How To Be A Bitcoin Hater

So you don’t really know what bitcoin is, which leaves you with two options: research, and not research. Now, like with most things in life, you should always go for the easiest; therefore not research. It’s not like there’s some magical open database of information available to you at all times. And because knowing stuff sucks anyways, I’ve compiled a simple guide to being a bitcoin hater, which will guarantee you feeling better about willingly not knowing things.

1. Don’t ever challenge anyone in person. You have, at your pale fingertips, an entire social network of pseudo-human interaction where you need never look anyone in the eye and where you are always right. Start in places like Reddit, Facebook, and YouTube, but if you really don’t have too much to say, Twitter is your friend.

2. Be highly suspicious of anyone who likes bitcoin of being a millionaire. Then fill yourself with resentment.

3. Be highly offended that there’s an abundance of white people really into bitcoin. Amir Taaki doesn’t count; he’s still half white, therefore racist.

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4. Remind us all that bitcoin is only used to buy drugs. This is of course a direct insult to your lifestyle because you’re still meeting that kid in the parking lot behind your old school, who makes more money than you do by selling coke cut with baby laxative.

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5. Safely assume that bitcoin is a fad perpetuated by neck beard hipsters, (but not the ones you hang out with).

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6. Assert that math, I mean bitcoin, isn’t real.

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7. Remember: you use your Visa and cash everyday, which makes you an economist. You’ve heard terms like fiat and deflationary, so you have full authority to claim that bitcoin is bad currency.

8. Point out the fact that bitcoin will be obsolete when we’re all in FEMA camps!

9. Conclude that since bitcoin is baseless in every way, and has a robust community, it must be a cult. Or some kind of club. Or made up of a diversity of people who people know things you don’t. Same thing.

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10. Although oil was volatile for some 40 odd years, and many things that are terrible have been stable, like the S&P 500 stock market, claim bitcoin is bad due to volatility. Don’t worry, it’ll hold up because if you don’t know anything, then nobody knows anything.

11. Demonstrate that you can comfortably subscribe to two contradictory beliefs at once by stating that nothing backs bitcoin, while continuing to use the dollar.

12. Resort to name calling:

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13. Say that Bitcoin is a tulip, Beanie Baby ponzi scheme. And remember, that’s what you think, and you’re never wrong, so you must be, not wrong in this case too.

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14. Assume that people who like bitcoin think they’re better than you. No, assume that they own bitcoin to be better than you.

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15. Whether it be in good humor or complete conviction (one can never know), don’t forget to voice that bitcoin is controlled by zionist reptilian shapeshifting overlords.

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16. If attacking a male, go for things like “you probably still live with your mom.” If female, this may remind you that you haven’t had much experience with osculating curves, so allow you virginal frustrations to fuel angry comments about her appearance. You’ll be surprised at how creative you can be in this state of mind.

17. In the very likely event of a killswitch or soft apocalypse, bitcoin would not work. So we might as well not use it now. In fact, let’s go back to trading seeds.

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18. Argue that because Sha256 was developed by the NSA, and the Internet was invented by DARPA, bitcoin is therefore evil.

19. Remember, everyone who uses bitcoin is evading taxes, and you’re better because you’re not.

20. Assume things.

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21. Point out that the government is not sure about bitcoin. And government represents us, so we too should not be sure.

22. Mention Ron Paul, because he’s crazy and doesn’t exist, just like bitcoin.

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23. Completely dismiss what this technology means for the unbanked 6 billion, and continue to point out white privilege because electricity.

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24. Publicly display that you have no idea what gives money its value.

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25. Laugh, because it’s a virtue that you truly don’t give a f*k about global innovation.

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26. If all else fails, blame the Internet.

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“If you don’t believe me or don’t get it, I don’t have time to try to convince you, sorry.” – Satoshi 7/29/2010

Being an Entrepreneur is Really Hard

Written by Jason King of Sean’s Outpost and reposted with his permission from reddit.


For over a week now, I’ve been trying to write a year in review piece for Satoshi Forest. The words, which usually just flow like a spigot when I’m passionate about something, seem to just dribble out. And what little ekes by is hardly print worthy. Maybe it’s just writer’s block? Writer’s block happens. Or maybe I’m not as passionate about Satoshi Forest as I used tao be?

But, I am passionate about Satoshi Forest, perhaps more than I ever have been. And writer’s block, if it is the culprit, cannot explain why I haven’t responded to Elizabeth Ploshay’s ALS Ice Bucket Challenge in a timely fashion. I guess I’ll have to donate now. You see it’s not just the Satoshi Forest year in review, it’s everything. Emails from friends I haven’t responded to, phone calls I let go to voicemail, new endeavors at Sean’s Outpost I let sit unannounced (http://blockchain.satoshiforest.com/). And then it hits me. I’ve been here before.

I’m really depressed.

And it seems to be going around.

Since the tragic suicide of Robin Williams, four (4) people close to me have also tried to kill themselves. One succeeded. An anecdotal survey of my friends has seen an equal uptick in the number of people talking about or attempting suicide.

It’s been really disturbing.

In the preparations for the Bitcoin in the Beltway conference this past June, I had one of the more surreal conversations of my life. An east coast sales director for Marriott called me wanting to know if bitcoin was linked to suicide. They had heard of the tragic death of Autumn Radtke in March (http://nypost.com/2014/03/06/bitcoin-firm-ceo-jumped-to-her-death-neighbor/) and were concerned about hosting a conference for a technology that was making people kill themselves. I was sure he was joking. He was not. The conversation I had with him must have allayed his fears. #BitcoinBeltway went great, can’t wait to do it again next year.

Obviously, bitcoin does not cause suicide. And while we are quick to sticky a “suicide prevention hotline” when the price crashes, bitcoin is not causing depression. What we may want to look into is something that is not bitcoin related, but more something that comes part and parcel with “bitcoiners”: the woes of entrepreneurship and startup culture.

Being an entrepreneur is f*ing hard. Really hard. Most people don’t even attempt it. It might not feel that way to you, but likely that’s because you surround yourself with other entrepreneurs. Your friends work at startups. Your trips are to startup conferences and conventions. Your news feed is r/bitcoin and hacker news. You are firmly in the echo chamber.

Most people will never try and build a product or company, so most people will never experience what it is like to fear you won’t make payroll and someone else will not be able to pay their rent because of you.

Most people will never know how difficult it is to raise money: to get someone else to believe in you enough to open their checkbook and support you financially…the hours you spend and the mental strain that comes from hearing “No” again and again and again. And if you get a “Yes” the pressure doesn’t dissipate! It increases! Now it’s your crazy idea and someone else’s money you’re responsible for.

Being an entrepreneur is really hard.

And we are really hard on ourselves. We are afraid to show any weakness, because we’ve been taught being weak or vulnerable is to be shunned. If someone asks you how your company is doing, “We’re killing it.” probably comes off your lips before you’ve even processed the question.

It is statistically impossible for everyone to always be “killing it.”

But ask at your next mixer or meetup and almost everyone will be “killing it.”

And that pressure to succeed, to perform, to win is immense. And I think that pressure may be even worse in bitcoin.

Not to everyone, but to a lot of bitcoin early adopters, and especially to a lot of early bitcoin entrepreneurs, bitcoin is a promise, a glimpse of a better world free from the inequalities brought by our legacy financial system. So if you fail in bitcoin, it is easy to feel that you are failing on that promise too.

I’ve felt that way – felt that if I screw up I am screwing it up for every non-profit and charity, that they will somehow not get the benefits of bitcoin because I failed. I see it in others. Just a week ago at #Cryptolina I talked with a group of brilliant entrepreneurs who were convinced that if they didn’t beat an incumbent payment solution to market, they had lost the war. And that whole segment of the market would NEVER benefit from cryptocurrency.

Being a bitcoin entrepreneur is hard.

And I don’t have the answers to how to deal with all the pressure and depression that come from doing what we do. But I have learned a couple of things and maybe someone else that is experiencing depression or having dark thoughts can read this and gain some value from what I’ve learned. And even better, maybe someone that has dealt with depression in the past can riff on what I’ve said and provide some insight into how they cope.

1) You are not alone.

When you are depressed, it seems like everyone else has it all together and you are the anomaly. That’s not true. They probably don’t have their s*t together either. And everyone has problems we don’t see. Everyone.

Some of the greatest entrepreneurs and investors of all time have had brutal fights with depression and suicidal thoughts.

READ:

http://www.inc.com/magazine/201309/jessica-bruder/psychological-price-of-entrepreneurship.html

2) Bitcoin needs you and it doesn’t need you. And that’s ok.

Bitcoin needs you. It really does. But it doesn’t need only you, it needs all of us. You are not the single point of failure. Bitcoin’s success is just as decentralized as the blockchain. So give yourself a break. It’s okay to make mistakes and it’s okay to fail. It’s even okay to fail spectacularly.

Think back to how many times bitcoin has been declared dead. How many times has the price crashed? How many times has a major bitcoin institution been corrupted/hacked/found to be a scam?

And yet, here we are. An you are here too.

3) It is okay to ask for help.

This is hard to learn. We come from a self sufficient culture. And if you ask for help, people will realize that you are not as awesome as they thought you were…BULLSH*T. Asking for help has ZERO bearing on how awesome a person you are. In fact, your friends WANT TO HELP YOU. Being there for you in a moment of crisis is something your friends are probably really down for. But if you ignore them or won’t tell them you are having problems it is really difficult for them to help. Talk to someone. If all else fails you can always call…

THE NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: 1-800-273-TALK (8255)

I know all of this might not make a difference. When you are caught up in your head in the middle of a depressive episode nothing seems to help. Try to find something that you can concentrate on just to get you through the worst of it. For me, I go play with my kids. It helps me, sometimes more than others.

If you are feeling down, try to talk to someone. And if you see someone feeling down, try to lend a supportive ear.

Bitcoin needs you alive.

Inside Bitcoins Conference and Expo Returns to Las Vegas in October, Get 10% Off!

Bitcoin Magazine is excited to be partnering withInside Bitcoins Conference and Expo, which will be returning to Las Vegas at the Flamingo Hotel on October 5-7, 2014!

The event will explore the way that cryptocurrency has been affecting the payments industry, and will cover a wide range of topics including mainstream adoption, compliance, bitcoin startups, investing, mining, altcoins, equipment, and more. The first 300 paid attendees will receive US$50 in bitcoin.

New to Inside Bitcoins Las Vegas will be a half day of small classroom-style workshops taught by cryptocurrency veterans, which will provide attendees with an interactive, informative setting to learn about various facets of the bitcoin ecosystem.

Keynote speakers for the event include Gil Luria, Managing Director of Wedbush Securities, and Bobby Lee, CEO of BTC China and Board Member at the Bitcoin Foundation. See full list of speakers here.

Session Topics Include:

  • Afternoon Keynote, The Tremendous Rise of the Bitcoin Industry
  • Bitcoin, Remittances and the Developing World
  • How to Win the Bitcoin Exchange Ecosystem
  • (Self) Regulating The Bitcoin Industry

And many more!See full agenda here.
We’re pleased to announce that Bitcoin Magazine is once again partnering with Inside Bitcoins to offer all readers 10% OFF Gold and Silver Passports. Enter code BMAG14 at checkout to redeem your discount.Register before September 10 and save!

Coming in September, Inside Bitcoins Conference and Expo Will Feature Over 40 Virtual Currency Experts and 21 Sessions

Inside Bitcoins , the leading international conference and expo exploring the business opportunities and threats posed by the growth of cryptocurrencies, debuts in London, 15-16 September, 2014.

Taking place at the Grange St. Pauls Hotel, on the doorstep of the City of London, Inside Bitcoins already has attendees from over fifteen countries registered and is expected to be the largest virtual currency conference in Europe to date. Exhibitors and sponsors confirmed for the event so far include CEX.IO, Ghash.IO, Strevus, Airbitz, AMT, Bitmain, Black Arrow, CoinTerra, Jumio, meXBT, ROCKMINER, Butterfly Labs, btc.sx, CoinSimple, Cryptopay, Jumio, meXBT, Digital Jersey, Unocoin, Verne Global, VirtusData Centres and Seedcoin.

20+ future-forging sessions, delivered by 40+ Bitcoin Visionaries with 400+ Bitcoin enthusiasts will set a new standard for conferences on this topic in the UK. Current speakers include: Gavin Wood, CTO, Ethereum; Steve Waterhouse, Partner, Pantera Capital; Hakim Mamoni, Co-Founder and CTO, Seedcoin; Nicolas Cary, CEO, Blockchain.info; Will O’Brien, CEO & Co-Founder, BitGo. View the full agenda and roster of speakers here.

The program is designed to provide an understanding of where the crypto currency industry is today and the associated business opportunities and threats presented to FinTech and infrastructure start-ups and investors looking to capitalise on the rise of a new industry and major corporations seeking innovative solutions providing cost-savings and customer acquisition opportunities.

London is only one of the participating international cities in the Inside Bitcoins world tour, along with Berlin, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Melbourne, New York City, Seoul, Singapore and Tel Aviv.

We’re pleased to announce that Bitcoin Magazine is partnering with Inside Bitcoins to offer all readers 10% OFF a full conference pass. Enter code BMAG14 at checkout to redeem your discount. Register now!
Companies interested in sponsoring or exhibiting should contact [email protected].

Q&A: Introducing Bitquick.co

I attended the Cryptolina conference in Raleigh, NC, where I met Jad Musablat and Chad Davis from Bitquick.co, a platform for users to buy and sell Bitcoin; and the only platform of its kind that insures all funds deposited onto their site.

We stayed at a nice Airbnb mansion, and I had a chance to hang out with these guys all weekend. I found them to be very enthusiastic, cool, and transparent folks. What struck me is that they really care about providing the best service, and making it easy for others to acquire bitcoins. Jad has a keen sense of detail. Chad is a forward thinking dude who has a knack for solving problems. Not only do I see talent in both dudes, but they are a great team. It also helps that their names rhyme.

I had a few questions for Jad, and here are his answers.

What is Bitquick.co Inc and how was it formed?

In May, 2013 I encountered firsthand the dangers of Bitcoin as I was scammed out of 10 BTC, and experienced the danger of not securing your accounts with 2 factor authentication, as my Mt. Gox account was hacked resulting in a loss of 21.88 BTC. This wasn’t due to any inherent weakness in the Bitcoin protocol, just a lack of legitimate services and personal knowledge.

My experiences pushed me to think of a way to reduce the dangers of, and ease the process of dealing with Bitcoin; I realized that for adoption to continue, trust in the community was a necessity.

But how? The answer came in a forum post on July 17 by a user on Bitcointalk.org displaying his new creation, “Connectcoins.com”. It was a simple platform that allowed users to buy and sell Bitcoin through an escrow operated by Connectcoins. The same day he launched it, I offered to buy it for $300 and to my fortune, he obliged. I changed the name to BuyBitcoin.us, and launched shortly thereafter. August, 10th, the platform was renamed to BitQuick and things have been moving quick ever since. Traction was picking up fast, and I needed help to keep up with the increasing order volume so I could still manage my school work. In October 2013, Chad joined the team and brought with him the idea of our Breast Cancer Awareness Month promotion, which managed to raise over $1,100 for charity: https://www.bitquick.co/bitquick-co-is-donating-25-of-october-revenue-for-breast-cancer-awareness-monthIn February, 2014 “BitQuick LLC” was officially registered in the state of Ohio.

BitQuick now provides a streamlined platform for users to buy and sell Bitcoins in a peer-to-peer fashion. We’re gunning for LocalBitcoins.com, as we think we’ve developed a more streamlined user-friendly experience. No more scamming! Buying and selling is only 3 simple steps. To buy, just place a hold, deposit cash at a local bank or credit union and upload proof of payment. To sell, provide your bank account name and number, send your Bitcoin to a BitQuick escrow address and confirm cash deposits as they arrive. It’s that simple. Only a 2% fee to buy and it’s always free to sell.

What is your professional background?

I’m currently studying Biomedical Engineering at the Ohio State University on a full scholarship and will graduate in May 2015, am the Founder and President of the Ohio State Bitcoin Group and the Treasurer of the Biomedical Engineering Society at Ohio State. I’ve been fascinated with running internet businesses from a young age. My first website was a pay per click advertising website I started my sophomore year of high school which accumulated over 7,000 users in 2 months. I then ran an MMA News website my senior year of high school called MMANews247. During my freshman and sophomore years of university, I ran an internet marketing company that specialized in affiliate marketing that generated over $80,000 in revenue in 2012.

What are you currently busy with?

I’m currently attending my final year at Ohio State University studying Biomedical Engineering. I’m also the founder of the Ohio State Bitcoin Group, a pioneering member of the College Cryptocurrency Network, and the Treasurer of the Biomedical Engineering Society at Ohio State.

What is your vision for Bitquick.co ?

For myself, my dream is that BitQuick can provide me with a full time job. I’m passionate about Bitcoin and when I’m working on BitQuick, it doesn’t feel like work. That’s the best type of job to have.

For everyone else, we’re building a platform for people that believe in a globally connected digital economy. I hope that BitQuick can provide a means for users to quickly, safely and easily jump in and out of the Bitcoin ecosystem anywhere around the globe. This will allow Bitcoin to continue breaking into the mainstream, and allow the everyday consumer to take advantage of the money saving power and connectivity that Bitcoin offers.

We also hope to be able to continue helping both the local community, and global community through continued promotions similar to our Breast Cancer Awareness Month promotion.

Tell me any other interesting info about Bitquick.

At Cryptolina we presented some survey results documenting the behavior of users when buying and selling Bitcoin, along with their preferences. The major takeaways were that people haven’t found a go-to favorite method for trading yet because they’ve been plagued by risk, delays, confusion and high fees. With that, we announced our partnership with Xapo to help alleviate the risk factor. We will be the first marketplace to actually insure Bitcoins deposited onto the BitQuick platform by sellers.

We also already have trading platforms in India (BitQuick.in), Taiwan (BitQuick.tw) and Europe along with an alternative crypto trading platform AltQuick.co. Middle East trading has just launched! (BitQuick.me). Tons of great things on the horizon for BitQuick!

After using BitQuick to some bitcoins, it seemed like a much more streamlined localbitcoins, with a much cleaner experience and interface. I wish I would’ve known about it earlier.  Give it a try here!

Farm In Michigan Growing Local Bitcoin Economy

In Ann Arbor, Michigan there is a plot of land called Arbor Hills Farman organic farm that leases land from bigger property called the Tilian Farm Development Center, where vegetables and livestock are cultivated.

The products are then sold to members of the community through a system called Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in which members, consisting of local citizens and local restaurants, receive fresh produce on a normal basis.

Arbor Hills is no ordinary farm, however. They lease out land and provide fresh produce and chickens for bitcoins.

Arbor Hills Farm is run by Katie Shafer, a yoga instructor/farmer who previously studied physics at Michigan State University, and Dan Till, who studied economics and Chinese at University of Michigan and currently runs a Bitcoin Consulting business: bitcointegration.com.

More recently,  Dan has been responsible for Tilian Farming Development Center’s “Bitcointegration.”

“After talking to the head of the organization that oversees the Tilian farm development center about Bitcoin, they loved it,” says Dan. ”I am paying the next Arbor Hills Farm Lease payment to Tilian Farm using Bitcoin,” he adds.

Arbor Hills is now raising funds in bitcoins for the Tilian Farm Development Center. The Tilian Center helps promote new farmers and experimentation with new farming technologies and practices; these include ideas like shrimp farming, a plan to farm llama to create local alpaca goods, and experimentation with innovative ways of heating the greenhouses on the farmland. This agricultural testbed, facilitated by bitcoin, will serve to introduce novel farming practices around the globe.

On a typical day at Arbor Hills Farm, the chickens get fresh food and water in the morning, then fresh water and watermelon throughout the day. Fruits and vegetables for the CSA are picked and delivered throughout the week.“We provide our community with the highest quality, best tasting produce, while utilizing farming practices that improve the health of the soil and the health of the people fed,” says Katie.

As Bitcointegration works to help local restaurants accept bitcoin, these locales will be able to use their bitcoins to purchase produce from Arbor Hills.

In addition, the yoga studio where Katie teaches plans to accept bitcoins as a form of payment; many of the individuals in this yoga community are members of the CSA that will also be able to pay for their produce in bitcoins.

Finally, these bitcoins will then move from Arbor Hills Farm to Tilian Farm Development Center for the lease payment.

This effectively creates small bitcoin economies that feed into one another.

“The farm will expand in many ways next year,” concludes Dan. “The size will increase to six acres, the number of workers will increase to five with rotational intern opportunities, and educational classes will be available to the community. We also plan on increasing the livestock numbers.”

This pioneering experiment will show how cryptocurrency can transform and disintermediate the farming industry.

This micro economy can serve as a model for functions of the greater bitcoin economy, and at the local level, communities can now benefit and create new forms of wealth, health, prosperity, and innovation for themselves.

You can find more information about the Tiliam Farm Program at their website here: http://tiliancenterorg.startlogic.com/about-us/farmland-history/

You can donate to this great project here, in bitcoins or fiat currency.

Hal Finney – We Salute You

Hal Finney was declared legally dead on August 28, 2014. It was a sad loss for the bitcoin community and with respectfully bowed heads we mourn his passing. Hal was a futurist and had an uncanny ability to see trends and technology down the road when others couldn’t. He dared to dream impossible dreams that few could see and most would never believe. He saw the future potential in bitcoin long before it went live. The 58 year old computer programmer and expert cryptologist succumbed to ALS, which is commonly called “Lou Gehrig’s Disease”.  It appears there weren’t enough “ice bucket challenges”, which is the latest trend currently taking place around the world, put forth in effort to collect donations to end the disease. For Hal, it was already too late to save his devastated body, but his mind never gave up or gave in. He held a few tricks up his sleeve until the very end. A person like Hal Finney does not go gently into that good night. We’ll get to that.

Hal was one of the biggest defenders and supporters of bitcoin from the earliest days. He rose to the defense of the still incubating technology against fellow cryptologists who were convinced it would never work. Hal held the distinction of getting the first bitcoins ever transferred to anybody as a test from Satoshi himself. In that moment one might draw comparisons to the first telephone call made by its inventor Alexander Graham Bell, which was made to his assistant as well. His first words were “Watson, Come here I want to speak with you!” (recorded in his journals in 1876).

Some had wondered if Hal was Satoshi, though this has been researched and concluded extremely unlikely. In a superb report for Forbes Magazine, Andy Greenberg was dispatched to the trail of the “supposed” Satoshi Nakamoto during Newsweek’s infamous reporting. When Newsweek’s “Crack” team cast their world-wide dragnet and found Dorian Nakamoto, much of the world seemed to break out a bag of popcorn to watch the story unfold. Many in the bitcoin community were shocked and outraged at the injustice; some just didn’t want the good mystery story to end. So this is where many learned about Hal Finney, his life, and the almost impossible odds that one of bitcoin’s real creators had owned a house and lived only a few blocks from the “imposter” version of Satoshi Nakamoto.

With the great mystery and mystique of bitcoin’s true creator still seemingly intact, Greenberg followed one of the leads of the story. The Newsweek headline and breaking story had frenzied reporters from around the world camped out at Dorian’s house just a few blocks from the house Hal once called home. Hal was as curious as anybody about the identity of Satoshi and played with the speculation on the bitcoin forums.

Prior to bitcoin, he became a founding father in many of the uses of the Internet we enjoy today. As one of the first and leading figures in the creation of PGP encryption, the ripples of his efforts are felt by hundreds of millions every day. He was stubborn. He did not trust that all governments were all beneficial and could be trusted to do what is best. He was a legendary proponent of individual privacy.

Hal spent his last months confined to his wheelchair, unable to speak or move. He did have control of his eyes and could communicate by looking up or down to answer yes or no questions. He was being held hostage by the hideously debilitating disease. With his wife Fran taking care of him full time, he was getting by.

On March 19, 2013 he issued one of his last posts on the bitcointalk forum titled “Bitcoin and Me”. Hal spoke about his early contributions to the bitcoin project and his current personal struggles with the disease. He mined some of the very first bitcoins with his PC’s CPU when it was still easy enough to do so. He gave up fairly early when it started to make his computer run hot. Looking back – he wished he had left it going a little longer.

A great deal can be learned of the attitude, fight, and optimism Hal had on life. Hal believed in the future and was inspiring to those who read of his account. Even in the face of his own limited mortality he was making plans for his heirs and keeping his precious bitcoins safe. However, some of them were used to pay for his wheelchair and medical costs towards the end. But Hal was the kind of guy who wouldn’t go quietly. He had been training to do a full marathon in his 50s just before he was diagnosed. These are not the aspirations of one likely to just give in.

One of his last futuristic beliefs was that he might be back to fight another day. With the same optimism he put into the future of bitcoin and the technology of digital cryptographic currencies, he put into the idea of cryopreservation. At the time of his last heartbeat his wish to be preserved came to fruition. Some people speak about the idea of cryopreservation in eerily similar terms that some talk about bitcoin – as if it’s a pipe dream. The futuristic idea would be that his body may one day be “jump started” once there is a cure for ALS. It’s the stuff of science fiction; but then again most of the world would have put bitcoin in that same category five years ago. The exploding price of bitcoin itself  may have played a part to  make his last adventure possible.

The bitcoin community leaders have begun an ALS research  fund.  The youtube video with Gavin Anderson completing the ice challenge and includes the link to donate bitcoin directly to the fund. Please consider this request in  Hal’s honor. Without his efforts in cryptography and bitcoin , you might not be reading this today. The address to donate directly can be found here:

Hal Finney was an optimist, futurist, idealist, and a fighter. He once spoke of the possibility of bitcoins reaching one million dollars each. Hal seemed stubborn enough that he would insist on one day waking up to see it happen. We in the bitcoin community salute one of our own. Hal Finney, may all of your optimistic dreams come true.

 

 

 

 

 

Hal

 

Violate the Core Principles of Bitcoin at Your Own Peril

Forbes magazine ran an article on August 24, “Why There Should be a Bitcoin Central Bank.” If you want the short answer and want to skip the rest of the article, it boils down to this: because that would violate every core bitcoin principle. This article shows the ignorance of most of the world that is deep into yesterday’s paradigm of money. This article is intended to establish four founding core principles of bitcoin technology that should act as the signal for “true north” from which banks, nations, and most importantly, the people of the world will eventually recognize. As people value the many aspects of bitcoin differently it is important to understand the roots of creation that are responsible for the fruits the world is beginning to recognize.

JP Morgan plans its own version of bitcoin but refuses to comment on their work which is supposed to compete globally with the “Web Cash” idea that sounds a lot like bitcoin. Yet their work violates one of the founding principles of bitcoin and digital currencies created in its image. (This article will refer to all alternative type digital currencies as “bitcoin” for the simplicity of reading.) With recent financial restrictions on Russia, their own work is being pushed ahead of schedule for their own version of the same technology. But they too have missed key foundational principles and will only represent a hollow shell disguising itself as the real thing.  The CEO of JPMorgan, Jamie Dimon himself, was attacking bitcoin even in January while at the same time his bank was trying (and failing 175 times) to patent the already open-source technology.

 

jamie devil

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon

It’s one thing for a bank to create its own payment system borrowing from some of bitcoin technology, but what about entire countries? Would this be more reasonable and trustworthy?  In recent news, Ecuador is trying to create its own version of a digital currency while banning the use of bitcoin. Once again, this shows ignorance of the principles that created bitcoin and is shaking up the world.

Principles and values defined

Principles are the bedrock, “natural laws” that form the core root of something. The are scientifically proven and basic instate. Performing basic mathematics is having the principles of mathematics down. You must know mathematics before you can understand algebra and calculus. They act as the “true north” for our compass to give direction and reference point. We aren’t born with the ability to write – this is a principle that you must learn to read before you can write. It doesn’t make a difference if people value algebra or the ability to write more than basic math and reading skills. The core principles of each discipline will enforce these natural laws to happen in sequence regardless.

The following principles are covered in this article:

1.       Neutral

2.       Open

3.       Trustless

4.       Decentralized

Bitcoin’s core principles

1.   Neutral

Political regimes have proven to be temporary. If they are overthrown, or invaded and disposed of, their currency goes with them. Bitcoin transcends politics and nations. Nations enjoy the power of creating and maintaining their monopoly on their own currency but  rampant corruption in the governments renders them untrusted by trading partner  nations. Even the US dollar as once respected as the reserve currency of the world is making many countries uneasy with its debt spending. The US, International Bank, and The World Bank could benefit  by holding countries such as Argentina responsible to paying their international debts. Bitcoin can be loaned with transparently to help end corruption.

Nations have also recently used money as a cold war weapon. They can invoke measures that make it painful or illegal to conduct foreign business and larger nations can exert enough pressure to send other countries into hyperinflation or a depression. One age-old warfare strategy was to counterfeit the currency of the rival country and flood their markets and cause massive devaluation for non-gold currencies. Gold protected against this as it’s impossible to replicate. Now counterfeiting has gone high tech as  routine reports indicate hackers are attacking foreign banks. But like gold…rising above all the muck and strategy and warfare…bitcoin may rise above the fray. It may one day provide shelter with its intrinsically valued properties but have several features that make it better than gold.

On the wrong side of the principle of neutrality, Ecuador has recently announced a ban on bitcoin and other neutral digital currencies. It also announced that it will create its own version of digital money.  Although it might easy commerce and banking with some of its population, this will likely fail in the long run because it doesn’t adhere to the principle of being neutral. Convincing other countries to trade using their new proprietary currency may not be any easier than what they have today. Neutrality of the world-accepted digital currency  might eventually compensate for bad monetary policy reputation. They’ve admitted that they intend to use it as a easier means of collecting taxes from their underbanked to try and meet enormous debt levels. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. They may be repeating the mistakes of Canada’s “Mintchip” digital coin they since gave up.  They too did not understand these core principles.

2. Open

The bitcoin code is open source. Anybody can view it and with a few programming classes can work to understand it. Non-open currency might not be any more trustful than the printed version which might be created into infinity with no proof otherwise. Given the choice of using a banned neutral world-wide currency or a state-enforced national currency which is not open to review might end up like Canada’s version. See how well they accept other national currencies across any border today (Barring the US reserve currency). Just ask Argentina. Or try to pay for you order on Overstock.com in Mexican Pesos. As it is written in programming language one might need to be versed in the skills of computer programming to understand it – but there are enough around the world who are able and who have to verify it does what it is programmed to do. It works like a series of complicated math programs. But it is all based on math, logic, and probability. You can’t hide secret back doors or operations in the open source code and get away with it. Literally anybody in the world can add code to the bitcoin program but having it peer reviewed and accepted by the world and the core development team is an entirely different matter. Openness enforces honesty. Hidden agendas, or any code that even smells of non-neutrality will be called out immediately as some of the best programmers in the world write it, test it and continue to improve on it. They are already suspicious of everybody and everything presented as a new idea as you can verify on their online forums.

Every change made to the bitcoin code is reviewed and tested among peers around the world for the good of all people and nations. It benefits from the bitcoin processing software being run world-wide network of computers using consensus of majority to enforce democracy of money. Some worry about if the inventor of bitcoin is a mysterious person clouded in secrecy and unknown motives. To this – the community agrees…”So what?” The program is open and edited, over 70% of bitcoin has been rewritten and streamlined.  It’s math. It’s only as secret as any math equation viewable by all. With it’s openness the best of the best hackers have tried to crack it, and they’ve failed. It’s likely impossible to create ‘back doors’ to software that is open source programs.

In contrast to the principle of openness – the examples given above for JP Morgan and Ecuador give context to this point by both failing to meet this principle. They both have proprietary “closed” programs that are not submitted for review by the public. This erodes trust when compared to bitcoin. They were created to only benefit the organization that is producing them. It would appear that only customers served by JP Morgan could use their new payment system based on bitcoin-like technology, but they would have to compete with the nationless and open code that can be used by anybody in the world (legal restrictions notwithstanding). JP Morgan seems to value the ability to avoid fraud associated with credit cards and the enormous savings potential, but it misses the boat for the principle of openness. When it eventually competes with the open source and trusted bitcoin open system, what would be the compelling reason to switch from a universally accepted and open system? Without the fundamental principle of openness the natural result would be less trust and limited acceptance. JP Morgan appears to not align their values with the principle of openness.

Ecuador made the mistake of disallowing bitcoin at the same time it announced its own version. This could isolate them from commerce with the rest of the world. The m-pesa model of digital money is now opening up to bitcoin with one in three Kenyans now owning a bitcoin wallet. It appears that Ecuador hasn’t been paying attention to transformation of m-pesa. Bitcoin might one day make m-pesa irrelevant itself as Kenya continues to set the pace in Africa for pulling itself out of poverty. Ecuador seems destined to repeat their same currency problems with a fresh coat of whitewash dressed covering up the point that its a shallow digital currency model  missing the principles discussed in this article.

3. Trustless

Bitcoin requires no third party to validate the transaction or the parties involved with the transaction. A native principle feature of the blockchain does this. It requires absolutely no trust in the person you are conducting business with because the record of the bitcoin required to complete the transaction is already available for inspection and verification. In this way it acts as non-counterfeit cash. One must only trust the blockchain, which is verified by the most powerful single purposed networked computer in history.

An important feature of bitcoin is that it is not tied to an asset like gold. As history has proven,  the keepers of gold cannot always be trusted. This situation of backing a digital currency creates a breakdown in trust that is different from history how? . . . as one must trust the person who says they have the gold. They may try to convince you with their own private ledger. And less informed public will fall for it. The word ‘bitcoin’ might one day be as effective as “DOT COM” leading a rush of unwise investment from people jumping on a bandwagon led by unprincipled people lacking the ability to maintain its customers bitcoin funds in a customer control wallet.

Mt. Gox is a good example of people new to bitcoin trying to bring their understanding of the old paradigm with them.   The advantage of having your bitcoin in your own personal digital wallet was completely missed by the sorry customers who trusted Mt. Gox to hold their funds without access to their own personal wallets. When the population doesn’t understand the principle of  being trustless they end up trusting the same kinds of institutions who’ve been fleecing them all along. Failing to utilize one’s own personal wallets for bitcoin safekeeping you may come to regret it.  They had the ability early on to move their funds into their own private wallet for protection but lacked the principle understanding presented here. Natively bitcoin requires no trust. But yet people mistakenly give too much trust by giving up control of their funds to those who do not deserve it.

As it is today, there must be some trust for the onramps and offramps converting national currencies to digital currencies and back such as Coinbase. Government regulations are needed when it touches regular currencies which cannot benefit of the blockchain. But in the long run, the long-standing advice of:  if you don’t hold it – you don’t own it might still apply. In the world of bitcoin, if you don’t have the private key to your wallet, you don’t own it.  Gold is estimated that over 100 ounces of real physical gold ounce, there are contracts with people who think they are the only owner. When financial calamity happens, and it eventually will, fractional reserve lending of gold will shock many. Their perceived safety of gold is an illusion.

Trusting derivative markets, ETFs and a host of other up-and-coming bitcoin businesses are attempting to make a profit by using bitcoin in old ways and old paradigms, but this counters the advantages of the protection of the blockchain. Big Wall Street firms demonstrate the value money and are happy to take short term gains at the expense of long-term reputations.  One may look at the recent history of  world record breaking 13 billion in fines levied on JPMorgan regarding corruption, and decide to trust them with their own digital currency. JP Morgan will likely make it sound good with expensive advertising on MSNBC with hope you forget about their scandals.

In the case of Ecuador, they claim to back their currency with assets of the nation. Yet they currently rank 102 out of 177 countries on the corruption scale. Their ranking for budget openness is classified as “minimal”. These actions will likely raise the price of bitcoin in Ecuador significantly as the government actions may seem desperate.

4. Decentralized

Bitcoin is founded on the principle that money should not be controlled any centralized entity. It was created for the private use of people by visionary people suspicious of government after repeated contagion of bank collapses that are still teetering in danger.  Using technology introduced with peer-to-peer file sharing used by bittorrent, the ability to stop file sharing and bit torrents was proving impossible. The lesson was learned about keeping information safe using decentralized models. Napster was centralized file sharing and it was shut down. Likewise, successors like Kazaa saw a similar fate.
Decentralization has a potential of equalizing control of the money. A recent Forbes report indicated that only 85 people in the world control as much money as 3.5 billion people on earth.  Those in power currently from the old paradigm will do what they can to corral and control the new paradigm to maintain their valued power. However the core principles of bitcoin will resist if they are utilized. Populations of collective societies might prefer centralization  versus individualistic western societies.

 

fbi whack a mole

Nation states can in theory build enough mining power to take consensus of a block chain. But that train of thought only works a short time before the geniuses that try to figure out how to stop a bitcoin freight train realize the people may just decide to revert to a previous block to fork and introduce a new algorithm that makes the previous hardware obsolete. They would be playing a billion dollar game of whack-a-mole. It is conceivable that somebody might create the hardware – but they won’t have the minds and hearts of the world consensus. The Genie is out of the bottle. The new paradigm has begun. The bitcoin protocol has already proven to be resilient. The honeybadger of money does not go quietly into that good night.

JP Morgan is centralized. It can be avoided. It can be circumvented. It has its own arbitration rules. They might make grand claims and put a lot of advertising dollars into making it sound like the best new thing – but it will be hollow. Without adhering to the core principles, it will become weak. Good advertising will only carry you so far. JP Morgan bits may be uncompetitive in places of the world the company doesn’t operate. It has to comply with heavy US regulations. Bitcoin companies may as well, but bitcoin itself will not. The blockchain is everywhere. It is beholden to no one. The US government controls JP Morgan: it can be compelled to stop.

Ecuador is one nation. Its government called for the ban on bitcoin and the creation of its own digital currency is centralized to a political structure and current administration. Its new digital “mint” can be declared closed or illegal by the next political party, or revolution by its people. It is controlled by a centralized government by those in power. With one war being lost, their currency will suffer the same fate as the losing country in all of history. This is a reason people will ‘vote’ with their dollars for a worldwide decentralized currency.

As far as the “Central Bank of Bitcoin”? The new principles will be crowdsourcing, decentralized banking functions, smart contracts, transparent wallet accounting and audits and much more that the world can hardly yet imagine. Central banks were the paradigm of the past. Under the system of central banks, Over half of the world remained unbanked or underbanked. Central banks helped the 85 richest people in the world control over half of the world’s money. Central banks centralize money and power for the top one percent of the world. The core principles value of Bitcoin’s  does not by default as person to person transactions can avoid banks and their outdated models. Banks will still be needed to lend money and help to get new businesses started but the decentralization movement has begun.

So back to the beginning of this article…Why should we not have bitcoin central banks? All of the above.
There’s your long answer.

OpenBazaar Looking for Beta Testers

The online marketplace ecosystem is currently run by companies like Amazon and Ebay that each acquire respective fees for their service and process most of their payments with credit cards and PayPal, which also take additional fees. But what happens when you decentralize these markets, and allow for peer-to-peer business transactions utilizing bitcoin? OpenBazaar.

OpenBazaar is an open source project to create a decentralized network that allows people to trade with each other directly online, using bitcoin, without paying sellers fees and without censorship.

It was formed when Brian Hoffman, the project lead, forked the Dark Market code back in April.

If you wish to sell something, you post a product listing on the site with the product’s specs. After publishing, it is sent to the distributed peer-to-peer OpenBazaar network. When someone searches for the product and finds your listing, you both must agree on a price that is then sent to a third party called a notary, which is actually also part of the OpenBazaar network. All three parties must agree to the stipulations of the business transactions. The buyer sends the funds, and the seller ships the product. When they buyer gets his stuff he marks it as received, which automatically releases the funds to the seller.

I met Project Lead Sam Patterson last week at the Cryptolina Bitcoin Conference where he informed me that the team is currently looking for beta testers.

I had a few questions for Sam and here’s what he had to say.


What is the vision for OpenBazaar?

 

We want to empower people to interact directly with each other online

for their trade, not have to rely on centralized services that charge

fees and monitor your commerce. Once people have the ability to engage

in commerce with individuals around the world directly, using Bitcoin as

payment, the potential for a new era of trade emerges. This is trade

without borders. Trade without censorship. Trade without the middleman

taking a cut. This will be the first truly free market online, and when

people act freely amazing things happen.

 

What are you currently busy with?

 

We are launching the beta at the end of August, and it’s a rush to get

everything in order to meet the deadline. We believe in the idea of

getting the simplest product out as early as possible so we can get

feedback from the community, and so we’ve set some ambitious goals for

 

When does it go online?

 

It’s online now, if you go to the Github and set it up yourself. But

it’s not usable for transactions quite yet. The beta launches end of

August, when it will be easier to install and use.

 

“We need beta testers,” concludes Sam, “and we need them to submit bugs and be patient

waiting for fixes.”

If you want to help report bugs just contact [email protected] or proceed to install  a node yourself using these instructions. Submit bug reports and any other ideas  for improvement to OpenBazaar’s Github.

“Feel free to drop into our IRC room on Freenode at #openbazaar,” reads the website.  “We’re happy to help you get a node running or answer your questions. Obviously any code submitted to the project is much appreciated! You can also donate Bitcoin to this address to help us pay for seed servers, the website, and other projects costs like conferences.”

The Value Foundations of Bitcoin: Austrian Redux, part I

There have been a number of Bitcoin detractors. Most mainstream economists and intellectuals denounce the idea as either impossible or a hoax, or they misconstrue it along the lines of play money or niche money. Another group of Bitcoin detractors comes from an Austrian/Hard Money contingent. These gentlemen who recognize the invalidity of the Keynesian models have nevertheless made their own various arguments attempting to demonstrate that Bitcoin cannot serve as money. For naysayers of this persuasion, there is nothing improper about the economic incentives of such a system, but simply that it will succumb to State control or prohibition, that it is trackable, or even that Bitcoins are intrinsically worthless.

The Keynesian response is understandable, though lamentable. Their schema for viewing economic operations precludes Bitcoin’s success as a money just as many Austrians would consider the introduction of demurrage money to be completely incapable of performing the role adequately. What is not so understandable is the resistance from Austro-libertarian circles, especially given the obvious complementarity of Bitcoin within the larger Austrian/Misesian framework.

The chief impediment of these thinkers is ignorance – not of economics, certainly – but of technology, specifically open-source code, distributed networks, public-key cryptography, and proof-of-work systems, all of which are integral to understanding Bitcoin’s value proposition. They do not understand how Bitcoin works, hence they cannot identify with other people who subjectively place value on acquiring Bitcoin. It is a simple step from there to suggest there is no value to Bitcoin – that it is a tulip mania, a frenzy, a bubble, a hoax, sure to crash to zero, etc.

The explanation for this negativity ultimately relies on a misuse of the regression theorem as provided by Mises and Menger, as well as a subtle denial of the subjective theory of value. In the eyes of Austrian economists, money – the most salable good in society – must emerge from a state of barter. It must be a good for which prior direct use value existed before it could ever acquire exchange value. Nobody would ever accept a good for indirect exchange unless it already commanded widespread desire through services it natively offered. Thus, gold and silver were widely popular monies for centuries because they offer use value. Bitcoin, on the other hand, emerged, not spontaneously, but as an “invention” that was “intended” to be used as a medium of exchange. According to this perspective, Bitcoin could never become money because there is never any initial use value any single person acquires from them. One holds Bitcoin only because he expects others to accept it indirectly for goods and services, and thus they laugh and scoff and compare Bitcoin to Ponzi schemes or other scams. It is ridiculed on par with perpetual motion machines – an impossibility similar to a medium of exchange without any direct use value. [ref]Thus, explanations for Bitcoin’s popularity from these folk amount to a Greater Fool Theory, where they imply Bitcoin traders have no fundamental value in investing in Bitcoin, but simply to unload them on to a greater fool who will pay more down the road. This is similar to the Keynesian beauty contest perspective in stock investing.[/ref]

This perspective, I believe, is obviously incorrect. Instead, the perspective that should be advanced is one that understands: (1) That Bitcoin as an emerging money perfectly satisfies the conditions of Mises’ regression theorem; and, (2) That value is subjective. The regression theorem demonstrates that a medium of exchange must have prior use value; thus, if we find a good operating as a medium of exchange, we should conclude it therefore has direct use value. This seems straightforward, and yet this approach is rarely taken. Instead, carts are put before horses; interlocutors will examine the perceived absence of use-value, not its presence as a currently functioning medium of exchange. Witnessing Bitcoin operating as a medium of exchange usually involves two further attempts at debate; either we must “throw out” the regression theorem (challenge its praxeological rigor), or the regression theorem is fine, but it proves Bitcoin cannot be money. If Bitcoin is “not money,” then any valuation placed on it is spurious and unsustainable. This is what fuels the charges of tulip mania. Without recognizing any inherent use value, these commentators (who presumably have never interacted with Bitcoin lest they fall prey to “hoaxes”) insist that there is none at all. However, this is a complete non-sequitur. Simply because neither Gary North nor Peter Schiff are creative or observant enough to identify the use value does not imply there is none. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. Mises explains the strictness of the regression theorem:

 

It does not say: This happened at that time and at that place. It says: This always happens when the conditions appear; whenever a good which has not been demanded previously for the employment as a medium of exchange begins to be demanded for this employment, the same effects must appear again; no good can be employed for the function of a medium of exchange which at the very beginning of its use for this purpose did not have exchange value on account of other employments. And all these statements implied in the regression theorem are enounced apodictically as implied in the apriorism of praxeology. It must happen this way. [ref] Mises, Ludwig Von. “Chapter XVII: Indirect Exchange – The Determination of the Purchasing Power of Money.” Human Action: A Treatise on Economics. New Haven: Yale UP, 1949. 410. Print.[/ref]

 

Thus, for those who support Mises’ theorem, to take the argument that Bitcoin has no direct use value is to deny the empirics of the situation: that Bitcoin currently is serving as a medium of exchange, and accordingly there must be an underlying value that spurred the creation of its exchange value. There is no other way it could have acquired such.

