poor won't have bank accounts or credit cards" misses the point. All of the cash people walk around with had to be produced at considerable taxpayer expense and is maintained after that (damaged bank notes destroyed and replaced, etc.). It's not like it's unfathomable that the Federal government wouldn't just set up its own "no monthly fee, no credit check necessary" system where everyone gets a card.
Where that gets disturbing, to me, is that you're giving up the anonymous nature of cash transactions. You won't even be able to buy a stick of gum without it being logged in a computer system owned by the Fed. But practically speaking? I don't think those concerns will do much to stop things from progressing. Government already keeps tabs on any purchases you make of more significance, such as a home or car, and demands banks report your large cash deposits to them. 99% of the population will decide it just doesn't matter that government knows about all the little stuff you purchase .....
"Musk is an very rich idiot who made his fortune running a payment processor, I think he know more about money than you and I."
Really because that just sounds like he'd be more biased toward digital payment processing than you or I.
Riiiiiiiight.
infamous krypto kurrency.
It was mostly Wall Street and Consumer banks that collapsed. The credit card banks did just fine.
Banks are smart enough to keep profitable business (Credit Cards) separate from risky ones (Mortgage backed securities).
I wish I could say the same about average Joe consumer. That numbnut let the wall between Main Street & Wall Street banks get busted down and he keeps letting more and more banking regulations get repealed because they're "job killing regulations".
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An asshole who is full of himself likes bitcoin, who would have guessed?
We can't all have a Bachelor of Internet Trolling.
And jack left town.
I think that the point is to spur responses.
Some are amateurs who just like reactions. Some, being actual paid Russian trolls, are probably rated by the number of responses. Angry responses are easier to elicit than thoughtful ones, thus...this stuff.
How did you come to THAT conclusion? Thats like saying the same thing about heroin use. Are you that fucking stupid?
If you have a job, it generally comes back. XD
half the folks at any job I've ever had are deadbeats. I remember one guy who'd come in, take one 4 hour bullshit phone call, go to lunch, do another long, 4 hour bullshit phone call and go home.
Very few folks are needed to run things anymore. But we're a "if you don't work you don't eat" society. So you've got a ton of jobs where you're over staffed.
If your friend ever gets a real taste of the efficiency he's pining for he's gonna hate it. That is unless he gets to join the owner-class and just boss the working class around. Maybe he will, but if not the choices will be non stop desperation or abject poverty.
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You do realize that those consumer protection laws were merely an attempt to prevent people from competing with the banks. There are people who are a severe credit risk. The anti-payday loan rule fucked them hard by ensuring that they have no access, at all, to credit. Tell me again who doesn't give a fuck about the poor? Warren stepped all over the truly poor to get progressive votes.
WASP? Musk exposed jews (rothchild bankers/media) "he said the Jewish media was slimy\dishonest" https://dailystormer.name/eter... and Jew history does the rest with their beliefs all non jews are nothing but cattle to be robbed, raped and killed https://news.slashdot.org/comm...
For those that haven't experienced them, they aren't like you imagine them to be:
- they don't feel like plastic garbage or shopping bags;
- they don't stick together (at least not any more than the paper bills did);
- they aren't super slippery, though they are smoother than paper;
- the feel does take getting used to but that's muscle memory and you adjust;
I say this as someone who was skeptical of the plastic banknotes.
vending and arcades are not all going to be paying $10/mo+3% device to take cards.
casino cash with out cash advance fees will they take cards with out running it as an cash advance?
we know you certainly don't have a Bachelor of French Language
lol
He hasn't founded PayPal. He bought himself in.
I'm pretty sure when he said 'founding the world's largest Internet payments company aside' that was sarcasm.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Most money is digital, not paper.
How is bitcoin structure brilliant? If every financial transaction would be done by bitcoin around the world, we'd use up a year's electricity consumption in a day. Just by processing those transactions!
On the one hand a bachelors degree requires some basic understanding of the topic. On the other hand I have seen programmers with a masters degree that couldn't program themselves out of a wet paper bag without setting it on fire.