The second major error is a subtle rejection of the subjective theory of value. When I point out that Bitcoin necessarily must have a use value, people will frequently demand to know what it is. What could possibly compel people to spend hard-earned fiat money in exchange for digital tokens? Usually I suggest social purposes. Bitcoin – being a scarce, digital good – is unique in that creation of one requires solving cryptographic puzzles of increasing difficulty. Thus, in the early days, before Bitcoin had either money prices or exchanges – in Menger’s words, “organized markets” – the only way to acquire Bitcoin was from a friend or to download the client and mine Bitcoin directly. The protocol’s newness and its underground nature enabled Bitcoin to become a status symbol. Cypherpunks and hacktivists – those closest to understanding the value proposition it offered – began to acquire them and mine them (and report their electricity/mining costs on message boards), and from there eventually Bitcoin spread to other markets and social groups. That’s it. The regression theorem does not admit of quantitative tests (ie, “how much” value a certain item or commodity requires before mass acceptance) – it simply states the necessity for prior direct value. This social status value Bitcoin acquired is real. It is a value accruing to whosoever desires it. Hobbyists place value on all sorts of bizarre goods many people would never think to acquire. Even objects of pure fads like Beanie Babies offer real, legitimate value: they offer the value of social inclusion or of being “in the know.”

Historically, while this account suffices to describe Bitcoin’s launch into becoming a medium of exchange, it doesn’t quite answer the question as to why Bitcoin units are individually valuable to users. The answer to this is straightforward. Bitcoin as a payment system is valuable; it renders amazing services nothing else can. The only means to use the payment system, however, is through the use of Bitcoin units. Therefore, as the units themselves are scarce, required means of action, they command a market price. Users are willing to purchase digital space on a ledger in order to take advantage of the manifold benefits they enjoy. The network cannot transfer dollars, euro, or yen. It can only move Bitcoin.

Understanding the Bitcoin units in the larger context of utilizing the Bitcoin network brings clarity to confusion. There is no contradiction or paradox in Bitcoin becoming money; it emerged as a scarce, digital item, which became a good (when scores of people began acquiring and discussing them), and then proceeded to become a medium of exchange (when it was used to indirectly purchase pizza). Whether it becomes liquid enough to crowd out the rest and become money to everyone will have to be seen, but it should be apparent that, from an Austrian perspective, there is no problem whatsoever with global Bitcoin adoption. Digital currencies are real assets that acquired exchange value – just as all media of exchange have – and it is the historian’s job, not the economist’s, to understand the empirical details that gave rise to this exchange value.

Satoshi

This is a guest post by Derek Watson.


So, it turns out that Satoshi Nakamoto is not Satoshi Nakamoto. According to Andreas Antonopoulos, who was charged with giving him the bitcoins that had been raised for him as a sort of apology for the Newsweek fiasco (and explaining what they were), he doesn’t know how to use a Web browser. So, assuming that Satoshi didn’t invent the Bitcoin protocol, have a stroke and retire to build model railway engines, what should we think about the Creator?

A lot of effort has been put into trying to work out who Satoshi is. His last words were that he was leaving Bitcoin and had “moved on to other things.” But could someone who was so obsessed (and who must have known that it would need much further development) give it up so absolutely? Wouldn’t we expect that person to continue working on it? It would be difficult to contribute to it under a pseudonym so perhaps Satoshi has revealed himself? Is he hiding in plain sight? It would be difficult for one of the core development team to hide the fact that he was Nakamoto. The temptation to refute any argument with “Don’t you know who I am? I am Satoshi Nakamoto!” would be too great. You can’t really feign ignorance and re-learn your own subject with a peer group.

Another alternative is that Satoshi is maintaining an active interest from the sidelines (this is pretty much a given, assuming he is alive), but is worried about the repercussions both on the currency and on him if his identity were to be discovered. Initially, the thought probably crossed his mind that he might be assassinated. He had been entrusted with the means to bring down governments, notwithstanding that it was his own brain that had entrusted him with it. Anyone who realises that they are more powerful than the government, the CIA, the FBI and any number of three-letter initialisms is going to worry about their personal liberty at the very least. At that point he had very few friends and his options were to keep very quiet, to get squashed like a bug or book a one-way ticket to Guantanamo Bay.

He? What makes us think that Satoshi is male? The inventor of the ultimate geek currency – are you joking? You may think he’s almost certainly male, but that is an assumption. What else do we actually know? We know his email address – it’s [email protected]. We know that he still has access to it, because he used it to tell the world’s media that they were barking up the wrong tree with Dorian Nakamoto. The email address was verified as the same one that had been used routinely when Satoshi was active. That tells us that Satoshi is still alive and still watching Bitcoin. Why did he send an email saying that Dorian Nakamoto was not him? If Dorian was not Satoshi, that fact would have come out eventually in any case. If Dorian had been him, then sending an email denying that would not have really achieved anything. Nobody’s going to believe a denial, even if it does come from Satoshi’s email address. We can rule out someone else using his email address, the only explanation is that he had some empathy with Dorian’s plight, and in a way he was laughing at the media’s clumsy attempts to unmask him.

Reactivating an old channel of communication was risky, as it provides the only link between Satoshi and the real world. It is tangible evidence that he is still extant and therefore worthy of ongoing research. The fact that he had the confidence to do that over such a minor issue as media misdirection leads me to suspect that he is still communicating with other people in other areas. Satoshi, however, appears to be someone who is confident with encryption and secrecy. Not just a Tor user, not just a PGP user, but someone who is capable of vanishing off the face of the earth. Anyone who can do that has some special skills.

The British are good at keeping secrets. Too good in fact. The valuable work done at Bletchley Park during the Second World War in breaking the Enigma code was kept secret until 1974, by which time many of the staff who could have told the story had died. The machines were scrapped and the plans burnt. As a result, the story that the world wants to hear is an echo of reality. Some staff were so indoctrinated that secrecy was necessary to the safety of the realm that they refuse to discuss their work, even now. Early code-breaking machines are being rebuilt based on guesswork. In the United States, the rule was that everything should be in the public domain, unless there was a good reason to hide it. In the UK, the rule is that everything must be kept secret, unless there is a good reason to reveal it. Snowden has shown us that, in the modern era, there is probably not that much difference between the two and the British GCHQ approach is winning.

Does Satoshi ‘owe it to the world’ to come out of hiding and do some interviews? The first man to step on to the Moon’s surface, Neil Armstrong, was referred to as a ‘reluctant’ American hero. He did not become a celebrity and took a variety of jobs in business. When hearing that his autographs were being sold, he refused to sign any more. Having been trained and paid at the taxpayers’ expense to do something in the public domain, Armstrong was someone who could have done so much to promote science and technology. He inspired generations of children and gave back something of the massive amount given to him, yet he preferred to keep it all close to his chest until the day he died.

Satoshi doesn’t have anything to prove to anyone. His achievements were self-funded and so there is no pressure on him to ‘repay’ any investment in him. That doesn’t mean that vanishing off the radar is the right thing to do. It’s possible that, as things have moved on, he wouldn’t be much help to the core development team, and his writings were so comprehensive that there is barely a theoretical issue that hasn’t been thoroughly explored. In fact, reading his original correspondence you might think that it had been written last week, not several years in advance. Another thing thing we know about Satoshi is that he is good at ‘thought experiments,’ following through on an imaginary scenario as if it existed in real life. Einstein couldn’t experiment with planets or objects moving at light speed; he had to imagine what would happen to those things. Working in the Swiss Patent Office, he was forced to conceive how the many inventions that passed over his desk could or would work—if they were ever to be assembled. Later on, he applied this imagination to things that could not be assembled. Bitcoin existed first in Satoshi’s head, then in writing. The actual Bitcoin system is its third iteration.

There are many things which would happen as a result of Satoshi going public. Some people would deny that it is him. Opponents of the Bitcoin system would point to Satoshi and say that the blockchain was a reflection of his weaknesses. Weaknesses could be invented. There would be an enormous media scrum, not least because he owns 1 million bitcoin. Based on today’s price of USD 600 a coin, that’s USD 600M, not a massive amount. However, if you consider that owning as few as 21 BTC means you could own a millionth of the world’s future money supply, Nakamoto’s future wealth is indescribably huge. That’s assuming that all 21 million bitcoins will eventually be in circulation, which, due to loss of private keys, is impossible. So, when he feels more secure will he come out of the shadows? Is he due for a Scrooge-like conversion? Or, like Neil Armstrong, will his invention be a source of secret satisfaction—until no more satisfaction can be had?

Satoshi has control of 1 million bitcoins. So far, he’s spent 18 bitcoins. What should he do with the rest—and what would be the impact on the rest of us?

Previously, I looked at what we do know about Satoshi Nakamoto—his skill in mind experiments, his compassion for Dorian Nakamoto and most of all, the fact that he is still alive, is watching bitcoin and has a current email address.

In the early days of the Bitcoin system, it was only Satoshi and a very few others who were mining bitcoin. It was a trivial task and it is estimated that Satoshi personally has approximately 1 million coins in his wallet. Apart from eighteen which were ‘spent’ for experimental purposes, these coins have remained untouched. Most people’s first thought is “At today’s valuation, that makes Satoshi a rich person!” Which begs the question—why would someone so wealthy spend none of his money?

There is a theory that Satoshi has lost control of the coins, possibly by losing the private key. It is not likely that the creator of bitcoins would have been technically so inept as to lose control over them. In all of the cases where large amounts of bitcoin have been lost to carelessness, it has been someone who was on the edge of the system who ‘forgot’ that they had bitcoins on (for example) a hard drive and literally threw them away. Satoshi will not have forgotten about those coins. And neither has anybody else.

Having built a system with a finite money supply, Satoshi would not have discounted the first million coins, explaining that there would be 21 million coins ‘minus the first million or so that were experimental.’ Those coins must be regarded as active and likely to come back ‘on-line’ at some point. If he had lost the key, or had decided to permanently exclude them from the money supply, I think he would have told us by now. So, why would someone with half a billion in assets, not touch them?

Assuming Satoshi is a US citizen liable for US taxes, with bitcoin classed as a ‘good,’ disposing of the coins would result in a very happy ending for the US Treasury. The US approach, which is to classify bitcoins as an asset, instead of a foreign currency on which no tax is payable for personal use, is clearly incorrect and will be changed with much confusion in the future. There are very few jurisdictions in the world that would ignore that sort of money, so unless Satoshi wants to move to the Turks and Caicos Islands he’s probably thinking hard about what to do with it.

Another possible explanation for the inactivity on the account is that Satoshi believes that any movement will result in his identity being compromised, and he is probably correct. The opponents of bitcoin would not be above using Satoshi himself as a PR weapon against the currency, and which of us is mathematically perfect? In the future, blockchain technology will eliminate corruption and enable perfect forward privacy for financial transactions, but we are not there yet.

Looking at the furor caused when the FBI decided to sell approximately 30,000 bitcoins by tender, dumping another 1,000,000 on the market is not going to help. Although most people know that bitcoin is deflationary, this is only in the long term. In the short-term—right now—it is inflationary, with the bitcoin supply increasing by 11.5% a year. This will continue until 2016 when the number of new bitcoins per block will halve from 25 to 12.5. Part of the reason that the price is not increasing is that there is no squeeze on supply. This will come when we all stop talking about bitcoin and start talking about how easy it is to send and receive money securely without a bank. Mass adoption will increase demand and may provide the earliest hope of a boost to the price, but the squeeze on supply is not going to bite for a while yet.

There are two dates you need to remember—2140, which is the last bitcoin mining in theory, but more importantly, 2040, which is realistically the last date on which bitcoin mining in any significant sense will become practically impossible (excluding quantum computing). Incidentally, quantum computers work by considering all the possible solutions to a problem simultaneously. That is why they are so fast. This means that a quantum computer will be able to mine every remaining bitcoin the day it is turned on. Put that date in your diary as well.

The problem with bitcoins (and every other virtual currency) is who gets them? When you invent a currency, who do you give it to? Some people’s answer, which we have observed in many alt coins, is you give a few away to your friends, keep a load for yourself and then try to sell the rest. This rarely works well. So, should you just give them away to everyone as they did with AuroraCoin in Iceland?

The new mothers on a big estate all need baby-sitters so they have a meeting and decide to set up a baby-sitting circle. They don’t know each other, but everyone knows someone who knows that other person, and who better to babysit than another mother, right? They decide the most flexible system is using babysitting tokens where each token represents one hour of babysitting. This gets round the ‘coincidence of wants’ and makes the problem of matching sitters with babies much easier. The problem is that new mothers join the circle precisely because they want some babysitting, and because they haven’t done any babysitting, people are reluctant to ask them. Thus, they don’t have any tokens.

So the mothers decide to give everyone who joins the circle five tokens to get them started. It will solve their immediate problem and after that, everyone will get to know them so they can start earning tokens of their own. The problem is that every mother that joins the group increases the money supply by five tokens because they never have to give them back. Soon, everybody has lots of tokens and nobody wants to babysit. The circle collapses and everybody blames it on the new mothers who used their tokens and never babysat in return, but the fact is that it was the rampant inflation that was inadvertently built-in that killed the system. The fact is that you can’t just give money to everyone, because then everyone has got it, so they don’t want it.

The solution which most users will accept, is that the tokens are distributed depending on how early you get into the system. Inventors get the most, providing they have mined them. Simply ‘reserving’ them is not seen as fair. Early miners end up with a lot of tokens. This is because they are ‘early adopters.’ They are effectively being rewarded for risk although another view is that they have been lucky that that their project gained any traction. As more and more people come on board, there are fewer coins to be had and less potential for growth.

So, what do those early adopters do with their coins? This goes to the heart of bitcoin as a deflationary currency, and the often-repeated criticism that bitcoin does nothing apart from encourage owners to ‘hoard.’

What would you do if you discovered a pot of gold buried in your garden? Would you spend some (not all) on a cruise, or would you bury it again, because you believe that the price of gold inevitably rises? If a relative died and left you a wedge of cash, what would you do? Would you spend some (not all) on a cruise, or would you invest it all in property because you believe that the price of property always goes up in the long-term? If you made a killing on the stock market, would you cash some (not all) of it in and go on a cruise, or would you reinvest all of it back into stocks because you think in the long-run stocks are always a good investment?

The world’s cruise ships are full of wealthy people who could tell you the answer. Bitcoin has the potential to be the currency that keeps on giving. Who cares if it is an intelligence test? Is that a bad thing? Don’t make the mistake of mixing up an investment that beats inflation with a deflationary asset.

Critics who say that bitcoin owners ‘hoard’ their bitcoins misunderstand that we are at the beginning of a phase of fiat-to-bitcoin conversion. Converting fiat to bitcoin and keeping it is the name of the game. You don’t have to buy bitcoin from people who are pessimistic about the price; there are many people who are sitting on piles of bitcoin and who are quietly converting them to fiat to pay their day-to-day living expenses. Bitcoin wealth is being used for philanthropic donations. It is being used as investment capital, and it is being put up as rewards for further innovation. In short, it is being used for whatever the owner wants to use it for—but it is being used.

So, what should Satoshi do—when he finally decides to do something? The coolest thing he could do would be to use the funds to increase the adoption of the Bitcoin protocol. There are several ways in which this could be done, but acting as an investor is probably the worst. The simplest would be to set up a Bitcoin Faucet Trust that made every recipient a stakeholder in the new financial system. This could be directed (as in the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) at the poorest people in the world and give them an asset that could be used to meet their real-world needs. One million coins might be five per cent of the world’s future money supply, but it is only slightly more than the 870,000 that went walkies from Mount Gox and a lot fewer than the billions of people who are financially disenfranchised. Gavin Andresen’s bitcoin faucet was generally agreed to have had a significant effect on adoption; the only problem was that the pump ran dry. We’re going to need a bigger faucet. The effect on the markets would be minimal, but the direct and indirect effects on world poverty could be significant.

I don’t think anybody would object to the outstanding coins being trickled back into the market in that way. It would help the currency, and it would secure Satoshi’s reputation as a great philanthropist as well as a brilliant conceptual economist and mathematician.

What do you think should be done with Satoshi’s millions? 


Permalink: http://bitcoinmagazine.com/16142/satoshi

 

My Cryptolina Experience

As a young blogger in the Bitcoin world, my job consists of a lot of waiting. Waiting for that dude to email me back, waiting for my articles to be published so I can get paid, just waiting.

A few weeks ago while waiting, however, I got an interesting email.

My friend John Scianna hit me up one night, telling me we’re going to Cryptolina, the first ever bitcoin conference in the Carolinas.

The brief message read “Yo K Cruz we goin’ to Cryptolina in North Carolina with the College Cryptocurrency Network”.

The College Cryptocurrency Network (CCN) is a student advocacy and outreach group that brings together students, staff, faculty, and other interested parties to promote education on blockchain technologies on college campuses. It was founded by University of Michigan students Jeremy Gardener and Daniel Bloch.

My friend John Scianna also informed me that MerchantCoin sponsored a  mansion for the CCN to stay in for the weekend in North Carolina. I didn’t need much convincing.

I got online and purchased my ticket. I took the plane and slept the whole flight. After the flight, I Google Map’d the mansion address and looked for bus routes. The closest bus would leave me about 6 miles from the lavish crib. I decided to walk it.

While walking in the hot sun it hit me: wait, why not hitchhike? I put one thumb up.

About 3 minutes later, I got a tap on my shoulder. It was a dude who saw me “thumbing it”, as he said. I accepted his ride without any reluctance and during  the ride, we spoke about bitcoin, life, and other cool stuff. It turns out this old dude was from my hometown.

I got to the house and began relaxing from there. I was the first one to arrive out of the big group that crashed at the mansion. The first thing I did was take a nap, a nice one. A few hours later I was awoken by different members of the CCN. These guys are pretty awesome

I met both cool and smart friends from all over the United States and even connected about potential business projects. After mingling with my new homies, I began preparing myself for the Conference going on the next day.

During the conference I watched cool talks and networked a tonload, the stuff I always do. You should see me in action.

I saw a lot of talks from many different individuals from different fields in the bitcoin ecosystem. I listened to riveting talks about everything from breakthroughs in bitcoin security, to Venture Capitalists, as well as a spine-tingling talk from Edmond C. Moy, the 38th Director of the US Mint Department.

Edmond Moy was in office when the decision to bailout the banks in the 2008 financial crisis was made. He disagreed with it at the time, in hindsight saying that what the banks needed was competition; he proclaimed that this is what bitcoin is here for. During the talk, I remember looking at the members of the CCN in head-nodding approval. After his speech about the future of money, he stood around and talked to us for about half an hour, being kind in his suggestions and advice to us youngsters.

The college community in general is important for the bitcoin world because its inherent ambition forges new friendships and new ideas. The relationships formed within this network will create many companies and projects in the economy. This ultimately creates a good labor pool for emerging Bitcoin companies to hire from.

One indirect consequence of this new economy is students dropping out of college because in the Bitcoin world, college means close to nothing. It’s all about the skills you bring to the table.

These guys (including myself) are smart, young, and a lot of times get stuff done quicker than older folks, and have a quicker way of doing it. There is, however, a shortage of women in the bitcoin community, but let’s save that for another article.

Nonetheless, we are the future.

Florida Needs Adrian Wyllie for Governor

“I think voting is great, but, if I have to choose between a douche and a turd, I just don’t see the point.” – Stan Marsh

Well, great news Florida voters, you have a third option. Adrian Wyllie, Florida’s Libertarian Gubernatorial Candidate, is running on a platform to keep government out of our personal lives, reduce unnecessary regulations and cut taxes.

Florida’s gubernatorial race is an interesting one; besides Wyllie, his two main competitors have an unique past.

Rick Scott, the current Republican governor, has one of lowest approval ratings among governors in the country. I reached out to his office for comment but had no reply.

Scott is nothing short of a controversial political figure; Florida’s Democratic Party points out how Scott “oversaw the largest Medicare fraud in the nation’s history,” as CEO & Chairman of the Hospital Corporation of America. In addition, Scott passed a law requiring welfare recipients to take drug tests, which was halted on constitutional grounds. Moreover, Scott has been pushing a campaign on how many jobs he has created, despite the fact that this was in a large effect the result of the country’s economic recovery.

Charlie Crist, the Democratic candidate, is the former governor of Florida but quit mid-term in an unsuccessful bid to pursue a US senate seat and now he wants his old job back. Crist was Republican at the time; however, he then changed his political affiliations to independent but is now running as a Democrat. I also tried to reach out to Crist but received no reply.

Crist has an interesting past of his own and it is the subject of a smear campaign paid for by the Republican Party of Florida. The party accuses Crist of accepting donations from billionaire ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein so Rothstein could have influence in the judicial appointment process. Rothstein even said in a testimony that he “was able to convince [Crist] to appoint people to judicial positions,” according to Politifact.

Adrian Wyllie isn’t a lawyer or a career politician, he’s a military vet, political activist and an business man. Wyllie is the president of a white hat information technology company that does computer consulting in the Tampa Bay area. Wyllie has a commitment to technology and small businesses because they will continue to make Florida great.

That’s why Wyllie is a bitcoiner; he has been mining the digital currency as a hobby for over a year, and he is even accepting it for his campaign. In January, Wyllie even spoke at the North American Bitcoin Conference in Miami and talked about his campaign.

Florida’s political races have always been a bit on the untraditional side, but now Florida has a chance to vote for someone who adamantly fights for the people’s rights and liberties.

The most open critics to these threats to our rights have been Libertarians like Adrian Wyllie. Wyllie recently got arrested for driving without a license, in protest of Florida’s “REAL ID Act.” The law in Wyllie’s view is eerily similar to Nazi Germany’s laws which made it easier to pick out enemies of the state. Today’s identification photos are taken with biometric cameras and put into a government database, just like if you were a criminal, which is why Wyllie is protesting.

Wyllie would bring a much needed change to the state and wants to promote the Bitcoin industry. Florida is already home to many Bitcoin businesses like Cryptsy, BitJack BTMs, and Trucoin.

When I asked Wyllie what he would do for the Bitcoin Industry, he replied:

“I would champion competing currencies legislation that would lift any barriers to transacting business in alternative and cryptocurrencies. My Intrastate Commerce Act would lift federal regulations for banks and financial institutions that operate exclusively in Florida, creating a market more conducive to widespread acceptance of alternative currencies.”

There is no doubt that Bitcoin startups bring high paying jobs to the community. Florida, no matter who gets elected, should try to embrace these small businesses. About half of all Bitcoin startups in the world have been in the US and most of those have been in the Silicon Valley area. Florida is a big financial hub for South America; the Brickell area has even been called the Wall Street of Miami because of the dense amount of international banks located in the district.

With recent regulations regarding bitcoin and lobbyists going to Washington to fight on both sides of the issue and BitLicense, bitcoin is going to be a topic of discussion in the coming political season – which is why Florida needs someone to protect Bitcoin.

So, I am calling upon YOU, the community, to help Adrian Wyllie out, spread the word, donate your time, or bits, whatever you can do to help out.

Wyllie will be taking part in several debates, so please make sure you watch:

  • Monday, Sept. 29, at the University of Florida and will air from 6:30 to 7:30pm
  • Friday, Oct. 10 WSCV Telemundo 51
  • Wednesday, Oct. 15, at Broward College and will air from 7:00 to 8:00pm
  • Tuesday, Oct. 21 Sponsored by CNN

If you’re going to vote, be informed and choose wisely.

Disclaimer: The author of this post is tired of the typical politician.

An Interview With Bobby Lee, CEO of BTC China

_MG_5668 (Bobby Lee)Bobby Lee is the CEO of BTC China, a three year old exchange which he purchased in 2013. Following his purchase, Mr. Lee led a brisk expansion in market share that coincided with rising Bitcoin prices in the fourth quarter of the year. December 2013 saw BTC China leading the world’s Bitcoin exchanges in volume.

While trading activity has dropped off since then (BTC China is currently ranked 3rd in worldwide volume), Mr. Lee has continued to focus on growing and diversifying his company. 2014 has seen a number of impressive features rolled out including an HTML5 wallet called Picasso, the expansion of international deposits to include USD and HKD, and the debut of an official desktop client BTC China Trader. In May of 2014 he was elected to the Bitcoin Foundation’s board of directors.

I contacted Mr. Lee hoping to gain insights about the state of Bitcoin in China, his company’s direction for the future, and what he thinks about the Bitcoin ecosystem in general. He was kind enough to take the time for a phone conversation which I have transcribed below.

Bitcoin Magazine: In an interview with Forbes last year you said you were looking for more involvement from the Chinese government. That happened in December, and had a cooling effect on the overall Bitcoin market. Are you still looking for regulation from China? And if so, what kind of regulation are you looking for?

Bobby Lee: There are two ways to answer that question. The first, is by saying what I would like to see happen. The other is what I expect to happen as a smart, educated person. Like an educated guess. So let’s start with an educated guess and then go back to what I would like to see happen.

Here’s the educated guess. For now, regulation of Bitcoin in China was laid out in the December 5th memo. The powers [th]at be have spoken. They don’t tend to speak often and they’ve spoken only once, and that was on December 5th. All the other nuances and changes over the past six to eight months have been verbal adjustments, they haven’t been formal regulation. It’s effectively course adjustments but they don’t call it that. So as an educated guess I don’t think there will be any significant changes in the near term, unless there are larger changes globally, either related or not related to large changes in price. In other words if Bitcoin, the market itself stays stable over the next three, six, nine, twelve months, I don’t expect there to be any new regulation from China.

There are two exceptions to that. If New York state or the United States have some new heavy handed regulation then China might increase pace and put out some things to more closely emulate what’s going on in the international community. That would be exception number one. The BitLicense and how soon it gets formalized and how widely it gets adopted, China might take inspiration from that.

The second exception would be, in absence of the first exception, if there was some dramatic increase in price, let’s say another 10x, in which case China might come out and do something more regardless of what the rest of the world is doing or not doing.

Now, what I personally would prefer to see, and this is not a China specific statement, this is a global statement, is more governments around the world start treating Bitcoin as seriously as they take it. What I mean by treating it is treating it by law, and what I mean by taking it is how much they’re paying attention to it. I say this with the intent that governments around the world, many governments, many central banks, are looking seriously at Bitcoin. And the reason is it’s not a toy. It’s not Monopoly money. If it were Monopoly money, if it were just coupons at a shopping mart, if it were just tickets and tokens at an amusement park or arcade game, then governments and central banks and serious people with suits on and ties and jackets, they would not be paying so much attention to it.

But yet what we see time and time again over the last six months to a year is that they’ve been afraid to acknowledge it for what it is. They’ve been in denial so to speak in terms of regulation. They have not been, in terms of law, they have not been setting the right kinds of laws and regulations to treat it as an adult. I would prefer governments to take it more seriously and give it more legitimate legal status as “money”. Freely circulated by people.

BM: In China you cannot buy or sell goods with Bitcoin, correct?

BL: So this is where it gets fuzzy. Different people will tell you different things and the reason is that there hasn’t been black and white law about Bitcoin. The December 5th regulation, if you will, is a piece of regulation issued by the central bank of the People’s Bank of China, and it governs what the status is of Bitcoin according to the central bank’s perspective. My paraphrase is that it’s been treated as a digital commodity, and likewise it is not a formal currency by that standard.

But yet, if it is a commodity, it’s a private good a private asset that people have the freedom to own and also buy, sell, or trade it. This digital asset, this digital good. But what’s curious is that the same regulation also talks about forbidding banks and financial institutions and payment companies from dealing with Bitcoin. Now that side is perfectly fair because the central bank does have regulatory authority over those kinds of businesses, specifically banks, financial institutions, and payment companies. So these three kids if you will, these three examples are well regulated under the central bank. And when the central bank says something along the lines of “bitcoin cannot be used for payment” or “goods and services cannot be priced in bitcoin” which was also paraphrased in the regulation, now the difficulty is that there’s some suggestive interpretation.

The reason I say that is because it was clear cut that these businesses could not interact with Bitcoin, however if Bitcoin was truly just a digital asset, and people on the street, at a restaurant, at a shopping mall decide to barter and trade for things, that’s not payment per-se because payment involves money and Bitcoin is not money under the prior definition. And the central bank does not govern commercial transactions that don’t deal with money. They don’t govern barter, especially not restaurant or coffee shop transactions. Something like Ministry of Commerce would cover that. So it is slightly in a gray area.

BM: In contrast to how “gray” this regulation seems to be, do you think the Chinese government ever considered the option of completely banning Bitcoin use in the country? Does it seem like they consider it a threat?

BL: They don’t see it as a threat, per se. The regulation came out and it was never because Bitcoin was perceived as a threat. The notion that Bitcoin can become a threat is mostly the Bitcoiners are thinking that might be the true reasoning. There’s no evidence that anyone who’s actually done the deed of the regulation has done it because of the notion of Bitcoin was a threat to China or the economy here.

The reason has more to do with stability, with finances, with preventing another bubble of an asset class.

BM: Do you think China will ever ban bitcoin?

BL: That question is politically sensitive because there are a lot of questions about whether the Chinese government can or cannot, whether they should or should not, whether it’s right or not right to do so. And without getting into the weeds I would say: banning Bitcoin is a legal option but, as adults, we know that the law is one thing and how it is enforced is totally different. Countries can ban chewing gum, but the question is does it actually rule out all forms of chewing gum and all activities of chewing gum. Not necessarily.

BM: In the interview with Forbes you described yourself as a “global citizen”. As the world becomes more interconnected via the internet, do you see Bitcoin becoming a global currency?

BL: So there’s the word currency and then there’s the word money. And the reason I bring up these two words is because I’m a layman not a lawyer, but my layman understanding is that money is more colloquial whereas currency has legal definition and strict definition of whether something is a currency or is not a currency.

In terms of treating Bitcoin as a currency, that will be up to countries individually. As of today, I don’t think any country has recognized Bitcoin as currency. However, one day that’s bound to happen. During my lifetime, hopefully/cross my fingers, one country around the world or several will recognize Bitcoin as currency. That doesn’t mean to say that the elite countries will, but at least some will.

The second way to answer that question though is to answer if countries will be willing to allow Bitcoin to transact and flow as money, and that answer is surely yes. More and more companies globally will allow for Bitcoin to be utilized as “money”. And then you can pay for things and barter for things. It’s already happening, you live near Seattle, I’m sure you can find a handful of coffee shops or venues that accept Bitcoin. In that sense it’s being utilized as money.

I’ve been to other countries around the world, countries in Europe where merchants accept Bitcoin, and I’m sure it’s being done in Africa, so it’s a matter of time. It’s happening already.

BM: BTC China recently began accepting deposits in USD and HKD. Is this part of a strategy to expand your business globally?

BL: I’m going to be a bit careful when I answer this question, because I don’t want to give you wrong information or mislead the public. I recognize that sometimes things I say get taken very seriously. So here’s how I would say it.

We are certainly looking at how to expand the business beyond just China, however that’s not to say that we want global domination or that we want to launch international expansion plans to five continents in thirty days. It’s two different things. We have some intent to try that, but we’re not launching a full-fledged international expansion, so that’s sort of the situation right now. And I am sincere when I say that. So in other words, we welcome international customers to an extent and we are showing our actions by allowing for USD and HKD deposits and withdrawals through one of our affiliate companies. For the record it is not directly done with the PRC company because there are some legal restriction and so on and so forth.

BM: BTC China recently released Picasso, a hosted HTML5 wallet. What are your hopes for this product and how does it improve over existing hosted wallets?

BL: There’ve been many hosted wallets before Picasso; this is more of a trial for us. Adventuring into new territory so to speak, we’re eager to innovate in this area. We’re the first to come up with the concept of a mobile ATM where people can sell Bitcoins on the go, person-to-person, on-demand, operating as their own ATM operator without the hardware component.

We are using HTML5 which avoids all the app store controversy and we’re working on improving it day by day. I’m sure you’ve seen a few quirks and bugs in the past. We were also intending for it to be more of a worldwide product with multiple languages and with support for multiple currencies in terms of the display and the ATM sell feature. So we are venturing into this new area to innovate and this is a, technically, hosted wallet where we as the company hold the private keys for our users, and our users can transact their Bitcoin once they’re totally verified by us and authenticated. Then we allow you to dictate how you move the coins to and from people.

What I would say is that this a very mobile specific interface. There are only a few other products like it out there. Most mobile wallets that are popular are what we call the traditional wallets where the private keys are actually kept and stored within the device. So this is a hosted web wallet, a mobile wallet, so that’s one difference.

When things are fine it’s all the same for the user, but when things go wrong like if the mobile device is lost stolen or hacked, that’s when the difference shines in terms of are the bitcoins lost or not. If they’re held by the company, in that case the users don’t lose the bitcoins. But they have to trust us as a company to manage that for them.

BM: There are competing wallets that generate a passphrase so the user can recover their coins in the chance something happens with the parent company. Have you thought about allowing that feature?

BL: We’ve thought about it, but that isn’t to say we plan to do anything or operate along those lines. To explain the difference, a hosted wallet is like a debit card. You have access to funds when the debit card is authenticated by use of a PIN code, whereas a non hosted wallet is like cash. You put some money in your wallet and the money is with you. You get robbed, you lose your wallet, then the bank has no liability. Whereas if you lose your debit card, you report it lost, then you won’t lose money per se. You just get a new wallet and set up a new debit card. So that’s different and I think people in society appreciate both aspects. Some people appreciate holding cash in their wallet and some people appreciate holding debit cards and credit cards in their wallet. What we offer with Picasso is more in line with the card-based example. Your now asking if we’ve thought about offering things along the line of cash, and we’ve thought about it but we don’t have any product or service right now at this point.

In that direction though, people have talked a lot about multi-sig and, you know, I don’t want to poo-poo multi-sig, but I mean people who are advocates of multi-sig are still overlooking one problem.

This is, when you have two out of three, or let’s say three out of five, you think you’re safe because it’s hard for the hacker to get access to multiple keys, but the reality is that it’s not that hard because when they get access to one of them, they won’t tell you that they’ve got access to one, so you should now rotate your keys and move into a different set. Most of the time what happens is they get access to one of the three keys and they wait and keep hacking you until they get the second. And as soon as they get a second, poof, your money’s gone. And if that happens, if your money’s gone, how is that different than one out of one? From a security perspective.

BM: The argument would be that the hacker had to go through two different steps instead of one. Of course, however, you are also right that the more security steps you go through, the more points of failure are created. It seems to be an ongoing debate over which is better, going through all these steps to create a wallet securely or simplifying the process to reduce the risk of making a mistake along the way.

BL: Exactly. This is why the Bitcoin industry, despite the progress we’ve made over the last couple of years, we’re still so young and immature. For this thing to take off and become mainstream and cross the chasm and become ubiquitous, we are so so early. I’m one of the biggest supporters and I admit that we’re just not there yet.

BM: Lately there has been some backlash in the community against the Bitcoin Foundation, with the logic being that if we are supporting a decentralized currency, why have a centralized organization try to run the community? Since you are a board member, I wanted to ask, why do you think we need a Bitcoin Foundation?

BL: I’ll say this. I fully appreciate the decentralized nature of Bitcoin, that’s why we’re all in this industry, in this revolution. I may be biased but we don’t need the Bitcoin Foundation to run Bitcoin. The Bitcoin Foundation is centralized, I do acknowledge that. It’s trying [its] best to be a representative, democratic sort-of organization by having elections and having board members. But in the end it’s an executive team that has to hire people to get things done. So I recognize it as a centralized entity, but it’s not the gatekeeper of Bitcoin. It’s viewed better as a group of people, group of members who come together with a common goal and agenda, and a common sort of direction for how they want to help Bitcoin grow, help promote Bitcoin, in the face of challenges and push-backs from governments and other aspects of society. So in other words, even in a perfectly decentralized situation, right, where you pick gold or something else, some people will get together who have common goals and ideas and they should be free to do so.

For example you know that gold is decentralized, and let’s say you and I are big fans of gold then we get together and we form a committee and we say “hey, let’s do something together and let’s put our dollars to work and let’s make something happen. Let’s create an agenda and push gold and market it in some area.” It could be as ludicrous as putting gold on the moon or using gold in more industries, whatever. That’s what Bitcoin Foundation is. It was never intended to be the guardian or the gatekeeper of Bitcoin. It was more about people [who] have come together over the years, became members, both personal memberships as well as industry, and they share a common (pause), they try and share a common vision and agenda that they push along by voting with their feet and dollars, and saying “let’s put the foundation in charge, let’s have it go in this direction.” And some of that means talking to regulators, working on technical progress, and paying developers to do things. But by no means is it the only way to advance Bitcoin.

BM: The best argument I have heard against people complaining about the Bitcoin Foundation is that there is nobody forcing the community to support them.

BL: Yeah, it’s like, we know water is decentralized, we know every country around the world has water, rainfall, lakes, oceans and rivers. And what if you and I say hey let’s get together and push for an agenda to have clean water. Let’s try to bring water to the rest of society, let them have clean water. So we create standards for what is clean water, what the pH level should be, what kind of pollutant level. I mean, that’s fine right? We’re not saying everybody has to drink water that’s approved by the Clean Water Association. It’s just that people with a good will want to do something better. And that’s what the Bitcoin Foundation is.

BM: What do you think is the greatest threat to Bitcoin?

BL: Great question, thank you for giving me an opportunity to answer this.

Bitcoin is what people want to make of it. And I think the greatest threat to Bitcoin is apathy. If people, I mean broadly people, humanity, if they give up on Bitcoin then Bitcoin will die. That’s what it comes down to. If we give up, if we as human people, as citizens of the world, if we individually or collectively as a group give up on Bitcoin then Bitcoin will die. Period. And that’s at the most core.

And if you peel back a layer then, and ask what should Bitcoin haters do? To be successful as a Bitcoin hater you should then encourage everyone to give up on Bitcoin. And we’ve seen signs of that. When people spread Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt, when countries and governments and central banks spread FUD about Bitcoin, there’s a clear agenda, there’s a clear goal which is to get others to lose interest and give up on Bitcoin. And that’s the biggest threat.

So going back to what we do at the Bitcoin Foundation, we want to prevent that from happening. We want to prevent people from giving up on Bitcoin even though it’s still in its nascent stage. We want to encourage more adoption and we want to encourage people to see the light at the end of the tunnel that Bitcoin does have a future despite its infancy. And that’s what the foundation is going to do. And even if there is no foundation that’s what Bitcoin people want to do. We want to educate. But it’s about hope as well. Hope, education, and there can be a solution.

BM: When I view that hope aspect it’s part of my (admittedly optimistic) belief that this common technology can bring our culturally diverse societies together into a more unified global culture. Do you share that sentiment?

BL: Absolutely. I fully believe with you that Bitcoin for the first time is an empowering human and technology development where for the first time we allow for people to electronically send money anywhere in the world. From person to person. And what I really mean is from person to person with no intermediary. That is a huge huge step in humanity’s progress. We’re talking about sending real value.

Like you and I are on the phone right now, all we’re doing is we’re sending information, we’re communicating. I know information is valuable but we’re not sending something that’s uniquely valuable. I’m not sending you a crate of bananas. If I could teleport and send you a crate of bananas or a crate of Hershey’s chocolate bars that’s like teleportation, that’s awesome right? But if it’s just information, it’s valuable but you can replicate it, it’s easily copyable. It’s valuable to you but once I give it to you I don’t lose it.

There’s a difference between giving you something where once I give it to you, you have it, I don’t have it. Whereas right now I’m not giving you information I’m copying information to you, I’m distributing information. On the other hand Bitcoin allows me to give you something. So I’m not actually giving you a crate of bananas or a cup of hot chocolate but I’ve giving you something where you can then turn that into a crate of bananas or a cup of hot chocolate. And that’s the first time ever, as I recall.

BM: This is some amazing technology indeed. Why do you think someone like Satoshi would go through all the trouble to make such a revolutionary invention, and then just walk away from it without taking credit?

BL: You know I certainly don’t know the answer, I won’t even pretend to know the answer but…I’m too young to speculate on the full range of answers but it is understandable. To me it’s within the realm of possibility. I can understand why that would happen. Certainly not everyone in the world would do the same thing but I can see why some people would choose to do it this way. And that’s the best answer I can give. I don’t have any other speculation as to why Satoshi, the pseudonym, decided to remain anonymous. People can speculate whether he’s still alive, people can speculate whether he will come out eventually, but we just have to accept it for what it is today.

BM: Your brother Charles Lee once said that he thinks cryptocurrencies are such a powerful concept, that they could one day overturn governments. Do you think some governments have come to this same realization?

BL: I’ll say this, any government who might be at threat of being overturned because of cryptocurrency, those governments are also the ones that are going to be blind to it. Those will be the very same people who will be ignorant and not understand what’s happening until it’s all said and done. In that case, they will not know what to do to counter cryptocurrency. The very governments that have the power to counter and to slow down this movement are not the ones at threat. At least not yet.

These are uncompetitive governments. They’re not thought leaders or industry leaders where they have the wherewithal to stop the advancement of cryptocurrency. It goes back to what you asked me earlier about China. I know you didn’t have China in mind and I don’t have China in mind with this question and answer, but you did ask me if China can ever ban Bitcoin and I didn’t finish my thought which was: by law they can ban it. Any country can ban Bitcoin. Any company or any organization can ban Bitcoin, I can ban Bitcoin in my house. If I’m the head of the household I can ban it in my house. Or the state of Washington can ban Bitcoin in the whole state of Washington. Or the city of Seattle can ban Bitcoin.

But then the question is, it’s like banning marijuana or cocaine. In the U.S. my understanding is cocaine is not allowed, it’s an illegal drug. But banning it is not to say that there is no single ounce or gram of cocaine within the entire United States border. I’m sure there is, I’m sure there’s cocaine in Washington. I happen to know there’s no cocaine in my home, but banning or not banning cocaine in my home, it’s just words and intent.

BM: It also comes back to what the mission of the government is supposed to be. They are supposed to be trying to implement policies that will be a net positive for society. So it comes down to: Is it a net positive for a country to work with Bitcoin? Are there things countries can gain from having a progressive stance towards this technology?

BL: I think this will change over time. Let me give you two examples. Both China and the U.S. have fallen victims to this. For example the IRS tax guidelines in the United States are not very favorable. It’s really going to suffocate Bitcoin down the road.

On the other hand I’m very hopeful. I’m a U.S. citizen, dual-citizen, along with Hong Kong, China, so I’m still hopeful because I know the IRS is an organization that’s run by people and people are allowed to change their minds and it’s very conceivable. We’ve seen the IRS change taxation rules over time so it’s conceivable and I’m hopeful that the IRS will change their view on how taxation for Bitcoin will be done down the road. It might take a year or three to change or it might take twenty years or thirty years but I think that will happen.

And the same in China. Today Bitcoin is stated to be allowed but I’m hopeful that as a country that wants to succeed and be relevant, where it wants people to develop and the economy to grow, then it would make sense to embrace the best technologies and services. And Bitcoin speaks for itself.

Bitcoin wasn’t born to harm the Federal Reserve or the China PBOC. I would say that the core of Bitcoin is that it’s the world’s first digital asset. And as the world’s first digital asset, why not? Our world is getting digital, why not have digital assets. Prior to Bitcoin everything was physical assets. Commodities or equities or real estate, they all have physical manifestation. But now for the first time in humanity you have a digital asset that people can invest in. And carve out and say “I own this much and you own that much, my country owns this much your country owns that much, my company owns this much your company owns that much.” It’s a measuring stick.

BM: In an old interview you said that “people are sitting on the sidelines in China.” Now, we know there is demand in China for this digital asset. It’s a widely held belief that Chinese demand is what was behind the run up to $1,000+ prices in December of 2013. Do you think that demand will come back anytime soon? Or are they waiting on more clarification from the government?

BL: Let’s clarify a little bit. I’ll use this example, I don’t know how relevant you may see it or maybe you see it as well. You live in Seattle, I lived in Seattle for one summer when I interned at Microsoft and I remember I lived in Redmond. At the time, almost 20 years ago, Bellevue, Redmond, it was still developing. There was still more housing to be built and stuff like that. What I’m trying to say is that when a new town gets developed further out from the so called city center, what happens is the property developers anticipate there to be demand by building these townhouses and residential areas and shopping malls. They pave the roads, demarcate areas for commercial and residential, and so on. So when they build the shopping mall, the shoppers are not there yet. Building the shopping mall in anticipation of: one day this will be a thriving community filled with shoppers where people will go to restaurants and watch movies.

The analogy to Bitcoin is that what happened with the run-up last year is that people in China, the so-called developers, said A-ha! This is an untapped market. There’s a billion people here, they’re all going to go and want to live here and go to these shopping malls and watch movies and buy cars and fill up the car at these gas stations, so let’s lay the groundwork to do all this. But when they do all that, people are still not there yet, they’re waiting for people to come. So what happened December 5th is that “uh-oh…the people are not coming.” Because of this fear, uncertainty, and doubt [was] spread by the government.

Therefore when they don’t come or when they take a break or when they do a six month hiatus, then everyone thinks that was a false alarm and we shouldn’t [have] gone crazy with the shopping malls and the parking lots. And that’s why the price came back down.

When I’m talking about people sitting on the sidelines I’m talking about the end consumers, the ones who were intended to come in, but never did. The people who came are the early people buying up the land, intending to build the shopping malls and the paving the roads.

BM: The infrastructure isn’t there yet for the people on the sidelines to join.

BL: Yeah and I’m not even thinking about payment infrastructure, I’m just talking about whether people feel safe holding Bitcoin as an asset class, as an investment. They’re safe from a technology perspective with correct storage but there’s also the word safe from the legal, governmental perspective. When your average Joe Grandma buys Bitcoin, even if they forget about or don’t understand the so-called technology and safety against hacking, they might want to consider what is my regulatory safety. Am I allowed to hold Bitcoin? Is it legal for me to own Bitcoin?

BM: The general perception can be pretty dismal overall. The first thing that comes to most people’s heads when I talk to them about the subject is something negative they heard on the news about a theft or drugs.

BL: Exactly, that’s exactly it. It takes a lot of education to overcome that initial setback. And that’s what I’m talking about. People in China are no different, that is the reaction I get from the passersby here in China. It’s a setback, with Mt. Gox and the PBOC ruling, so it might be a six month setback, it might be a six year setback until we overcome it collectively as a society, as a country.

BM: Thank you very much for your time, Mr. Lee.

BL: Thank you, it was a pleasure speaking with you.

Storj Introduces Decentralized Cloud Storage

Storj has made waves in the name of complete decentralization of your cloud storage. As businesses and consumers alike are moving to the cloud, Storj provides an innovative means of solving the problem, “How do I keep my valuable information out of the wrong hands?” Winner of the Bitcoin Hackathon at this year’s Texas Bitcoin Conference, the company gives users the ability to not only secure their information using P2P technology and encryption, but users can also earn money for their extra hard drive space with Driveshare. Storj has also released a beta of their most recent application called Metadisk, giving you true ownership of every bit, byte, mega and gigabyte of your information.

The company launched last month and raised nearly 1,000 BTC with the pre-sale of their network access tokens. The Storj press release follows:

 

The Cloud is Powered By Storj

“It is time for the cloud to truly become a cloud, made up of a vast multitude of resource droplets that are added and subtracted as the cloud forms, moves and changes shape.” – Metadisk Whitepaper (2014)

AUGUST 26, 2014 — The world is getting smaller as the speed of information is growing. Natural resources are becoming more scarce and yet the population of computer-enabled Gen-X’ers is becoming more vigilant as innovations in communication and trust abound.

As we continue into the future, we will see a sharp increase in the demand for more information that is accessible – for a generation used to Internet-access on demand and wi-fi enabled everything, the expectation for readily-available data and immutable space for it will continue to grow.

A startup with its origins in Bitcoin has proposed an innovative solution to this problem. Aptly named, Storj – the company launched last month with a pre-sale of their network access tokens, STORJCOIN X raising over 900 BTC.

Led by two entrepreneurs with a growing community behind them, the Storj platform and the coin are both key elements to the beginnings of a future where all computer storage will be decentralized. Its first release will be a user-friendly web application called Metadisk – a web based drag-n-drop file storage system.

Described as an entry-point into the Storj network and currently available as a developer-prototype, Metadisk is the first of its kind that allows trustless storage and client-side encryption. Projects like Maidsafe, and Tahoe-LAFS were the first to demonstrate the feasibility of decentralized storage and the use of trustless nodes across the network. Using similar principles, Metadisk communicates with the Storj network to locate available resources (hard drive space) and then transfers the file to at least 3 separate locations to maintain the 3x redundancy considered the industry standard for cloud storage.

However, to achieve the scalability, security, and cost effectiveness of a truly secure storage system, the company must think outside the box (a centralized server box that is!). Projects like Bitcoin, Bittorrent, public key encryption, and cryptographic hash functions encompass the missing elements needed to establish a self-managed network of trustless nodes cooperating together, where the coin will serve as a means to pay for and exchange storage space and bandwidth.

“This model harnesses the powerful free-market force of self-interest to drive the network’s growth and efficiency while remaining decentralized,” explains Shawn Wilkinson, Co-Founder, from his home in Atlanta, GA. By incorporating Bitcoin technology into the platform, Storj is able to utilize an open-ledger system to keep the nodes of the network in check. Through the use of encryption and hashing of the file we can ensure that files can’t be accessed or tampered with, even on untrusted hardware.

Since the release of the Metadisk prototype, members of the community have been developing numerous apps to demonstrate the power of the Storj network.

Decentralized Video:

http://snart.cc/teststorj/demo.html

Decentralized Images:

http://salty-escarpment-7445.herokuapp.com,

http://bitcoin.info.ro/test/storj-img/

Decentralized Audio:

http://cloudnineco.com/storjapps/music/

PDF / Txt Demo

http://pryds.eu/publicdomain/

 

If you would like to test your skills in developing an app that will be Powered by Storj, there is a publicly available API and reward bounty of 10,000 Storjcoins X on their forum: storjtalk.org. Check out www.storj.io for more details.

 

John Scianna’s Draper University Campaign

My friend John Scianna, an active participant in the bitcoin community (and writer for Bitcoin Magazine), is working to attend Draper University and needs our help to fund his endeavor.

He told me about his plan, and other than donating a few satoshis, I didn’t know how I could be of service to this fellow bitcoiner. Then I had a lightbulb moment: I’ll write about it.

While putting together the questions below for John to anwswer, I realized how important it is for us as a community to support each other – because if we don’t, who will? Donation info is at the bottom of the page.

1. What is Draper University and why do you think you’d be good for it?

Draper University is an entrepreneurship program, it’s in San Mateo, California and was started by the “free-spirited” venture capitalist Tim Draper. It covers everything you would find in an accelerated MBA program for entrepreneurship. The program is quite unique, it’s in the historic Benjamin Franklin Hotel where students and startup founders live. You literally eat, sleep and breathe among entrepreneurs seven days a week for seven weeks.

I believe I will be perfect for Draper University, because this is something I have always wanted to do. I have dreamed about going to California and working in the technology space ever since I was little. My favorite song is even “Going to California” by Led Zeppelin, I think the culture out there just suits me best. Draper U is becoming increasingly Bitcoin focused now that Tim bought 29,658 bitcoins. Tim’s son Adam also has an accelerator program, Boost, in which about one-third of the startups are bitcoin related.

2. What is your professional background?

My professional background ranges from agricultural sciences to financial services. I have worked at the University of Florida’s Tropical Research and Educational Center where I did plant tissue culture on tropical plants and took part in a study on jatropha curcas, a plant that makes biodiesel. I have also interned for the USDA where I did research on consumer preferences of tropical fruit and I got to go to the USDA’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. to present my research.

On-campus I focused on developing my marketing expertise. Freshman year I was a part UF’s Multicultural & Diversity Affairs, where I was the External Marketing Director. My responsibilities included promotion, partnering with other organizations, event planning and hospitality services at MCDA’s Institute of Hispanic-Latino Services.

This past year, I was the Community Outreach Director for UF’s Nourish International. In Nourish we have small business ventures on-campus to raise money for sustainable development projects. This year it was for a project in Uganda to help send AIDS orphans to school. We would do ventures like sell bows on game day and donuts in the morning. It really taught me how to put myself out there and sell, plus everything went to a good cause.

What was even harder than selling bows, was trying to sell life insurance and other financial products when I was at Northwestern Mutual. I think that was the hardest job I have ever had. I would cold-call people all day hoping to get a meeting or two, it was tough, but it definitely taught me how to be persistent and to overcome failure.

It wasn’t until my first Bitcoin conference that I became a journalist in the field. I have always liked voicing my opinion and I saw it as a great way to meet interesting people. I had learned all about bitcoin through mining, it really speeds up the learning curve when you dive into something that technical; so, I had enough knowledge to write on the subject and went right into it.

3.What are you currently busy with?

Like most in this community, I am busy with Bitcoin. I am an intern for the Chamber of Digital Commerce and I work closely with Perianne Boring. This past week we spent our time calling the offices of congressmen and women scheduling meetings with them for the inaugural Congressional Bitcoin Education Day. I think this is a great way to inform our leaders of the great promises of Bitcoin, no matter what your political views are; regulation affects us all. If we choose to do nothing we will ultimately lose, so by doing this we can educate politicians about the benefits of bitcoin and dismiss all the negative propaganda that Bitcoin has faced in the past. My work with Perianne mostly focuses on education and addressing public policy issues like New York’s BitLicense.

In addition to that I also write for a few Bitcoin media outlets, and I have been working on a tea startup, teatoshi, that my co-founder and I plan to launch soon.

4. What do you wish to get out of Draper University?

The most valuable thing I wish to get out of Draper University is the connections with other entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. I think this is the most valuable aspect of the residential experience. Draper University has an online course, but you won’t get the same benefits as being there.

I think going to the residential program is important because entrepreneurs and venture capitalists share a synergistic relationship; there are so many ideas out in the world but without venture capitalists many [of] these projects wouldn’t be able to get off the ground or scale. You can create an app or e-service from space, but there won’t be any venture capitalists there; this is why you find so many entrepreneurs moving out to the Valley.

Hopefully, once I graduate from DU I can be apart of Tim’s or Adam’s incubator programs – that way I can stay in California and get my ideas out my head and into the world.

5. How can the bitcoin community help you?

The community can help by donating whatever spare bits they have in their wallet so I can cover the expenses of the program or simply by sharing this article. You can introduce me to someone who might be able to help or if you are a company you can sponsor me. I will wear your company gear, I will even shave my head if you want me to, all I really care about is being able to go.
You can donate in Bitcoin or Fiat, but I actually prefer bitcoin because gofundme charges about 8% and you can track the funds to Draper U’s address.

BTC: 1KfpoCwWcAbyxdiwqGvWtKcdGwcLhB4zuK

Fiat: http://www.gofundme.com/johnscianna

 

Discount Available For The Digital Currency Summit

Just today, Thursday, August 28th, by paying with bitcoin you can buy one of the 25 discounted tickets for the Digital Currency Summit that will be in Andorra next September 17-19.

Only for 2 BTC, instead of the regular price of 1190€, you can participate in this event and enjoy a wide range of talks organized in different categories like investment opportunities, regulation laws, banking, and workshops where speakers will be several of the best Bitcoin experts from around the world and in Europe like Jon Matonis, Marco Santori, Jan Kees de Jager, Constance Choi, Alberto Gómez Toribio and many more.

To enjoy this great offer you must buy the ticket, today only, following the steps described in this page.

Dominica to Be the First Bitcoin Nation

The “Bit Drop” to distribute Bitcoin to all islanders

AUGUST 28, 2014 — Dominica is set to be the first nation to adopt Bitcoin following a successful collaboration between island officials, Coinapult, Aspen Assurance, Bitcoin Beauties and the College Cryptocurrency Network, who have partnered to deliver the project, officially titled The Bit Drop.

The Bit Drop project will to send Bitcoin to every resident on Dominica, a Caribbean commonwealth island, via SMS texting. With a population of over 70,000, this project will create the world’s largest and highest density Bitcoin community.

The Bit Drop is scheduled to take place on 14th March 2015 at 09:26 to coincide with Pi Day. To mark this unprecedented event The Bit Drop will be throwing an island-wide party with celebrities, musicians and supporters of Bitcoin, fire dancers, sponsored tropical island spirits, free giveaways, and bitcoin education booths during the event. This will be the first time a government has embraced the potential of Bitcoin for the population of a whole nation.

More information can be found at www.letthebitdrop.com


 

About Let The Bit Drop Partners

  • Coinapult is a bitcoin wallet, and merchant services provider.
  • Aspen Assurance accepts bitcoin for corporate, licensing, and bond services
  • College Cryptocurrency Network’s MIT chapter is responsible for the distribution of bitcoin to every undergraduate later this year.
  • Bitcoin Beauties is a global organization of women who evangelize and use Bitcoin to monetize their passions.

Hot Cryptocurrency Trends: Delegated Proof of Stake

This is a guest post by Max Wright



Disclaimer: Max Wright owns both Bitcoin and BitSharesX. Wright’s critique of the security concerns of DPOS can be found at http://www.SuccessCouncil.com

In August of 2014, in front of a small crowd at a regional Bitcoin event in Raleigh, North Carolina, a panel of arguably 6 of the brightest minds in Crypto were asked, “What is the most pressing issue facing Bitcoin today?”

The unanimous answer: A more efficient consensus algorithm.

For those of you who do not know, Bitcoin is secured by a consensus of “who owns what” by what is called a Proof of Work consensus algorithm.

Satoshi understood that decentralization is the key to a disruptive technology in the field of payments and currency. By creating a system that used many individuals, but relied on none, the system would be sufficiently decentralized so that it could never be thwarted, much like Bitorrent.

It was genius.

Without going into the technical details, every single day 3600 Bitcoins (approx $2 million worth) are created and given to the many individuals (called miners) who secure and run the Bitcoin network.

Said another way… The people who own Bitcoins are paying a security force (miners) via the mechanism of inflation, $2 million per day for that security service.

In return, Bitcoiners can participate in a trustworthy, frictionless, pseudonymous, instant payment system without the interference of third parties.

Obviously those who participate find this a to be a great deal, myself included.

Lets take a deeper look to make that $2 million in inflation a little more tangible. Because most of the individuals who are providing that security service have electricity, hardware and time costs, they must sell most of the Bitcoins they receive to cover their cost.

For the sake of round numbers lets say that 25% of that $2million is kept in Bitcoin by the miners as profits and 75% are sold to pay for the hardware and electricity costs.

That means that every single day, at least $1.5 Million of new money must enter the Bitcoin eco-system to hold prices stable.

That means, if there was a more efficient way to provide security and consensus for Bitcoin, then rather than just keep prices stable, the first $1.5 million per day or half a billion dollars per year would drive Bitcoin prices up significantly.

It is easy to see why the Bitcoin brains trust in North Carolina said the most pressing issue is to find a more efficient consensus algorithm.

The challenge for any algorithm is to create efficiencies without sacrificing security.

This is why I think the altcoin space is so important. With over 700 altcoins, I see it as a huge lab experiment to test out different consensus algorithms. Survival of the fittest, if you will.

Whichever altcoin and underlying consensus algorithm proves worthy, can be “stolen” by Bitcoin. That is the great thing about Bitcoin. It is software that can be updated.

So has a superior algorithm to Satoshi’s original Proof of Stake been invented yet? Well only time will tell, but I suspect the answer is Yes.

Dan Larimar published a whitepaper on a concept he called Delegated Proof of Stake (DPOS) in April of 2014. Among the Bitcoin intellectual elite, opinions were divided. Some loved it. Some hated it.

There is no question it is vastly more efficient, easier to use and can safely confirm transactions in 10 seconds compared to Bitcoin’s 1 hour.

But the Billion dollar question is: Will a security weakness be discovered?

I have been watching Larimar and his coding team with keen interest since April as they worked around the clock until the first altcoin based on DPOS, BitsharesX, was released in late June.

Within 30 days BitSharesX had gone from nothing to the 3rd biggest altcoin with a market cap of over $100 million, as of the time of printing this article, and rising fast. Really fast.

But will BitSharesX stand the test of time? And if so, What and when will the Bitcoin community do?

If Bitcoin were to adopt a DPOS consensus algorithm too soon, then there may be a security flaw discovered afterwards which would be devastating.

However if DPOS is superior and the Bitcoin community adopts it too late, then they could miss the boat and be displaced as the number one Cryptocurrency out there.

But its very early days. I don’t think anyone would suggest DPOS has earned its stripes just yet. It will, however, will be very interesting to watch this Crypto soap opera play out. Especially if BitSharesX keeps climbing in value like it has.

Bitcoin and Austrian Economics

Displaying Ben_Best_lecture.jpg

This is a guest post by Ben Best 


Bitcoin and Austrian Economics

Austrian Economists are harsh critics of government central banks (such as the Federal Reserve System of the United States – a name intended to obscure its role as a central bank, unlike the Bank of England). Austrian Economists can also be very critical of fractional reserve banking, the practice of lending money in greater quantity than the amount of deposits.  For these reasons, Austrian Economists could be expected to be enthusiastic supporters of Bitcoin. Unfortunately, this is usually not the case.

Cryptocurrency, Bitcoin in particular, presents a formidable challenge to the world-wide socialism by which governments control the means of production of money. The ferociousness with which the US government defends its monopoly on money could be demonstrated by the 2011 sentencing of the producer of Liberty Dollars (coins made of precious metals that could be exchanged as commodities) to 15 years in jail ― accusing him of “domestic terrorism”.

Someone attending a Bitcoin conference could be shocked at the widespread acceptance of Austrian Economics among Bitcoin enthusiasts ― in sharp contrast to the situation in governments and universities. Yet the majority of Austrian Economists not only don’t appreciate Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, they are very critical. There was barely a mention of Bitcoin at the 2014 Austrian Economics Research Conference. Three negative articles about Bitcoin appeared in the Mises Daily articles of the Austrian Economics Mises Institute over a year ago:

The Money-ness of Bitcoins

Bitcoin: Money of the Future or Old-Fashioned Bubble?

The Bitcoin Money Myth

No more has appeared on the subject of Bitcoin in Mises Daily since that time. I believe these articles contain many erroneous arguments, which I wish to address.

The major objection to Bitcoin by Austrian Economists seems to revolve around whether Bitcoin is money. The claim by many Austrian Economists is that money can only arise from what is the most saleable or marketable commodity: the so-called “regression theorem” of Austrian Economics.

There is certainly truth to the claim that money has historically arisen from commodities, but that is history, and cannot be used as a litmus test for money-ness. What matters is whether the reputed money can be used as a medium of exchange. But if an original commodity value for Bitcoin needs to be specified in order to regard it as money, I would speculate that some computer techies placed a value on Bitcoin as being a breakthrough in money technology. And computer techies enjoy being early adopters. The commodity value that these early adopters gave to Bitcoin led to an exchange value for other people who did not have the original commodity value preferences.

That would be a strained argument to justify Bitcoin in terms of the regression theorem.  Although it is hard for most economists to imagine a medium of exchange not arising from a highly liquid commodity, I believe that Bitcoin started out as an invention intended to be a new form of money. New technologies require new ideas, which in this case should mean a reexamination of the regression theorem.

Precious metals became money largely because they are the most corrosion-resistant materials ― as well as because of rarity and divisibility. Gold and silver became highly marketable because of these features rather than the opposite: that gold and silver became money because they were highly marketable. For most of human history the bulk of humanity has been more interested in food and shelter as marketable commodities than in jewelry or works of art in precious metals. The bulk of humanity would not have such interest in the “beauty” of precious metals to make those metals highly marketable were it not for their use as money. Austrian Economists recognize that value is subjective, so the subjective valuation computer techies had for Bitcoin should count for no less than the valuation of the beauty of precious metals by those wealthy enough to acquire luxury goods. Neither precious metals nor cryptocurrency can have an objective intrinsic value apart from the subjective valuations of some group of humans. Any group of humans can decide whether to use something as commodity.

Precious metals are bulky and inconvenient to use, which is why people have preferred paper certificates for precious metals. Sadly, the convenience of paper over precious metals led to fractional reserve banking, and ultimately to the fiat currencies used as money today.

Does the “regression theorem” justify the money-ness of fiat currencies? Fiat currencies are “backed” by legal tender laws ― by government guns and prisons. The argument that money must be material cannot even be justified by reference to paper currency and coins. Paper currency and coins account for no more than a tenth of American fiat money. Monetary transactions involving fiat money are dominated by checks, credit cards, and online payments. Paper money and coins may well become completely obsolete in the coming decades as financial transactions become increasingly digital. The US government now only allows businesses to pay their taxes electronically ― even checks have become obsolete for this purpose.

The Money-ness of Bitcoin

Is Bitcoin money? With Bitcoin you can purchase airline tickets (from Virgin Atlantic), hotel bookings (from Expedia), automobiles (from Tesla), electronics (from Tiger Direct), as well as products from tens of thousands of other merchants. Admittedly, most of these merchants will very quickly convert the bitcoins obtained in the transactions to fiat. Some Austrian Economists have also claimed that Bitcoin cannot be money because it is not a “final means of payment”. Other Austrian Economists argue that being a medium-of-exchange is not a sufficient condition for being money. I have been more persuaded by the latter argument.

The US Dollar value of all outstanding bitcoins is currently about $8 billion. Numerous immigrants send bitcoins instantly to their relatives overseas, thereby avoiding the 10-15% bank fees and the five day delays of bank wires. These immigrants purchase bitcoins as a commodity to reduce their transaction costs, just as someone might buy a cash register to reduce transaction costs. Actually, for immigrants who are unbanked, there may be no alternative means of transferring their money abroad. Such fiat currencies as the Moldovan leu, the Ethiopian birr, and the Vanuatu vatu can’t compare to Bitcoin in terms of world-wide use and acceptance as money.

But it isn’t only immigrants who use Bitcoin to reduce transaction costs. The investment banker/Austrian Economist Peter Schiff was a harsh critic of Bitcoin in 2013: My Open Letter to Peter Schiff.

But Schiff became a Bitcoin enthusiast in 2014 after discovering that Bitcoin could save him transaction costs in his business. And some people acquire bitcoins for reasons other than to reduce transaction costs or simplify transactions, such as for contracts, to implement
other cryptocurrencies, etc.

The claim that Bitcoin cannot be money because it is too technology-dependent is also fallacious. Credit cards are technology-dependent, yet are now more widely used for financial transactions than paper currency. Half of the financial transactions in the African country of Kenya are by means of the cell-phone-based M-Pesa. Cell phones have become universal. People throughout the “underdeveloped world” have cell phones, despite having no bank account, no credit card, and no credit rating. When smartphones become universal in a few years, Bitcoin will be easily accessible worldwide.

In my opinion, the underlying reason many Austrian Economists are hostile to Bitcoin is because they are “gold bugs”. In my opinion these Austrian Economists are not much better than the Keynesians who insist that money must be fiat so that central banks can manipulate interest rates. In a market economy it is the market that chooses optimal solutions. If legal tender laws are repealed, the market will determine the best medium of exchange ― which could be precious metals, a basket of commodities, Bitcoin, or some other cryptocurrency. But Bitcoin may emerge as money even without legal tender laws.

Austrian Economists for Bitcoin

To give credit where credit is due, there are some Austrian Economists who are very pro-Bitcoin, and their number is increasing. Jeffrey Tucker was initially skeptical, but has since become an enthusiastic promoter (as anyone can see who looks at his Liberty.ME website.  Two other erudite pro-Bitcoin Austrian Economists are Peter Surda and Konrad Graf. The most representative article by Peter Surda is “The origin, classification and utility of Bitcoin,” and the most representative article by Konrad Graf is “On the origins of Bitcoin: Stages of monetary evolution.” These Austrian Economists argue that the anti-Bitcoin Austrian Economists don’t understand the regression theorem.

In the early stages of Bitcoin, bitcoins were accumulated by the developers as part of their experimentation, becoming something of a status symbol of points in a computer game or website, but with the intention of possibly becoming a medium-of-exchange. That intention eventually led to attempts to use bitcoins for that purpose. As such attempts increased, so did the liquidity. Liquidity is a prerequisite for becoming a medium-of-exchange.

Graf compares bitcoins achieving commodity value starting as a status symbol to the historical evolution of money from beads on a necklace and later gold and silver. These items did not have much value apart from durability and beauty, but eventually became valued for their use as media-of-exchange. This argument is quite distinct from the justification of bitcoins as having commodity value because of reducing transaction costs — a commodity value which is unrelated to the regression theorem (emergence of bitcoins as commodity to bitcoins as media-of-exchange).

I think that both the anti-Bitcoin Austrian Economists and pro-Bitcoin Austrian Economists contort themselves too much in their efforts to justify the regression theorem as it relates to Bitcoin. The Austrian Economist Murray N. Rothbard explains the regression theorem in Chapter 5 of his great book MAN, ECONOMY, AND STATE, which include the following passage:

Demand for a good as a medium of exchange must be predicated on a previously existing array of prices in terms of other goods. A medium of exchange can therefore originate only according to our previous description and the foregoing diagram; it can arise only out of a commodity previously used directly in a barter situation, and therefore having had an array of prices in terms of other goods. Money must develop out of a commodity with a previously existing purchasing power, such as gold and silver had. It cannot be created out of thin air by any sudden “social compact” or edict of government.

Although an argument can be made that bitcoins gained value as experimental tokens and status symbols, I think the “barter” history of Bitcoin (starting with the May 22, 2010 pizza purchase for 10,000 bitcoins) was highly motivated by a “social compact” amongst a community of computer geeks who had a prospective medium-of-exchange, wanted it to become a medium-of-exchange, and played with it as a medium-of-exchange until it became a medium of exchange. I think it is incorrect to say that Bitcoin arose from a commodity as Rothbard would describe it. Bitcoin is not something Rothbard or the earlier Austrian Economists could have imagined.

I have been irritated by the claim that bitcoins are a medium-of-exchange, but are not money. I now accept Graf’s definition of money as “the most liquid good in a given society context” and thereby used as a unit of account (basis of pricing goods). Even in cyberspace, fiat currencies are the ultimate unit of pricing — bitcoin unit pricing is still derived from fiat pricing.

A Free Market in Money

Bitcoin was the first cryptocurrency, and therefore currently has market dominance. But Bitcoin has flaws which many of the newer cryptocurrencies have corrected, such as the concentration mining amongst those with ASIC computers (and low electricity costs), the ten-minute confirmation time, the public block chain, the declining reward for mining, the “waste” of electricity associated with proof-of-work, etc. Let the market choose the preferred medium of exchange. Competition among types of money will allow for the most efficient medium of exchange. That may happen whether or not legal tender laws are repealed and the socialist/fascist control of money can be ended.

I would not deny that cryptocurrencies have problems that need to be resolved before they can be more widely used as money, but this is understandable insofar as the technology is new. The status of cryptocurrencies has justly been compared with the status of the Internet in the 1990s. The American government tried to treat cryptography as a restricted munition subject to government regulation, but the demands of online commerce and government ineffectuality at control predominated. Cryptocurrency prices are currently too volatile for them to function well as a medium of exchange, and the technology for making loans with cryptocurrencies has not been well-developed. Such problems will likely be resolved.

Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies cannot be eradicated by government prohibition any more than prohibition of alcohol prevented the use of alcohol. Unlike Liberty Dollar, there is no central responsible agency for governments to attack if they wish to ban cryptocurrencies. Making cryptocurrency ownership illegal would be much more difficult than was the case when gold ownership was made illegal. The major vulnerability for cryptocurrencies lies in the exchanges: the financial institutions that exchange cryptocurrencies for fiat currencies. Exchanges cannot operate legally without government licenses. Until there is more widespread commerce in cryptocurrency, most people will acquire their money as fiat, and must purchase cryptocurrency with the fiat. The other major vulnerability is taxation. Current Internal Revenue Service regulations treat cryptocurrencies as equities subject to capital gain tax. Cryptocurrencies may be forced to evolve underground or overseas before they can prevail openly in the United States.

I am hopeful that cryptocurrency will eventually displace fiat money. I believe that this will happen first in countries of the “underdeveloped world” where central banks engage in the most reckless inflationary policies. I believe that cryptocurrency will displace the US Dollar and the Euro as a world reserve currency. Eventually governments of “developed countries” will have no choice but to repeal legal tender laws, abandon the fascism of central banking, and succumb to the new world of money.

I am also hopeful that Austrian Economists can learn to appreciate the extent to which cryptocurrencies represent an unexpected and unprecedented challenge to central banking and fractional reserve banking. I am hopeful that Austrian Economists will begin to see how cryptocurrencies vindicate the principles of Austrian Economics. The cryptocurrency community is looking to Austrian Economics as an inspiration for their practices. I hope that Austrian Economists can be convinced to assume intellectual leadership, rather than be reactionary naysayers. The arguments are straightforward, but too many Austrian Economists contort themselves trying to decide if Bitcoin is a commodity or are too attached to gold to appreciate how much technology can transform the world.

Digital vs. Virtual Currencies

This article originally appeared in Bitcoin Magazine Issue 22.

There’s a lot of misunderstanding around the terms “virtual” and “digital,” and people often mistakenly use them interchangeably. The reality is that virtual currencies are a type of digital currency, meaning that all virtual currencies are digital, but the converse is incorrect. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are another type of digital currency, but they are in a separate category from virtual ones. Other types of digital currency also exist, and understanding which is which can become confusing.

Digital currencies are exactly what they sound like: currencies stored and transferred electronically. Any money based in 1’s and 0’s meets this definition; dollars stored in a bank account are supposed to be a representation of dollars actually held somewhere, whereas physical bitcoins are a representation of their digital counterparts. One could argue that our increasingly cashless society means that all currencies are becoming digital (sometimes referred to as “electronic money”), but they are not presented to us as such.

Real digital currencies have been around for some time. One of the first was E-gold, founded in 1996 and backed by gold. Another known digital currency exchange was Liberty Reserve, founded in 2006; it let users convert dollars or euros to Liberty Reserve Dollars or Euros, and exchange them freely with one another at a 1% fee. Both services were centralized, reputed to be used for money laundering, and inevitably shut down by the US government. Online payment services like PayPal (founded 1998) function similarly, based on traditional currency, except with more restrictions and government compliance (ensuring their survival).

Based on offshore tax havens beloved by the wealthy and unscrupulous, early digital currencies gave the industry a bad image. Virtual currencies, by contrast, are intended to be light-hearted and fun: they, too, have been around far longer than cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, and are used primarily for online entertainment in virtual worlds. “Virtual” can be defined as “not based in physical reality,” and virtual currencies are those which are not intended for use in “real life,” or expenditure on real assets. They are, in another word, toys.

Pretty much all virtual currencies are centralized, with control of the money supply resting in the hands of the virtual world’s developers. Most massive multiplayer online games hire trained economists for this sort of thing, and their power dwarfs that of the American Federal Reserve. When they want to increase the money supply, they add some new quests with increased gold rewards. If they want to shrink the money supply, they add what are called “sinks,” which usually amount to expensive new vanity items, vehicles, etc. that are purchased from a non-player character, thus vanishing the money back into the game. A new update can completely change the game’s economy, and cripple a player’s enterprise.

Virtual currency developers vary in how much interaction they allow their system to have with “real” currencies. At the extreme end of the spectrum, World of Warcraft is very strict; Blizzard does this primarily to avoid legal headaches, as their currency would incur taxes if the government recognized it as having actual value. In order to maintain the perception that their virtual gold is fake, violating this rule is punishable by a permanent ban, and they actively search for accounts involved with real-money trading. Many items bind to an account upon acquisition; since this restricts the free flow of goods, the net effect of such restrictions is to reduce the scope of the game’s economy.

Other online game developers want to promote a deeper and more dynamic virtual economy, such as the team behind EVE Online. EVE, if you’re not familiar, is a very complicated online space-faring game, replete with drop-down menus and statistics. Players construct corporations and empires spanning galaxies, in a massive game-world where almost the entire experience is built by players on top of existing economic infrastructure. While there is a pre-defined set of things a player can do, the variety of their interactions forms a stunningly complex system. Their biggest war ever cost over $250,000 in virtual destruction.

The EVE Online developers still issue ongoing updates as players discover exploits that throw the economy out of whack, and maintain certain restrictions. While all items can be freely traded, EVE still has to maintain that its virtual currency has no real value. Technically, you cannot buy ISK with dollars, but you can buy game time cards, which can be traded in-game for ISK. You cannot, however, redeem cards for cash, and while real-money trading is far more extensive than in games like WoW, it is technically prohibited.

At the far end of the spectrum are virtual worlds like Second Life, an online life simulator developed by Linden Labs. Linden Labs tolerates the exchange of Linden Dollars and real-world currency, but they still control the supply of Linden Dollars. One can openly make a living and earn traditional currency with a successful in-game enterprise; however, Linden Dollars are still a virtual currency because Linden Dollars are practically never redeemed directly for real goods or services. Some players may have made a fortune from it in real estate, but it’s still a game.

Other digital currencies, meanwhile, are redeemed for physical goods and services all the time. You can order products via PayPal, for example. Bitcoin used to be thought of as “Internet money,” but you can now spend it in person at physical businesses. This makes them similar to traditional money in that respect, and makes them more “real.” Cryptocurrencies are designed to be capable of replacing cash, and there’s nothing virtual about that.

The other obvious factor differentiating cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin from other digital currencies is that they’re generally decentralized. No central power (such as a group of video game developers) has arbitrary control over the money supply. World of Warcraft, EVE Online, and Second Life all have servers, which the developers can manipulate at will (or shut off entirely), but Bitcoin runs on a network of participating computers that agree to the same standard.

Unlike such centralized currencies, bitcoins are mined at a mathematically-controlled rate, and their supply subject only to free market demand. This distinguishes them from traditional currencies like the dollar, as well, which follow the decision-making of central banks. The cryptography inherent in cryptocurrency also makes it more anonymous than any real or virtual currencies, which are tracked by banks and developers, respectively.

There are still some unanswered questions. Where does the virtual world end, and reality begin? Is owning an image in a game so different from owning an image on a website? The amount of time people spend in online games will continue to climb as the technology advances, to the point that many will covet virtual property more than physical. This could lead to virtual currencies becoming real digital currencies, or traditional and digital currencies entering the virtual space.

The lines are getting blurry in the world of currency. As banks go online and plastic becomes ubiquitous, physical cash is becoming antiquated. Electronic money has already taken over, but digital currency is taking things a step further: for the first time in history, people are thinking in terms of numbers, not coins and bills. Once everyone realizes that the majority of the “cash” in the world exists in banks’ computers, with no hard money backing it at all, they won’t see the effective difference.

Illustration by Indiana Joel.

‘The Hunt for Satoshi’ fundraiser Is Live On Swarm

Alex Preukschat, Josep Busquet and José Ángel Ares García, the trio behind ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’the new Bitcoin Comic which previewed at CoinSummit and was recently written up on CoinDesk, are gearing up to launch their project Kickstarter style on the new SWARM platform which recently raised over $1,000,000 worth of Bitcoin in startup capital.

Preukschat says he wants to take 1,000 pre-orders of the comic before it goes to print and those who sign up will receive crypto-tokens from the SWARM platform in return for their donations allowing them access to perks and special offers in the future, like limited edition artwork cover for the comic books and T-Shirts.

Crowdfunding on a Bitcoin-only platform makes a lot of sense to Preukschat, whose basic goal is to educate people about Crypto-currencies and introduce them to Bitcoin Cypherpunks roots.

To get more depth on the story, Bitcoin Magazine spoke with Preukschat to find out more about the new comic book and about the decision to float it on SWARM.

BM: What inspired you to write ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’?


AP: I believe that money is a fundamental tool of society and that it needs to be understood by as many people as possible to help create a better financial and monetary system. Money from my point of view can only be as good as the people using it and to achieve the highest possible quality money people need to be as educated as possible about its functions and characteristics. From my point of view Bitcoin is the ideal money to create interest in the whole subject. Our objective with the graphic novel is to transmit many of those educational aspects about money without people having to feel intimidated by finance or technology. We hope that people will share it with their friends, family, children and parents to share their passion about Bitcoin in an easy way and also to attract many more people from other communities to get people more interested in money and Bitcoin.

BM: How long have you been working on the comic, and how did you three distribute the workload?


AP: We started working on the comic book [in] October 2013 and it will be published October 2014 in Spain. The workload has been very different during the creation process. Initially we worked a long time on the type of story we wanted to create. To do that we developed 5 different possible story lines and discussed the ideas with different Bitcoiners and between ourselves. At the end we decided to go for an adventure story to make the story interesting to all people and to integrate the relevant aspects of Bitcoin and money in the storyline so that everyone could understand the relevance of money and Bitcoin without too much effort. My work has been mainly in defining the script and we had a short break while José Ángel worked on the illustration, but in the final stages I had to work many hours to work through all the details we wanted to have included plus the annex we have created about the Bitcoin ecosystem. Participating in CoinSummit in London was a great opportunity because it was the first time we showed our product after 10 months of work and we did not know what to expect, but fortunately the welcoming has been great and our trailer video has been very popular.

image

BM: We’ve heard that there are hidden teasers throughout the story, can you tell us something about these?

AP: This is something I was mainly responsible and enjoyed a lot and where Félix Moreno de la Cova, a Spanish Bitcoiner, also helped me to brainstorm for nice spots to place fun and interesting references to cryptography and Bitcoin. The main character of the story is called Bob and his girlfriend is Alice and many of other characters also have names related to cryptography. There are pages where Jeff Garzik and Gavin Andresen appear, the Shiba Inu from Dogecoin or KimDotCom from Mega setting up an account with his service while doing the NSA entropy game they offer when setting up an account. The idea is to make it fun for Bitcoiners to search and find the many references we have inserted in the book, but also to make it interesting for someone new to the space to read the book a second time and after having learned more about Bitcoin to recognize some of the many references we make.

BM: What is your goal in joining with SWARM? What do you aim to get from it and what will investors in your comic book get out of it?

AP: We really like the SWARM team and think we are both very much philosophically aligned about how we see some aspects of how our world operates. They are as passionate as we are with their work and we like to work with people who have a sense of craftsmanship of what they do. We hope that we will be able to pre-sell 1,000 copies for the English edition and gather some funds to be able to participate in Bitcoin and comic conferences around the world to present the Bitcoin graphic novel we have created. We are also looking for contacts and introductions to quality publishers around the world to get the Bitcoin message to as many people as possible. We believe that the Bitcoin community and SWARM funders will benefit by contributing to the English edition that can be shared with family and friends to let them learn more about Bitcoin in an easy and relaxed way. We also believe that a graphic novel will contribute to the Bitcoin global branding in a positive way within a context where people don’t have to feel intimidated by technology and finance and just enjoy reading a cool story that introduces them to Bitcoin and money in a fresh way.

When Bitcoin Magazine approached SWARM for a comment on their planned initiative with BitcoinComic, Ben Ingram said: “When we first met Alex and he showed us ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’ we immediately knew we had to launch this on Swarm. This comic will help to take Bitcoin to a new (and hopefully even younger) audience in a way that is fun. For those of us who are in the BTC community, it’s going to be a fantastic memento of this time, when Bitcoin is beginning to pervade general consciousness.  The book is beautifully illustrated, full of interesting nods to other seminal works.  Beyond the great book, Alex has a fantastic outlook on life and the future of Bitcoin, and his rationale for the years of labour that he and his team have invested is truly inspiring. When explaining why and his aims, he said to me “How can I tell my daughter in twenty years that we had some opportunity to help achieve financial freedom for our children, but instead we just sat by and watched? I hope this book can help in some small way with the growth of the bitcoin cause.”

It’s a noble effort, and I can’t wait to get my hands on one of the limited and signed ‘founder editions’. It is worth mentioning that via the launch on Swarm there will be a couple of opportunities available for a few individuals to be ‘drawn’ into the book; we expect these little slices of comic immortality to sell fast. Please subscribe to the Swarm newsletter (via www.swarmcorp.com) to be notified of launch date and full launch details.”

@richardboase

Drop In Value And the Current Speculation

Margin Trading Was The Cause?

Some theorize there are whales (people with large enough funds that they can make the market shift noticeably) who are pushing (selling lots of Bitcoins) through margin calls.

Margin calls is an element of margin trading. A margin trader can deposit funds in a specified account with a related business – in this scenario, digital currency exchanges. Or specifically some have mentioned Bitfinex.

img1

Once a margin trader has deposited her or his funds they receive percent of it back as credit. For example, you deposit $5,000 in Bitcoin and you would have your account credited the $5,000 and then another $5,000 (in a chosen denomination).

This credit would allow you (as a margin trader) to place bigger sell and buy orders than you normally would, creating liquidity on an exchange and attract more customers.

However, within margin trading there exists the margin call. When a margin trader’s stock value that he is buying falls below a certain level (in this case, the value of Bitcoin), then the issuer of the credit calls in the account of the margin trader.

Let us assume that 1 Bitcoin is $500. A margin trader’s account requires a minimum ‘maintenance’, which is normally a percent of the amount of his trading account. So, if you deposited $20,000 worth of bitcoins then you would get an extra $40,000 worth of bitcoins (on the platform) for you to trade with. Your maintenance requirement is a percent of this, lets say 30%.

Your total stock, or bitcoins in this case is $40,000 (at $500 per coin, so 80 for this example). Your maintenance requirement is 30%, in this case it is $12,000. Now, the bitcoin value on the platform that you have your account on drops to $450, your total stock (80 coins) has fallen to $36,000. Your maintenance cost for this amount (30%) is $12,000, your equity (the initial amount you put in) in your account is $20,000, which is over your maintenance requirement, so no problems, your buy wall of 50 coins at $440 (for a total of $22,000), is not touched.

Now let’s say your creditor gives you a 3/1 margin (appealing to traders) and your maintenance fee is 40%. You could deposit $20,000 (in bitcoin) and get $60,000 to play with, again, at $500 per btc for a total of 120 coins.

You place a buy wall at $440 for 50 coins ($22,000), value on the platform drops to $450 per coin, this places your stock (120 coins now at $450) at a total value of $54,000, of which your maintenance (40%) is $21,600, and you only have $20,000 equity.

Your margin call now comes into effect and your creditor can take action to bring your equity back up to the required amount; to do this, they liquidate your buy wall.

If the scenario was more extreme, or multiplied by many traders (as some guess), then this could wipe out the $450 buy wall, which creates a potential snowball effect that might start to force lower buy walls to be liquidated due to margin calls.

Basically, this forcibly enables the creditors to sell the remaining securities, which can then break into other customers’ margin calls, creating a cascade ‘fall’ effect as margin call after margin call is broken through.

Margin trading is an acceptable and viable method within the traditional finance world, apparently to help settle the market and reduce volatility. It is debatable whether this has had a similar effect within the Cryptocurrency sector.

It could be that this emerging sector is currently just too small to accommodate such margin traders.

Good News – Brings Value Drops – Spending Average Goes Upimg2a

Another theory juggled around is that good news equals a drop in value. This is determined to be brought about because of the increased availability of services and goods, that at this current time there are more old Bitcoiners who have substantial amount of wealth (through attaining crypto earlier/cheaper), and now have increased places to use their funds.

The problem, as perceived, with this is that most merchants that adopt Bitcoin initially ‘cash out’, meaning that they convert the majority, if not all, of their sales in Bitcoin into fiat – which they do through a payment processor, which then converts via an exchange.

This is equivalent to the same people who are spending their coins on these businesses to selling their coins directly within the exchange market.

What some believe will occur is that when businesses start to realise the savings from transacting in Crypto, they will offer incentives to customers, such as discounts on goods purchased with bitcoin (such as Newegg which offered a temporary 10% discount on purchases made with Bitcoin).

The discounts for customers should (in theory) encourage customers to buy bitcoin. The average customer purchases through exchanges, vendors or brokers, and this drives up the value again.

Mining – Old And New

A third debatable theory is the new incoming miners into this ecosystem.

img4

With the vast amount of new mining gear, notably the amount of fiat people are spending to acquire such mining gear, there are the costs of keeping everything running and making a living. Unfortunately most of these costs are likely still fiat: electricity, rent, staff, food and similar, though for some mining operations it can be argued that their costs are paid in Crypto, or that most of their costs are.

There are still the bills and fees that cannot yet be paid in Crypto, and those that do pay in Crypto to third parties who then convert it to fiat.