Bitcoin's structure is less than brilliant. It cannot scale efficiently with volume of exchanges. The concept that in order to be part of the public ledger you must "consume" computing power to crunch meaningless numbers is idiotic. Right now bitcoin miners are burning more or less 300 times the energy required by traditional credit circuit to clear a single transaction. In the future we will exchange digital tokens but the transaction will be local (between the actors) and not distributed over all over the world. This will save energy and time and the right to privacy.
It isn't really an individual technology but the masterful way in which they were combined and the economic concepts applied that makes it so impressive.
The "economic concepts applied"? That might sound brilliant to someone who is ignorant of the economics involved. Bitcoin is basically a techie love letter to going back to the gold standard and it fails for many of the same reasons with a few new problems thrown in. Plus it's organized like a multi-level marketing scheme (fraud?) with the people that got in early reaping most of the advantages. If you think Bitcoin is a brilliant take on economics you don't understand the economics involved.
Frankly it scaled beyond what anyone could dream of with a beta protocol.
Bitcoin is wildly popular with speculators and people hoping to avoid legal scrutiny and some libertarians with a hard on against fiat currency. It's consuming ridiculous amounts of energy, is far more expensive per transaction than the dollar, is accepted almost nowhere, has enormous exchange rate volatility, and is utterly useless for most people most of the time. But other than that it has "scaled beyond...".
I haven't carried paper money in years and do perfectly well.
I have people working for me that cannot get a credit card or debit card of any description. Exactly what do you propose they do? I don't use much cash myself but what works for me doesn't apply to everyone.
You don't need an expensive computer, all you need is a debit/credit card.
A) Not everyone can get credit or debit cards. About 15 million adults in the US do not have a bank account. Among black or hispanic between 15-20% of households don't have a bank account much less a credit card. And this is in the wealthiest country on the planet. Go to a country like China and credit/debit cards are very rare outside of large cities.
B) A computer is involved in literally every credit/debit card transaction and I assure you that it is expensive. Just because you use plastic doesn't remove the computer from the equation - it just makes it one computer instead of two.
I fail to see how carrying around a thin piece of plastic is less convenient than having a pocket full of metal and paper.
It's not that plastic is less convenient, it's that for a lot of people it doesn't carry much if any added benefit. Virtually everyone carries a wallet of some description. Carrying cash is every bit as easy as carrying a piece of plastic once you are carrying a wallet. Cash transactions are a lot more straightforward in a lot of cases. Cash is accepted almost everywhere, does not require any special accounts, works even when the power is out, etc. It's (usually) quick, it's easy, and it's reliable. Going cashless comes with very real costs which as modest as they might seem to you or me, some people cannot afford or simply do not want.
I've also been to some restaurants where they do not accept credit cards. Go to a farmer's market and start waiving around a credit card sometime. A few vendors accept them but most of the vendors are still cash only.
From your negativity, I can only assume you've been holding out on switching to going cashless, but if you try it you'll never both with cash again.
Not at all. I rarely use cash myself. I might use $40 in cash in a typical month at most and I find that to be something of an irritation. I'm just well aware that going cashless is simply not going to happen for a lot of people any time in the near future. I have several employees who work for me who cannot get credit cards (bad credit) and don't have enough money to bother with a bank account so they don't have a debit card either. Not everyone is as lucky or capable as you and me. Cashless is fine but expecting everyone to do it is just not realistic.
For the rest of us...right, you're going to use your card to buy a candy bar? Or a sex toy?
Oh, and btw, slashdotters, from MIT:
"Once hailed as unhackable, blockchains are now getting hacked"
https://www.technologyreview.c...
"Paper may be the foundation of civilization, but it can get wet and burn so it must not be nearly as safe or secure." ... so, keep it dry and it's fireproof?
How can Bitcoin be efficient? Its security comes from the complexity of the calculations. This complexity translates directly into an insane power consumption at the miners. Due to how its security works the cost of this power consumption must must be a quite large fraction of the value of the transactions.
This is just crazy. The base design of cryptocurrencies makes them an insane waste of electricity, therefore creating lots of environmental damage.
I remember because my dad just barely squeaked in a bankruptcy (medical debt from when his mom was sick).
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