At 3,600 Bitcoins produced daily (25 every 10 minutes, 150 every hour, roughly), at $400 per Bitcoin that is $1,440,000 inflation per day (monetary supply). Not all these coins would be sold on a daily basis, keeping in mind that a lot of miners only get a fraction of a Bitcoin per day, and it is debatable whether all the coins are sold (privately or via an exchange/trader/broker), kept, used, or chewed upon.

However, it is arguable that a certain amount of newly mined coins are being exchanged on the market for fiat to cover buying and running expenses. How much is anyone’s guess, but even a third being sold daily could be a basis for significant price swings, depending how (immediately, or slowly) and where they are sold.


Disclaimer: This article is in no way offering financial advice; please take all precautions if you are trading in Cryptocurrencies. The information offered in this article is purely speculative and does not contain all the notable theories out there; it is meant as ‘food for thought’ and to inspire further discussion among you and your peers.

 

We’re on a Mission from Doge: Burning Man Part I

“Let us leave good sense behind like a hideous husk and hurl ourselves, like fruit spiced with pride, into the immense mouth and breast of the world! Let us feed the unknown, not from despair, but simply to enrich the unfathomable reservoirs of the Absurd!”

As a proponent of Open Source, and Decentralized Technologies, I am absolutely enamoured to be participating at Burning Man 2014 to promote the most subversive technology on the planet, Dogecoin.

Burning Man may be described as a miraculous free-forming anarchistic love city. This is where many of the world’s most forward thinking creative thought leaders meet every year to cross-pollinate ideas. Some of its basic tenets include gifting, radical inclusion, participation, and communal effort.  When you start analyzing it, this bears striking similarities to the fun loving Dogecoin community, and Open Source Culture.

If you dig even deeper you start to see Burning Man as a kind of Proto-city for an Open Source Society, a type of “Social Operating System”; even its city map resembles a giant upside down Open Source logo. Coincidence?  Probably, but who cares.
Screenshot 2014-08-19 15.20.59

Organized by Gary Lachance of The Decentralized Dance Party, if you’ve never heard of the DDP but care about Decentralization and Open Source, you should definitely get to know who these guys and gals are.

“Much like Open-Source software, a DDP is a peer-produced, collaborative undertaking. Everyone pools their talents and energies to create and refine an ever-evolving manifestation of their hearts’ desires. People build sound systems in shopping carts and baby carriages, construct insane backpack-borne laser light shows, crowd-surf each other up escalators, construct hilarious costumes, and perform epic dance routines for everyone to enjoy. It all coalesces into an anarchic explosion of collaborative creativity that drives the energy and excitement to unimaginable heights.”

-Gary Lachance

This will be the first Crypto themed camp at Burning Man ever.  Gary has been tirelessly promoting Open Source and Decentralization for over 10 years, creating countless writings on the topic, including his Grand Decentralization Theory, Privacy Is The Enemy.  He argues that we must transition into our inevitable future in a fun and safe way – that’s where The Doge comes in.

At Burning Man, they operate on a “Gifting Economy” where everything in the city is given for free and the stigma of money, even Bitcoin, may leave a sour taste in their mouth. That’s why we’ve decided to preface the conversation and spike our Kool-aid with Doge. For the unfathomable reservoirs of the absurd will never run dry nor will man’s thirst ever be quenched. We set out on an epic quest for the betterment of mankind…we’re on a mission from Doge.

Mission: To evangelize why decentralized technology will completely subvert our legacy models of socio-economic organizations – how it will topple hierarchal systems of control, coercion, and any other oppressive noun you can think of. We’ll be promoting everything from Decentralized currencies, DAO’s, DAPPs, Crowdfunding, Decentralized Government, Transparency, Absurdity, Mesh Networks, and more.  Most importantly I would like to help prove to Burning Man that cryptocurrency can be used to fund their projects and bring people together in a unique way that is akin to their ethos.

We want you:  If you’re going to Burning Man this year and want to help us take Doge to the moon, stop everything you’re doing and please read this beautiful document, and then get in contact with either me or Gary ASAP.  In terms of next year, I’m quite certain we’ll be working with many other crypto enthusiasts such as the Ethereum team to setup some kind of Crypto themed camp.

Donations:  This trip was organized last minute and any donations to the cause would be extremely beneficial.  Please do not tip to my author addresses and use these instead!

Screenshot 2014-08-18 18.19.11

I’ll be reporting back at the end of our trip to for Part 2 of Burning Man, complete with pictures, stories, and personal revelations.

 

Social Multiequivalence: Money as Decentralization

Let there be two owners A and B of commodities x and y, respectively, of whom A wants y and B wants x. With no money and no third commodity, the only way for both owners to obtain their desired commodities is directly from each other:

A ⇢ y B ⇢ x
x y
y x

Otherwise, A and B must delegate their commodity ownership to someone who then redistributes it between them. However, such a centralized solution would at least partially contradict the same ownership, by at least partially transferring it away from its rightful controllers. Hence, only a decentralized solution can preserve the whole commodity ownership underlying this exchange, by A and B exchanging x and y directly.

Still, direct commodity exchange poses two problems, either of which alone is enough to prevent it. The first problem has a subjective nature:

  • To be exchangeable for each other, x and y must share the same exchange value.
  • It can happen that every exchangeable quantity of x has a different exchange value to that of any exchangeable quantity of y.

The second problem has an objective nature instead. Let (as below) A, B, and C own commodities x, y, and z, respectively. If A wants y, B wants z, and C wants x, then direct exchange could not give those three owners their desired commodities—as none of them owns the same commodity wanted by who owns their wanted one. Moneyless exchange now can only happen if one of those commodities becomes a multiequivalent: a simultaneous equivalent of the other two commodities at least for the owner who neither wants nor owns it—whether the other two owners also know of this multiequivalence or not. For example, A could obtain z in exchange for x with C only to give it in exchange for y with B, this way making z a multiequivalent (as asterisked):

A ⇢ y B ⇢ z C ⇢ x
x y z*
z* y x
y z x

Still, this individually-handled multiequivalence poses a second pair of problems:

  • It enables conflicting indirect exchange strategies. In this last example, A could still try to obtain z in exchange for x with C (only to give it in exchange for y with B) even with B simultaneously trying to obtain x in exchange for y with A (only to give it in exchange for z with C).
  • It not only allows—again—for all mutually exchangeable quantities of two commodities to have different exchange values, but also increases the likelihood of that mismatch, by depending on additional exchanges between different pairs of commodities.

Social Multiequivalence

Fortunately, all those problems have the only and same solution of a single multiequivalent m becoming social, or money. Then, commodity owners can either give (sell) their commodities in exchange for m or give m in exchange for (buy) the commodities they want. For example, again let A, B, and C own commodities x, y, and z, respectively. Still assuming A wants y, B wants z, and C wants x, if now they only exchange their commodities for that m social multiequivalent—initially owned just by A—then:

A ⇢ y B ⇢ z C ⇢ x
x, m y z
x, y m z
x, y z m
y, m z x

With social (rather than individual) multiequivalence:

  • There are always two exchanges for the owner of each commodity (who either sells or buys it before buying or after selling another one, respectively), with any number of such owners, in a uniform chain.
  • All commodity owners exchange a common (social) multiequivalent, which eventually returns to its original owner.

Additionally, with a social multiequivalent (money) divisible into small and similar enough units, even if all mutually exchangeable quantities of two commodities have different exchange values, these two commodities will remain mutually exchangeable. For example, let two commodities x and y be worth one and two units of a social multiequivalent m, respectively—x(1m) and y(2m). Then, let their owners A of x and B of y be also the owners of three m units—3m—each. If A and B want y and x, respectively, but always exchange their commodities for m units—x for 1m and y for 2m—then:

A ⇢ y B ⇢ x
x(1m), 3m y(2m), 3m
y(2m), 2m x(1m), 4m

Finally, with social multiequivalence thus making, as only money does, commodity exchange always possible, every social multiequivalent is money, which is conversely any form of social multiequivalence.

Money as Decentralization

Even so, historically, despite preserving the decentralized ownership of commodities during their exchange, money has itself become rather centralized. Indeed:

  • It must represent the same decentralized ownership it preserves.
  • It must be concrete for all commodity owners to share it.

However:

  1. Its concreteness to each among those owners requires its private control by a public authority—whether over selling, buying, creating, or destroying it.1
  2. Its then-centralized control at least partially prevents it from still representing a decentralized commodity ownership—thus defeating its original purpose.

Fortunately, despite necessarily concrete to all people, or socially concrete, a monetary representation can be rather abstract to each person, or individually abstract. For example, cryptocurrencies—like Bitcoin—use public-key cryptography to represent both money as a private key and this private key as a public key, so money becomes metarepresented, or metamoney. Then, despite remaining socially concrete as a decentralized network, any such metarepresentation of money becomes individually abstract as a monetary—meta—unit, which preserves its decentralization, by preventing any public authority from privately controlling it.


  1. See Abstractly Represented Money: Introducing Metamoney. []

The Science of Trust

Trust is something we’ve taken for granted for a long time. Until recently, nobody ever thought to formally study the concept, except for the Machiavellian goal of learning to falsely instill it in others. One of the most revolutionary things accomplished by cryptocurrency and related fields is to turn that question on its head: instead of wondering what makes people trust others, Satoshi questioned whether trust is necessary or efficient in the first place. Who do we really have to trust with our money, why, and what can we do to change that?

Origins

Long-time Bitcoin Magazine readers likely have no love for the concept of trust, but it was actually a remarkable innovation: rudimentary forms of it are restricted almost entirely to mammals, who possess the combination of intelligence and social behavior required. Many prehistoric hominids, like the Neanderthals, actually had larger brains than modern humans. This means a Neanderthal may have been more likely than you to invent something like fire, but this came at the downside of extra testosterone, and therefore aggression and the inability to cooperate. The first caveman to invent the spear probably didn’t trust his peers enough to share his discovery, and it was the cooperation made possible (in part) by trust that allowed homo sapiens to take over.

Trust took a turn for the worst when human societies began intensely competing with one another. Surviving wars and lean times require a large, organized society, but the only known way to organize a society at the time was by the force of a central authority. Traditionally, that role was “given” to the most powerful man at the time, who controlled who got what assets, when, and how much they were worth. Noble dictators have existed, but this generally had the effect of corrupting the morality of the men in charge, whom we had to trust almost completely.

New political innovations have alleviated the problem somewhat: democratic institutions give us some measure of control, putting our trust in the decision-making abilities of the masses. Constitutions seek to remove trust in people entirely, fearing tyranny of the majority, and instead place it in the hands of logic and reasoning (at least as interpreted by the constitution’s author). Unfortunately, the field of finance did not evolved differently, with the steady eradication of informal (beads, shells), commodity-backed (gold) and local currencies as central banking systems like the dollar and euro took over. This requires us to trust banks with holding, transmitting and maintaining the value of our money. They frequently fail, and we’re forced to trust the national banks at the center of such systems with controlling the money supply.

Hawala

In the same manner that elections and constitutions lessen the need to trust central political authorities, cryptocurrencies lessen our need to rely on central financial authorities; this can be accomplished in a number of ways, the first of which was actually pioneered hundreds of years ago by traders in South Asia, the Middle East and Africa. It’s called the hawala system, and is basically a system of debts: when a migrant worker wants to send money back to his family in, say, Somalia, he gives it to a hawala broker, who sends word to a broker overseas, who gives it to the man’s family in the form of Somali shillings. There could be multiple intermediary brokers in-between, but with modern communications technology, this process is almost instantaneous.

 

hawala diagram

 

This constituted the first decentralized global money transfer system. Rather than having to trust any central authorities, each hawala broker only needs to trust the other hawala brokers to which he is directly connected. A broker dispensing money in Somalia expects that his associate receiving the actual money overseas–or the intermediary in-between–will pay him back at some point in the future; this typically occurs outside the mainstream financial system, to avoid fees or (occasionally) law enforcement, and can take the form of cash, products, commodities, property or even loaned employees. Hawala agents could hypothetically conduct all of their finances this way, completely avoiding traditional finance.

This has been a blessing for many developing economies, but it has its limitations: in reality, most directly-connected hawala brokers have deep bonds like family ties, since it’s impossible for humans to vet every broker in the network, or monitor their honesty ongoing. They expect one another not to accrue significant debt relative to that owed to them, to repay debt whenever logistically-convenient, and to take financial responsibility if a payment they were supposed to remit fails due to the dishonesty of their unshared associates. It’s very easy for disputes to arise in such a system, and they are usually settled with violence or coercion.

Ripple

Ripple hopes to solve these problems. Although it’s not technically a decentralized cryptocurrency, it is open source, and it’s not exactly centralized, either. It is a distributed network started by Ripple Labs in 2004, and allows users to exchange any currency or commodity. Cash and precious metals, of course, cannot be sent through the Internet, so Ripple employs a system very similar to hawala: users with Ripple wallets send each other something like an IOU–a promise that the receiver has become the owner of wealth not in his or her possession.

 

ripple diagram

The primary difference is that one is not required to trust the other user; the IOUs traded are actually backed by third parties called “gateways.” Gateways are the only ones who can bring units of a currency or commodity into the Ripple network, which they do by promising to have that many units on reserve for redemption. One must trust the gateway issuing that currency or commodity. If the receiver does not trust the gateway issuing the sender’s IOU, or wishes to accept payment in a currency not held by the sender, Ripple sends the IOU through intermediary user nodes–again, similar to hawala.

The nastiest disputes occur when two parties disagree on who owes what, so Ripple has a single ledger of account. All nodes in the network store the current ledger in the form of its hash, a number derived from the ledger’s contents. A user can compare his ledger to others via the hash with ease, and use it to validate any transaction or account balance. Changes to the ledger are made by “validators,” whose nodes can confirm valid transactions on the network and add them to the list.

To ensure that everyone always sees the same account balances, however, the validators must agree on the order in which transactions occur, which occurs by consensus in an iterative process: transactions come in sets, and if the majority of validating nodes one is connected to choose another set, the node switches to theirs. All users must trust that the validators they chose to connect to want to form a valid consensus, and are not colluding to trick you with a false ledger, but their identities are known such that their honesty can be readily evaluated, which would be impossible in human networks like hawala.

To make this all easier and help regulate the network, Ripple launched its own currency called XRP; it actually is controlled by users directly, being a digital construct, and therefore is a convenient means of settling such debts. Users must destroy extremely tiny amounts of it to use any network resources, which prevents spam and DDoS attacks. It can be created by Ripple Labs at will, so to some extent we are required to trust them as a central authority that will (hopefully) use them in a way that avoids inflation. Although these XRP are given away to charitable or scientific causes, Ripple Labs gave themselves a large sum of XRP in the beginning, which makes them unlikely to behave in a manner that would devalue it.

Bitcoin

This system is functional, and is still the most effective means of exchanging currencies without a central authority, but Bitcoin takes distrust to a whole new level. Unlike Ripple, no one can create new bitcoins: the network creates them automatically, at a predictable rate. This removes our need to trust a central authority with managing the money supply. New bitcoins go to Bitcoin miners, who play the role of Ripple’s validators by deciding when each transaction is confirmed. Since it is impossible to confirm invalid transactions, the decision goes to whichever miner manages to process the next set of transactions (or “block” in Bitcoin) first. As a result, consensus is not required; you don’t have to trust any particular miner because the only way to produce a false ledger (or “blockchain”) would be a 51% attack, requiring collusion between the majority of nodes on the entire network, not just the ones immediately connected to you.

Since bitcoins are  the only currency on the Bitcoin network, for now, we don’t have to trust any gateways, either. Therefore, we don’t have to trust any of the nodes in the Bitcoin network, which allows all nodes to stay anonymous, removing our need to trust any third party with personal information. This has become a major part of Bitcoin’s appeal, and for those not in the know, the creator himself–Satoshi Nakamoto–is also anonymous. Like Ripple, however, the code is open source–all of us can see it, and he cannot alter it without our permission–there’s no need to trust him or her, either. Bitcoin runs pretty much on its own.

Unfortunately, this means bitcoins cannot easily be exchanged for other currencies, which the Bitcoin network cannot handle, at all, at least in its current form. Bitcoin proponents believe this will inevitably be fixed by new protocols added to the Bitcoin network, called “sidechains.” Sidechains like Mastercoin and Counterparty allow the representation of other currencies and commodities on the Bitcoin blockchain, which leads to decentralized digital exchanges. We would still need to have trust in whomever issued those currencies and commodities, which they must hold in reserve, but the exchange process itself requires none.

Moving forward, sidechains and other “Bitcoin 2.0” technologies are poised to continue the trustless revolution. Once money has been properly decentralized, decentralized system engineers will move to obsolete traditional democracy and constitutions, as well, replacing all bureaucrats with digital protocols. There will come a time when nobody has to trust anyone with anything, and in this inevitable future, many of history’s worst kinds of corruption will become impossible. The only question is when.

Dos and Don’ts of Talking Bitcoin with Noobs

If you’re reading this article, there’s a good chance you know a thing or two about bitcoin. You can prognosticate about prices and harangue about hash rates with the best of ‘em. Despite that, you’re still part of a minority, at least according to Bloomberg. Fewer than half of Americans know what bitcoin even is, and those who do have vastly different levels of knowledge. Effective communication will change that. Here are a few guidelines for conversing about bitcoin.

Don’t get technical. Don’t assume that your interlocutor knows what you’re talking about. Especially at the beginning of a conversation, always over-communicate and reiterate. If you were selling a car, you wouldn’t start by belaboring a detailed verbal schematic of the inner workings of the internal combustion engine. Rather, you’d focus on what the car can do for the consumer—its advantages, its features, and its ability to increase quality of life. Likewise, unless you’re chatting with a developer, software engineer, or someone with an understanding of cryptography, shy away from the technical processes that empower the blockchain.

In the same vein, overly complicated discussions about economics—Austrian or otherwise—are best reserved for circles where that type of specialized pursuit is an acceptable topic of conversation. Otherwise you’ll ostracize (Austrianicize?) a broad base of potential adopters.

Don’t be careless with terminology. The meaning ofbuzzwords like “liberal” has evolved over time and is heavily dependent on context. Similar bitcoin-related terms (e.g., anarchy, cryptocurrency, etc.) have the potential to leave a bad taste in the wrong person’s mouth. They must be dispensed with care. Writing at CoinDesk, Adam Henft goes so far as to say the word “cryptocurrency” should be banished from the lexicon (and replaced with “bankless money”):

“Crypto” is a prefix that has nothing good about it, especially as far as the mass market goes (and currency is the ultimate mass market product, after all). The word raises all the negatives of bitcoin – mysterious, not trustworthy, and dangerously complex. It also triggers other “crypto” associations – like crypto-fascist, crypto-Nazi, and cryptosporidium, a germ found in fecal material that causes diarrhea. Not exactly the neural associations you’d want for your brand.

Don’t speculate or oversell. You might think bitcoin is an earth-shattering, world-changing, paradigm-shifting technological innovation (I happen to). But overselling a nascent product on the marketplace is never a good strategy. Be calm, cool, and collected in your advocacy of bitcoin; announce the revolution with a reserved confidence. Don’t make grandiose promises of wild price increases. In addition, it’s okay to say “I don’t know” to someone who asks you a question beyond your scope of knowledge. There’s already enough misinformation being spread by naysayers.

Don’t dwell on failures. Despite all of bitcoin’s successes so far, there have been plenty of failures, too. Exchanges have shut down in embarrassment. Wanton prices continue to swing violently. Illicit websites such as Silk Road will forever be associated with bitcoin. Don’t spend time on this—the media will take care of that for you. Just because you’re successfully dispelling something doesn’t mean you’re not dwelling on it. Instead, devote a single sentence of a conversation and turn the negative into a positive. (For example, “Trustworthy exchanges are now performing voluntary audits.”)

Do focus on social impacts. People respond to emotional appeal, and explanations of how bitcoin can foster social advancement will generally resonate well. Explain how bitcoin can enable more robust global exchange by addressing issues of international remittance and third-world economic development. Across the world, those who lack access to a bank for whatever reason will no longer be at a categorical disadvantage. Non-monetary applications of the blockchain, including smart contracts and smart property, can further obviate the need for trust, granting easier access to credit to underprivileged individuals and businesses.

Do highlight personal benefits. People are self-interested by nature. “What can bitcoin do for me?” Tackle this question head-on, highlighting bitcoin’s ease of use. Share how low transaction costs and miniscule transaction times change the way property is transferred. Mention how bitcoin can enable and popularize small payments. Focus on how simple and beneficial it is for businesses of all sizes to accept bitcoin by partnering with companies like BitPay or Coinbase.

Do synchronize your Johari window. In 1955, psychologists Joseph Luft and Harrington Ingham developed a concept known as the “Johari Window.” Based on individual dispositions, every person has a natural Johari Window. Introverts have small windows and tend to reveal less when communicating; in contrast, extroverts have wide-open windows and are eager to share.  Your window is not fixed, however. Synchronize your Johari Window with your conversation partner to engender a sincere connection. While Bitcoin may be a trustless protocol, conversation is not.

Do prove your case. You can talk about bitcoin until you’re blue in the face. At the end of the day, however, actions are more persuasive than words. People like proof. Offer to set up a wallet for someone and send them a millibit. Demonstrate in real time the nearly palpable wonder of a bitcoin transaction. It’s often the initial hurdle that’s the highest to jump over for newcomers; tear down that barrier and it won’t be long before your interlocutor is doing the same for someone else.

 

Building a Bitcoin Economy: How to Make the Transition

Feeling lost? See parts one and two of this guide.


The Bitcoin community has made great strides in spreading adoption so far. Businesses accepting Bitcoin have popped up all over the world, and in many cities like Vancouver, we’re starting to experiment with spreading vertically along the supply chain. Hopefully soon the public will begin to embrace it, but a crucial problem remains: if everyone gets paid in bitcoins, how will they pay their taxes?

There are a lot of things that just aren’t easy to accomplish with a grassroots approach. In many parts of the world, people still rely on things like public transportation, the payment mechanisms for which are controlled by the government. If you go to a public university, or have to pay a fine, or want to buy a license or permit, you can only pay with whatever currency the government is accepting. Since many working adults in the world have real responsibilities, like families, they’re not going to risk incarceration in protest.

It’s up to us, therefore, to make it tenable for them. As of the time of this writing, we have yet to find a solution for this problem in Vancouver, but there are people here and abroad approaching the obstacle from different angles. Several avenues of societal integration appear to be emerging, and with them a clear path towards a cryptocurrency-based society.

The first and easiest stepping stone would be intermediary tax and bill-payment services; if a third party will take Bitcoin and pay your bills in fiat, utility companies don’t have to accept. Many businesses around the world have already accomplished this, such as Bylls, which spawned from the Montreal Bitcoin Embassy. One can even pay his or her taxes this way, which allows a fiat-free lifestyle without incurring the wrath of the authorities.

Hopefully, that prospect excites you, and you will become one of many Bitcoiners to use such a service. If the resulting volume becomes sufficient, companies lacking an inherent stake in the fiat system will feel compelled to adopt. Cutting out the middleman effectively undercuts competitors, so utility and communications companies that lag in doing so will be at a disadvantage. Already, businesses like DISH Network are initiating the process.

Governments do have a stake in the fiat system, though, because they control the money supply. In many instances they wield a monopoly, which they could use to contain the spread of cryptocurrency. Often times they do not, however, such as municipal transit systems, which compete with personal vehicles and taxi services. Managing change is a logistic difficulty, especially for public transit like buses where boarding speed and efficiency are crucial. The instantaneous and precise nature of Bitcoin solves these problems, and convincing just one government enterprise to adopt gets Satoshi’s foot in the door.

This will precipitate a gradual cultural shift, in which people start to accept the possibility of a decentralized society–at that point, any remotely-democratic state will be fighting a losing battle. Reach out to receptive government enterprises and institutions whenever possible, and the acceptance of each one will encourage the acceptance of the others. This will build confidence in Bitcoin, and as the price rises, government agencies will have to hold their financial assets in it, or else watch them inflate to oblivion.

The central government will begin to run out of options at this point. Not only will the contractors they pay be using Bitcoin, but so will their own agents. This is the time to campaign for the state to formally adopt Bitcoin; sheer market force will compel them to hold their finances in Bitcoin, as well, in order to avoid bankruptcy. Once they’re holding Bitcoin, and paying expenditures in Bitcoin, they’ve no reason not to accept taxes in Bitcoin, as well.

As soon as one nation adopts, the same bandwagon effects will play out on the international stage; nations have to interact with one another, and they don’t want to do so through a middleman. But what if a rogue dictatorship chooses to break the mold, despite the repercussions? What if our own representatives refuse to accept the coming of change, or we just don’t want to be ruled by other people, anymore? Find out in the last installment of Building a Bitcoin Economy.

This how-to guide is part of a series written by director Andrew Wagner on behalf of the Bitcoin Co-op. The author is not compensated by any businesses mentioned in this article, except with the joy he gets from undermining the traditional financial system. If you want more information, or to join our non-profit advocacy movement, reach out at [email protected].

How Bitcoin Can Transform Art

This story originally appeared in Bitcoin Magazine Issue 21.


“Without art, the crudeness of reality would make the world unbearable.” -George Bernard Shaw

Art is an undeniable feature of society. They have always been a part of our humanity.  Unlike sciences, which have predictable laws, art is human expression.  Limitless, and inspirational. Art has the power to move humans into action… or inaction. Art can also be a commentary on our current human conditioning, leaving a mark on society.

Yet these marks are largely funded and arguably controlled by the elite – wealthy families, foundations, and galleries – the ‘patrons of the arts.’ Artists must find a way to remain true to their forms of truth without offending those who put food in their mouths.   Both Michelangelo Buonarroti and Pablo Picasso were backed by powerful patrons, yet simultaneously rebelled against the establishment: despite his patrons’ wishes to leave the Pieta unsigned, Michelangelo snuck into St. Peter’s Basilica and graffitied on the sculpture “Michelangelo Buonarroti, Florentine, made it.” And Picasso repeatedly offended his patrons through his crude paintings. Mark Rothko of the New York School, an artist who created works about despair and the human condition, defied what his critics and patrons defined as art, and ultimately took his life in a final snub to the establishment.

The average salary for an artist in America is roughly $44,000 a year, a fact that challenges the concept of the modern-day ‘starving artist.’ Critics of this concept must still consider the immense expenses involved in the production of art; in fine art’s case, there’s the cost of materials, marketing, exhibitions, selling space, insurance, shipping, gallery fees and, of course, time. Then consider the costs associated with other forms of art, like dancing: shoes, training, costumes, travel… or music production and performance: instruments, equipment, audio engineering, performing… And then, of course, art is distributed through established platforms like iTunes and art galleries, which take 30% and 50%, respectively.

What about government grants? Don’t governments provide financial resources – like grants – to aid artists and allow them to focus full-time on their art? These grants are both slow to award funding and, depending on the government in power, funding is often taken away from art styles that those in power deem ‘inappropriate’ and undeserving of government funds. In Canada, Bill C-10 included a provision that would allow the government to refuse tax credits to film and television productions that are ‘contrary to public policy’. What does that include, really? Who defines public policy? Unfortunately, when you’re giving out the money, you make the rules. For reasons like this, it is argued that a separation between Art and State must exist. Without it, pure, creative art cannot flourish. But artists need the funding to even produce. So what are their options, here?

In search for alternative, artists find new space on the internet; its emergence has broadened the support of myriad styles of visual art, including street, underground, performance, interactive, contemporary and traditional. This shift into the digital world allows artists to connect with individuals all over the world. However, it is argued that this shift, although fantastic for increasing access to potential buyers, limits the intimacy that truly makes art unique. Y.T., a prominent figure in the bitcoin art world, defines art as “the process of creation and the experience between an audience and a creative work.” “Art”, she continues, is “more than an object or performance; it is the space between; an attribution of the wetware.”

Right now, artists are stuck. It seems like they can only exist in the physical space by taking funding from their patrons. Otherwise, they flock to the internet, where they may access more funding, but the experience of their art is diminished.

A new option presents itself with the emergence of Bitcoin – one that combines the digital world with the physical world, one that could allow artists to stay in the expensive in-person world of galleries without relying on the restrictive demands of modern day patrons.  The fact that we can now move small amounts of money around – a phenomenon called ‘social tipping’ – may tip the scales in favour of artists. We – ‘the people’ – may now be able to collectively fund our artists!

Right now, we cannot tip artists $1, because it would cost $1.50 in fees through Interac e-money transfer, and we would need their e-mail address, a password, etc. And we can’t pay them through credit card. What would that look like, traveling from painting to painting and swiping our card for $.25 for every piece we like? Bitcoin changes this. Now we can use our phones to scan a unique code and send small payments directly to the artists whose work we enjoy.

Social tipping is already alive and well with regards to online content and on Twitter. In his most recent interview with Joe Rogan, Bitcoin evangelist and expert Andreas Antonopoulos discusses his experience with being tipped on the popular social platform: “I take tips on twitter. And without knowing these people, they can send me a quarter, or ten cents, over Twitter. Instantly. and you can’t even do that with any other payment system because it costs so much…”  We saw the power of this when Joe Rogan flashed his wallet’s QR code, and the tips started pouring in.

Can this integration of QR codes, facilitating micropayments, change the funding of artwork and keep it in the physical sphere so we can experience it? Can we remove art from the hands of the elite and fund artists – through the volume of small payments or ‘tips’ – and have the masses fund them? Or is this just a dream? If we do start incorporating QR codes on our art, will this lead to us putting QR codes on everything, thus monetizing our human experience?

When it comes to art, galleries absorb real estate and management fees in order to provide wall space to artists. Cory Peeke, Art Professor at Eastern Oregon University and Director of Nightingale Gallery, would welcome direct tips to artists via QR codes, as long as “the code not be overly obvious or disruptive.” He continues, “my worry would be that the code somehow distracts from the work. This is along the same line of concern I have with artists who insist on large labels, or those who insist on signing their work in a large, obnoxious way … it appears too desperate.”

Peeke acknowledges that the territory is new and evolving, but “supports options for artists to make a profit from their work and seek monetary support, even from people who cannot afford to purchase the work.” As long as social tipping does not remove the eventual purchase of the work, or detract from the experience of it, Peeke appears encouraging. This feedback is positive, and offers a win-win-win: people can enjoy the artwork, the artist can create two streams of revenue, and the gallery still gets paid for their efforts.

Troy Fearnow, owner of Cryptoart, says that the concept of social tipping and art seem to be in line with consumer motivation. During his company’s pre-launch at the Texas Bitcoin Conference, many people suggested the idea of social tipping through QR codes as he introduced the company’s aesthetic fine art paper wallets. “Some of the ideas were quite interesting,” he reflects. “Imagine a museum that was purely funded by attendees tipping on donated works. It would provide valuable metrics as to what the public wants to see. The concept could be taken a step further by requiring a certain amount to be spent in lieu of an admission fee.”

Currently, artists around the world are attracted to the promises of Bitcoin. Like art, the protocol transcends borders. Fearow worked with Ukrainian artist Alexander Fedosov to create the debut images for Cryptoart. Cryptoart publishes aesthetic paper wallets that function as a double-investment: a purchase that allows bitcoin to appreciate along with the art it is stored in.  Theoretically, bitcoin acts as a deflationary currency and store of value, and art is typically the same, seeing its value increase over time. This combination – a cryptocertificate – offers investors a recession-proof investment that both looks amazing and retains value on two levels.  The aesthetic paper wallet hosts a QR code on the back – offering a way for visitors or onlookers to transfer value to the art-bearer’s wallet. The cover of this magazine is a social experiment into the power of QR codes and art: if you enjoy the cover, tip Alexander Fedosov and let him know. In this work, Fedosov portrays the ancient greek goddess Hecate, which throughout history has been associated with crossroads. It’s meant to allegorize Ukraine as it’s forced to choose between western and eastern worlds. Fedosov is particularly affected, as he is in close proximity to Russian forces.

Can we use micropayments to change the ‘starving artist’ problem? It appears that bitcoin offers us a way to socially fund our artists, removing their reliance on governments and the financial elite. This could be a chance to bring the ‘power back to the people’ and allow us to support artistic aspects of our culture. Can this bring the power back to the people and support the artistic aspect of our cultures? We bitcoiners have already shown the world how we collectively can transform charitable attempts and injustices, as shown through our support of Sean’s Outpost and Dorian Nakamoto.

Can we transform art, too?

 

Leverage Your Bitcoin: An Interview with Bitcoin Solutions’ Adam O’Brien

Have you ever thought about leveraging your stored bitcoin? Perhaps you don’t spend your bitcoin, and you, like others, save it with the hopes of its increase. (It is deflationary, after all.)

I originally met Adam O’Brien, Founder and President of Bitcoin Solutions, at the Toronto Expo in April, 2014. He’s a nice, down to earth guy with a lot of thoughts on bitcoin.  Like me, he’s a bitcoin enthusiast and his company offers some really cool ways to engage with bitcoin.

I spoke to him today about his latest ventures and projects in the space.

O’Brien originally got involved in bitcoin when he wanted to buy it, but found – like most of us – that it isn’t exactly easy or accessible. “I wasn’t able to do it instantly,” O’Brien says. “I found this to be problematic, and wanted to give others the accessibility that I found the industry was lacking.”

O’Brien’s company owns and operates both Alberta and Saskatchewan’s first bitcoin ATMs (BTMs), making engaging with bitcoin easy, accessible and convenient. However, what is the point of making bitcoin accessible if people don’t understand it?

Like many of us, O’Brien noticed this lack of understanding: “People were saying things like ‘Isn’t the CEO of that company dead?’” As a result, O’Brien resolved to not only make Bitcoin accessible, but also make it understood.

With these two bitcoin basics down pat, he is now launching into a new venture – that is, giving people the option to put their bitcoin to work using leveraged trading. First, understand it. Then, access it. Then, make it grow!

Bitcoin Solutions’ newest product is a trading platform that allows users to leverage both their bitcoin holdings and our time. “Rather than trying to day trade, [Bitcoin Solutions Trading] does it for you,” O’Brien explains.

Users are able to open a position, predicting a price increase or fall. “We do the heavy lifting,” O’Brien continues. “Not only do we take the stress out of day trading, we allow you to leverage your bitcoin up to 8x.”

This is an attractive product for people such as myself, who simply do not have the time to engage in day trading, but who want to see their bitcoin investments do more than just… well… sit there.

If you’re like me, you have some bitcoin in a hot wallet for daily use, and lots of it stored away for future use. But, like cash, it’s nice to have some of that bitcoin working in some way to increase its value.

Bitcoin Solutions Trading is a super easy, user-friendly platform. I signed up this morning and was quickly ushered into the trading platform. O’Brien explains, “once you sign up, you can deposit bitoin into your account address; this is your ‘investable balance.’”

From here, you can swap the bitcoin you’ve sent into Bitcoin Solutions Trading from USD to Bitcoin and vice versa. “This is a feature,” O’Brien clarifies, “but unnecessary for opening a position.”

Next, users can choose whether they think bitcoin’s value will go up or down.

Finally, users pick the amount they wish to invest (with minimums starting at $10) and how much they would like to borrow, or leverage.

Now, users must still decide whether bitcoin will increase or decrease in value: “the price is too volatile to trust anyone but yourself to make that call,” says O’Brien. But the potential for profits is maximized by leveraging your investments while the platform guards your risk with our Stop/Loss feature. This feature ensures no margin calls will be needed and your investment will work as hard as it can, costing you as little as it can.”

O’Brien explains,

“In your ‘open positions’ page, you can see where your positions stand – either at a profit or a loss. Included in this is your fee; when you see your profits, you are seeing your net profit. Likewise, if it is showing a loss of $21 and your daily charge is $3, then your loss is actually $18 + $3 fee, giving you a total loss of $21.”

O’Brien’s platform is designed to show true profit. It also charges users a daily fee to leverage  – 0.3% of the amount borrowed from Bitcoin Solutions.

Bitcoin Solutions is planning on implementing proof-of-solvency, too, making this investment option even more attractive. “It is in the works,” O’Brien explains. “Currently, we engage in offline servers for security. We are always exploring new ways to ensure our clients’ bitcoin is as safe as possible.”

All of Bitcoin Solutions Trading fees can be found here. Bitcoin Solutions is a responsive company, with representatives available to answer questions or address concerns.

“We [Bitcoin Solutions] are committed to our clients’ satisfaction, and we’re responsive and here to answer any questions you may have,” O’Brien adds.

You can engage with Bitcoin Solutions over Facebook, Google+ or Twitter, or send his company an e-mail to [email protected]. Check out his company’s YouTube channel here.

Please consult your financial planner, investment advisor or bitcoin specialist with more questions if you are not familiar with trading or leveraged trading before engaging in this platform. To sign up for Bitcoin Solutions Trading, visit here or visit http://btcsolutions.ca for more information!

For media inquiries, please contact Adam O’Brien at [email protected]

Disclaimer: I have no affiliation with Bitcoin Solutions or Bitcoin Solutions Trading and am not an affiliate for this company or trading platform. I like to interview cool people doing new things in the space :)

Storj Vs. Dropbox: Why Decentralized Storage Is The Future

In April 2014, Storj, an open source decentralized storage platform, won the Texas Bitcoin Conference’s hackathon, netting them $250,000 from the BitAngels Fund. The crowdsale for their token SJCX and early access to the software has begun and will be running until August 18th (3 days).

The future of cloud storage is decentralization. Imagine being able to rent out your extra hard drive space through an autonomous network and getting paid for it in a cryptocurrency. This is being made possible thanks to Satoshi Nakamoto and platforms such as Storj, Maidsafe, Ethereum and others.  Now that we have the ability to tie P2P currency to resources such as storage space, bandwidth usage, and CPU power, services like Dropbox and Google Drive will be getting a run for their money.

Unlike other 2.0 platforms, Storj has decided to take a “baby steps” approach for developing their software. They want to build their system out in small, modular pieces first so that they can be used as working prototypes. The first of these pieces is a drag-and-drop file hosting web app called Metadisk, which recently had its whitepaper and video tutorial released. It’s important to note that Metadisk is just one piece of Storj, and as development progresses, more of these web apps, such as DriveShare (used for renting out your own hard drive space), will be coming together to form a more cohesive whole.

Cost Storj has come out with an infographic on the comparative costs of storing data between a decentralized system like Storj and a traditional centralized system like Dropbox. The results are staggering. Storj claims that buying and selling hard drive space in an autonomous network would reduce the cost of cloud computing by orders of magnitude, 10-100x cheaper.  storjinfoCurrently, one can rent out 100GB of storage space from Dropbox for $99 a year. Even if a user does not employ the full 100GB, he or she still has to pay the price. With Storj, one would be able to rent out a VPS (Virtual Private Server) from a service such as Digital Ocean and run a 100GB MetaDisk webnode for only $1.47, which includes redundancy backup copies. Add $0.49 for cost of retrieving the data, and we’re looking at $1.96 for the same amount of storage as Dropbox’s $99 offer. On top of that, a user may rent out their extra hard drive space and make a substantial profit with Storj.  In Dropbox’s model, if you pay $99 for 100GB a year but don’t use half the space you end up paying for what could potentially be profit. storjdriveshare The cost of storage generally gets cheaper and cheaper over time, since storage media capabilities double every 12 months.  If a decentralized storage system was completely autonomous, the price of storage could eventually drop near the 0 mark.  For current centralized cloud services, this would be impossible, as explained best in the Metadisk whitepaper: “This is competitive with centralized file hosts because even if their cost for storage media halves each year, their ongoing operating costs in data center rents, employee salaries, accounting costs, regulatory burden, legal fees, etc. will remain fixed or increase year over year, limiting their ability to compete with a decentralized model that has no such costs.” – MetaDisk Whitepaper

Security In an interview with The Guardian, Edward Snowden called Dropbox a “targeted wannabe PRISM partner” that is “very hostile to privacy.”  With Storj, client-side encryption would ensure that files are secure.

Blockchain Storj wants to use multiple blockchains to store metadata as a sort of directory for where files are stored and how much redundancy they have.  Once the blockchains are too large, they’ll use Merkle tree configurations to speed up this process, similar to how Bitcoin SPV wallets work.

Speed I asked Storj’s founder Shawn Wilkinson about the expected speed of the network once scaled to expectation. “Compare Dropbox and any peer-to-peer network. At scale, peer-to-peer networks will blow any centralized service out of the water. My goal is maximum throughput, so fast that your internet connection is the bottleneck not the network because at the base we have rewarded transfer.” Crowdsale Storj recently started their crowdsale on July 18th, selling their token SJCX on Counterwallet in exchange for Bitcoin. 15% of SJCX goes to the developers, 15% goes to the community and 70% goes towards the crowdsale. Only participants in the crowdsale will be allowed to sell their hard drive space in the early network through DriveShare. Metadisk is already available to participants. What is SJCX good for?

  • You earn it from selling your hard drive space
  • You use it to buy hard drive space on the Storj network
  • Allows exclusive access to Metadisk and DriveShare
  • You get at least 10% of all new experimental coins made from STORJ

The crowdsale has so far collected nearly 600 BTC and will be ending on August 18th. (3 days)

Mine for the Cure

I’ve long been interested in ways to use cryptocurrency mining to solve practical problems; proof-of-work’s waste of energy is its biggest problem, the solution to which could be the final nail in fiat’s coffin. While Gridcoin showed some promise, it failed to take off, and the search for a scientific coin capable of taking us to the moon continues. Many seemed to criticize its centralized nature–a central authority vets which scientific programs users can participate in, and validates their efforts–and maintaining proper security while dedicating more resources to useful work has proven difficult.

The problem with security is that proof-of-work miners need an algorithm where the solution can be verified with virtually no effort, and in an objective way. The algorithms used by BOINC (Gridcoin’s central authority) fail to meet these conditions. Real scientific problems are more intricate than repetitive hashing functions, but the scientists behind non-profit research projects are as resourceful as they are underfunded, and a new team has stepped up to the plate.

CureCoin is based on Folding@home, a product of Stanford University’s Pande Lab. It eclipses Gridcoin’s BOINC with over 45 petaFLOPS of processing power, making it the fastest computer network in the world thanks to countless volunteers. Pande Lab uses this computational power to simulate the folding of proteins, the work horses that carry out the instructions encoded in your DNA. They carry out a vast array of functions, such as transporting chemicals throughout the body, replicating DNA, and behaving as enzymes–catalysts that speed up metabolic reactions in the body when and where it needs energy.

Protein folding (or misfolding) is therefore a critical component of most diseases. Viruses like AIDS are essentially rogue genetic material, infecting a host with new instructions for proteins that spread the virus at whatever cost. Even without the influence of such contagions, the body’s proteins can misfold on their own, leading to a host of problems: excessive DNA replication can lead to cancerous growth, and the inability to provide nutrients or energy where needed is a suspected contributor to many mental illnesses. Understanding what influences protein misfolding (and how) is vital to curing many of these maladies.

Altruism and intellectual curiosity have worked wonders for Stanford’s program, but with CureCoin they hope to provide hard incentives to contribution. Not unlike how SolarCoin subsidizes solar energy production, CureCoin subsidizes medical research contributions: it saves a portion of the minted block rewards for redistribution to users based on how much folding they did. This differs from the system utilized by Gridcoin, which just increases or decreases a block’s reward depending upon the miner’s BOINC contribution. If there is ever an excess of either folders or miners, the other becomes relatively more profitable, tying the strength of both networks to the value of CureCoin.

For mining itself, CureCoin utilizes a hybrid proof-of-work/proof-of-stake system. Unlike other hybrid systems like BlueCoin’s, however, CureCoin shies away from newer scrypt algorithms like X11, opting to stick with the tried-and-true SHA256 (as in Bitcoin). They want to encourage people to use consumer hardware like home computers for folding proteins, leaving mining to ASIC rigs with little utility for folding. To prevent a large mining operation from launching a 51% attack on the network, some blocks are also “minted” in the proof-of-stake system, which they have basically borrowed from PeerCoin.

This set-up has many advantages over competitors like GridCoin. Since block rewards do not vary depending upon how much science is being done (protein folders always get 20% of the block rewards), it’s possible there will be more stability in value. Stanford is a renowned university working with partners like Sony and Nvidia, and their Folding@home network is the most established of its kind. Although CureCoin’s reliance on the SHA256 hash algorithm allows the use of specialized mining equipment, its hybrid use of proof-of-stake mitigates the security risks.

Unfortunately, the project is still somewhat centralized: CureCoin is completely open source, but parts of Folding@home are not. All protein folding is validated by Pande Lab, and while the developers of CureCoin operate independently, they maintain control over if and when new scientific projects will be added to the network. Contributions to those projects are likely to be validated by central authorities, as well, but if you’re willing to trust the scientific community and its benefactors, CureCoin succeeds in its mission. At the very least, those of you who do or will fold proteins for altruistic reasons may as well claim some reward on the side.

Is Bitcoin causing Libertarians to Experience Wet-Dreams?

Researching all things bitcoin thoroughly for the last two years has led me to come across several occurrences of articles referring to bitcoin as a “Libertarian wet-dream”. It is commonly referred to this way in several blogs, forums, computer technical websites and even some professional economic journals. The expression is now so pervasive that a Google search brings up seemingly countless instances for your linking pleasure. Perhaps it is now time for a journalistic undercover investigation to confirm the phenomenon is indeed a new epidemic.  If the connection between bitcoin and wet-dreams is established we my ask ourselves – could wet-dreaming also happen with owners of  litecoin or other alternative currencies?  Is it safe for one to ask – “Is anyone safe”? The topic of bitcoin has been covered extensively in most other angles, but in the name of science it seems, nobody can yet answer the questions of  “what happens to bitcoin when you sleep”?

Wet-dreams should be taken seriously. Treating the medical condition is not generally supported by health insurance.  As such, it may be time to take matters into your own hands. The emotional scarring that can result from wet-dreams cannot be dismissed out of hand. In previous generations even castration was one remedy. If the link is made, is anybody safe going out of town to a bitcoin conference? If you’re a Libertarian and traveling with a buddy – this is no laughing matter.

mysteryman

 Medical research:

Wikipedia defines a wet dream as a spontaneous and unintended orgasm happening while one sleeps at night . Now a wiki site has been created to provide delicate answers sought by those intending to discover the mysterious origins of wet-dreams.  If one is inclined, one might even find many useful tips in overcoming the embarrassing affliction that is claimed to have happened at least one time to 80% of males. In short, researchers found likely causes involve overactive hormones and tight clothing that causes unnecessary stimulation. The website makes the point that it is nobody’s fault when it happens and provides a couple of obvious suggestions to avoid the dilemma. Some of the suggestions include sleeping on your back and avoiding spicy foods. Interesting to note, that avoidance of bitcoin – was not listed among the remedies. Other medical journals used by the professionals of the sleep study medical field also failed to distinguish links to the Libertarian political leanings over other political parties of the US.

After extensive review of the publicly available medical journals, an established link between bitcoins and wet-dreams was not discovered. In addition, there were no studies found that indicated Libertarians were more likely to experience wet dreams than other political groups. There was no mention of bitcoin in the medical journals as of yet. In an off-the-record discussion with one self-described “medical professional” who wished to remain anonymous at a Colorado “herbal medicine outlet”,  advised that there could possibly be accidental induced wet-dreams in the future as an unintended side-effect with related purchase made from altcoins – such as sexcoin, or xxxcoin. Yet it appears wet-dream specialization researchers haven’t penetrated this field of study to include bitcoin yet.

mri

Artist rendition of possible future bitcoin wet-dream study.

As bitcoins are invisible, and dreams are also non-tangible, some may wonder if it might be possible that the commentators making these statements are projecting their own repressed frustrations while dealing with the predicament perhaps still freshly on their minds. One might deduce that they themselves may suffer from the embarrassing affliction which may only seep into the conversation through Freudian suppression. Perhaps they themselves have become subject matter experts of the effects of wet-dreaming but mistakenly associate the troubling condition on their basic lack understanding of bitcoin itself.  After careful review of Satoshi’s white paper – the topic of wet-dreams was not a topic under consideration. Troubling for the sufferers, WebMD does not appear to have a support group for like-minded wet-dreamers waiting to embrace them.

Libertarian link research results:

Having reached a conclusion showing no mention of bitcoin wet-dreams in the current medical journals, further research was conducted into the Libertarian political party. The party platform for the Libertarians can be found on their official website. Contrary to the opinion of some armchair Libertarian experts – they take no official stance on bitcoin.  What may perhaps be even more surprising to these commentators… they take no official position on wet-dreams. They do take political donations for bitcoin, along with five different credit cards, cash, and monthly donations.

The Wikipedia entry for the Libertarian party lists various members of leadership. The current chairman “Nicholas Sarwark” has issued no opinion of bitcoin. Former Libertarian presidential candidate “Gary Johnson” admitted he knew almost nothing about bitcoin in an interview last year. In this regard, one might think the most famous Libertarian voices would be wet dreaming about bitcoin. Further research into Ron Paul’s website called “Voices of Liberty” search for bitcoin brought up a message: “Nothing Found”. However, interviews found on YouTube indicated he admitted he was still uneducated in the science behind bitcoin. Further searches on YouTube brought up surprising quantity of wet-dream material but unrelated to bitcoin and is not recommended for your independent follow-up. No links have been inserted, so those search results will not be forthcoming.

Using common scientific principles, there is also a need to establish a control-group used for a baseline for comparison. As bitcoin is used as a financial payment mechanism, to be truly forthcoming, we should also establish that it does not stand out as uniquely “dry-dreaming” as well. Therefore a comparison was undertaken into any relationship between cash and credit cards causing wet-dreams as well. On the other end of the stick, we must also measure other political parties other than Libertarians for another control-group for consideration. The research looked for a peer-reviewed study which measured the frequency of wet dreamers among various self-identifying Republican, Democrats or Independents. However, the results of this additional research also failed to prove any reliable link establishing strong bonds between the wet-dreamers and their political affiliation. Antidotal evidence for certain unnamed politicians were considered,  but ultimately *Bill Clinton* rejected for lack of subpoena-able evidence.  Although nowhere else covered, it might be possible to purchase Viagra with bitcoin. If taken before bedtime and without partner – unintended side effects of that lapse in judgement could, in theory, be partially associated on bitcoin for allowing such an non-invasive purchase. Unfortunately for now, the results of successfully finding wet-dreamers with known associations to bitcoins – or politics turned out to be… anticlimactic.

For the reader alarmed about the possibility of bitcoin inducing wet-dreams in themselves, the wet-dream prevention website did provide more possible useful tips. First, avoid mixing your Viagra and sleeping pills.  Second, the use of a honey mixture (applied by ingesting – not as topical application). Lastly, avoid over-stimulating yourself with financial news and especially bitcoin news before bedtime. Close the websites you use to track bitcoin’s hourly price movement and try to think about something else… like baseball.

The research into the Libertarian to bitcoin to wet-dream link seems to have ended with dead ends on both sides of the equation. The comments and opinions now all appear to be nothing more than premature speculation. The story of proving bitcoins have anything to do with wet-dreams for anybody seems to end with no happy ending.

 

*Author’s note: This was written to be a light-hearted comedic piece on the subject; not to be taken seriously. May your sleepwear remain dry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Smart Property in Action

Smart property is to deeds as Bitcoin is to money. In the same way that Bitcoin revolutionized the concept of currency, smart property revolutionizes the concept of ownership, removing the need for a central authority to say who owns what. Our system of ownership is just one in a growing line of things to be decentralized, but will inevitably be among the most important. The question is, how can we enforce such a system without the firepower backing modern courts?

For those of you still trying to grasp this idea, it’s helpful to remember that bitcoins are not actually things: Bitcoin is a decentralized system for deciding who has how much money, and bitcoins are the unit of measurement it uses–they reside nowhere except the imagination of Bitcoin’s users. Just like traditional ledgers of account, however, the blockchain can be adapted to track who has what assets and property. This is being done by Bitcoin “2.0” platforms like Mastercoin and Counterparty, and some platforms like Ethereum are building new blockchains altogether.

For some types of property, this might seem kind of simple: things like trademarks, copyrights and patents are no more physical by necessity than money is, in contrast to houses and land. The question is, how can we ensure that people will respect the blockchain’s authority? You can show up at my home with a blockchain claiming it belongs to you, but I’m not going to vacate the premises.

In reality, this is a misleading question because it applies equally to the judicial system–the American Supreme Court, for example, maintains no armed forces, and must simply hope that the Executive Branch (which the President leads) will respect its decisions. They usually do, but partially because they appoint the judges, and it’s good PR. When politics goes awry, however, the Constitution is occasionally ignored, which politicians as celebrated as Abraham Lincoln are guilty of doing.

To the same extent that other government branches enforce the rule of courts, however, there’s no reason they couldn’t enforce the rule of the blockchain. A stranger cannot move into your house because a court has verified a document stating that you own the property, which means that if you call the police, they will remove the stranger. The police are equally capable of enforcing a blockchain verified by nodes in a peer-to-peer network.

But what if we wanted to go a step farther and decentralize the enforcement system, as well? It would certainly be nice if we could obsolete the police. While it’s not yet possible for everything, it is increasingly possible for electronic items: a computer could be designed to respond only to its blockchain-designated owner, who could be given remote access. Users could be verified physically or remotely by anything from a simple pass-phrase to advanced biometrics; without a central authority and with full encryption, there’s less cause for concern about your personal data.

As technology advances and electronic integration becomes more widespread, these sorts of methods will become more feasible. Vehicles increase in processing power every year, to the point that autonomous cars for mainstream consumers are a serious topic. A “smart” car would not respond to the commands of a thief as designated by the rightful owner, and instead turn off or drive to the nearest detention center. A home with integrated air conditioning and electronic locks could be designed to behave similarly, and increasingly advanced automated security systems will add weight to the blockchain’s decisions.

In the far-off future, it’s conceivable that technological replacements could obsolete the police, too–maybe not Robocop, but a functional means of controlling lawbreakers. Thereafter, selling a house is as easy as exchanging altcoins: you can send a transaction yielding ownership of the property, and receive a Bitcoin transaction in return. Just like sending an email.

Money 20/20 Incentivises Attendees with Bitcoin

Bitcoin took Money 20/20 by storm in 2012, and since then the topic of digital currency has remained a topic that has raised eyebrows of many in the financial services industry. This, the third year of the conference, Money 20/20 has remained supportive of its newest payment technology. This week, the organizer announced an incentive for all attendees to drive registrations. Only during the week of August 11, Money 20/20 is offering 0.1BTC for anyone registering as a paid attendee.

The five-day event is one of the leading global events for innovations in money. To be held the first week of November, the conference will bring together more than 6,500 attendees, as well as feature over 500 CEOs of over 2,500 countries around the world. For Bitcoiners, Money 20/20 is very likely the most popular event to spread the word on the advancements in digital currency and blockchain technology. With companies like BitPay, Chain, Coinbase, Armory and Circle in attendance, Bitcoin will yet again be a large focus throughout the event.

Money 20/20 will provide broad coverage of cryptocurrencies and feature over 40 speakers addressing a wide range of topics during the three days of programming called (Bit)coin World. The primary goal of these discussions will be to increase awareness of technologies, companies and applications, all while working to advance innovations in the payments and financial services space. (Bit)coin World will bring together two disconnected sectors of the industry, that of the cryptocurrency and distributed payment protocol sector and mainstream financial services. The inclusion of Bitcoin matches the event’s outlook on promoting a world where all commerce is a connected experience, one that can be done anywhere and and anytime. “Money 20/20 is unique in the ability to cross-pollinate this new and important sector with the more established segments of the money ecosystem,” an organizer stated in a recent article.

Attendees and sponsors are still able to purchase tickets and sponsorship packages using Bitcoin, a payment method that made its debut at last year’s event. Organizers are working hard to expand the use of Bitcoin by offering the exciting incentive to innovators in the payment and financial service industries that choose to attend Money 20/20.

The Bitcoin incentive was decided after a survey of thousands of attendees that have already registered for the event, with a reward of 0.01BTC for completing the survey. A link was provided for participants to set up a Coinbase wallet, and the response was huge. Over 29 percent of respondents provided a bitcoin address. Based on the response, Money 20/20 decided to expand the incentive to drive event registration and offer the 0.1BTC reward this week only.

To take advantage of the 0.1BTC incentive and to attend Money 20/20 beginning on November 2 in Las Vegas, be sure to check out http://money2020.com/. With more companies entering the cryptocurrency space and continued innovations, it is likely that Bitcoin and distributed payment protocol technologies will play an even larger role at this year’s conference.

Former US Mint Director Takes on Bitcoin at Raleigh’s Bitcoin Convention

The next upcoming Bitcoin convention is in Raleigh, North Carolina on August 15th and 16th. Interestingly Cryptolina.com will have as keynote speaker Edmond C. Moy, the 38th Director of the US Mint as well as Adam Draper, Founder/CEO of Boost VC. The Raleigh/Durham area in North Carolina is an important tech hub so it does make sense that a figure representing Venture Capital will be among the speakers. As for Mr. Moy, I’ve heard from the organizers that he is actually in favor of Bitcoin. I can only suppose the love is mostly about the payment system and the certification of information in a decentralized manner that the block chain is giving us. I guess we’ll find out.

I’m bringing this up because the US mint had a role much in line with the US constitution in the 19th century but this alignment has been “rusting” since then. The 2 main relevant sections of the US constitution concerning money and the mint are in Article 1, section 8 and in section 10. Section 8 specifically lists the power that was granted by the State to Congress. Anything not listed is not in the power of the federal government. In section 8, the part concerning the US mint is as follow (see bold text):

To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

While section 10 has this part with two relevant statements to this discussion highlighted in bold:

No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.

Remember that this should be read in the context of the time to be able to properly understand the meaning. What this means is that the States are not allowed to “coin” money, as this was a power the States granted to Congress. To coin money meant to create gold and silver coins with a specific weight and size so that it can easily be recognized throughout the country to facilitate exchange. Otherwise, it might have led to a complex game of guessing how much silver is in this Georgian coin versus this Maryland coin. Standardizing it at the federal level was the role for which the US mint was established. But the other interesting part I’ve highlighted mention that the States should not make anything but gold and silver coin as a mean to pay any debt. So article 10 specify that the States can only recognize gold and silver coin but they are not to mint any, while article 8 grants this power to Congress. This does not allow Congress to dump this role to any other entity.

Since then, the US mint has been minting anything but gold and silver coins except for investors to collect and invest. They still put $50 on 1 ounce of gold while the current price is currently $1300, only more confusing the population.  The fact paper currencies were used for convenience allowed the state to print more of it and to cheat away from this rule. An interesting anachronistic question that comes: what if Bitcoin was invented back during the time the US Constitution was written and had been added to that list. With an electronic representation that cannot be tricked, a horse might still cost $75 dollars today, or perhaps even less.

I’m looking forward to the convention. Bitcoin provides a payment system which is already somewhat controversial as it bypasses banks and government restrictions. Just ask the government of Argentina. But the currency is what usually creates more controversy as it is completely unregulated and has a fixed supply. Around 2140, it is expected that all the 21 million bitcoins will be created. Then, we will experience slight deflation as people lose their password. During the early months of Bitcoin’s history, the term “Natural Deflation” was shared with Satoshi Nakamoto who found it as an appropriate term. You can check this conversation in Chapter 30 of The Book of Satoshi at BookOfSatoshi.com, a book that I wrote that includes the collection of writing from Satoshi Nakamoto along with explanations.

I too will be speaking at Cryptolina conference and my topic will be about a proposed method to allow for side chain now. So far, support of a side chain requires a modification of the existing Bitcoin protocol, while this proposal avoids it. It does require the miners who are interested in participating in the side chain operation to run a separate protocol along with a slight modification of the Bitcoin software. The miners on the Bitcoin block chain compete for generating the SHA256 output of their respective block that needs to be below a certain threshold. The winner might not be among the subset of miners who participate in the side chain, and so the proposal requires the next runner up, the miner who had the lowest SHA256 output while running the race. This requires a slight modification to record their best result and this does not affect the Bitcoin protocol in anyway. You can view the paper here:

philchampagne.github.io/xsidechain/Side_Chain_without_Bitcoin_modification.pdf

Hope to see you there.

May the coin be with you

Jerry the Bear Using Bitcoin to Help Children With Type 1 Diabetes

Jerry the Bear is an interactive tool that empowers children with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) to master their medical procedures. The company behind Jerry, Sproutel, is reinventing diabetes education through play. Last year, just two percent of children with the condition played with Jerry, fed him food, checked his blood sugar levels and gave him insulin. Now, the company has sets its sights on a higher goal: getting Jerry in the hands of every child diagnosed with T1D, a vision that, with the help of Bitcoin, can help change the lives of over 12,000 children.

This beneficial tool gives children the power to learn everything about their condition in a manner that is completely interactive and challenging. Jerry the Bear delivers a complex curriculum that teaches everything from symptom diagnosis to carb counting. While taking care of Jerry, kids will unlock a series of 21 animated storybooks that tell the tale of Jerry training for the All Star Games. These stories and tasks were developed with the help of doctors, educators and parents. From the help of BitPay, donations can be made via Bitcoin at no cost, so that 100 percent of donations can be used to benefit this life-changing effort.

Sproutel’s decision to accept Bitcoin comes from a desire to embrace the new and exciting digital currency, further sparking interest in the campaign and increasing the impact Jerry the Bear can have on every child diagnosed this year. Bitcoin donations can be made to the campaign via the product’s website, coupled with a simple checkout process from BitPay. The campaign is a perfect example of the opportunity and benefits that Bitcoin creates for charitable organizations, allowing charities to receive a full 100 percent of donations with no costly credit/debit card processing fees, while remaining tax deductible.

Although the campaign has a wide range of donation options, a $299 donation will provide one Jerry the Bear to a child with Type 1 Diabetes. Thus far, Sproutel has raised over $40,000, which is double their original goal. However, the company has a stretch goal of $179,000 to provide Jerry the Bear to five percent of children in need. If the stretch goal is met, ContextMedia, a campaign partner will also donate 30 bears to hospital waiting rooms so that 20 percent will be able to experience Jerry the Bear. Even more amazingly, there is also a sizeable donation level of nearly $3 Million that will provide the 12,000 kids dealing with Type 1 Diabetes with a Jerry the Bear of their very own.

The Jerry the Bear campaign is working hard to make a monumental difference in the lives of others and the future of kids throughout the nation. This matches the vision at Sproutel of creating similar technologies for all children who are diagnosed with chronic illness. By making a Bitcoin contribution, you will be trading digital currency for warm and fuzzies. Sounds like a no brainer.

Globalization and Cryptocurrencies

The development of cryptocurrencies has been fascinating to watch. In only five years, thousands of currencies emerged from the Internet following the release of the original Bitcoin protocol. Clearly, we are witnessing paradigm shifts in regards to commercial and legal frameworks, economic theory on money, and new avenues for self-expression.

One of the more interesting social consequences of cryptocurrency has been the drive to regionalize. Independent ethnicities, kingdoms, and linguistic traditions can develop a sense of identity by using specific currency. Coins like MazaCoin (in this case, used by the Lakota people) allow rallying around tribal or national pride. They can also serve political functions. Scotland, for example, has explicitly laid out a referendum in September 2014 for the people to vote on whether Scotland should become an independent country from Great Britain and thus the UK. The introduction of Scotcoin earlier this year will help form a public consciousness regarding separation; if the Scottish people can adopt Scotland cryptocurrency, this will reinforce the drive to decentralize further.

This reminds me of a point Andreas Antonopoulos made when he addressed the LA Bitcoin meetup in April – that money is a tool of expression. The users of Dogecoin demonstrate that they prefer conducting their transactions in Dogecoin instead of Bitcoin, despite remonstrations to the contrary. There is something silly, fantastic, and absurdist about Dogecoin. It is a coin floating on no perceivable “real substance,” and yet it commands market value. This is due to its community and social features: Dogecoin users are renowned to be generous in tipping and welcoming newcomers, they are silly and outrageous, they crowdfund races at Talledega, etc. Dogecoin also rides on its own absurdity – it is the highest form of satire. The users of Dogecoin make no pretensions about it being the best coin due to its inherently valuable technical features, etc. And yet this is precisely its strength. Visiting the Dogecoin and Bitcoin subreddits will grant one very different takes on the users of these coins. Bitcoin users, alas, are not as wild and zany as our Dogecoin counterparts. The act of using Dogecoin is a reflection of identifying with that currency. Because switching costs for cryptocurrencies is very low, merchants will begin accepting multiple cryptocurrencies. When I am faced with the option of purchasing goods by credit card, cash, bank card, or a handful of cryptocurrencies, one of the criterion for making that decision involves examining which community I want to support: international payment processors like Visa and Discover? Central banks and their commercial agents like Citi and Chase? Or do I want to transact in a currency that is widely held by people that share my values? So-called “non-economic” valuations begin to exist in the minds of crypto users that can manifest in using bizarre forms of payment, such as Dogecoin or even less popular coins.

This is not to suggest a global cryptocurrency is a phantom. While there will be a plethora of cryptocurrencies to choose from, certain coins will doubtless remained favored by investors and developers. This will be due to either their superior technological capabilities, greater liquidity, or idiosyncratic reasons such as one being the cryptocurrency of a large nation. The strongest of these factors is hands-down the liquidity effect. A more liquid currency implies there are more partners with which one could potentially trade. Money, in the Austrian perspective, is the most salable good in society. It is that good which commands the largest audience of prospective buyers, and therefore, if brought to market, would sell quickest and with the least amount of friction compared to any other good. Payment systems gravitate towards low-friction channels, and, other things equal, users will adopt the payment system that offers the path of least resistance.

Currently, this position is dominated by Bitcoin. By an enormous margin, Bitcoin’s market cap is superior to the market caps of other cryptocurrencies. This implies, in the eyes of investors and developers, that future cryptocurrency adoption will likely to continue to be Bitcoin-based. Bitcoin’s first mover advantages are self-reinforcing because it commands the liquidity lead on all other coins. Liquidity is also related to volatility. An illiquid currency experiencing large trading volume will react in a volatile fashion – prices will skyrocket and collapse over and over.

Bitcoin’s liquidity also implies a strong network, as large liquidity implies large transaction volumes, which implies a robust mining environment. Thus, the security of the Litecoin network is far lower than the security of the Bitcoin network, and this is due to miners preferring to validate transactions on a blockchain which includes many more hands. Other things equal, a more universal money is preferred to a less universal money. Not until Bitcoin, and cryptocurrency generally, becomes globally saturated will we begin to see the non-liquidity effects start to dominate.

Without any knowledge of technological superiority, new entrants into the cryptocurrency field will adopt the most popular and hence most liquid coin. Another, perhaps more common, function of money, beyond expression, is the facilitation of trade. Once cryptocurrencies are recognized by each individual around the globe as email currently is, then there is no additional network for Bitcoin (or any coin) to gain, and their respective liquidities will begin to approach equality. At a certain point, non-liquidity effects such as technological superiority or social factors can dominate, and probably will. The open source nature of Bitcoin makes long-term coin speculating impossible. Bitcoin could fall by the wayside as superior coins and crypto platforms gain prominence; it could also become the economic backbone integrating every transaction on every platform on the planet. Until such a time when the world is awash with cryptocurrencies, however, Bitcoin will continue to be the global leader.

How do these forces coexist? If people prefer more liquid monies to less liquid monies, then there is a tendency for a single money to emerge over all the others. Any slight advantage one money holds over another will create marginal adoption – which increases the liquidity of the money, and hence its attractiveness for other people – and thus create a self-reinforcing loop. This tendency operates so long as there is any competition between monies, for while the world is not integrated with a single money, we are still in a state of semi-barter. Only with a completely common unit of account will economic calculation – the process of transferring resources from less value-productive ends to more value-productive ends – be maximized. A world of competing monies is a world without a common unit of account, and hence economic calculation is stunted to the extent one cannot price his opportunity costs in a single unit.

What this implies is that while Bitcoin will grow and lead as a global unit of account, individuals may still prefer to exchange with coins that are less liquid. In particular communities, the members may prefer to be paid wages and purchase goods in a regional coin rather than in Bitcoin. This is particularly true given how easy it is to exchange any number of coins into Bitcoin and vice versa. The cost of retaining a less liquid currency shrinks if one can exchange it into Bitcoin at very little discount.

Thus, I imagine non-Bitcoin cryptocurrencies (altcoins) will act as highly liquid media of exchange for particular regions, companies, Internet groups, religious communities, and other voluntary collectives. This will become more popular as the levels of liquidity between all cryptocurrencies rise, and the cost of holding assets of lesser liquidity becomes very low. If some altcoins become as liquid as Treasury bills, for instance, then some people will prefer to use them as money for then their social signaling function dominates the liquidity function. Altcoins will be liquid enough to permit regional or private trading groups to flourish on them, and people will choose to give up the extra liquidity they could achieve with Bitcoin to embrace the personality of their unique coin. Fundamentally, this implies a harmony of interests between the users of all cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin will likely be the global monetary unit on account of its first-mover advantages and network effects, and altcoins will satisfy crowds looking for illiquid expression. They satisfy two different desires on the part of people who hold money, and there is no need for excluding one or the other.

Alliance of Austin Agorists Host Eighth Networking Party

Join the Alliance of Austin Agorists this Saturday August 9th from 6 to 10pm at Brave New Books in Austin, Texas for their 8th networking party and counter-economic farmers market. They will host four Central Texas residents who have found success with enterprising agorist ventures.

Speakers include Catherine Bleish (thebitmom.com, sovereignliving.com), Justin and Jessica Arman (mymagicmud.com, thelibertybeat.com), and Tracy Ward (facebook.com/paleotillas). Come ready to spend bitcoin, silver, FRNs, or barter at the market.

Agorism is a concept coined by Samuel Edward Konkin III and is a social philosophy that advocates for peaceful revolution through voluntary interactions such as counter-economics. It has also been called revolutionary market anarchism.

When asked about his organization, founder Joel Williamson stated, “The Alliance of Austin Agorists is a group of freedom-oriented individuals who take the power of peace and truth seriously. We believe that real change can occur through post-parliamentary direct action. We think tactics such as education, community-building and mutually beneficial voluntary exchange will pave the way to the world we wish to see.”

This is why Bitcoin so perfectly intersects with agorism. It is post-parliamentary direct action and a voluntary exchange that is free of government coercion and manipulation.

When asked about the lack of government influence in philosophical agorist enterprises, Williamson stated, “We understand that a peaceful society is possible without violent monopolies, and we wish to evolve past such institutions by building a counter-economy that will ultimately render them irrelevant.”

While many activist organizations turn to politics to make the changes they seek in society, Williamson thinks there is another way: “We recognize that bullets and ballots are impractical and outdated methods for change. We know that a better world is possible and will come to fruition as soon as we choose to get serious about freedom and start building!”

About Alliance of Austin Agorists
The Alliance of Austin Agorists is a grassroots organization of left libertarians, market anarchists, anarcho-capitalists, voluntaryists, individualist anarchists, mutualists, etc. who are interested in growing the counter economy, community organization, and making like-minded friends.

Goals as an organization:
– Educate people about agorism
– Encourage people to start practicing counter economics
– Radicalize minarchists and encourage consistent libertarianism
– Host monthly networking parties that include counter economic farmers markets for all products, skills or services as well as interviews and speeches with speakers well versed in ideas surrounding freedom and agorism
– Help liberty minded individuals make friends

About Joel Williamson, the founder of the Alliance
Joel Williamson is a people person and a radical who wears his passions on his sleeve. He started the Alliance because he believes that freedom lovers should not only think and preach ideas surrounding liberation, but also live them. Joel’s fight is against couch potato libertarianism and even worse, the idea that we should focus our time money and energy on implementing a libertarian world through parliamentary politics. He believes in agorism because it is consistent, eclectic, and most importantly, practical. He holds fast to the agorist idea that real change occurs when we realize the things we can control, ourselves. Instead of putting our trust in politicians, he advocates that people be the change they wish to see in the world, for profit, for goodwill, and for fun. The Alliance of Austin Agorists is his attempt at putting his money where his mouth is. The sky is the limit, and for him this means helping implement universal anarchy.

Joel has done great work supporting Ross Ulbricht, alleged founder of the Silk Road. He has been an integral part of the Free Ross campaign, selling t-shirt to raise money for Ross’s defense and working closely with Lyn Ulbricht, Ross’s mother.

Contact the alliance at facebook.com/allianceofaustinagorists or at [email protected].

Brave New Books is located at 1904 Guadalupe Street Austin, Texas. They accept Bitcoin and have a Bitcoin ATM for your convenience.

Free, Unlimited, Forever – BitPay’s New Pricing Plan

BitPay continues to break down barriers for merchants looking to accept Bitcoin. The payment processor launched an exciting new pricing plan for businesses that will ultimately eliminate every hesitation for whether a company should accept Bitcoin as payment for products and services. Get excited, BitPay’s new plan offers merchants basic payment processing with zero fees for an unlimited amount of transactions, forever.

With the unveiling of the new plan, BitPay can lower the barrier to entry for businesses around the world who want to accept Bitcoin. Now there are very few excuses one can give for why they would not utilize the digital currency as an additional form of payment. Although the company provides plans with additional services at a per-month cost, the new basic plan will allow every business to see the benefits that bitcoin provides, free of charge. In other words, this is a great time to start accepting bitcoin, regardless of your experience level.

The news took Reddit by storm on Wednesday when the company held an AMA to give the community even more information about the new basic plan. With over 250 comments, the main topics included what effect the proposed BitLicense would have, compliance, the zero fee structure and increasing bitcoin adoption throughout the world. It quickly became apparent that the company’s main focus is toward vastly decreasing barriers and making it easy for a business to start accepting bitcoin. “Processing fees should not make or break a merchant’s decision to accept bitcoin,” BitPay stated during the AMA. This is a big step forward, one which many view as a step in the right direction toward growing the adoption rate around the world. To do this, the company is staying the course in continuously working to improve user experience on both the merchant and customer side. This has been seen in recently released tools such as Copay, Bitcore and GetBits, all of which are open-source.

For merchants, the new basic plan provides unlimited basic bitcoin payment processing free of transaction fees, for however long they wish. This plan also provides unlimited access to any plugin, API or app from the BitPay library, and includes email support. However, some merchants require additional products and support, which is where the company’s Business and Enterprise options come into play. Both plans do have a monthly cost associated with them, but provide businesses with services to match their specific needs. In addition to the features of the Free Plan, the Business pricing plan includes phone support and Quickbooks integration; while the Enterprise level puts everything together and provides a dedicated account manager, VPN access, and enterprise engineering and integration.

It seems that this freemium model has struck a chord with the bitcoin community and many are very excited to get on board. Although BitPay operates strictly on the merchant side, they have always been quite good at introducing new things that are aimed at increasing awareness of bitcoin to both consumers and merchants – most notably, their open-source development projects, a sponsorship of The Bitcoin Bowl and Georgia Tech athletics and now, the first bitcoin payment processing plan that is free-of-charge, forever. Will BitPay be able to reach its goal of one million merchants by the end of 2016? The new plan will surely help.

The Arrogance of Dollars

One sentence perfectly summarizes the problems with modern finance, and you can find it in your pocket. Open up your wallet and take out a US bill of any denomination. On its front, you’ll find these words:

“THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE”

This simple sentence encapsulates Old-World finance, where central bankers make intimidating commandments, and governments try to manage commerce from a central point. Contrast this with bitcoin, which represents New-World finance. Several points:

1. There’s a reason why fiat currency needs special clauses. Never in history has a fiat currency maintained its value over time. Whoever controls the printing press has always inflated the money supply. Thus, fiat money, our dollar, comes with intimidating commandments: “You must accept this paper as money – or else!”

2. Bitcoin needs no special commandment. Nobody is forced to use it; nobody controls the printing press. If it came with a declaration, it would read: “This bitcoin is completely worthless unless you choose to value it.”

3. Consider the extraordinary hubris of central planners. Some distant, far away bankers declare that their special currency will be legal tender for all debts, public and private. Excuse me? Who do these people think they are? Imagine a regular person demanded you accept whatever currency he created, just because he said so. You’d probably think he was deluded.

4. Bitcoin proves that money doesn’t require government decree. Good economists understand that money emerges from a free market. It doesn’t depend on some authoritative declaration or mystical process. A growing number of individuals choose to trade with each other using something they find valuable. It’s no more complicated than that.

The new emerging financial system has no room for lofty commandments, and we mustn’t tolerate attempts to force people into one particular way of doing commerce. Believe it or not, people can figure out by themselves what currency they want to use. (Usually, they don’t want to use junk.)

We can expect the old, failing financial system to get even worse – historically, the closer a currency edges to collapse, the stricter the financial controls become. Be prepared for a flurry of new laws, rules, regulations, and threats regarding your freedom to use money.

Fortunately, bitcoin presents an opportunity to break free from this coercive system and its inflationary, fiat currency. No matter how hard they try, governments and central banks can’t create bitcoin out of thin air, and no matter how many laws they write, it’s going to be difficult to prevent people from using it. I only hope bitcoin will be able to withstand the onslaught from all the arrogant rule-makers attempting to control a new financial world.

Pheeva: New Things on Horizon

The Pheeva Bitcoin Wallet is now in the Apple app store. You can also get this crafty hot-wallet in the Google Play Store and the Google chrome store.

The individuals behind Pheeva are two serial entrepreneurs and developers with backgrounds in tech. Lamar Wilson is back-end development, and Lafe Taylor is front-end development.

I clearly recall meeting them earlier this year in Austin, Texas, at the first ever Texas Bitcoin Conference. Lamar and Lafe were cool guys, and they were providing iOS users a bitcoin wallet through their Cycle of Goodness cooperative that provides its members many perks. Some of these include discounts of developed apps and revenue sharing in the future. When meeting the guys, I knew that they really believed that everyone should have access to bitcoins.

Fast forward to now, and Pheeva is available for download in the app store. I recently spoke to Lafe and he told me that they are even getting a TV commercial ready for pheeva, which I had a chance to see on reddit. It was pretty funny. This so-called Troll campaign will commence soon. Very soon.

Pheeva is made to be a hot wallet. “Much like your old school billfold,” reads the Pheeva website, “a hot wallet should only be used for short-term storage for small transactions. It’s basically a transactional wallet and not meant to be a vault that stores a lot of bitcoins.”

It’d be the ideal wallet for a casual outing; it is the app that you bring up on your phone to make that quick payment and go on about your sweet day.

After meeting the guys behind Pheeva, I realized how open to feedback from the general public they are. Their mission is to provide financial freedom and convenience to those who don’t have it. Their Co-op exemplifies these values by allowing members an opportunity to come together for bitcoin and for the betterment of the whole group.

They also have have some upcoming rollouts that will benefit COG members directly. After speaking to Lafe, it has been made very clear that Pheeva has many new projects on the horizon, and many exciting things going on within the next few months.

One of the newest features, Pheeva FIll, allows users to purchase bitcoin gift cards directly within their Pheeva wallet. You can now both buy bitcoin gift cards from Pheeva’s partners; you can redeem your cards directly within the Pheeva wallet.

Pheeva Plus allows users to purchase goods and services from some of the largest brands. It provides more opportunities for you to use your bitcoins. For the first time ever, bitcoin users can buy digital gift cards from over 200 brands on their own bitcoin wallet app.

Be on the lookout for Pheeva’s Troll Campaign and any other features that will make bitcoin hot for you.

To download from the Apple App Store click this link (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id885343126) from your mobile device or simply just look up Pheeva directly within the app store.

The Android version is available here https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pheeva.pheevaWallet&hl=en

Advanced Bitcoin Quiz. Part Three of Three. Know Thyself

This is the final quiz of a three part series of quizzes designed to assist the reader to know thyself as the great Greek philosopher Socrates once advised.

If you were smart or lucky enough to pass the beginner and intermediate level bitcoin quizzes, you might be ready for the last part of the bitcoin quiz designed to identify areas you may find yourself in need of a little more knowledge for followup. This final quiz is here for you to find yourself. Perhaps there is a greater calling for you?

The last part of this series is intended to help those possessing the necessary gift or an aptitude for understanding the deeper principles that make digital currencies. There are those among us that have found something deep within, has suddenly and inexplicitly… awoken.  Many have reported a strong prompting that creates an obsession. Many have not been able to put their finger on it…this place or this voice inside that creates the obsession about bitcoin and digital currencies. Many have reported that they can’t make the thoughts, or math or philosophy go away, and many have never felt this way about anything else in their lives.

For these people – brick walls do not stop. Brick walls only keep out those who don’t want it bad enough. These three quizzes have acted as filters.  They also acted as guides for those curious enough to follow the links to discover the answers they sought.  Quite possibly – new audience to bitcoin may have discovered something in this research to spark an element of curiosity. Those of us intense into the topic have found the rabbit hole we have found in common. The final part of this quiz represents the bottom. Once the reader has found the answers to the questions for their own satisfaction, the next door or direction to follow may become obvious based on their natural talents.

Bitcoin needs more developers, testers, teachers and heavily detailed experts to promote, carry forward and lead the next generation of currency, payment systems, economics, data and value transfer systems. The new and upcoming paradigm is still largely an empty canvas waiting for you to paint it. We are Dorthy of the Wizard of Oz who’s old black and white farmhouse has just landed and our black and white existence in the world will soon be redefined in full color as she opens that old beaten down farm door that will lead her outside world of color.

Worlds beyond imagination wait for those with the talent and skills to define it. While most of humankind still grasps at idea that this new invention of unstoppable currency living “in the cloud”. If you’ve completed this final quiz, you are now likely years ahead of most of the world  and actually building the roads and  bridges that will carry billions of people from the old analog world of currency systems to the new digital paradigm whose time has come.

In the two previous tests, the quizzes were twenty questions and the answers provided at the end. This quiz will consist of only 10 questions. There will be few readers qualified to comprehend this quiz and thus it will be short. There will be no answers provided. This will be for our leaders to decide. We will discover those with the passion and initiative to complete the quiz and validate their own correctness.  As the technical crowd does, teams often develop and message forum boards will be the passageways of knowledge.  Your help is already there.  Bitcoin requires teamwork. Open source software requires teamwork – bitcoin should demand grand-scale teamwork as it is trustless and permission less. If it were to be respected and used by all nations, it will need world-class teamwork. It must continue to withstand hacking – you must outsmart the hackers as well.

When you reach this level of understanding, you know that education does not come from having somebody spoon feed you a quiz with answers, this requires the kind of sweat and tears that separate the genius from the “wannabe”.  Knowing the answers to these ten questions proves nothing in itself.  But, completing this quiz and verifying the answers hold up may give you some confidence to know who you are and what you were meant to do. Perhaps digital currencies are your destiny. This quiz is not about discovering if you are right, it’s about discovering who you are. Does your fate lie within bitcoin?


 

  1.  What is Ralph Merkle’s contribution to bitcoin?

  2.  Who is the person that had a direct link to both Satoshi Nakamoto and PGP encryption corporation?  (Bonus) How\where do they store their bitcoin (if any)?

  3.  Distributed Autonomous Corporations have features that are unlike any regular ‘brick and mortar’ corporations found in many countries. What are three main differences?

  4.    Bitcoin network discourages messages in the blockchain, yet blockchain.info allows this. How?

  5.   How much do bitcoin nodes get compensated for their efforts? – Who pays?

  6.   Where on the internet does one find the official source code to begin adding suggestions and help to test code?

  7.    Give three examples of why bitcoin mixing services are needed in legitimate (not illegal) transactions and history.

  8.   In what way does  NXT coin, Counterparty coin, Ethereum and Mastercoin differ from bitcoin technology?

  9.  How does the bitcoin network make the difficulty adjustment  every few weeks. What exactly does it do that changes the difficulty?

  10. What is the biggest problem of using brain wallets and why are they discouraged?


If you have the ability to answer these questions, or at least know where to go to find the answers, then you may have the intelligence, tenacity,  or the “right stuff” to take a more active role the in the bitcoin community. This quiz was not to find out what you were lucky enough to have stumbled on before finding this test. Consider getting involved and take leadership positions as this may now be your time to make a difference. People might only offered one opportunity in life to change the world; ask yourself if this is your time and place to make a difference and blaze a trail that will be followed for generations. For those that recognize the tell-tale signs of discontent stirring within them – do not sit idly and wait for somebody else to change the world. If you find an inner primal part of you is screaming for a chance to make a difference. Take heed and answer that call.

“Be the change you want to see in the world.” –Gandhi

 

Comments and Petitions: How the BitLicense Will Affect the Future of Bitcoin

When Ben Lawsky and the NYDFS met with key players in the Bitcoin community earlier this year, there were many questions of what the committee would propose and how it would affect Bitcoin entrepreneurs, businesses and the future of the digital currency industry. For nearly everyone in the Bitcoin ecosystem, the proposed BitLicense struck a nerve. It is a hot button issue including how the proposed rules and regulations will be debilitating to the digital currency industry, how a BitLicense will stifle continued innovation and mainly, the extremely short period which the NYDFS is giving to comment on the proposal.

In a recent Coin Congress press release, President of the Digital Chamber Perianne Boring stated regarding the short comment period, “One egregious aspect is that the NYDFS is only giving 45 days to comment, which is severely inadequate to proposed regulations of this scope.” Because of this short period, there are a great many within the Bitcoin community, including Coin Congress, that are calling on the community to submit comments to the NYDFS. Initially, Lawsky made claims that the proposed regulations would be intended to act as guardrails to protect consumers and root out illegal activities without stifling innovation. However, organizations like Coin Congress, the Digital Chamber and many others believe the BitLicense will in fact do the opposite, potentially crushing the Bitcoin industry in New York and stifling jobs, investments and innovation. Now, with less than 40 days to comment, the Bitcoin community needs to provide the committee with needed insight. Instructions on how to comment can be found here.

What is included in the proposal?

The NYDFS proposal would require a “BitLicense” for any firm engaged in receiving or transmitting virtual currency on behalf of consumers; securing, storing, or maintaining custody or control of virtual currency on behalf of customers; performing retail conversion services; buying and selling virtual currency as a customer business; or controlling, administering, or issuing a virtual currency.

Holders of a BitLicense would be required to adhere to a set of rules and regulations meant to prevent illegal activities and protect virtual currency customers. However, these proposed regulations, a word that the Bitcoin community often cringes at, will likely have adverse affects on continued innovation in the industry if the requirements remain the same. A detailed breakdown of the requirements proposed by the NYDFS contain a long list of actions that will be overseen by the NYDFS, including anti-money laundering, consumer protection, cyber security, capital requirements and financial reporting and audits. Yes, these are very important aspects of any business in the industry, but they can easily be controlled internally.

Petition to the state

Members of the Open Source Financial Developers Association (OSFDA) have begun a petition to the Governor and State legislature to bring attention to the overreach of the proposed BitLicense. The organization believes the rules and regulations put forth by the NYDFS will have drastically negative effects on businesses and communities in the industry, as well as blockchain-based technologies.

The petition was introduced because comments made by the community to the NYDFS are failing to address the Governor, who is responsible for appointing the superintendent of the NYDFS. The organization stated, “This BitLicense, if enacted, would serve as a permanent reminder in subsequent elections of those who opposed small business innovation in New York.” The petition can be found on Change.org at http://chn.ge/1o4sot7.

It is obvious that many individuals in digital currency communities believe that the proposed rules in New York will greatly affect the future of the industry. The hope is that the NYDFS will be open-minded, listen to the voices of the community and allow businesses in the industry to flourish.

Spend Physical Gold Online via GBI’s Ripple Gateway

Gold Bullion International (GBI) has announced their newly launched Ripple gateway. GBI is a leading institutional precious metals provider to individual investors and the wealth management industry.

GBI’s technology and operations platform allows investors to acquire and manage their physical precious metals assets directly through GBI or through their existing wealth management account relationships.

Precious metals are acquired through a competitive institutional dealer network, stored on behalf of investors in protected and insured vaults in New York, Salt Lake City, London, Zurich, Melbourne and Singapore, and audited by one of the big four accounting firms.

GBI bills itself a reliable option for precious metals ownership. GBI is an institutional quality precious metals provider with over $1 billion in completed transactions. The firm provides its services to a broad range of customers including Merrill Lynch.

With their announcement it is now possible to quickly and easily buy gold to diversify portfolios, and spend gold anywhere BTC is accepted. Of course, this builds on other new applications like money transfer through Fidor Bank, remittance through Ripple LatAm or Bitso, and the many other gateways and B2B services operating on top of Ripple.

This implementation and approach is part of a growing trend like with Bitgold. That is, to capitalize on the unique aspects of Bitcoin’s successful technology while, at the same time, creating more stable and reliable financial instruments.

With GBI’s digital, gold-backed currency, traded over the Ripple protocol, anyone can now trade, send and spend physical gold online via GBI’s Ripple Gateway. This brings greater liquidity to gold. The protocol allows clients the ability to spend their physical gold (XAU) balance online, send it electronically to friends and family, or spend it as a currency for payment anywhere Bitcoin is accepted.

This new and unique capability comes from GBI’s just-launched Ripple gateway. All XAU trades are backed with physical gold deposited in six secure vaults around the world. Select market makers have already been issued XAU balances and have commenced trading.

Ripple is an open-source, decentralized payments protocol that enables anything of value to be traded through a global value web. Market makers on Ripple seamlessly exchange different units of value for trading and transactions. For example, when GBI clients pay for goods and services with gold, it can be automatically converted into dollars or another preferred unit of value for delivery to a merchant.

“Ripple changes the dynamics of value, allowing for a real-time market that can instantly trade between gold, currency, mobile minutes, and more,” said Steven Feldman, co-founder and CEO of GBI. “We have been leaders in combining technology and precious metals, and our integration into Ripple allows us to continue our push into digital currencies by enabling investors to now buy digital physical gold.”

“Investors can withdraw their XAU balance at any time and GBI will send the corresponding amount of physical gold,” said Savneet Singh, co-founder and head of the Digital Currency initiative at GBI. “GBI allows those who prefer the security of a precious metals-backed currency to now buy digital units of that currency on Ripple with complete confidence in the security of their assets. This continues our movement into the digital currency world and we look forward to sharing future exciting announcements shortly.”

Bitcoin and Bilingualism

Bitcoin, theoretically and empirically, already qualifies as money. Bitcoin is not Chuck-E Cheese tokens and, despite Charlie Munger’s esteemed opinion, certainly not “rat poison.” Surda and Graf have the right idea on this. Bitcoin was initially valued for what it was – powerful cryptographic technology that was valued by crypto-anarchists and various individuals on the bitcointalk forum. Eventually, the specific characteristics of Bitcoins (divisibility, ease, speed, etc.) caught on to larger and larger groups of people who began buying and using Bitcoin for exchanges. And voila – now we have a medium of exchange. Given the vast market of goods for which Bitcoin can currently be exchanged in so many locations, I’m willing to consider it money. Online vendors and entrepreneurs already conduct monetary calculation in terms of Bitcoin. If there were “Bitcoin banks” where people sent their Bitcoins for safe keeping, and this bank secretly operated on fractional reserve principles, the ensuing money creation would slowly distort the structure of production for all goods denominated in the Bitcoin economy. I don’t think that’s controversial.

I’m more interested, though, in looking at the perspective of Bitcoin competing as a money and analyzing it from an economic perspective. Many of us are familiar with how money originates: all commodities come to be valued for whatever direct need they fulfill; certain commodities come to be valued for the indirect service they perform in addition to whatever use-value they have. Individual people, recognizing that some commodities have attributes satisfactory to enable this indirect exchange, begin using it instead of resorting to barter. Of course, the issue of contemporary money presents a few challenges, namely due to the political nature of its implementation (although the above analysis still applies to fiat money). This is where Bitcoin becomes exciting to study. Bitcoin, as a distributed digital crypto-currency, is not politically connected at all and yet it entered the market and is gaining strong traction. How will this play out for the individual?

If we imagine Bitcoin gaining in popularity, and that it continues to attract a larger crowd, the network effects of Bitcoin will become stronger. Languages and money derive some of their value on how many people use them. So, over time, the processes I describe will become more and more mature, in the same way as immersion in another country will sharpen those language skills to greater or lesser extents.

In some remote future, Bitcoin or another cryptocurrency may replace traditional currencies. But the change from a society using one currency to another would be neither instant nor would adoption and conversion happen simultaneously. Over time, as media of exchange appreciate in value, people will begin to hold marginally larger quantities of it. They will more and more come to calculate their Bitcoin-expenses in Bitcoin, instead of calculating Bitcoin-expenses in re-exchanged fiat. The individuals who choose to acquire marginally larger Bitcoin cash balances as it widens will begin associating a specific value to Bitcoin taking into account its deflationary aspect, just as we do with US Dollars or other fiat currency. The “value” of a unit of currency is determined, among other variables, with what one can purchase with it. As people become more acquainted with seeing and referring to various goods priced in Bitcoins, a mental association will develop that is totally independent from fiat values. So while today, the value of Bitcoin is thought of in terms of its fiat exchange, this connection will eventually disappear and two separate currencies will be coexisting, each with their respective markets and market actors. Just as in certain European societies that speak more than one language, every society integrated with Bitcoin and their traditional currency will learn both “languages” – perhaps in the way that gold and silver paired together historically. They will take on separate roles, or possibly Bitcoin will swallow the whole market. Only time – and the changing preferences of savers, entrepreneurs, and consumers – will tell. What is certain, though, is that everyone connected to the Bitcoin economy – even tangentially – will be forced to “speak” in terms of Bitcoin. In the past, people used to write “gold clauses” in their contracts specifying payment in ounces or grams of gold instead of in fiat values. This practice was popular because gold was a more reliable store of value than fluctuating national monies; they also allowed accounting in international terms. The value of a certain quantity of gold was familiar to all parties involved, whether they were in Europe or Asia.

In the 21st century, Bitcoin has replaced gold in all but decorative and ornamental functions. Further, because Bitcoin is a true medium of exchange and not simply a store of value, small-time merchants and regular consumers will become acquainted with it quickly. Because Bitcoin is a deflationary money, there will tend to emerge price discounts between fiat and Bitcoin values. Merchants, wishing to spend cash and retain Bitcoin, will reliably price their wares lower for customers who relinquish Bitcoin to them. This is what Daniel Krawisz refers to as “hyperbitcoinization.” It is a type of hypermonetization where one monetary unit accelerates in displacing another. We are already seeing price discounting with regards to credit cards. Many convenience stores and small businesses prefer to handle cash than credit, and they thereby offer an implicit discount for users who pay in cash (charging $0.50 on top of a credit transaction is the implicit cash discount). Likewise, merchants will agree to accept less Bitcoin than the pure exchange value to entice consumers to spend it. Consumers, witnessing the price discount – Gyft already offers 3% on many major retail outlets – will become interested in learning how they can save money. These two incentives are harmonious; both merchant and consumer benefit from Bitcoin, and the value proposition Bitcoin offers will force everyone to learn this second language. For a while thus, fiat values and Bitcoin values will exist simultaneously in people’s minds. Over time, the initial fiat values of various goods will disappear entirely as merchants refuse to accept worthless debt promises associated with the central banks of various nations. They will demand real assets for their goods, like Bitcoin, and then there will be no purpose in remembering the language of dollars, Euros, or anything else. They will be as dead as Latin.

BTCTrip: We Accept Bitcoiners

You have probably heard it a hundred times by now: we accept bitcoins…

This “we accept bitcoins” phrase is perhaps the latest marketing craze that has engulfed many e-commerce sites and traditional brick & mortar stores. Although many businesses accept your alternative currency, not many of them go further than that.

Well, BTCTrip doesn’t just accept bitcoins, they accept bitcoiners. That’s what sets this travel site apart from the rest. Accepting bitcoiners means catering to the wants of bitcoin users by paying employees in bitcoin, offering more than discounts, and promoting the space.

Martin Fernandez, the co-founder of BTCTrip, was described by Vitalik Buterin as “the archetypal Bitcoin user.” It is no wonder why: Fernandez has been in the tech community for years and even sends e-mails to Satoshi.

Changing the Industry

Bitcoin is noted as a disruptive innovation in the finance world, but Bitcoin businesses are disrupting their respective industries – just like BTCTrip is disrupting the travel business, since most flights and hotels are booked through only a few brokerage sites.

The industry is taking notice: CheapAir and Expedia now accept bitcoin and Fernandez has been asked to talk about how bitcoin is changing the industry at PhoCusWright’s Travel Innovation Summit in November in Los Angeles. Not only that, but Martin will speak about Bitcoin as a disruptive payment at a Card & Payments Latin American conference in Miami in August.

Local Exchanges

In a perfect world some would like to see bitcoin being used everywhere, having the ability to go to different countries and never having to exchange currencies. That vision may take some years, but in the meantime, BTCTrip is turning some of its 150,000 hotel partners into local bitcoin exchanges.

The local hotel exchanges would allow you to travel to a country, exchange your bitcoin for the local currency in a safe location, and when you leave, exchange your leftover local currency back to bitcoin. You will no longer have to see the currency exchange desk at the airport and get charged ridiculous fees.

Get the Guarantee

Being able to spend your bits is the goal, but so is getting that bitcoin discount. Luckily, you won’t have to search every travel site and google promo codes because BTCTrip has you covered:

“We want you to rest assure that every time you make a purchase on BTCTrip you find the best available prices. That is why we now guarantee that BTCTrip will offer the best prices on flights and hotels. If you find a better deal we will beat it and process a credit in your favor. We will also offer a discount on your next hotel reservation.” – BTCTrip Best Price Guarantee

The Community

Bitcoiners are part of a community, a community that embraces inclusion both financially and socially.  Starting in a couple of weeks, you will be able to pay for your hotels and flights with dogecoin and litecoin because in essence their users are a part of the bitcoin community too.

Being a bitcoiner doesn’t mean you are limited to a certain set of ideals, Martin told me. “Bitcoiners are libertarians, capitalists, anarchists, entrepreneurs, technology evangelists, cryptographers, developers and so many more factions.”

Bitcoin technology may have had some setbacks this year, but the community still held strong and together with people like Martin disrupting the world, Bitcoin can only go one place: TO THE MOON.

Bitcoin Magazine Congratulates Team Member, Vitalik Buterin

Bitcoin Magazine would like to congratulate former Lead Writer and now Editorial Board Member, Vitalik Buterin, on his receipt of the Peter Thiel Fellowship Award. Vitalik is the mastermind behind the Ethereum Project. As a 20 year old, his development experience is extensive with involvement in Bitcoin, KryptoKit, and the Dark Wallet.

Through the Peter Thiel Fellowship program, Vitalik will receive a grant of $100k to span over two years so he can focus full time on the Ethereum project and further decentralized developments. In addition to funding, all fellows will receive guidance on entrepreneurship and startups.

Congratulations, Vitalik!

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The Thiel Foundation issued the following press release on the award and recipients:

PETER THIEL ANNOUNCES 2014 CLASS OF THIEL FELLOWS

WIRED.com video series “Teen Technorati” follows 40 finalists vying for a Thiel Fellowship

SAN FRANCISCO – June 2, 2014 – Peter Thiel today introduced the 2014 class of new Thiel Fellows. The fourth set of young entrepreneurs to be awarded Thiel Fellowships, the fellows will receive support to bring their innovative scientific and technical projects to life, learn entrepreneurship from the ground up, and begin to build the companies of tomorrow.

“As student debt soars and the wages of college graduates sag, the need for more thoughtful and personalized approaches to finding success is greater than ever,” said Peter Thiel, creator of the Thiel Fellowship. “We hope the 2014 Thiel Fellows inspire people of all ages as they demonstrate that intellectual curiosity, grit, and determination are more important than credentials for improving civilization.”

Over two years, each fellow receives $100,000 from the Thiel Foundation as well as mentorship from the Foundation’s network of tech entrepreneurs, investors, scientists, thought leaders, futurists, and innovators. Projects pursued by the 2014 class of fellows span numerous cutting-edge science and technology fields, including aerospace, computer science, education, game development, biotechnology, health I.T., neuroprosthetics, and civic technology. At a time of increasing concern over the value of a college education and a national student debt burden that tops $1 trillion, the Thiel Fellows are part of a growing national movement exploring alternative ways to build successful futures.

For the 2014 fellowship, the Thiel Foundation received applications from nearly every state in the U.S. and from 44 different countries. The applications represented a diverse pool of educational experiences, coming from young people in high schools, undergraduate and graduate schools, state schools, technical schools and liberal arts colleges, homeschooled students, and some who had already stopped out of college.

“As we welcome the new class into the growing Thiel Fellowship community, we also celebrate the achievements of our 2011, 2012, and 2013 fellows,” said Jonathan Cain, president of the Thiel Foundation. “Over the past three years, they have started dozens of companies, created more than 182 jobs, and generated more than $87 million in economic activity. They’ve acquired this funding by raising venture capital, earning grants and sponsorships, shipping products, generating revenue, and even by selling the companies they’ve created. And now they are helping the next generation of tech researchers and entrepreneurs by mentoring future cohorts of Thiel fellows.”

The Fellowship application process is known for its challenging and unconventional nature, and the journey of this year’s 40 top finalists was documented by WIRED’s new mini-series “Teen Technorati.” Season one of the series, available online now on YouTube and at http://video.wired.com/series/teen-technorati, captures every step of the competition during the finalist weekend in San Francisco as the young finalists vie for the fellowship.

“Selecting twenty Thiel Fellows from the pool of finalists was particularly difficult this year,” said Mike Gibson, VP of Grants for the Thiel Foundation. “The WIRED crew really captured the incredible talent and sheer determination that all of the candidates brought to the weekend activities, including team building challenges, their individual lightning round pitches, and café-style mentor interviews. Even more importantly, though, the finalists were able to come together as a community of new friends and colleagues, which we hope will continue for the rest of their lives.”

Although competition for the fellowship is strong, there are numerous opportunities for interested young people to participate in the community. The Thiel Foundation Summit, a semi-annual conference sponsored by the Thiel Foundation is open to young people who are passionate about entrepreneurship and technology. The most recent summit, in New York City last November, drew more than 450 attendees from around the world. The next summit will take place in San Francisco on June 7 and 8. Attendance is by invitation only; to learn more or request an invitation please visit: http://www.thielfoundationsummit.org

“With the Thiel Summits we aim to continue to encourage more young people to focus on technology and entrepreneurship, and empowering them to pursue their dreams,” said Danielle Strachman, program director of the Thiel Fellowship. “These weekend-long conferences bring together fellowship applicants, current fellows, mentors, and hundreds of young people who are excited about entrepreneurship. Most exciting for us, summit attendees have started forming grassroots meetup groups when they return home, helping grow the spirit of our community exponentially.”

ABOUT THE 2014 THIEL FELLOWS:

Shantanu Bala (19, Phoenix, AZ) is developing a system for using a real-time video and audio feed to convey visual facial expressions and auditory cues using a series of vibrations across a user’s skin. His research aims to expand the potential scope of information that can be extracted and conveyed using digital sensors and haptic actuators.

Vitalik Buterin (20, Toronto, Canada) has been captivated by Bitcoin and the crypto-currency space for some time. He is now working full-time on developing Ethereum, a peer-to-peer network that any application can use and access and a mobile and desktop client to allow people to build advanced decentralized applications and use them in a platform that is as convenient as a web browser.

Benjamin Englard (18, Miami, FL) is a computer scientist interested in natural language processing, computer vision, distributed computing, and the synthesis of computer science with other fields. He is working to combine ideas from computer science and psychology with the goal of personalizing technology.

Adithya Ganesh (17, Plano, TX) is a computer science student on leave from Stanford. He co-invented IntentSense, an intelligent bionic glove for partial hand amputees. He is interested in using machine learning and predictive analytics to personalize bionics and health care in general.

Grace Gee (19, Port Lavaca, TX) co-founded her start-up CortexML with a fellow Harvard classmate to make data analysis more intuitive and simple. She was pursuing a joint bachelors and masters in computer science at Harvard before becoming a Thiel Fellow.

Ishaan Gulrajani (19, Philadelphia, PA) wants to change the way people make software. After leaving MIT, he founded a startup that won an Apple Design Award and received support from Y Combinator.

Lucy Guo (19, Pleasanton, CA) is a designer and software engineer who has been creating profitable websites since 6th grade. After building educational software for developing countries, she decided that she wanted to make studying fun for everybody. During her fellowship, Lucy will be working on gamifying education by creating a platform that will allow students to study their schoolwork through multiplayer games.

Thomas Hunt (17, Saratoga, CA) wants to cure cancer. He spent three years at the SENS Research Foundation studying Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT), a mechanism that is suggested to be indirectly responsible for all cancers. He is using automated high-throughput drug screening to find drugs that can reduce ALT activity.

Rebecca Jolitz (19, Los Gatos, CA) hopes to revolutionize the satellite development cycle. She is a researcher-entrepreneur with a family background in aerospace and holds degrees in physics and mathematics from UC Berkeley.

Alex Koren (19, Bergen County, NJ) is working on the new wave of crowd-sourced supercomputing and mobile monetization. He’s the co-founder of the start-up Hyv, which has built a platform for globally distributed computing. He envisions a world where users can not only use their devices for entertainment and communication, but also for social progress.

Conrad Kramer (17, Philadelphia, PA) taught himself to program at age 13, and hasn’t stopped since. He is currently working with 2014 Thiel Fellow Ari Weinstein to develop new types of productivity software for mobile devices, including DeskConnect, which allows users to seamlessly push websites, documents, pictures, and everything else to any device at any time.

Eliana Lorch (17, San Francisco, CA) struggles to carry out a conversation for more than five minutes before sidetracking into neural nets or math, either to explain to you what she’s been learning or to press you for your insights. She is passionate about exploring the outstanding results that deep learning has recently led to in computer vision and voice recognition.

Fouad Matin (18, McLean, VA) wants to drastically accelerate how we learn. He is building software to make learning technical skills more accessible and efficient.

M. C. McGrath (20, Boston, MA) is a former Boston University student working on Transparency Toolkit, which is open-source software that helps investigative journalists rapidly analyze documents without coding to uncover corruption, civil liberties violations, and human rights abuses.

Adam Munich (20, Buffalo, NY) is an inventor combining his interests in engineering and natural sciences to develop new technologies to mobilize radiography.

Catherine Ray (17, Alexandria, VA) has a passion for exploring the beauty of mathematics and applying its power to unsolved problems in various fields. She is currently focused on improving closed-loop detector adaptation in neuroprosthetics, computationally and mathematically modeling quasicrystaline patterns, and automating the behavioral classifications of lab-animal vocalizations.

Jarred Sumner (18, Lafayette, CA) wants to build tools that lower the barriers to entry for starting new companies. Previously, he built Selfstarter, an open-source DIY crowdfunding site that startups have used to raise $10,000,000.

Martin Stoyanov (17, Novi Pazar, Bulgaria) is developing software aimed to fundamentally change the way people consume email on the go by enhancing the UI of email inboxes to maximize time and efficiency.

Kaushik Tiwari (19 New Delhi, India) is working to improve health care. As a Thiel Fellow, Kaushik hopes to create a technology interface that changes the hospital-patient relationship and solves the problems of transparency and efficiency.

Ari Weinstein (19, Philadelphia, PA) is a software jail-breaker with a passion for making great software. He is working with fellow 2014 Thiel Fellow Conrad Kramer on new types of productivity software, including DeskConnect, which allows users to seamlessly push websites, documents, pictures, and everything else to any device at any time.

ABOUT THE THIEL FOUNDATION

The Thiel Foundation defends and promotes freedom in all its dimensions: political, personal, and economic. The Thiel Foundation supports innovative scientific research and new technologies that empower people to improve their lives, champions organizations and individuals who expose human rights abuses and authoritarianism in all its guises, and encourages the exploration of new ideas and new spaces where people can be less reliant on government and where freedom can flourish. For more information, see ThielFoundation.org, 20under20.org, and BreakoutLabs.org.

# # #

 

Blockchain is Back! Relaunches on Apple App Store, Completely Revamped Android Wallet App

Apple users and bitcoiners can now breathe a little easier. Six months after Apple removed the Blockchain wallet app from the App Store, Blockchain is back. The company made the announcement this morning, just days after the release of a completely revamped Blockchain Android app, which was initially unveiled at the North American Bitcoin Conference in Chicago.

When the original iOS app was banned by Apple in January there were over 1,000 news stories that covered the development. Apple seems to have gotten the idea. Although Apple has not directly stated their support of Bitcoin and other payment technologies, it seems they have changed their stance on the type of approved applications within the App Store. It is most definitely an important step forward for Bitcoin, but is also very exciting that Apple seems to be ready to accommodate future digital currency development. Today’s announcement further legitimizes Bitcoin and makes it possible for iOS users around the world to have access to Bitcoin applications. There is no need to smash your iPhone with a hammer.

Complete Redesign

So how does it look? You may remember that Rubik’s cube icon, but prior to the application’s removal, Blockchain was the most downloaded bitcoin wallet on iOS. The new Blockchain app has undergone a complete redesign with security and usability in mind. Users will notice an elegant and simple experience designed to make it easy for new and existing Bitcoin users. The team at Blockchain is excited to continue investing in iOS and reimagining how the world transacts.

Android user experience

During the North American Bitcoin Conference in Chicago, the company also unveiled the new Android application. Like the iOS application, this new version has been completely re-designed from the bottom-up. However, the Android version has a few more bells-and-whistles to provide the user. The new experience includes a wallet dashboard, transaction view, a location-based merchant directory, and more.

The user experience of the Android version has been far improved with the addition of the new features. To make it even easier, the new Blockchain app also integrates with the user’s address book. This enables the user to make peer-to-peer transactions whether or not the user has an existent Bitcoin wallet.

The in-app merchant directory is the first fully integrated Bitcoin merchant map. This exciting feature makes it easy for a user to find where to spend their Bitcoin based on their specific location. The directory utilizes geo-location to discover local businesses and shops that accept Bitcoin. Each of these additional features on Blockchain’s Android redesign have drastically improved user experience.

Changing how users interact

Both applications are changing how Bitcoin users new and old interact. With over 1.9 Million users around the world, Blockchain is working to make Bitcoin more accessible and easier to use for everyone. The goal is to take this vision to not five, ten or 20 million users, but to create simple and creative ways for users to interact so the company can achieve scalability of hundreds of millions of users.

 

DAC Sun Limited Launches first official Bitshares X Chain for Distributed “Trading” of Commodities and Stocks.

On July 19th, Bitshares announced that its Hong Kong-based partner DACS Unlimited is launching the first official, live Bitshares X chain. Bitshares X is the stock- and commodities-focused product of Bitshares, which aims to be a multipurpose platform for distributed versions of everything from insurance to music retailing.

This makes Bitshares, arguably, the first functional iteration of what’s known as a Distributed Autonomous Corporation – essentially, a distributed, centreless system much like the Bitcoin network, but able to execute commands more complicated than ‘buy’ and ‘sell,’ and with a wider variety of resources. That could mean this counts as a victory for Bitshares over its main conceptual competitor, Ethereum, a DAC platform that is still in the proof of concept phase.

However, there are some reasons to be skeptical of Bitshares’ implementation of the DAC concept for commodities and stock trading. I’ve had a few conversations with Bitshares founder Dan Larimer about how Bitshares-X gets these assets onto the blockchain, and what it boils down to is this: When you place buy or sell orders through Bitshares-X, the DAC matches you up to others that have a matching opposite order, but there’s no substantive requirement that anyone involved actually owns the asset in question. Traders have to keep digital currency on the chain that matches the value of any commodity they’re ‘trading,’ and all trades settle within the blockchain based on real-world market closings, but if you actually want to buy gold via Bitshares-X, you’re SOL.

Ultimately, this makes Bitshares-X a digital version of a bucket shop. These institutions, popular among the lower classes in the 19th and early 20th century, took bets on the movements of stock and commodities prices without actually being engaged in the stock market directly. You could certainly make the argument that even ‘proper’ options trading on Wall Street is little more than glorified gambling, but in the case of the bucket shops, and now Bitshares-X, that’s literally true.

Aside from the conceptual fudging behind calling this activity “trading,” whether it’s actually legal seems pretty murky – bucket shops are illegal in the United States, where Bitshares is based. If regulators have had so much trouble getting their head around the decentralized, nearly unregulatable trading of digital currency, how much of a tizzy are they likely to go into when people start trading unregulated stock derivatives?

On the other hand, this may be a transitional phase while Bitshares’ founders and community integrate their promising DAC technology into a more conventional infrastructure. After all, the stocks being traded on the NYSE aren’t particularly tangible, either – they just happen to be undergirded by a much more robust legal and social infrastructure. On the off chance that existing trading institutions let technology like Bitshares survive, DAC-based asset trading could be at least as revolutionary as Bitcoin itself.

#wearesatoshi

This is the feature article for Issue 20.

Explaining Bitcoin to a luddite is like explaining the plot of an action-drama movie. Failing exchanges! “Overnight” millionaires! Bank robberies! Drug-busts! World-changing innovation! Government espionage and fortunes made and lost! One of the most interesting aspects is the superhero-like protagonist: our system’s very anonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.

#themanbehindbitcoin

Satoshi Nakamoto is thought to be a pseudonym for the unknown “Father of Bitcoin”; in Japanese, Satoshi Nakamoto roughly translates to “thinking clearly inside the foundation.”1  For the purpose of this article, Satoshi will be referred to as a male.

His preference for privacy is his hallmark. He used e-mail addresses and web-sites that were untraceable. In 2009, he produced his famous white paper in flawless English and invited interested developers to assist him with improving his code, written in C++. In April, 2011, considering his work strong enough to pass onto others, he announced he was “moving onto other things” and has not been heard from since.2

Nakamoto’s desire for pure anonymity has been understood and should be respected; we live in a world where disruptive innovation that challenges the interests of governments and big business is eradicated. Just ask Julian Assange, Edward Snowden and Kim Dotcom, or the creators of e-Gold, who were charged with money laundering and the operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business and quickly shut down.3

Human nature is what it is. We love a great masked-crusader story, and some consider it natural to seek the truth4, no matter the consequence.  Many publications attempt to discover the man behind Bitcoin, including The New Yorker, Fast Company and Vice Magazine.  All failed, and the question remained: who is Satoshi Nakamoto? We ended up with a few clues: according to his P2P foundation account details, he is a 37-year-old male living in Japan. His choice of language is English, but his spellings and colloquialisms shift from American to British, meaning he could be more than one person.  When he responded to posts and e-mails, they would arrive at different times, meaning he could exist in different time-zones. What we do know is that Satoshi is highly intelligent, economically and mathematically brilliant, well-versed in cryptography, a capable (but not expert) programmer, and likely has a background in academia, as his white paper is written in an academic style.

Given what happens to disruptive innovators in today’s world, Satoshi Nakamoto had good reasons to stay anonymous. Developers who worked alongside him, and the community that flourished with his gift, largely respect this desire.  Even if personal safety isn’t what Satoshi is concerned with, and it’s more modesty, or dislike of attention, or just personal preference, Satoshi’s desire for privacy has always been clearly stated. It is ‘his’ wish. In the end, his identity should only matter to those who are looking to bring him down or hold him accountable to the actions they consider detrimental to their own way of life.  Apart from being unkind and disrespectful, it is simply dangerous to expose people of this magnitude.  The Bitcoin community respected this wish from the start. We didn’t dig much; rather we understood his/her/their desire and, understanding the uselessness of gossip, we turned our focus to Nakamoto’s incredibly innovative concept instead. As Eleanor Roosevelt famously said, “Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, and small minds discuss people.” Bitcoiners are idea-driven people.

#ourneedforbitcoin

Some of the world’s most brilliant minds are attracted to Bitcoin; even if they don’t particularly support it, they are intrigued by its development and growing pains.

We live in a world where people can simply vanish for speaking out against infrastructures, institutions, or governments we consider damaging to ourselves, our environment, and our way of life. Most discussions about Satoshi Nakamoto occur when explaining the Bitcoin story to new adopters: “You mean we don’t know who created it? How is that possible!” Yes, it is neat, isn’t it? When we agree with the intrigue of the anonymous creator and get back to the benefits of Bitcoin, the topic eventually disappears from discussion, and this is where the real magic begins.

We humans are truly incredible beings. We are so very capable of moulding the world around us into what we desire. We accomplish incredible feats by focusing our attention and power into what needs to be done – individually and collectively. It has been said that the catalyst for the ‘re’invention of digital cash (a.k.a. Bitcoin) was the horrific 2008/2009 American Subprime Mortgage Crisis and subsequent worldwide financial crisis5. Confidence in fiat (government issued) currencies came into question with practices like quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve and other central banks, private or public reserves, or governments themselves. Essentially, quantitative easing is economics lingo for ‘let’s create more money, thereby devaluing all existing money ever-so-slightly (this is what inflation is), and retain the newly minted money for our own use’ – usually to spend on propping up the economy. You can see how that would appeal to governments and central banks the world over. However, the public was soon witnessing major a European sovereign debt crisis and an all-out global recession, and it hit home.

Humans lost their houses, their pensions and their dignity, while the indifferent and ego-driven ultrarich “banksters” and instigators in the global meltdown collected their bonuses and watched their companies collect trillions of dollars in bailout funds.6  The complete lack of respect for the non-rich became more visibly apparent during this time. One example of this clear arrogance and lack of respect for human dignity was the infamous $50 ‘bonus’ by one Koch brother, a member of one of the of richest billionaire families in the United States – to his trusty doorman for a years’ worth of work.7 What is wrong with these people? Our lack of respect for each other seems to have reached a pinnacle.

However, some of us are awakening to the dangers of our current financial and banking infrastructure and policies, understanding that the systems we have in place are not sustainable, practical or beneficial to the advancement of humankind. The entire financial system seems, in oversimplified terms, to accrue a disproportionate share of all wealth to the richest and best connected. Niall Ferguson, in his book “The Great Degeneration”, explains that, since the 1970’s, real income (income adjusted for the effects of inflation over time) for the ever-shrinking middle class has gone unchanged at best and decreased at worst, according to how you crunch the numbers. In our western capitalist system, most wealth generated through the computer and internet eras has accrued to the wealthiest 1% and 0.1% of individuals, whose real incomes and wealth have risen up to 10 times in that same period. For example, if your family was moderately wealthy in the 1970’s, chances are you and your brood are now ten to one hundred times richer today, while your middle class brethren, on average, haven’t budged. Our system simply cannot continue as is without a very large number of people realizing that this is grossly – systemically – unfair. Where we once had a thriving and prosperous middle class, we now have an alarmingly large swath of society trapped as poor and working poor, alongside a stagnant middle class. There is potential and power in each one of us, but the fruits of our labours are being systematically sent to the the top, so the rich and ultra-rich can do whatever the rich and ultra-rich do to feed their collective materialism and ego. Thankfully, however, there are incredible human beings who choose to dedicate their time, energy and resources to pursuits other than materialism and ego.  Enter Bitcoin.

The Bitcoin community is filled with these types of individuals: people who work to build sustainable infrastructures so we may live in a win-win environment and support the matters in our lives that are of true significance: the environment, which sustains our physical bodies; safety and freedom from fear, which sustains our emotional and spiritual well-being; and access to knowledge and the pursuit of purposeful work, which sustains our incredible minds and souls.  The systems we knowingly or unknowingly choose to engage in now immensely limit our potential as individuals and society as a whole. They do not support the development of great minds.

#distractionfromwork

Part of the problem with our current global culture is the power of the media to distract us from the work that we need to accomplish to create win-win environments. We live in a world where Justin Bieber’s deposition video is our top trending topic; where we riot violently over lost hockey games and not over the inclusion of toxins in our personal care products8, dangerous Monsanto policies, or horrific acts of genocide or war that rage all over the world. Is it that we don’t care? Or is it that we are so distracted by the latest gossip that we are literally amusing ourselves to death?

Because we are feeling the pressure of our broken economic system(s), it’s becoming impossible to ignore the promise of something like Bitcoin. This innovation offers an alternative system – one that is a decentralized, network-based, cooperative way to transfer any amount of value, to anyone, anywhere, at anytime, and for a fraction of the current costs. In a world where Western Union is the most recognized logo, you can imagine the possibilities for cost-savings! The true potential of this innovation is for the 6 billion of the world’s poorest: the underbanked.

But, remember, we are distracted. Of 100 people personally polled, most people could not actually explain or define Bitcoin to me, but they could tell me all about how it “went bankrupt in Japan”, how “Bitcoin’s CEO committed suicide”, and how “the bank got robbed and they went under.” Like it or not, the majority of people are still convinced by 30-second television bits that focus on the 1% of “bad” news. And why would these news clips focus on anything else? Traditional journalism, after all, is geared towards selling copies, written by non-experts in the fields they generally report on, to a population of media consumers who expect ‘bread and circus’ from their media: shiney scandals, controversies, and flashy doom and gloom headlines; if it bleeds, it leads. Bitcoin challenges our current infrastructure and, on the whole, could stand to rewrite the rules on wealth distribution and wealth transfer. The hyper-powerful and ultra-rich owners/executives of both the financial sector and media9 do not support anything that challenges their position. They are afraid of what Bitcoin heralds: a disruption of their power base.

There is a lot of work that needs to be done to reverse the trend of wealth inequality, and distractions will always try to deter us. However, we must remain in constant effort to convert small minds to great minds and unleash the incredible potential in all of us. Focus not on what is served, bleeding, on the platter of conventional media, but instead seek to find true innovation and help improve the world in whatever way you can.

#distractionexample/newsweek

One such distraction that folds all of these issues together is the recent Newsweek article by American freelance journalist Leah McGrath Goodman and her team of forensic journalists. Newsweek itself is another sad story, exemplifying the folly of traditional media in the internet age. The magazine was recently purchased for $1USD in exchange for absorbing Newsweek’s considerable financial liabilities by the late Sidney Harmon, a pioneer in the audio speaker industry10. Harmon hoped to revive the magazine’s reputation as a source of quality information.  Leah and her team were assigned to the considerable task of regaining readership, and fast; the cover story was theirs to present to the world. They needed something that would get Newsweek flying off the shelves and create massive discussion. What was the most controversial, mysterious and misunderstood topic that would attract readers young and old, brilliant and distracted?

Bitcoin, of course. But it had to be accessible. Another story on “mining” doesn’t sell. The masses can’t grasp it. As we know from Facebook and Twitter analytics, celebrity sells. Gossip sells. And we humans have always had a fascination with masked characters. “Unmask Satoshi Nakamoto”, a little voice must have said. “It will sell.”

Leah’s search for the truth quickly trumped the desire for anonymity Satoshi Nakamoto expressed for years and is yet another clear indication that we are collectively failing to respect each others’ wishes, even when they are clearly and repeatedly expressed: “It’s natural to want to know who is behind Bitcoin, even if he is no longer involved. As a journalist, I thought I could clear it up.”  And on she went, just like so many others who exist in the world right now, with her outright disregard for Satoshi Nakamoto’s preference for personal privacy. It should be stated that her concern for his safety, given he is estimated to host a fortune equivalent to approximately $400M in bitcoin, was not a concern for her, either: “I’m the finance editor for Newsweek. I cover Wall Street.  The people that I write about buy penthouses and make a great deal more money than what we’re talking about with Satoshi.”12

The quest for truth is an honourable one, but at what point does it trump the value of respect for privacy?

#thenewsweekarticle

Leah moved forward. She and her team sifted through public and “archives that [Leah] doesn’t even use”11 “and “crossed off …all the leads we could find. We worked out all the possibilities and narrowed it down to the strongest lead.”11 Leah likens her investigative and forensic to a process of elimination: looking for reasons why one cannot be someone instead of looking for reasons why one can be. “It’s all about eliminating candidates… it’s looking for things that will cancel people out.”12 Their strongest lead was one Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto (born Satoshi Nakamoto), a Japanese-American, based in California.  It should be noted that Leah later defended her invasion of privacy by stating that all the information she published was “publically available”, even though she also expressed that working with her forensic journalist team gave her access to archives she was otherwise not exposed to.11

Leah attempted to speak with Dorian many times and failed. She reached out to his family members and eventually obtained Dorian’s e-mail address via a company who supplies Dorian with model train parts for a hobby he enjoys. She connected with him regarding his train hobby,  but when her questions shifted towards Bitcoin, he disconnected. Leah persisted, tracking down Dorian’s house through publicly-available means and appeared in his driveway, unannounced and clearly unwelcome. He immediately phoned the police, which she thought odd. Eventually, he emerged, looking “annoyed”. In their 30-second conversation – which was not recorded, by the way – he allegedly responded to Leah’s question about his involvement with Bitcoin by saying “I am no longer involved in that and I cannot discuss it. It’s been turned over to other people.  They are in charge of it now.  I no longer have any connection.”

Bingo. Newsweek had what they needed for their scoop. Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto was “undeniably” the creator of Bitcoin. All from an unconfirmed, unrecorded, offhand comment from a man with whom she had never before spoken in person.

According to Leah’s story, Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto (Satoshi Nakamoto) is an engineer, mathematician and a libertarian. He has no public record of being a cryptography expert, and he has a mediocre handle on the spoken English language. Dorian is notorious and obsessive about his privacy. Dorian enjoys the mountains, the sea, and model train sets. His brother mentions that Dorian and will never admit to “starting Bitcoin”. It makes you wonder: how many prank calls do you think that family received from bitcoin techies asking if he invented Bitcoin? We’re talking about some of the brightest minds in the tech sector. Chances are that with ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ contained within his full name, Dorian had been emailed, called, hacked, and stalked before; no wonder he called the police. Wouldn’t you?

Leah’s story dug deep into Dorian’s life.  It exposed personal health and financial problems, and also included a picture of his house, his car and his license plate. Leah wanted to craft an image for the world of a humble genius that created a landmark innovation. She did. She showed us everything about a ‘rich’ man so humble that he wouldn’t dip into his supposed $400M USD bitcoin stash to prevent the foreclosure of his house. On March 6th at 6:05 AM EST, her story was released to the public.

#inconsistencies&dorian’sresponse

The fallout from this “news” was loud. At first, many in the Bitcoin community challenged her accusations. Inconsistencies appeared immediately: if this man was so obsessive about his privacy, why would he use his own name? If this man had access to over $400M USD, why would he allow his family and his own health to suffer, to the point of a foreclosed house? If he is Japanese, why has Bitcoin never been translated into his mother tongue? The development of Bitcoin requires incredible comprehension of cryptography, which Dorian does not appear to have. The original Satoshi white paper is written in crisp, academic English, and Dorian’s English is not at that level. The inconsistencies continue13, and the strength of Leah and her team’s argument fell apart faster than the Lehman Brothers.

Dorian even disputed this accusation himself, telling the Associated Press “I’m saying I’m no longer in engineering. That’s it. And even if I was, when we get hired, you have to sign this document, contract saying you will not reveal anything we divulge during and after employment.  So that’s what I implied. It sounded like I was involved before with Bitcoin and looked like I’m not involved now.  That’s not what I meant.  I want to clarify that.”14

#initialfeedback

The Bitcoin community saw these discrepancies in her assertions immediately, and some conversation developed over the veracity of the argument. Dorian, who may or may not be the Satoshi Nakamoto, was unceremoniously forced under the public microscope by a reporter trying to fit a square Satoshi into a round Nakamoto. They also questioned her journalistic methods; Dorian was singled out by Newsweek as the last man standing with the correct name in a process that ruled out everyone else. The remaining discrepancies seem forced into place with flawed logic with the starting assumption that Dorian was guilty until proven innocent; the court of public opinion seems backwards in this case. However, these discussions died down quite quickly. Disappointment with the articles’ unnecessary and invasive details of Dorian’s private life quickly took its place via Twitter.

  • So you had to show a picture of his house and license plate when the man is worth a fortune.  Disgraceful.
  • Serious question: why would you post his address on the internet when you know he clearly wants to be left alone? Did you ever consider that posting his address, and that he has $400m could be a bad thing?
  • Why did you publish the photo of home & car? What did doing so add to the story? Was there any discussion of risk to Nakamoto?
  • Is there a reason why you needed to include such intimate details about this man’s life in the article?
  • Why don’t you post an article with a picture of your house, and your address, and tell everyone you have 400m inside?
  • Disgraceful invasion of Satoshi’s privacy. MOST UNETHICAL ARTICLE EVER. You ruined his life. You must be proud!
  • I wanted to know about the person, not what his home address was, his license plate, or medical issues.

Even those in the Bitcoin community who have been obsessed with discovering Nakamoto’s identity for years did not feel the answer was worth violating the privacy of a clearly very private person/entity. Michael Goldstein of the Satoshi Nakamoto Institute explained, “If someone was telling you they don’t want to be known, and you report a story about that person’s life and put up a picture of him and his home, that’s a bit f-cked up.”15

Of course, the bad-apples – which exist in every industry and community – resorted to vicious ad-hominem attacks, calling for Leah to be fired, and in one case, burned. Overall, the Bitcoin community’s voice was one of concern for Dorian Nakamoto’s well-being and safety, and deep disappointment over the lack of journalistic integrity by Leah and her team, especially with her knowingly and continuously invading the privacy this man so clearly desired and cherished.

Of course, some vitriol was spewed from Leah’s side, as well, accusing the community of being prepubescent. But even this back-and-forth childish ad-hominem attacks did not last long. We realized quickly that this reaction, this sensationalist publicity or “pressititution” was exactly what Leah and Newsweek had hoped to gain: attention.  So we turned our sights to what we do best: focusing on the positive. Andreas Antonopoulos, Chief Security Officer for Blockchain and noted Bitcoin entrepreneur and cryptography and security expert lead the way gracefully, with what great minds do best when it comes to gossip:  “Ignore them. Don’t feed the speculation.”

Within the hour, Andreas rallied the community together. “Let’s show them what the Bitcoin community is all about!” He created a charitable wallet, wherein our community could contribute whatever we could to send to Dorian Nakamoto to “say sorry” for all of this.

Donations began pouring in from around the world.  You see, for most of us in the community,  it doesn’t matter who the creator of Bitcoin is. It is irrelevant. We are ALL Bitcoin. Without all of us participating together, putting our faith and belief in this system, Bitcoin does not exist. It needs all of us working together, building and maintaining a trustworthy network to survive and thrive. We are all taking a chance on a new innovation that many won’t touch due to fear. And, just like Satoshi, we understand the potential risks of being involved in something that so boldly challenges our broken financial systems and current infrastructures. Together our community reinforces the importance of this technology and we keep each other focused on the end goal: adoption.

Our small minds, focused on the person, soon regrew to remembering the idea. We are all satoshi. Our Twitter names reflected this. A new hashtag, “#wearesatoshi” showed the world that our focus is not on who, but on what. And we are people who stand behind and support whomever needs it, whether it’s a student calling home for money17, the homeless18, or even a struggling man living in a humble home in California. In the end, this is what Bitcoin is about: coming together to empower one another and contribute to the earth each one of us deserve to enjoy.

Together, we are. By the end of March, Dorian Satoshi can expect a charitable gift from the Bitcoin community to the tune of approximately $20,000 USD19. If he declines it, it will be sent to a charity of his choice. If he does not choose a charity, it will be sent to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a not-for-profit that works to ensure that rights and freedoms are enhanced and protected as our use of technology grows.

Leah has not yet apologized for her lack of respect for Dorian’s request for privacy. She has not apologized for publishing his personal information, clearly knowing that was not his preference.  She says that Newsweek’s “graphics department” made the final decision on publishing pictures of his house, car, license plate and person.  Did she not take them? While It is admirable that Leah is so dedicated to finding – and eating – the truth, and we must remember the importance of respecting our fellow citizens, whatever their wishes may be. Leah, we respect your search for the truth, but we are very disappointed with your methodology and your inappropriate invasion of Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto’s privacy.  It was completely and utterly unnecessary.

Dorian: we, the Bitcoin community, are sorry for the hassle this investigation has put you through. Whether you are or are not the “real” Satoshi Nakamoto is irrelevant. We wish you all the best and hope that our contributions can help in whatever way you choose to receive or allocate them. Please do not align this experience with Newsweek with the Bitcoin community.

Satoshi Nakamoto: Whoever you are, thank you for what you’ve given us. It must be exciting to watch such co-operation unfold from your idea and the team you motivated to create.

Bitcoin community: there is more work to be done. Ignore the noise. Expect these distractions, but steer around them. Keep your blinders on. Follow the great minds that lead the way. We are changing the world, and we invite everyone who is willing to join us. Focus on educating those around you, bringing local businesses on board with the amazing benefits bitcoin offers, and otherwise developing your knowledge and increasing adoption anyway you can. Stick with other great minds, and let’s get to work.

 

Sources:

1. “Motherboard Motherboard.” Motherboard. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://motherboard.vice.com/en_ca/blog/who-is-satoshi-nakamoto-the-creator-of-bitcoin>.

2. “The Crypto-Currency.” The New Yorker. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/10/10/111010fa_fact_davis>.

3. “E-Gold Charged with Money Laundering.” E-Gold Charged with Money Laundering. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.securityfocus.com/news/11462>.

4. “Bitcoin Founder Unmasked? Newsweek Cover Story Author Stands by Story after Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto’s Denials.”CBSNews. CBS Interactive. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.cbsnews.com/news/bitcoin-founder-unmasked-newsweek-cover-story-writer-stands-by-story-after-dorian-satoshi-nakamotos-denials/>.

5. “The Definitive History of Bitcoin | Visual Capitalist.” Visual Capitalist. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.visualcapitalist.com/the-definitive-history-of-bitcoin>.

6. “Bailed out Banks.” CNNMoney. Cable News Network. Web. 18 Mar. 2014. <http://money.cnn.com/news/specials/storysupplement/bankbailout/>.

7. “Koch Brother Tips Doormen $50 FOR THE WHOLE YEAR at His Luxurious Park Avenue Building.” – Democratic Underground. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.democraticunderground.com/10021808930>.

8. “‘Dirty Dozen’ Cosmetic Chemicals to Avoid.”David Suzuki Foundation. Web. 19 Mar. 2014. <http://www.davidsuzuki.org/issues/health/science/toxics/dirty-dozen-cosmetic-chemicals/>.

9. “Who Owns The Media? The 6 Monolithic Corporations That Control Almost Everything We Watch, Hear And Read.” The Economic Collapse. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

10. Pompeo, Joe. “Newsweek Sells For $1 To Stereo Equipment Mogul Sidney Harman.”Business Insider. Business Insider, Inc, 02 Aug. 2010. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

11. “Bitcoin Founder Unmasked? Newsweek Cover Story Author Stands by Story after Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto’s Denials.” CBSNews. CBS Interactive, n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

12. “Leah McGrath Goodman CNN Interview.” YouTube. YouTube, 07 Mar. 2014. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

13. “The Newsweek Credibility Matrix.” The Newsweek Credibility Matrix. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

14. Press, By Tami Abdollah Associated. “LA Sheriff Backs Newsweek Quotes of Nakamoto Visit.” ABC News. ABC News Network, n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

15. Greenberg, Andy. “Outrage, Disbelief as Bitcoin Creator Outed.” MSNMoney. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

16. “As Anger Dies Down, Leah McGrath Goodman Continues to Defend Her Story.”NewsBTC. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

17. “The Verge.” The Verge. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

18. “Sean’s Outpost.” Seans Outpost. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

19. “Bitcoin.” Andreas: I’m Fundraising for Dorian Nakamoto :. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

 

 

Dogecoin Core Development Interview

Dogecoin, born in jest, is now serious business. A major payment processor already supports Dogecoin payments. This has opened up the coin to a huge selection of international merchants.

One such merchant is Hustler Magazine, which recently confirmed it would start accepting payments in Dogecoin.

Dogecoin is also being embraced by new exchanges, including those in the lucrative Chinese market.

Most importantly, the community seems as vibrant and passionate as ever. This is important. However, it matters little if there is no one maintaining the protocol and ensuring both the integrity and security of the network.

Fortunately for Dogecoin the core development team is equally as passionate. They are increasingly becoming recognised as one of the most active and productive core development teams in the space.

All eyes are on Dogecoin core development at the moment. Many thought leaders have directly challenged the ability of the coin to survive. Most notably, Litecoin creator ‘Coblee’ said Dogecoin was never meant to last. Also, Tim Swanson has been very analytical and critical of the economic model Dogecoin pursued and its implications for network strength and integrity.

We decided to give the Dogecoin core developers an opportunity to bite back (pun intended). We caught up with Dogecoin’s lead developer ‘langerhans’, to talk about the direction of this successful young coin.

1. What is your position in Dogecoin core development? How did you get into that position?

My position is lead developer. Basically this means I am responsible for advancing the development of the Dogecoin network and the Dogecoin Core reference client.

Doing that I try to keep a balance between the management part of it and actually working on it myself.

Lots of work is done by the team I am part of, for which I’m really thankful. The role was appointed to me already a few months ago by the founders of the coin. We got to know each other through reddit where I once pointed out a needed change for the client. From there I started working on it more and eventually I was made lead developer.

2. What is your training, experience and background?

I mainly work with Android, this is what caught my interest early on and is also what I do for a living. I did programming before as hobby and my education was mostly focused on CS. My experience with cryptocurrencies actually mainly comes from my work with Dogecoin, which I started by porting the Android wallet. I learned a lot while working on several Dogecoin related projects.

3. How many active contributors are there to the core Dogecoin code?

In the core development team, including me, we have currently four people from which three are the most active at this point of time. There is also the so called extended development team consisting of roughly 110 people. Not all of them contribute to the core client, but many are contributing either in code or in knowledge and advice.

4. What do you enjoy most about your work on Dogecoin core development?

If we are talking about the Dogecoin Core client, then it is the learning. As I said, I gained a lot of experience not only in programming, but also in managing the surrounding tasks of such an open source project – for example, managing the releases and the repository.

If we extend it a bit further I also enjoy the community very much. It was what got me started with it and it is what keeps me going. I got to meet many nice people and found new friends which I greatly enjoy.

5. Dogecoin started life in jest, but it now has significant momentum behind it. With the rapid expansion of the community, brand and coin, also the hope, real investment and sunk costs, are you feeling the pressure?

Well, there is pressure, not only by service providers, but also the community. They all depend on a stable platform for their currency and their services. This is what we are trying to build and maintain and I think we did a good job with that so far.

Our Core client is the most current one in terms of adoption of fixes from the Bitcoin codebase and we are overall very active developers. So yes, I can see the pressure, but it’s not affecting me in a bad way.

6. The Dogecoin community is passionate and active. After all the debate is done, who ultimately decides if any implementations or amendments to the coin are done? Who has the keys, so to speak?

We of course do continuously check what the community thinks. We then narrow it down through the development community to the core devs and ultimately it will be me as lead developer who “turns the key”. That is also the reason why this seems to be such a lengthy process. [There are] many options to be considered and analyzed.

7. Do you consider Dogecoin’s recent declining hashrate a threat to the longevity of the coin? What proposals are currently on the table, if any, for addressing this issue? What, if any, is the time frame for implementing a solution?

A low hashrate is a threat for every Proof of Work based coin that doesn’t implement special measures to mitigate possible attacks.

Dogecoin was brought to the market with an “expiration date” as the block reward schedule was made for about one year. That is basically the reason why we were already looking for solutions for quite some time.

The problem is that many of the solutions are either still highly theoretical or are deemed to be in an “Alpha” or “Beta” state. Some have technological issues, some have “political” issues.

After the venture of Litecoin’s creator into the Dogecoin subreddit, it seems that the implementation of the so called auxiliary proof of work is the most discussed one right now. While my recent reddit post about this may have seemingly implied differently, I’m not against this concept from the technical perspective.

Yet, we still want to make sure that if this is considered to be the option to go with, there are no oversights of any concerns with it.

8. Do you consider a 51% attack an imminent threat? Is securing the network a primary concern of your team?

It is a threat yes, but I don’t know the timescale in which it becomes feasible for an attack. The whole discussion currently happening is about the security of the coin. So yes, this is a primary, if not the primary concern.

9. Will Dogecoin merge mine with Litecoin?

I think the question is wrongly worded. The implementation of auxiliary proof of work does not mean “merging” the two coins.

It just happens that Litecoin is the coin with the highest hashrate on the scrypt algorithm. That means the Dogecoin network can accept blocks coming from their network, while securing it that way. Therefore I think the phrase “merged mining” is to be taken with a grain of salt.

Implementing AuxPoW is still on the table, yes.

The decision will be made sooner rather than later. Then it will be about finding the time to implement the chosen solution.

10. Where do you see Dogecoin in 1 year and 5 years?

Alive & kickin’ just like it did the last months. In one year I hope to see a stable currency that is is highly accepted and used by merchants and I still see the awesome community around it.

Five years is really hard to look forward to, as this is a whole lot of time in the cryptocurrency business. Every guess I’d take would be exactly that, just guessing. I do believe in Dogecoin and I hope to see it still around until then, maybe established as the currency of the internet which it aimed to become.

Cypherpunk Comic ‘Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’ to launch Crowdfund on SWARM platform

Alex Preukschat, Josep Busquet and José Ángel Ares García, the trio behind ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’the new Bitcoin Comic which previewed at CoinSummit and was recently written up on CoinDesk are gearing up to launch their project kickstarter style on the new SWARM platform which recently raised over $1,000,000 worth of Bitcoin in startup capital.

Preukschat says he wants to take 1,000 pre-orders of the comic before it goes to print and those who sign up will receive crypto-tokens from the SWARM platform in return for their donations allowing them access to perks and special offers in future like limited edition artwork cover for the comic books and T-Shirts.

Crowdfunding on a Bitcoin-only platform makes a lot of sense to Preukschat whose basic goal is to educate people about Crypto-currencies and introduce them to Bitcoin Cypherpunks roots.

To get more depth on the story, Bitcoin Magazine spoke with Preukschat to find out more about the new comic book and about the decision to float it on SWARM.

BM: What inspired you to write ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’?

AP: I believe that money is a fundamental tool of society and that it needs to be understood by as many people as possible to help create a better financial and monetary system. Money from my point of view can only be as good as the people using it and to achieve the highest possible quality money people need to be as educated as possible about its functions and characteristics. From my point of view Bitcoin is the ideal money to create interest in the whole subject. Our objective with the graphic novel is to transmit many of those educational aspects about money without people having to feel intimidated by finance or technology. We hope that people will share it with their friends, family, children and parents to share their passion about Bitcoin in an easy way and also to attract many more people from other communities to get people more interested in money and Bitcoin.

BM: How long have you been working on the comic, and how did you three distribute the workload?

AP: We started working on the comic book October 2013 and it will be published October 2014 in Spain. The workload has been very different during the creation process. Initially we worked a long time on the type of story we wanted to create. To do that we developed 5 different possible story lines and discussed the ideas with different Bitcoiners and between ourselves. At the end we decided to go for an adventure story to make the story interesting to all people and to integrate the relevant aspects of Bitcoin and money in the storyline so that everyone could understand the relevance of money and Bitcoin without too much effort. My work has been mainly in defining the script and we had a short break while José Ángel worked on the illustration, but in the final stages I had to work many hours to work through all the details we wanted to have included plus the annex we have created about the Bitcoin ecosystem. Participating in CoinSummit in London was a great opportunity because it was the first time we showed our product after 10 months of work and we did not know what to expect, but fortunately the welcoming has been great and our trailer video has been very popular.

BM: We’ve heard that there are hidden teasers throughout the story, can you tell us something about these?

AP: This is something I was mainly responsible enjoyed a lot and where Félix Moreno de la Cova, a Spanish Bitcoiner, also helped me to brainstorm for nice spots to place fun and interesting references to cryptography and Bitcoin. The main character of the story is called Bob and his girlfriend is Alice and many of other characters also have names related to cryptography. There are pages where Jeff Garzik and Gavin Andresen appear, the Shiba Inu from Dogecoin or KimDotCom from Mega setting up an account with his service while doing the NSA entropy game they offer when setting up an account. The idea is to make it fun for Bitcoiners to search and find the many references we have inserted in the book, but also to make it interesting for someone new to the space to read the book a second time and after having learned more about Bitcoin to recognize some of the many references we make.

A picture from the comic book

BM: What is your goal in joining with SWARM? What do you aim to get from it and what will investors in your comic book get out of it?

AP: We really like the SWARM team and think we are both very much philosophically aligned about how we see some aspects of how our worlds operates. They are as passionate as we are with their work and we like to work with people who have a sense of craftsmanship of what they do. We hope that we will be able to pre-sell 1000 copies for the English edition and some gather some funds to be able to participate in Bitcoin and comic conferences around the world to present the Bitcoin graphic novel we have created. We are also looking for contacts and introductions to quality publishers around the world to get the Bitcoin message to as many people as possible. We believe that the Bitcoin community and SWARM funders will benefit by contributing to the English edition that can be shared with family and friends to let them learn more about Bitcoin in an easy and relaxed way. We also believe that a graphic novel will contribute to the Bitcoin global branding in a positive way within a context where people don’t have to feel intimidated by technology and finance and just enjoy reading a cool story that introduces them to Bitcoin and money in a fresh way.

When Bitcoin Magazine approached SWARM for a comment on their planned initiative with BitcoinComic, Ben Ingram said: “When we first met Alex and he showed us ‘The Hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto’ we immediately knew we had to launch this on Swarm,   This comic will help to take Bitcoin to a new (and hopefully even younger) audience in a way that is fun. For those of us who are in the BTC community, it’s going to be a fantastic memento of this time, when Bitcoin is beginning to pervade general consciousness.  The book is beautifully illustrated, full of interesting nods to other seminal works.  Beyond the great book, Alex has a fantastic outlook on life and the future of Bitcoin, and his rationale for the years of labour that he and his team have invested is truly inspiring.   When explaining, why and his aims, he said to me “How can I tell my daughter in twenty years that we had some opportunity to help achieve financial freedom for our children, but instead we just sat by and watched.   I hope this book can help in some small way with the growth of the bitcoin cause”.

It’s a noble effort, and I can’t wait to get my hands on one of the limited and signed ‘founder editions’.   It is worth mentioning that via the launch on Swarm there will be a couple of opportunities available for a few individuals to be ‘drawn’ into the book, we expect these little slices of comic immortality to sell fast.   Please subscribe to the Swarm newsletter (via www.swarmcorp.com) to be notified of launch date and full launch details.”

@richardboase

Abstractly Represented Money: Introducing Metamoney

Part of this article appears in Issue 20

In his pocket, Joe has an old leather wallet. It contains enough banknotes to buy him a brand new wallet of a better model he saw in a magazine. This buying power is exclusive to him, who alone can use those bills to buy something. Likewise, if he transfers them to another person, then instead of him, only this other person will own their buying power.

However, although Joe’s transferring away his banknotes can always transfer along their control, it could never transfer along their whole property, which is not only his. The bills, as possibly distinct from their purchasing power, do not belong to him alone. For example, he has no right to create or destroy them: they are public. What belongs to either him or whoever else controls any such notes is rather their buying power, which hence is privately owned.

Indeed, by always just privately owning his banknotes, Joe could sell them independently of their purchasing power, which they could not represent. However, selling them in this way would prevent him at least temporarily from using the same bills to buy anything. Then, by recognizing their lost purchasing power as a monetary value, for keeping which they must remain its representations, one can conclude:

  1. All monetary value must be private.
  2. All its representations must be public, or unsellable.

Still, if not Joe, then who else can sell, buy, create, or destroy his or any equivalent banknotes? This question should be negligible if what he owns is their monetary value rather than the bills themselves. However, since the purchasing power of each bill can change once people sell, buy, create, or destroy other such bills, the same question becomes critical. Indeed, part of its answer is that now commercial banks create most of the money supply by selling it, in a process called fractional-reserve banking.

Commercial Banking

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago,1 this is how fractional-reserve banking originated:

Then, bankers discovered that they could make loans merely by giving their promises to pay, or bank notes, to borrowers. In this way, banks began to create money.

Bankers also needed, however—and still need—to keep, at any given time, enough money to provide for expected withdrawals: “Enough metallic money had to be kept on hand, of course, to redeem whatever volume of notes was presented for payment.”

Hence the name “fractional-reserve banking”: commercial banks must hold a fraction of all deposit money as reserves—which legally (since 1971) need no longer be “metallic money” but only a public debt—to meet withdrawal expectations: “Under current regulations, the reserve requirement against most transaction accounts is 10 percent.”

In a fractional-reserve banking system, on which most of today’s international economy relies, commercial banks create money by loaning it, hence as a private debt.

Transaction deposits are the modern counterpart of bank notes. It was a small step from printing notes to making book entries crediting deposits of borrowers, which the borrowers in turn could “spend” by writing checks, thereby “printing” their own money.

For example, once a commercial bank receives a new deposit of $10,000.00, 10% of this new deposit becomes the bank’s reserves for loaning up to $9,000.00 (the 90% in excess of reserves), with interest yet without withdrawing the loaned money from the source account. Likewise, if that maximum loan of $9,000.00 does occur and the borrower deposits it into another account, whether in the same bank or not, then again 10% of it becomes the latter bank’s reserves for loaning now up to $8,100.00 (the 90% now in excess reserves). As always, the bank charges interest on the loaned money despite not withdrawing it from the source account. This process could proceed indefinitely, adding $90,000.00 to the money supply, valuable only as their borrowers’ resulting debt: after countless loans of recursive 90% fractions from the original deposit of $10,000.00, that same deposit would have eventually become the 10% reserves for itself as a total of $100,000.00.2

Thus through stage after stage of expansion, “money” can grow to a total of 10 times the new reserves supplied to the banking system, as the new deposits created by loans at each stage are added to those created at all earlier stages and those supplied by the initial reserve-creating action.

Yet how can credit alone create new money? How can a debt retroactively create its owed money? Something else must be happening here, in addition to mere loans. What is it? What else happens in the whole process of commercial banking? First, there is a deposit. Then, there is a loan of up to a fraction (of 90%) of this deposit, at interest yet which the bank never withdraws from the source account. Finally, the borrower can credit that loan to another account, in the same or any other bank. Suddenly, the trillion-dollar question emerges: are these two accounts sharing the same value?

  • Regarding deposit money the answer is yes: the loan can still belong to the balance of the source account, consequently being that same deposit money.
  • Regarding account balances the answer is no: the loan can also belong to the balance of the target account, consequently being additional deposit money.

However, if the partial balances of both accounts must represent the same deposit money, then how can they duplicate it?

Privately Public Money

Distinguishing the letter “a” from its verbal sound would prevent this visual representation of that word. Likewise, distinguishing a banknote from its exchange value as money would prevent this concrete representation of that value.

The resulting indiscrimination between a representing entity and what it represents must happen to all representations of something dependent on them by something independent from them. Indeed, the letter “a” does not depend on its dependent word, or a banknote on its dependent trade value as money. Likewise, bank accounts do not depend on their dependent balance, nor precious metals on their dependent buying power. Anything that depends on being represented by something independent from representing it becomes indistinguishable from that representing entity.

Additionally, only by being concrete can objects remain independent from what they represent, which they always do. Hence, each alphabet letter, banknote, precious metal, bank account, or other self-independent representation, even if just imagined, must be concretely objective. While conversely, because money depends on its own representation, all its concrete representations must remain indistinguishable from their monetary value, despite this value and those representations being always respectively private and public.

So letting money concretely represent its own exchange value is inherently problematic: the resulting indistinction between this concrete money and that privately owned value must privatize its otherwise public representation of the same value. Consequently, all such purely objective representations of money will require an impossibly privatized control of their still necessarily public, unsellable selves, whether by their private owners publicly selling, buying, creating, or destroying them.

Even so, Joe still privately controls the exchange value of his always public banknotes. Indeed, people have long expressed that value concretely, with not only banknotes but also countless other objects, including precious metals and bank accounts. Yet how could they do it? How did they solve the ownership conflict inherent in any such privately public representations of money? How could each concrete representation of money be both private and public? The solution was to delegate its privatized ownership to a public monetary authority.

People had no other choice: any privatized ownership of a still necessarily public entity can only consist in the privatizing delegation of its public ownership. Then, all resulting delegates will constitute one same body administering or governing this public entity: the state or government, part of which must privately control any object that concretely represents money.

However, the private and public ownerships of one same thing are still mutually exclusive. Hence, the public authority that results from privately controlling all concrete representations of money must rather be private. Eventually, this conflict will segregate all administration of money by governments into a privatized part of their public selves: a central bank. Indeed, any privatized power could only remain public as long as just part of it became private. So the same governments will become private by delegating all their control over money to that private part of themselves, which conversely will remain public just by belonging to them.

Finally, regardless of government structure, concrete objects can only represent money by remaining privately public, hence while still privately owned by the public part of governments, even if also by their central banks. For which to be possible, any government already privatized into its own central bank must create this always privately public money by borrowing it from that bank. Then, this government not only buys the created money from its privatized inner self, as which it reciprocally sells it to its public whole, but also destroys that money by paying it back to its lender bank, if ever. While conversely, that central bank becomes the original creditor of all this privately created, publicly loaned money, of which it must create ever more to enable paying its interest. As thus, with the resulting inflation and recursive interest payments, the same bank owns an ever-increasing fraction of the exchange value of all its issued money.

Still, even in the absence of any central bank, once commercial banks create money by loaning it to people who then use that money to buy public debt, or even just pay taxes, governments already borrow their money from the banking system, despite indirectly. Then, the partial privatization of those governments only lacks a formal, institutional expression.

Central Banking

So bank accounts must be as indistinguishable from their deposited money as any such concrete representations are indistinguishable from the money they represent. Hence two deposits in different accounts being always different money, even if one is just a loan of money from the other: when depositing money borrowed from one account into another, people must duplicate that money, by mistaking it for both accounts.

Additionally, since all money created by commercial banks remains as just balance fractions borrowed from their client accounts, that money must be worth only as credit, or as the corresponding debt principal. This way, except for money neither in reserves nor loans—and possibly not even in bank accounts, thus not being excess reserves—but not from loans, bank loans are the only money supply left for paying their own interest. Consequently, such an interest-paying, self-indebted money supply must grow at least at its own interest rate less any other money also excluded from bank reserves: eventually, whether as loans or not, the total money supply must increase exponentially.

However, who does then create all needed new money? Before central banks, governments would have done it. Later, each new central bank has created ever-increasing amounts of that money on behalf of its government. Indeed, since the source account of any bank loan could have been the target account of other such loans, from which it would be then indistinguishable, banks can always replace that source account by debt instruments, including some representing a public debt. So by becoming central banks, they can create new account money in exchange for promises from their governments of paying it back with interest, essentially the same way they replicate part of that money in exchange for promises from their commercial clients of paying it back with interest. However, paying the additional interest on this new money, now created as a public debt will demand still more money. Then, the same banks will—as they always did—create ever more money from new public debt for paying interest on both private and old public such self-indebted money.3 This way, all new money created as a private or public, interest-paying debt must recursively amplify any lack of itself initially solved by central banks creating still more of it.

The result is an exponential growth both of the money supply and the debt it represents, then a proportional, ever larger transfer of exchange value to the banks through inflation and interest payments, respectively, which must collide with social-resource limits. Constructively delaying this collision depends on a corresponding increase in the social production of wealth, which must rather collide with natural-resource limits.

Are there any alternatives to such an unsustainable economic system?

Abstractly Represented Money

Unlike the symbol for a verbal sound, its audible self cannot become indistinguishable from what it means. For example, the sound of the word “everything” cannot already be everything and still mean it. Unlike its visual representation, that sound is not recognizable independently of meaning something else, from which it hence must always be distinguishable.

Still, verbal sounds are not the only meaningful entities always necessarily distinguishable from their meaning. There are also public representations of a privately known entity. For example, the number three could represent a single, just possible number to every person while representing the actual number five only to Joe.

Then, people could publicize a number (like five) as referencing another, private one (like three) without ever publicizing this private (the five-like) number as conversely referencing that public (the three-like) one. Public-key cryptography does precisely that: it uses two numbers or keys of which, although either number means the other, only the private key can reveal its corresponding public key. This way:

  1. Any content encrypted using the public key can only be decrypted by someone who also knows the private key.
  2. Any content signed using the private key can still be authenticated by someone who only knows the public key.

Using public-key cryptography, people can finally avoid privatizing their public representations of money, by representing any exchange value as a private key then representing this private key, or metarepresenting its represented value as the corresponding public key. For example, the Bitcoin decentralized network uses public-key cryptography to build signature chains, each link of which represents a balance transfer, or transaction. In Bitcoin, transferring the balance of one public key to another consists in combining the target key with the transfer that resulted in that balance, then signing this combination with the source private key. After which, any holder of the source public key can authenticate this new transfer as originating from whoever could sign it—necessarily by holding the source private key.

Then, money becomes a privately-signed yet public transaction chain despite never becoming itself public. For the first time in history, representing an exchange value (as a private key) does not require privatizing its publicly representing object (the corresponding public key). With such a metarepresented money, or metamoney, a public abstraction (a public key) can represent an exchange value (that of a private key) without ever becoming itself private—which makes its privatized control by any public authority not only unnecessary, but also impossible.

Indeed, publicly expropriating money, whether by selling, buying, creating, or destroying it, requires privately controlling its publicly representing object, which then must be concrete. On the contrary, abstractly representing that money prevents all privately public authorities from having any control of its representing object, then from necessarily expropriating an increasing fraction of its exchange value. While conversely, to avoid this privately public, hence increasingly expropriating control, each object representing money must be abstract—like a public key.

Finally, to be centralized—in a government or central bank—a public monetary authority must privately control what represents money, which then must be a concrete object. While conversely, to control an abstract representation of that money, this public authority must become decentralized—in a metamonetary system, like Bitcoin.


  1. Dorothy M. Nichols. Modern Money Mechanics. 1994. Written in 1961. Revised in 1968, 1975 and 1992.
  2. After twelve recursive loans of 0.9 excess in reserves each, a $10,000.00 deposit would have already become $10,000.00 × (1 − 0.912) ÷ (1 − 0.9) = $71,757.0463519.
  3. For a unified explanation of why money becomes a both private and public debt, please read the book Representational Monetary Identity.

To Dream Of Bitcoin

Ancient Greek philosophers learned the importance of dreams: that dreams tied into our reality somehow, but notably that we must first dream of something before we can make it reality. Man told stories and dreamed of flying to the moon, and then with dreams created for generation after generation, we achieved it.

man walks on moon

Marked by Neil Armstrong’s famous words “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Bitcoin was a dream, the want and need for change, born from a desire burning in everyone. For if what Bitcoin brings and promises was not what we all desired, then surely, for whatever our reasons, we would not be drawn to it as we are.

For many of us the start of the internet was around 1995-1996, though it was birthed much earlier than that through the ARPANET, and dreams before that of radio and telecommunications (telegraphy). The list can go on, but it all seems to carry the same theme, better and faster communication with other people. The dream in this case could be understood to be reaching towards a type 1 civilization form of communication (see: The Kardashev Scale), in that we use the planet’s energy to facilitate communication, radio waves, internet. What can be seen from our history is that anything which enables us to travel and communicate more efficiently with each other, whether personally, business and especially within the financial world, tends to have long lasting effects.

But then here I like to draw a line, which leaves everything we knew behind and brings Bitcoin, most notably, the Protocol, in a new level of understanding and ordering of society. What is the dream of Bitcoin? Is it to be a new type of money, to coincide with fiat, or replace it? And then there are those of us that point out at each opportunity that the Protocol is more than just ‘Bitcoin’ the currency, and that we have not seen anything yet.

For some the dream is a ‘get rich quick’ scheme; the scammers and thieves and hackers that they tell you about, similar to bogey men – “if you’re not careful they’ll come and get you!” Except in this case, it’s very true (you should always enable 2fa and keep security in mind); there is wiretransferunfortunately this unwanted element of society that is attracted to Bitcoin.

All new and old in the bitcoin sector should remain wary of interacting with PayPal with regards to bitcoin; there are many tales of people being scammed through PayPal.

Yet it can be said, same as all previous valuable commodities and monies, silver, gold, diamonds and similar, have been made targets by pirates, bandits, crooks and criminals. It can be argued that this is a tried and tested way to tell that something is working, and this particular thing may be worth looking into and keeping tabs on.

The Alternative?

Is the dream an alternative to the current banking system and economic dilemma? A solution to an escalating global dilemma through an amazing technological achievement, as some argue. At the moment, people mostly look on it as a different form of money; wait until more people realise that it (the protocol) can be used for so much more – it is internet phase 2.0.

When we think about the internet as a tool for communication on an energy (radio waves) basis, and through this form of communication, we can discuss, offer trade, and give services. However, we never had a tool to transfer wealth or assets through this amazing form of communication.

Cryptocurrency fills this gap. The dream of transferring wealth across the planet in the same way was finally achieved in 2009. Credit cards and the fiat system were never designed to operate over the internet; how they have existed has just been a band-aid on a far more technologically advanced system.

For example, introducing the printing press is comparable to introducing the internet, an upgrade from fiat money to digital. And as we know, we introduced paper (cotton) money with the printing press, and Bitcoin is the next stage evolution of introducing digital money with digital communication. So is the dream one of communication in finance and business? Many are the complaints of the time delays and errors when using the traditional wire transfer model. Add the costs with complications of the traditional financial system and potential for fraud, we can see why a dream of a better system has come about.

Another angle that has been brought up occasionally is the political spectrum.

When it is time, after a certain amount of global adoption, a political party will fully adopt Bitcoin and entrench it within their mandates. The start of a significant societal evolution will quickly follow the political evolution, and it will be most interesting to witness.

What would a traditional political party be with full transparency of political accounts? What if the law was that any donations not identified on the Blockchain had to be sent to charities and to public sector services. And any funds a party sends through a tumbler is also enforced by law to be sent to a charity, and likely the party would be held suspect by the people.

And we, the people, can all view the Blockchain, whenever we want.

The emerging business sector, and additional business and banking for all the unbanked (estimated in the billions), they have their own dream now made possible with Bitcoin.

From time to time it comes up in a discussion whether in person, on forums, or via other means of communication. What are the intentions of Bitcoin and the Protocol, or rather, what were the intentions of the creator for the tool that was made?

Community & Charity

Unintended consequences are always on the mind of the long term planner. Witnessing the developing altcoin phenomena, we can see that charity and the feeling of community seems to be rather paramount. The potential for a thousand people to give as little as they wish, the equivalent of pennies (or cents if you’re that way inclined) to benefit those in need, such as Sean’s Outpost that works for the homeless, or as the recent charity drive for the wrongly accused Dorian Nakamoto shows, funds can be raised quickly and directly in support.

Dorian fundraiser

The potential for charity work is world changing. Being able to give funds directly to an individual who has suffered through a disaster would enrich people the world over. Could it be said that it is a dream of sons and daughters the world over who often send money to relatives or friends, that it could be done with such ease and zero to little expense (admittedly a tiny bit of expense if you include a transaction fee, which is generally recommended to support the miners).

Recently a friend linked a YouTube video – Solar Freakin’ Roadways is the title. And yes, you guessed it, it is about solar freakin’ roadways. Following was a discussion about how such a thing could be operated with a Cryptocurrency payment system in a decentralised manner. A particular roadway could consist of a number of individuals paying for panels as a group or individually (all manner of kickstarter and crowdfunding emerging these days). This particular project fundraising via kickstarter ended on June 20th and raised over $2 million.

Imagine decentralised ownership, users providing a toll road payment via Bitcoin or another relevant Cryptocurrency, and this fee being distributed automatically amongst all the ‘shareholders’. And each shareholder would of course be gaining a return from the solar energy that was being distributed to the local area.

solarroad2

And if a combined project like this was worked out to be profitable, then it would see exponential growth, and this may go quite a way to solving energy problems, every roadway turned into a solar panel. Direct payment and distribution made possible by Cryptocurrency.

Personally I did not even imagine such a concept as solar roadways until a friend linked the video. It makes me wonder what else we can dream of that is just around the corner.

Freedom

For many on the liberalist economic side, the concept of a peer2peer finance system independent from the machinations and influences of bank and government is the ‘dream of freedom’, and what is freedom but the ability to control one’s own destiny.

Though we can have our liberty taken or hindered by a myriad of alternative methods, financial freedom is often looked at as a key factor to achieving this long sought after freedom.

Through traditional and current financial systems, the exclusion of individuals, or even whole countries, such as UK with regard to Iran:

Iran is currently subject to financial sanctions. This document contains the current list of designated persons relating to proliferation sensitive nuclear activities.
~ HM Treasury

And even governments may soon understand the power of freedom of finance behind bitcoin and Cryptocurrency. As tensions heat up in Ukraine, Visa and Mastercard obeyed the western powers and blocked Russian transactions and key individuals, with the west using economic strangleholds to try to force Russia to back out of Ukraine as it tears itself apart.

Recent legal changes within Russia, requiring “foreign credit operators will have to pay a fee of 25 percent of average daily turnover to the (Russian) Central Bank” – and that from July 1st (2014) “Visa and MasterCard can no longer block Russian clients.”

As to whether or not Visa and MasterCard will obey the recent Russian laws with regards to servicing Russian clientele remains to be seen. And would they (Visa/Mastercard) counter play against the estimated $1.9 billion for Visa and $1 billion for MasterCard that will come from the 25 percent fee by raising fees for Russian clients?

Is the dream of financial freedom for individuals and for governments moving closer to a reality? Within the last year the Russian central bank has gone from ‘banning’ bitcoin to a recent statement from the central Russian bank that they may now ‘legalise’ bitcoin.

Note: No government in the world has (yet) made a law or even stated that trading in Bitcoin or other Cryptocurrency is illegal.

Banks have strong influences, more so in some countries than others, but in no country in this world do banks have the power to create law at whim; they cannot simply say “Bitcoin is banned!” and have it banned in their respective countries.

Banks do not create laws; they can lobby, and undoubtedly they have considerable weight when influencing laws, but there is a process that must be adhered to.

China banks ban bitcoin

As Russia is discovering with the recent financial sanctions levied against their country, the dream of freedom, freedom from control for individuals, businesses, or for governments, is not just for us but for the masses that rail at the rat maze that the banks hold us in.

The emergence of global trade through financial freedom (Cryptocurrency) will be followed by trading freedom, and a new surge in economic growth. The growth of the internet has been strangled by inflation and the implementation of a transfer of wealth system that was not created with the internet in mind.

Adoption of digital currency will enable someone from anywhere in the world to accept micro-payments, or more, from anyone else in the world without the need for an intermediary. When one person in Africa (or elsewhere) can receive funds directly for work or services without the loss of such funds through using a third party traditional sector, it will mean that there is a lot more wealth flowing freely around the world instead of being stolen and funneled to the select few.

We may be years away from such a realisation, but the dream is there.

Application

Bitcoin the “currency” is just the first application of Blockchain technology. And it would become understood that this first integration of such a technology was inevitable considering its precursor and the global economic status at the time of its emergence.

The open source nature enables applications of Blockchain technology that can be recognized in other scenarios, such as the world’s first virtual truly democratic voting system. Not only will every voice be heard on an issue, and that voice verified by cryptography, there will not be a need for congregations of people, who often seem to lead us into war.

When an issue arises, and we are able to vote with a cryptographically secure system, giving a simple yes, no, maybe, within such a short time, from home, from our phones, from a library or anywhere that has an internet connection, then the application of Blockchain technology with regards to politics and virtual democracy be realised.

There are almost as many cell-phone subscriptions (6.8 billion) as there are people on this earth (seven billion)—and it took a little more than 20 years for that to happen.
~Quartz

The amount of funds spent on security for votes would be cut astronomically, and the trust in the system (when people understand how secure it would be) would enable the people to truly be represented.

Visit your local government website. An issue has popped up, you have a given amount of days to cast a vote: send your Votecoin to the relevant address for Yes or No.

And I hazard a guess that any current political party or potential party or individual that pushes for a 100% transparent and much more inclusive system would gain many votes from a despondent voting populace.

The potential is out there, and there are very likely implementations we have not considered yet. Whilst other dreams and innovations are often hindered by a lack of funding or monopolizing and ‘buying out’, with Bitcoin is not only the dream of an alternative financial system, legal, political and business, but the decentralization factor lends itself to the dream of the incorruptible, a system of control and rules that is proactively inclusive, meaning that it pulls you in, sooner or later; its time has come.

And what of other applications?

Depending on how you are inclined you might not be dreaming of new businesses but of new opportunities for current businesses. Marc Andreessen and Balaji Srinivasan state numerous methods of integration for improvement: “…clearly the way to fix email spam was to have there be a micro charge for every message sent…  20 years ago we were talking about this  idea we just had no way to implement the payment.”

Remember, this is not just about Bitcoin as a currency, or even Bitcoin as a transfer of wealth. This is truly about the technology itself and its myriad potential of applications.

Another beautiful thing about it is, is that the initial application of currency in the form of Bitcoin will fund all the other applications that are to come. Each application is a dream of doing something different, something better.

A Dream Of Peace

One of the arguments about an inflationary currency that can be created out of whim by governments and banks is that it provides a limitless supply of finance for war.

Limitations in financial resources for governments act as a tether, a restraint. For if they (governments) were normally to divert their financial resources into providing funding for their war machines, then they would be left short of financial resources to provide for their country; their military expansions would be limited.

Empires and military expansions tend to only be possible through inflation of the currency, to be able to afford to pay for extra troops. And this inflation means that they have to pay their current troops even more money to rise with inflation and keep their armies happy.

A similar pattern of the contemporary world can be found in the dust of the Roman Empire.

This is a self defeating prophecy that can only be stretched out by inflating the currency to its breaking point.

Once the breaking point is reached, society collapses.

It now costs the government about two cents to make a one cent piece, so the penny could be considered a commodity coin.
~ The Coming End of Fiat Currency.

If governments were not able to inflate their financial resources (Quantitative Easing) to ridiculous levels, or even at all, then logic dictates that there would be less war, if war would occur at all.

With a limited financial resource, what country would risk the ire of their populace by squandering the limited finance on their war machines? It seems logical that they would instead reinvest the funds they do have, within their own country, to create a return that would enable them (the country) to keep functioning. And by these acts, the politicians are more likely to keep their positions.

Also, it can be argued that within a finite system of finance, politicians and government officials who make the best use of the funds available are likely to serve longer terms and provide their society with a much better return for their money (taxes), instead of printing to oblivion to make up for the failures of the various political parties by attempting to plug the gaps in their own national systems.

Though some argue that the excessive printing of monies is doing exactly what it is meant to do, allowing the 1% to buy up as much land and property as they can before the inevitable financial collapse, so that they can turn around and sell these properties to the next generation in the form of life debts.

In the UK, the Bank of England began its “asset purchases” in January 2009.
~ BBC News

Translation: The Bank of England is spamming its Print Money button and buying up as much property and land as it can ASAP.

Is this a massive land and property grab before the fiat economy collapses?

Bitcoin Payment Protocol Explained

What do you do with bitcoin? Why, you spend it of course! Or more precisely you pay for something or some service using it. The specific process to pay using bitcoin is called the Bitcoin Payment Protocol and it is codified in a document called BIP70.  A BIP is a Bitcoin Improvement Proposal and is one of the mechanisms used by the Bitcoin “core developers” to improve Bitcoin.  There are all sorts of BIPS on lots of great topics but let’s not get diverted. Go to: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/  and check them out yourself.

Now back to BIP70 the payment protocol. The description is at: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0070.mediawiki and is the basis for the technical content  of this article. The abstract of the payment protocol states:

This BIP describes a protocol for communication between a merchant and their customer, enabling both a better customer experience and better security against man-in-the-middle attacks on the payment process.

Note that a man-in-the-middle (sometimes abbreviated MITM) attack is when a customer connects to a merchant, and it turns out that the customer is not really talking to the merchant. Rather the customer is talking to a man sitting in between (in the middle) the customer and the merchant. This “man” can see all of the traffic going between the customer and the vendor and is thus able to get the usernames, passwords and credit card info and all that sort of personal stuff, by imitating the vendor.  With a good imitation the customer will likely be none the wiser. MITM attacks are insidious and technologies (such as the BIP70 payment protocol) to prevent them are important.

Let’s break down the concept of a payment protocol.  First, a “payment” is the transfer of value from one individual to another. Second, a “protocol” is a specific process or sequence of messages that must take place in a particular order. As part of the process certain “conditions” might need to be validated for the process to run to successful completion. Sometimes a condition is not met and the process aborts or returns an error message, but the protocol itself should be able to handle all of these conditions, making it a “robust” protocol.

A payment protocol is a sequence of messages between the customer and the vendor, in a particular order, with an expected set of responses, or acknowledgements that are part of the messages.  Let’s look at a particular set of messages that I will call the “passing in the hallway protocol” (PITHP). If you work in a building and happen to pass by colleagues, it might go something like:

  1. Sandy says:  Hey Sharon, how’s it going?
  2. Sharon says: Hi Sandy, fine fine, and you?
  3. Sandy says: “same old, same old”

and we’re done, exciting ayee?

That simple “passing in the hallway protocol” was a sequence of messages passed from one person to another in an expected order. Of course things might not go as expected in which case additional condition handling messages might be needed.

  1. Sandy says: “Hey Judy, how’s it going?”
  2. Judy says: “Hi Sandy, did you get me that status report yet?”
  3. Sandy says: “Yes, I sent it yesterday, but let me check, darn email is acting up”
  4. Judy says: “I need it by close of business today.”
  5. Sandy says: “No prob. I’ll resend it.”

The code that implements the protocol must deal with all the various types of exceptions and conditions that can happen. ALL of them.

There is very informative illustration in BIP70:

bip70

Note that the customer sends messages to the merchant, however two other entities come into play. First the bitcoin wallet application itself, and the bitcoin network. You read the illustration from top to bottom which denotes the specific sequence  of messages.  The diagram however does not specify all of the possible options that the code must handle. For example, if the merchant server does not respond with a “PaymentRequest” message then the customer must do something such as repeat the “pay now?” message or abort the whole transaction.

Let’s walk through the diagram in plain english:

The customer clicks on a “pay now” button which sends a message to the merchant server. The merchant server requests a payment from the wallet application (belonging to the customer). The wallet application asks the customer, “are you sure you want to authorize this payment?” To which the customer clicks, “OK”, sending a message to the wallet application. The wallet sends the payment to the merchant and possibly at the same time it initiates a transaction to the Bitcoin network. The Bitcoin network does its transaction thing, causing the merchant to receive bitcoin. The merchant server acknowledges the payment sending a message to the wallet, and finally (optionally) the wallet sends a message back to the customer.

A very thorough, yet quite understandable, explanation of the details of the payment protocol was authored by Mike Hearn and is available at:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=300809.0   There are a LOT more details to the payment protocol I would simply suggest keeping in mind that the point of the protocol as stated in the BIP70 abstract, is to make for a better and more secure customer experience. As more wallets and merchants provide more complete support for the payment protocol, we will all benefit.

 

Vocabulary Context Is The Reason Bitcoin Isn’t Deflationary

I hope to set a Bitcoin Magazine record for most succinct argument here, as my profession has an uncomfortable obsession with efficiency. I study economics because I like teaching at the University level, and because I want to improve the field. Here’s how the community can help.

Coin enthusiasts often struggle at convincing economists and academics that Bitcoin is interesting, and that’s largely because the community is misusing many economic ideas.

At the forefront of this is the misuse of the notion of a deflationary currency. Deflation is a decrease in the prices of goods, and yes as prices fall each unit of money is worth more in terms of how much it buys. This is not something that is unique to Bitcoin, it’s a property of any type of money.

When we refer to changes in the price of one currency (or an aspiring one like Bitcoin) in terms of another ($), we should be referring to either depreciation or appreciation:  Bitcoin has been strongly appreciating (gaining relative value) against the dollar since its birth. So coinheads have been eager to hold on to their Bitcoin not because of deflation, a change in the price of goods, but because of its eager history of appreciation against the almighty dollar.

Second off, let’s all remind ourselves that Satoshi’s paper only mentions the word currency once in regards to physical currency like fiat. He refers to the protocol as a payment system, which is of course different from a currency. A currency is a store of value (among other purposes), and we all need to be honest with ourselves that Bitcoin, while striving to achieve this, still has much to prove in this area.

Economists love the idea of comparative advantage: the skill that you are relatively better at than your neighbor. Bitcoin’s comparative advantage largely lies in its low transaction costs making it a severe threat to traditional payment networks. For the time being, fiat’s comparative advantage is still stability: that’s why we see coin quoted in world currencies in the first place.

Not all economists dismiss this topic; young professionals like my collaborators and I recognize that the system is perhaps the greatest monetary/social experiment of our time, and much of the empirical analysis is on its way to peer review.

Somebody Forgot to Tell the Blockchain It’s Over

There are so many headlines about impending doom right now. Russia versus Ukraine, which might drag US and Europe into war. The Syria conflict continues. The Mt. Gox bitcoin exchange finally implodes taking down 850,000 bitcoins with it. Charley Shrem of BitInstant under house arrest. Several governments issue warnings about bitcoin investment. The Federal Bank’s continuing to receive unrequested opinions coming, yet again, from Senator Machim; when financial baker JP Morgan ridicules it, their man Machim squawks each time he thinks he can get a headline conveniently ignoring that his allies at JP Morgan were just recently fined 15 BILLION in the last year.  Including the Bernie Madoff pyramid scheme they helped with. All the while the blockchain still toils away silent and oblivious to the headlines.

The Blockchain doesn’t know when solicitous News Anchors give it tabloid treatment. Even CNBC’s News Anchor, Kudlow, has had two years to catch up but is still confused thinking businesses would be crazy to expose themselves to the price volatility of bitcoin. The blockchain can’t laugh at Kudlow’s lack of a five minute research into Bitstamp or Coinbase to learn companies can convert to cash immediately. His diatribes are never corrected by those uncomfortable junior reporters that know the king Kudlow is wearing no clothes but politely forget to tell him.

The blockchain has work to do reconciling accounts and verifying each bitcoin is accounted for. Behind guarded doors at the Federal Reserve The Federal Bank officials force more billions into the banks just to keep them afloat because they know the moment they stop the WORLD economy might fail. They keep us tied to their runaway train because they can’t figure out a way to stop it. The people that made the block chain already know this -and this was the reason they gave birth to the block chain.

The leader of Ukraine just stole billions of dollars from his countrymen. If the blockchain was in charge of it, we could see where it went. You can’t move that kind of money quickly without everybody being able to track it. But the news reporters missed that. When Ukraine put limits on its population to not withdraw funds, to stop bank runs, all of them were in danger. The Block chain would protect them from that too. Where was CNBC reporting that one? The people are now asking for bitcoin donations for blankets and food to protect them from the oncoming Russian onslaught. Do the free people of the world want to stand still wishing there was something they could do?  Or will they spend 10 minutes, buy some bitcoin, scan in the QR code in the article linked and send them money to help? They will have it in 20 minutes from right now thanks to the block chain and Coinbase.com. Try to do that with a bank.

It just keeps quietly reconciling the ledger, on schedule, every 10 minutes, like clockwork. It’s still issuing 25 new bitcoins each time it’s reconciled just as it has done for a year and will continue to do for three more when it’s schedule to lower that amount. Hackers will still try to steal it. Hucksters will still try to hustle people out of it. Because it has value, bad guys will use it to trade for bad things just like they have for millennia for anything of value.

When the bitcoin price crashed temporarily in 2011, 2012, and 2013 and now in 2014 – economists, news reporters, bloggers, and many companies were pronouncing it dead. But they didn’t understand the block chain. It doesn’t die. Ten minutes after they submitted their opinion, the block chain reconciled the last block of transactions and computers around the world continued to mine another block of currency into the system. People still traded with it, and it went on to prove itself defiant of their predictions. Somebody forgot to unplug the block chain and turn the lights out. We know this because:

Bitcoin hasn’t gone into seclusion.

Bitcoin hasn’t issued any press releases.

Bitcoin hasn’t checked the polls.

Bitcoin didn’t flood the market with new money to keep its value up.

Bitcoin didn’t huddle with the G8 or G20 in emergency sessions.

It didn’t concern itself with job loss, unemployment, interest rates or popularity contests.

It didn’t read the tabloid news. It didn’t hire a lawyer, or summon a new PR team.

The longer it operates, the more people notice and believe in the power of the blockchain. Ask the people of Ukraine how they are going to get money now. The public tend to believe the point of view of news channels and know all about the 430 million dollars in bitcoin that seems to have been stolen over a few years. While it makes headlines, 180 BILLION a year is lost through credit card fraud alone. The blockchain doesn’t care that 99.7% of the reported fraud from is from credit cards in one year. Its paltry .03% makes headlines and senators call to ban it? Does the good senator have a “Bat-phone” with one button connecting to JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon?

As history has proven without exception, wars come, the famine will follow, banks will collapse, the politicians are always voted out of office, or thrown out, a country’s boundaries are redrawn; yet the blockchain will still be going – oblivious to these matters. As long as the internet exists somewhere in the world, the blockchain will continue on schedule. The idea, now turned into invention won’t die, it won’t be un-invented. You can’t kill an idea whose time has come. More and more people are just now realizing this for the first time. It is likely inevitable that deep down in some primitive part of our brains, many people instinctively just… understand what this may mean. Currencies backed by shifting politics will fall when the political winds shift, just as they always have in the history of civilization; all they need is one little push. Gold and silver transcended boundaries and politics. Perhaps the blockchain will as well. While central banks and government can confiscate gold and silver, bitcoins have a nasty way of retaining value down to infinite decimal places when needed. It might be the digital sand running through their fingers when they squeeze.

Perhaps these news reporters might learn from history and hold off on the obituaries that might come back to embarrass them. When people repeatedly hear these predictions, the boy who cried wolf may come to mind. It seems that an increasingly amount of people understand the power behind the blockchain and already know what it will be doing in 10 minutes, 10 days, 10 months, and 10 years. Some people’s perception about the value of digital currencies might change temporarily, but increasing numbers of them eventually come to the understanding that it isn’t going anywhere. Somebody forgot to tell the blockchain to take his ball and go home, the game is over or so they say.

Not to worry, the blockchain doesn’t get its feelings hurt. It doesn’t have time to, there’s work to do – sometime within the next 10 minutes.

Multisig: A Revolution Incomplete

The author is involved in the Ethereum project. The author has no relationship with BitGo, Bitrated, Codius or CryptoCorp.

Update: Ben Davenport from Bitgo has replied, saying that they already have an API to support use their service as a pure CryptoCorp-like oracle and soon intend to provide a browser extension. I commend them for their rapid response and dedication to sound security practices. GreenAddress also provides an API allowing applications to plug into their services

After several years of improving infrastructure and technology, it seems like multisignature wallet technologies are finally making a headway in the Bitcoin world. Greenaddress.it and BitGo have emerged as primary contenders in the space, and the latter has recently raised $12 million in venture capital funding and boasts that it stores over $100 million in BTC. The growing emergence of multisig is a very welcome sight in the Bitcoin ecosystem, as the benefits have been known and the components in the Bitcoin protocol have been available for nearly two years and now finaly mainstream consumers can start bearing the fruits. Particular benefits of multisig include consumer-merchant escrow applications, allowing for an open and free marketplace for arbitrators to make Bitcoin commerce relatively safe and fraud-free in areas where such protections are necessary, as well as the personal use-case of savings wallets, protecting users from the loss or compromise of any single one of their private keys.

At a time when consumer protection as arisen at the forefront as a concern, with the looming BitLicense regulations imposing a heavy level of restriction on cryptocurrency businesses, multisig additionally offers a promise as an alternative to a regulation-centric approach to consumer protection – instead of trying to make absolutely sure that each individual business is trustworthy, we can set up systems to maximally remove single points of failure and rely primarily on safety-in-numbers. However, as potentially revolutionary a technology as multisig is, it is also at risk of being overhyped and misrepresented, as some businesses may try to claim the branding benefit of having their addresses start with a “3” without taking the effort of actually being trust-free. The point of this article will be to define a concept of “good multisig” – technologies that actually remove the need for trust in individuals and promote consumer protection, and “bad multisig” – mere cryptoeconomic security theater, and try to determine the dividing line between the two.

The Client Side Revolution

Before we get to actual multisig, we must first dissect one particular technology that is being used by a number of companies in order to seemingly enhance security and reduce the need for trust: the client-side web app. Before the client-side web app took hold, there were two dominant paradigms in Bitcoin clients. First, there are the desktop clients, programs that you download straight to your computer. The benefit of desktop clients is that the users hold the private keys themselves on their own machines, so there is no need to trust any third parties to store one’s funds. However, this comes at a usability cost: the user needs to download an application. Second, there are the server-side web wallets, where a third party holds the bitcoins for you, and gives you access to conveniently deposit and withdraw using an account much like a Google or Facebook account without downloading any software. This has a high degree of usability, but at the cost of requiring trust.

Client-side web apps are an elegant third solution: although access to the website is still done using a webapp, with no inconvenience of downloading software required, the private keys are stored and transactions are signed on the client side inside the web browser using Javascript. Hence, although the application has the same level of convenience as the web interface provided by a trusted server-side wallet, the server does not have access to your private keys and you do – a seeming best of both worlds. The most popular client-side wallet right now is probably blockchain.info.

Now, let us evaluate the merits of this paradigm. Client-side Javascript is certainly not without its critics; there is even an entire article by Matasano entitled “Javascript Cryptography Considered Harmful”. Although the piece is quite extreme in its negation of absolutely any benefits of client-side browser-based cryptography, it does make valid points – particularly, that when you download browser Javascript you are still trusting the source. That is to say, if blockchain.info or a rogue employee of blockchain.info wanted to, or if a government extorted them to, they could simply send you browser code that would take your private key and sign a transaction sending all your funds to their address, and you would never know the difference until it is too late. Now, if one takes this argument to the extreme, one may argue that even with a downloadable client it is possible to distribute a version that steals your private keys, but intuitively it seems obvious that this is much less of a problem in that case – particularly because you are only downloading the software once.

So how much are you trusting the software provider in each case? Let’s break down just what would need to happen for a successful exploit to take place in each case:

  • Desktop client, built from source – the provider, or an attacker who hacked into the provider’s systems, would need to submit a patch to the client’s repository on Github including a backdoor, and you would need to download the client before someone inside or outside the organization would scan the source code and notice
  • Desktop client, binary (the option normal people use) – the provider, or an attacker who hacked into the provider’s systems, would need to compile and publish a version of the client including a backdoor, and you would need to download before someone inside the organization detects the malfeasance (it’s too hard to decompile binaries to detect backdoors until it’s too late in most cases, so it would have to be internal, although in the long term once an exploit is found it is possible to isolate it)
  • Client-side browser webapp – an attacker would need to quickly slip a version of the client including a backdoor into the content delivery network, and only everyone who logs in between that time and the time when the malicious version is taken offline is vulnerable
  • Server-side browser webapp – an attacker would need to access the site’s cold wallet, at which point absolutely every user’s account would be compromised

Hence, we can see a hierarchy of security, where the lower down you go the less secure you are and the more you need to trust. One particular distinction is the difference between a short-term and long-term attacker: is it the company that’s evil, or is it simply someone jumping into their servers through some exploit for a few minutes or hours before they notice? Against long-term attackers, only downloading older versions directly from an open source repository can help you; against short-term attackers binary desktop applications work reasonably well, and even client-side browser webapps may limit the tragedy to a small number of users.

In general, though, there is a fundamental divide between the desktop cases and the browser cases: in the first two, if an attacker gains access for a short period of time, if security is set up correctly that is not a problem at all, because the issue can be corrected in time, but in the latter cases it is. Hence, client-side browser-based apps provide only a partial gain of security over server-based wallets.

How can the problem be fixed? The simplest approach is to move from client-side webpages to browser extensions. This solves the problem almost completely; from a security perspective, a browser extension is almost exactly equivalent to a desktop application run inside of an interpreted environment like Java or Python. However, this does come at the cost of adding an extra step – the user must download a browser extension instead of just trusting the server, and for this reason even if sites like blockchain.info offer a secure browser extension version of themselves most people still use the website.

Note that all of the above is certainly not an indictment of client-side browser Javascript; all it says is that client-side browser Javascript is not that much more secure or trust-free than the approach where the server holds all of your money. There are reasons other than security and trust to write a client-side browser Javascript cryptocurrency application; the biggest one is likely convenience, since the more is done in-browser the less infrastructure you as the application developer need to manage yourself. The ether sale webapp uses client-side Javascript for this exact reason (convenience of development and robustness against denial-of-service attacks); of course you are trusting Ethereum when using the app, but that’s not a problem because you are trusting Ethereum to develop the platform anyway. Thus, if we admit that we are trusting providers like blockchain.info, we can say that their use of client-side cryptography is legitimate. For multisig providers, however, the story is completely different…

The Fused Multisig Wallet

The previous discussion about client-side security is important because it brings to attention an important, and sometimes forgotten, ingredient in security when dealing with cryptographic protocols: the security of the source code itself. Although a cryptographic protocol such as Bitcoin may be theoretically trust-free, in reality almost everyone is not nearly technically competent to evaluate the entirety of the code for themselves. The kinds of clever exploits developed in the Underhanded C contest show quite well how difficult it is to make sure a piece of software is completely attack free; hence, as a result, for pretty much everyone except the original author of a program protocols do still require a certain amount of trust.

In the case of multisig, what we are trying to do is explicitly eliminate the need to trust any single entity. In general, there are two ways in which multisig is implemented. The first we will call extended 2-of-2. The basic concept of 2-of-2 is simple. One key is held by the user, perhaps via a password-derived brainwallet, or a randomly generated key held encrypted in browser storage or a client-side application, and another key is held by the server. When the user wants to sign a transaction, they log onto the wallet on their computer, and then produce a transaction sending funds from their address to the desired destination and sign it with their private key. Then, the transaction is sent to the server. The server then does some fraud-detection check; for example, it may send a confirmation code to the user’s phone number, and ask the user to type it in. If successful, the server signs the transaction and sends it off.

By default, however, this scheme is fragile. If your computer is hacked, or you forget your password, then you lose access to the wallet and the server can do nothing about it. Similarly, if the company maintaining the server suffers an accident or mishap or disappears, you lose access. The extension to 2-of-2 is the patch to this problem. Essentially, every time your client produces a new transaction, it actually produces two transactions: one sending the funds as desired, and then a second sending the remaining funds after the first is finished to some backup address controlled by you. The server signs both transactions, but publishes only the first – the second is returned to you so you have a way to recover your funds even if the server disappears. Note that the address is 2-of-2, so the server has no way to invalidate that transaction without your consent. One particular point to keep in mind is that the server should be the first entity signing the transactions, not the second; otherwise, the server can maliciously sign only the first transaction and not the second and then disappear, leaving the user permanently in limbo.

The second scheme is simple 2-of-3. There are three keys: your key, the server’s key, and a backup key held by you in some secure offline location. Just as above, you sign, the server sends your phone a confirmation code, you supply the code on your computer, and the server signs; that’s all there is to it. If you lose your password, you can use your backup key and the server’s key to send a transaction to a new wallet; if you or the server get hacked then the attacker still has only 1 of 3, and if the server is malicious or disappears they only have 1 of 3 and you have 2 of 3. Similar logic applies for the 2-of-2 case, except that the cases that involve you losing your key or the server disappearing are instead handled by applying the emergency transaction. Thus, we have two slightly different but in many ways equivalent protocols for creating a multisig setup with no single point of failure…

… until we start thinking about the software code. One popular multisig wallet, BitGo, currently presents itself primarily as a client-side-Javascript web application; hence, we can analyze BitGo using the same analysis that we used to analyze blockchain.info (note: I am not picking on BitGo specifically; it is simply one of the most prominent and well-funded, other alternatives usually work in exactly the same way). If an attacker takes control of BitGo’s servers, then they have the ability to start feeding users a faulty web application. Additionally, if an attacker takes control of BitGo’s servers, they can also apply the second signature. Hence, BitGo continues to be a single point of failure.

Now, one could reasonably argue that (1) BitGo is a trustworthy company and so they are not too likely to act maliciously themselves and (2) the presence of multisig means that the attacker has to hack BitGo in two ways and not one. However, this does not bypass the primary point, which is that a centralized server-side wallet can achieve the exact same guarantees without the complexity of having the user store keys by simply adding an extra layer of multisig or secret sharing to their cold wallet. Hence, this kind of client-side-browser multisig wallet setup can be considered to be entirely cryptoeconomic security theater. This is not saying that BitGo is not secure; compared to most alternatives it is a good choice. Rather, this is simply saying that the “multisig” aspect is not providing precisely the guarantee of security that some people think it does.

The philosophical reason why combining browser Javascript and multisig is so problematic is that browser-based Javascript multisig wallet providers, and also many desktop-based providers, are setting up a protocol that is immune to any single point of failure from a protocol standpoint, but they are then immediately sacrificing that advantage in reality by playing two roles in the protocol at the same time: the client and the sever. The problem seems fundamental, and given how crucial the client is to any interaction perhaps even unresolvable; as we saw above, no matter how you download a piece of software, unless you have the time to properly review every line of code you are trusting the provider. At first glance, it seems like there is no way around this issue. However, as we will now see, there is, and the solution once again lies in multisig – this time done right.

Multisig Unfused

The multisig implementation in real life that I believe best exemplifies my vision of the correct way of doing things is the one that is being built by CryptoCorp. CryptoCorp’s approach to multisig is fundamentally different: rather than trying to take the Paypal route (really, most pre-crypto businesses’ route) of treating the interface and the security provider as part of the same package, CryptoCorp generalizes and abstracts the role of the interface and makes its core offering only the security provider. That is to say, CryptoCorp is spending the bulk of its resources specifically developing advanced features and algorithms for its signing oracle server, and lets any other wallet provider integrate with them in order to provide a compatible interface. At the Texas Bitcoin conference in March, CryptoCorp showed a working prototype of a modified Electrum wallet; now, they are working with over ten wallet providers to help integrate support for their server.

Of course, one question is, what is so special about CryptoCorp’s server? An app to do second-factor phone verification with Google Authenticator and sign transactions can be written in NodeJS in a few days; I even did it myself. Where CryptoCorp shines is in the advanced algorithms that it uses to filter between fraudulent transactions. Just paying $3 for a coffee? The CryptoCorp oracle doesn’t even bother asking for confirmation. Paying $500 for a laptop? It might check a bit more stringently. $50,000 for a car? Prepare for something pretty close to KYC verification. Unless the recipient’s address is known to belong to the well-established BitPremier, in which case it might send the transaction through with less hassle simply because it knows that you can always request a refund from them if you make a mistake – and if the recipient’s address has been linked to a hacker syndicate, it might ask for verification even at $3.

So why is CryptoCorp’s approach the better one? From my above criticism of the usual approach to multisig, the answer is obvious: the entity building the oracle and the entity maintaining the software are completely separate. In fact, with CryptoCorp you can actually be relatively safe even if your software turns out to be completely taken over by an attacker. You can use independent tools to verify that the addresses that you’re seeing are legitimate (and not fake multisigs where all keys are actually controlled by the attacker), the client cannot send transactions unilaterally, and if the client tries a more subtle attack like changing the outputs on the transaction or changing the amounts then the oracle will catch that. Thus, there actually is no single point of failure, and the trust-free promise of cryptocurrency is finally achieved.

It is important to note that Cryptocorp is not the only company that is doing things in this kind of generalized and highly modularized way. Codius, the oracle-based smart contract platform from Ripple, is approaching the issue in exactly the same way, and from a consumer protection standpoint so is Bitrated, with its open marketplace of buyers, sellers and arbitrators – although Bitrated still falls slightly short by being a browser-based webapp and not a client-side application or browser extension, or better yet a protocol with multiple compatible implementations.

Decentralization-Friendly Business Culture

The road to making all crypto-businesses look more like CryptoCorp, Codius or Bitrated, and less like PayPal, will be a long one. In the tech business community, there is strong pressure in favor of creating an end-all ecosystem rather than a single component and building a “moat” so as to make your product indispensable for your users – ideals that are the exact opposite of the principles of commoditization, generalization and separation of concerns that are so important for a robust decentralized ecosystem. Corporate profits go up massively if you have a secure position and a monopoly, and yet in the land of secure cryptocurrency applications being modular and easily replaceable is the name of the game.

However, we must note that CryptoCorp has managed to overcome this barrier, overcoming the stigma of being “just a signing oracle” by being a really really good signing oracle – and the wallets that CryptoCorp works with have also done the exact same thing. Even exchanges, perhaps the ultimate commodity business with hundreds of exchanges around the world, still manage to differentiate themselves. In the case of arbitration on services like Bitrated, arbitrators can choose to specialize in different industries, follow different commercial norms (eg. on acceptable standards of product quality, the extent to which consumers are expected to read purchase agreements, etc) and have well-optimized risk models that allow them to charge lower fees.

Additionally, perhaps running a multisig oracle does not need to be a business; like DNS servers, the task can simply be commoditized and done by a combination of larger companies, nonprofit research groups and hobbyists. Such a situation will be arguably preferable, as each entity running each node will have a stable independent source of income and much more reputation to lose, so we can expect oracles to both disappear and cheat much less frequently. But ultimately, if the community demands true decentralization, the market will configure itself somehow to provide it; the only thing that remains is an organized effort to complete the switch.

Bitcoin: The difference in Attitude is Education

This is a guest post by Naomi Brockwell.

The media tends to focus on doom-and-gloom stories, because sensationalist headlines attract larger audiences. However, when journalists go so far as to misrepresent facts and sway the public in one direction or another, these stories can be dangerous. This is especially true when talking about a new technology that has the potential to change lives for the better. Public opinion can mean the difference between this potential being realised, or crushed completely.

That is the situation with Bitcoin.

The media frequently talks about Bitcoin now, but often misrepresents the facts. Coverage tends to focus on the negatives. Stories about money laundering, drug trading, exploded exchanges, and price crashes predominate. The coverage rarely mentions the role of the positive, entrepreneurial Bitcoin community in launching a technological revolution that is at the forefront of dramatically improving lives. Venture capitalists are pouring resources into this technology that they say combines the power of gold with the convenience of the Internet. Bitcoin forums are buzzing with excitement about an impending financial revolution.

So why are some people so positive, and others so negative?

Criticism of Bitcoin overwhelmingly comes from the uninformed, while support often comes from the technologically competent. Paul Graham, a prominent venture capitalist, refers to Bitcoin as a paradigm shift that is unfortunately “derided as a toy, just like microcomputers.” Accomplished venture capitalist and entrepreneur Marc Andreessen has written that the potential of bitcoin today is analogous to personal computers in 1975 and the Internet in 1993. Today, it is the preoccupation of “nerds.” Tomorrow, it can change the life of everyone.

Andreessen has done more than just speak Bitcoin’s praises; he has invested just under $50 million in Bitcoin-related startups.

The difference in attitude is education.

Bitcoin is beginning to transition away from its volatile beginnings and theoretical potential into a mainstream phenomenon, with real results for the layman just over the horizon.

Critics commonly mention Bitcoin’s role in money laundering and corruption, epitomized by the infamous online market Silk Road. What is less well publicized is that Bitcoin can also serve the public good. Venture capitalist Tim Draper recently bought $19 million worth of Bitcoins confiscated from Silk Road, and plans to use them to provide liquidity in Third World countries as a means of combating rampant inflation and corrupt government policy. Draper’s initiative is an exemplar of Bitcoin’s coming of age.

There are 2.5 billion unbanked people in the world, and now by just giving them access to a cell phone we have potentially added 2.5 billion people to the global economy. Furthermore, with bitcoin you can send microtransactions directly to people anywhere in the world, without crippling fees from middlemen or fear of government extortion.

On top of this, basically anything you can buy for US dollars, you can now also buy with bitcoin. Seemingly every week a new brand name retailer is added to the list of merchants who accept bitcoin, which now includes the likes of Overstock, Expedia, and OkCupid. The price of Bitcoin is on the Bloomberg terminal [XBT] as well as Google Finance [CURRENCY:BTC].

Despite all the endorsements and exciting developments, a recent Reason-Rupe poll shows that only 8 percent of people say that they really understand Bitcoin, while 56 percent want to ban it.

In response to the fearmongering and lack of credible information about Bitcoin, I started my “Bitcoin Girl” project as an accessible and fun way to present videos that demonstrate the human impact of this technology. Bitcoin Girl is part of a larger initiative by the nonprofit Moving Picture Institute. Called the Bitcoin Project, it uses entertainment to highlight how crypotcurrencies such as Bitcoin have the potential to create incredible positive economic and social change.

If we want to avoid uninformed legislation crippling Bitcoin in its infancy, we need to educate the people who understand humans better than computers.

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— Naomi Brockwell is a program officer with the Moving Picture Institute and a policy associate at the NYC Bitcoin Center. Her Bitcoin Girl website is online at BitcoinGirl.org.

Buying Your Next Car with Beepi

If you are looking to purchase a pre-owned vehicle with Bitcoin, look no further – Beepi has made it a possibility. With the help of BitPay, the California-based company has integrated bitcoin payment support for its continually expanding line-up of pre-owned automobiles. Beepi has become the first peer-to-peer marketplace to allow customers to purchase cars with bitcoin, further solidifying the role of digital currency in mainstream applications.

Buying a car is a person’s second largest financial purchase and the integration of bitcoin payments further supports the company’s mission to create the most hassle-free way to purchase a vehicle online. What Beepi is doing is commendable, eliminating the stressful barriers that are often associated with purchasing an automobile. In addition, the company is also offering prospective buyers pre-approval for loans at check-out and a ten-day money-back guarantee.

Beepi was founded last year and emerged into the used-auto market in a time when innovation in such an industry was hard to find. With Beepi, gone are the days of traveling to the dealership and spending hours haggling price and features, or utilizing an online service that takes just as much time and requires the same hoops to jump through as traditional car purchasing methods. Instead, Beepi directly connects buyers and sellers on a platform that is easy to use, one that eliminates overpriced commissions and the burden of haggling price. By adding bitcoin payment support, Beepi is working hard to create a new way to buy a used car, in a way that benefits all parties involved.

Buyers wishing to purchase their next vehicle with Bitcoin can do so by completing an easy process. After selecting a car, the buyer can select “check out” and choose “bitcoin” as the payment option. BitPay gives the seller the ability to allow the buyer to pay via bitcoin and still receive cash in the end. Additionally, Beepi also offers a variety of financing options, one of which is the company’s easy loan pre-approval process which also occurs within the check-out environment.

A year ago, buying a car with Bitcoin was unheard of. Since then many individuals have purchased cars from dealerships offering luxury brands like Tesla, Range Rover and Lamborghini. Excitingly enough, Beepi is one of the first used-car platforms to offer such a payment option.

Bitcoin’s role in automobile sales is solidifying as more and more dealerships and online providers like Beepi are choosing to accept Bitcoin. Because a car is often an individual’s second largest lifetime purchase and isn’t often done with cash, the thought of Bitcoin makes complete sense. There are many financial hurdles and fees that have always been associated with purchasing an automobile, but Bitcoin can enable online services like Beepi to save its customers a large percentage on the final cost. “Integrating with bitcoin is a natural extension of our promise to deliver the easiest way to purchase a car in the 21stcentury,” Beepi CEO Ale Resnik stated.

The Truth About Bitcoin – Dispelling Common Myths About The Digital Currency

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Bitcoin has become frequently talked about in the financial media. Despite this the general public is still relatively under informed when it comes to this digital currency.

In a January 2014 poll it was found that only 25% of US adults were familiar with Bitcoin. This means that there is still significant room to educate the general public about the advantages of using a peer-to-peer digital currency. To address some of those knowledge gaps here are some of the most common myths about Bitcoin as well some of its key benefits.

Myth #1: Bitcoin is no different to any other digital currency

There have been many other digital currencies in the past, including Beenz, Liberty Dollars and eGold. However these digital currencies are not the same as Bitcoin. These digital currencies were subject to control by financial regulators, governments and central banks. As a consequence they could only be issued according to the permission of these third parties. These third parties could destroy the currency or impose their own controls. Bitcoin is decentralised and therefore it is not subject to these types of controls.

Myth #2: Bitcoin is a Ponzi scheme

One of the most common attacks on that coin is that it is some type of Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme uses funds from new investors in order to pay out the original ones. The nature of the Ponzi scheme is that at some point it must inevitably collapse. Bitcoin is different in that any investor in the currency can benefit. Bitcoin is not an investment scheme but a rather a decentralised peer-to-peer currency that is useful both as a store of value and as a means of exchange. As Bitcoin rises in value relative to other currencies both early and later adopters benefit.

Myth #3 : There are no benefits to Bitcoin beyond its investment value

This is quite untrue as Bitcoin has a number of advantages over both fiat currencies and gold. Compared to a fiat currency, such as US dollars, Bitcoin is anonymous, faster to transfer, not based on debt, limited in supply, and not controlled by central authority. As a consequence governments cannot simply print more Bitcoins when they want to stimulate the economy.

Because of the dangers of a Fiat currency many people have called for a return to the gold backed system. However Bitcoin has a number of advantages over gold including being easier to secure, verify and to transfer.

Negatives associated with Bitcoin

Most of the negative press that has been associated with Bitcoin has to do with Bitcoin exchange platforms. These are places where but coins can be exchanged for sovereign currencies and other digital currencies. The largest of these exchanges was Mt Gox which was based in Japan. By 2013 it was handling 70% of all Bitcoin transactions.

In February 2014 it suspended trading and close its website. At the time 850,000 Bitcoins which had the equivalent value of US$450 million went missing. Since that time 200,000 of these Bitcoins have been found but the rest remain missing. It’s important to note that the dangers in the system lay with Mt Gox which was insecure and poorly managed, rather than than Bitcoin itself.

It is important that all citizens understand what Bitcoin is and its implications for the economy. As Nobel Peace Prize nominee Leon Louw has noted:

‘Every informed person needs to know about Bitcoin because it might be one of the world’s most important developments.’

UltraCoin 101

For the first time ever in human history, we can create unforgeable documents. This is thanks to the Blockchain.

The Blockchain is a peer-to-peer ledger, owned by nobody, that creates and records all digital currency transactions using mathematics. The blockchain uses the computing power of the global public to solve these cryptographic problems that confirm transactions made using a digital currency such as bitcoin.

The blockchain also stores aspects of each transaction made using the currency;  small transactions can be made in which any information is permanently stored; forever.

Promises can be made and enshrined on the blockchain. This new form of promise, however, is different than the often broken ones we as humans are accustomed to. They will never be deleted or altered.

Every business transaction is a series of promises: the promise to provide a product or service and the promise to pay for it.

Since promises are often broken, many measures are invariably taken in order to guarantee that people and business entities keep their promises. Some of these measures include “due diligence, research, lawyers, litigation, mediation, arbitrators, and escrow agents.” (Veritaseum Research Report, 2014).  Unfortunately, these measures typically cost a significant amount of the value of a promise (or contract).

These measures ultimately exist to limit the trust necessary from both parties to make the transaction as smooth as possible.

Now, what if I told you that there was a group of individuals allowing for business transactions with no trust at all from both parties?

Veritaseum,  a C corporation “formed to exploit modern cryptography in the field of finance, economics and value transfer transactions”, has developed UltraCoin, a patent pending application that utilizes recent discoveries in cryptography to allow businesses to save their “promises”, or obligations and contracts, directly on the blockchain of the currency used for the business transaction.

This transforms promises into “predictable, enforceable outcomes.”

The latest Veritaseum research paper reads

“When a promise or a contract is made using UltraCoin, it is no longer made with the desire, gamble and/or hope that it will be kept some time in the future. It is made as immutable fact that the transaction will be executed exactly as agreed.”

In case you didn’t know, UltraCoin was invented Veritaseum’s founder, globally renowned analyst and investor Reggie Middleton.

On the subject of his current focus, Reggie says “We feel Veritaseum is ripe for a strategic investor to approach us before the end of the calendar year, likely before we’re able to go for our Series B round. Strategic investors include payment processors, global banks, and innovative technology companies such as Google, Facebook, Microsoft or Apple.”

The UltraCoin motto is “Create loans without banks, trades without brokers and contracts without lawyers-all available through your own personal digital wallet.”

Veritaseum has just conducted a small soft launch of Ultracoin’s prototype. It was presented at the Chicago Bitcoin conference. The prototype that they’ve released currently trades well over 75,000 tickers. That exceeds the amount that Wall Street and London brokerages can offer retail clients and many institutions.

“After the beta is polished, Reggie concludes, UltraCoin will move on to peer to peer lending and letters of credit. While that is being done, we will focus on sales and marketing and fundraising.”

UltraCoin has poised itself to become a disintermediating threat to Finance as we know it today, as they will expand their operation from contracts to many other components of business transactions.

Bitcoin is providing a way to change to many parts of our lives that we view as unalterable, but it’s happening quick. We could  miss it in a blink, I promise.

You can download the UltraCoin prototype Here.

 

Orlando School Gives Students bitcoins

Last month I attended an interesting Orlando Bitcoin Meetup. The Meetup took place at Bright Learning Academy, a school for special needs students that works with children who need an alternative to traditional school settings. The school takes a technological approach to learning.

It’s no mystery that kids learn to understand technology much more easily than we do. That’s just the way things go. Bright Learning Academy is teaching money management and free market principles with Bitcoin technology. They did it before MIT.

Last winter, school teacher Robert Lefebure began signing up students for a wallet at Blockchain.info.

“The idea, explains Robert, “was to use Bitcoin to teach personal money management and economics because, frankly, it’s hard to understand where Bitcoin is taking us if you don’t know what economic factors took us to where we are today. I gave each of them what was (at the time) $3 worth of BTC. The reaction of the kids varied from “I want to spend it right away” to “what is it? A couple of months later MIT announced giving $100 worth to each of their students but we had already “been there, done that!”

Robert started to get some of the kids to post articles on the school blog site and add their wallet addresses to their articles. A few raised a little money that way too.

Bright Learning Academy plans on providing their students with bitcoins this upcoming school year. But next time around, more places accept bitcoin than before. The kids should have more leeway.

The founder of Bright Learning Academy is Alan Mark Friedland. He has been in the financial, investment and securities businesses since 1984. Mr Friedland worked for Stuart James Company, Blackstock and Company and Prudential Bache Securities as a registered representative. Mr. Friedland founded Edge Securities member N.A.S.D. in 1986 which became one of the first leveraged day trading firms for professional traders. Edge Securities was an option trading member of the American Stock Exchange. Mr. Friedland is an expert in short term securities trading. He has developed many successful custom computer programs to trade the markets over the past 25 years. He visualized and created one of the first social media chat rooms and advertising websites on the Internet in 1994 at www.talkroom.com and questchat.com. In 2000, he developed one of the first web based intranet learning products for public school systems. In 1999 he created one of the first laptop based Cyber School in Orange and Seminole Counties Florida. Mr. Friedland has been developing Forex automated currency trading programs for the past 4 years. He is developing Bitcoin technology to share these programs.

“My interest in Bitcoin began in 2012 – in particular, its ability to create trading markets,” says Alan. “It is probably the biggest opportunity since the commercialization of the Internet in the early 1990s. We have created our own school cryptocoin to reward students and as a way to reach out to the business community to help with donations.”

Bright Learning Academy has began pioneering money management education by utilizing the still nascent bitcoin currency. MIT followed suit. It would be no surprise if more and more educational institutions begin to utilize the educational potential of bitcoin.

Visit the school website Here

Ripple Labs CTO Designs Smart Contracts

Stefan Thomas is one of the more talented and respected developers in the space. An old hat at this young technology, he has been making waves as the CTO of Ripple labs. In a recent effort he has set his sights on smart contracts technology. The designs and implementation he and his team have come up with are interesting, to say the least.

In a white paper entitled Smart Oracles, we see described a novel, simple, and flexible approach to smart contracts.

In such a system, rules can be written in any programming language, and contracts can interact with any service that accepts cryptographically signed commands. The paper also includes an implementation of smart oracles, called Codius (based on the Latin “ius” meaning “law”).

Smart contracts are an exciting new frontier for technology, business, and law that have the potential to usher in a wave of innovation and serve as a building block for a next chapter of the internet.

The concept of a smart contract is to formally encode the conditions and outcomes of a legal agreement into a computer program. Rather than rely on another party to enforce the terms of the arrangement, the obligations of a smart contract are settled automatically and autonomously through the execution of its code.

As such, math-based currency networks like Bitcoin and Ripple provide an important building block for smart contracts by allowing the transfer of digital assets with a cryptographic signature. The benefits of using smart contracts instead of traditional contracts are increased speed, efficiency, and trust that the contract will be executed exactly as agreed.

Most proposals for smart contracts depend on independent entities to inform contracts about the state of the outside world. Bitcoin contracts rely on “oracles” to attest to facts from the outside world by introducing signatures into the network if and only if specific conditions are met.

For instance, the smart contract for a will would need to know whether or not someone had died. Such a system typically requires the smart contract code to be executed on the consensus network itself. But encoding advanced logic and executing untrusted code is complicated to integrate. Until now, this has been one of the primary obstacles for creating a viable smart contract system.

Smart oracles take the concept of oracles a step further by placing the untrusted code execution in the oracles’ hands. Smart oracles, then, are trusted or semi-trusted entities that can both provide information about the outside world and execute the code to which the contracting parties agreed.

By decoupling the execution of untrusted code from the consensus databases and other services that track and transfer asset ownership, smart contracts can be achieved without increasing the complexity of existing consensus networks like Bitcoin and Ripple.

Without being tied to any single consensus network, contracts created using smart oracles can interact with multiple networks at once as well as virtually any type of online service. This means that a single smart contract could interact with Bitcoin and Ripple, web-based services like PayPal, Google, Ebay, etc. or even other Internet protocols, such as SSH, LDAP, SMTP and XMPP.

The Codius implementation of smart oracles is designed to provide developers with a robust and familiar platform to build smart contracts and hit the ground running. Because Codius uses Google’s Native Client to sandbox untrusted code, developers can write contracts in any programming language.

Codius and smart oracles in general open up new possibilities for developers, entrepreneurs, and enterprising legal and financial professionals. Agreements that previously required lengthy legal contracts can be translated into code and run automatically by smart oracles.

Smart contracts hold the potential to empower people to build a fairer, more affordable and more efficient legal system and smart oracles are one of the simplest ways to realize that dream. Potential use cases include bridges between value networks, escrow, cryptocurrency wallet controls, auctions for digital assets, derivatives, debt and equity, smart property and voting.

Since the system is extensible, the functionality will continue to expand as the ecosystem develops.

Bitcoin and Marx’s Theory of History

This article first appeared on page 26 of Issue 21.

You probably don’t think about Marxism when you think about Bitcoin. To most people, Marx is known as the guy who didn’t like private property and capitalism in general. Bitcoin, a cryptocurrency with the ability to encourage markets by breaking down the worldwide barriers created by multiple national currencies, doesn’t seem like it has much to do with him. You would probably think that Marx wouldn’t like Bitcoin.

But I don’t think so. I believe if Marx were around today he would see Bitcoin as an excellent example of his Theory of History in action; a global system, with roots in the crisis’ of capitalism, that will bring the world closer to his utopian ideals.

What many people don’t know about Marx is that he admired capitalism as a creator of wealth. While he despised the way that it abused the labor of the proletariat (working class), he saw it as a necessary period on the way to socialism and, eventually, communism. He believed in historical materialism, the idea that society is shaped by physical conditions at certain points in history. These physical conditions create an environment for revolutionary changes in human society.

If this seems confusing, the best analogy I can draw is with Darwin’s theory of evolution. Much like On the Origin of Species sought to explain how biological creatures change over time as a result of their environment, Marx sought to explain the process behind humanity’s economic evolution. Marx admired the work of Darwin and thought that his (Darwin’s) work created a foundation that he could build on. From his letters:

Darwin’s work is most important and suits my purpose in that it provides a basis in natural science for the historical class struggle. One does, of course, have to put up with the clumsy English style of argument. Despite all shortcomings, it is here that, for the first time, ‘teleology’ in natural science is not only dealt a mortal blow but its rational meaning is empirically explained.

Marx’s history of class struggle outlines 6 stages of history, each one creating the foundation for the next. They are: primitive communism, slave society, feudalism, capitalism, socialism, and communism.

So how does all this tie into Bitcoin?

I think there is an interesting parallel between how Marx describes the transition from capitalism to socialism and what we are seeing today with the adoption of Bitcoin. As I said before, Marx believed that capitalism was a fantastic tool for increasing production and development. You can attack his beliefs as much as you want (and there is plenty to criticize in his writing) but there is no denying that Marx was brilliant when it came to forecasting the consequences of trade. From The Communist Manifesto:

Modern industry has established the world market, for which the discovery of America paved the way. This market has given an immense development to commerce, to navigation, to communication by land…as industry, commerce, navigation, railways extended, in the same proportion the bourgeoisie developed, (and) increased its capital.

Keep in mind that this man is writing in 1848, a time when the “world market” barely existed. Marx carries the consequences of the global spread of capitalism to what he believed to be their logical conclusion:

In place of the old local and national seclusion and self-sufficiency, we have intercourse in every direction, universal inter-dependence of nations. And as in material, so also in intellectual production. The intellectual creations of individual nations become common property. National one-sidedness and narrow-mindedness become more and more impossible, and from the numerous national and local literatures there arises a world literature.

Marx never explicitly outlines how capitalism becomes socialism. Nor does he give a timeline for when it will happen (though he hoped it would happen during his lifetime). All that he leaves readers with is his certainty that this revolution will happen and that it will occur at a time when capitalism has spread across the entire globe threatening the clarity of national boundaries and ownership of intellectual creations.

A time much like today.

Viewed through this Marxist lense Bitcoin becomes a product of its time in world history. This helps to answer what I believe to be the most fascinating question surrounding the phenomenon: why is Bitcoin working at all?

While there are obvious real world uses for Bitcoin, only the most ardent supporters of the protocol will claim that the technology in its current state is the best option for conducting everyday transactions. Buying products with BTC can be clumsy and time consuming. Prices change by the minute. Conversion to fiat (which is needed to pay taxes or buy goods and services not offered in BTC) can be burdensome. Secure storage is a vexing process for those who are not computer savvy. Convenient storage is risky.

So why has there been a steadily increasing rate of adoption?

My hypothesis is that people around the world are excited about Bitcoin because of the promise that it holds as an alternative to the existing economic and political structure. To many users, Bitcoin isn’t just an alternative currency or money transferring system. It is a representation of their distaste with the world economy we are living in.

Recently there have been arguments that the Bitcoin community is a “rich, white, male disaster”. While there is truth to this statement, it is also an editorialized simplification. A more measured analysis of the data reveals a different conclusion. From the blog Simulacrum (which the HuffPo article used as the source for its data):

The results so far from the 2014 community survey suggest the community is now only about one quarter libertarian, matched by a quarter liberal, and a quarter more left-wing, with a few smaller groups of other political identities.  When asked to choose a political label, we get responses from all four quadrants of the political compass.

And when discussing the idea that Bitcoiners are wealthy:

On the contrary, during my ethnographic research a far more common background story is one of precarious living arrangements, economic uncertainty, and limited opportunities. Bitcoiners rarely talk about how many bitcoins they have, instead focusing on when they first heard about it, when they first got involved, and how they feel about the project. They do not talk about their stash as an asset, but rather as a shared interest. When the cruder financial implications are discussed, they are usually framed in terms of empowerment and escape, the plans for buying a house, raising a family, or gaining the economic freedom to focus on some other project.

Far from the elites suggested in the Huffington Post article, Simulacrum paints a picture of the average Bitcoin user as an everyman frustrated by what Marx would describe as the (again from the Manifesto) “uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation” that distinguishes our modern “bourgeois epoch”. These people are not attracted to Bitcoin because they want to buy drugs or get rich quick. They are human beings frustrated with the instability of our modern society captivated by a system that just might offer hope for a better way.

This mentality can be traced back to the very inception of Bitcoin. While Satoshi never actually outlines his mission for this technology in the White Paper, there are clues to what he wanted to accomplish with his/her/their creation. Consider the note embedded in the Genesis Block:

Jan. 3, 2009: The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks.

The 2008 worldwide collapse was a monumental failure by the financial sector and the governments that oversee them that ended up having global consequences, consequences that hurt the financially vulnerable people of the world more than anyone else. Economists decided the best course of action to fix this situation was a bailout for banks, the same institutions that helped cause the crisis. Judging by the Genesis Block note, Satoshi took issue with this solution and he viewed the cryptographic reliability of Bitcoin as a tool to stop this reliance on flawed human agency.

Satoshi had political motives as well. While he did not see Bitcoin as a necessary and sufficient tool for creating a better world, he believed it was a start. From the Cryptography Mailing List:

Yes, (we will not find a solution to political problems in cryptography), but we can win a major battle in the arms race and gain a new territory of freedom for several years. Governments are good at cutting off the heads of centrally controlled networks like Napster, but pure P2P networks like Gnutella and Tor seem to be holding their own.

And here, again, we come back to Marx. If Bitcoin does end up becoming part of a larger global revolution, its decentralized nature is exactly what Marx predicted. He did not believe in the proletariat’s ability to organize themselves effectively. From Phillip Gasper’s The Communist Manifesto: A Road Map To History’s Most Important Political Document:

Marx and Engels (his co-writer) never speculated on the detailed organization of a future socialist or communist society. The key task for them was building a movement to overthrow capitalism. If and when that movement was successful, it would be up to the members of the new society to decide democratically how it was to be organized, in the concrete historical circumstances in which they found themselves.

And so the Bitcoin economy finds itself five years into this social experiment, with no central authority or backing, but nonetheless a growing global community guided by nothing but the collective belief that there is a better way for the world to go about the ordinary business of life. Should it succeed in changing the way we all interact, historians and economists could be forced to reevaluate their criticisms of a man that long ago predicted the evolution of human trade.

#OffTheCouch: Award-winning Film Could Bring Bitcoin to 1,000 High Schools

The Corporation Film’s Crypto Challenge from Hello Cool World on Vimeo.

For its 10th year anniversary, “The Corporation” is raising money for a re-release shown to 1,000 schools across North America. Their original fiat campaign closed at $30,000, and they’re hoping for a match from the cryptocurrency community.

Campaign creator Kat Dodds is making this a race to the top for a special thanks section of the film that will feature the logos of the contributing cryptocurrencies. Students across 1,000 schools will receive a free lesson in corporate literacy and be exposed to Bitcoin for the first time. The updated version of the film will feature Bitcoin’s logo and explain to the audience how the film was able to get a re-release. This is an act that will inspire the minds of future generations about cryptocurrency for years to come.

#OffTheCouch is also Dana.io’s first crypto-only crowdfunding campaign. Dana.io is a startup based out of Vancouver that supports both fiat and crypto-donations, and uses a pay-what-you-want fee model. It is a platform geared towards artists, authors, and activists. Co-founder and CTO Scott Nelson has actively supported the Bitcoin community from the very beginning.

Dodds first heard about Bitcoin through Nelson and working on creating #OffTheCouch. It became obvious to her that both film and Bitcoin share a similar message in exposing financial models that are unstable, unjust, and unfair. As an advocate of alternative solutions for society, Bitcoin seemed like a natural next step to Dodds.

The film’s provocative revelations should resonate with the non-conformist attitudes of many cryptocurrency supporters. Issues covered in the film includes the likes of the privatization of rainwater in Bolivia, to the manufacturing of consent in our consumerist society, and the ramifications of legally protecting a business as a “person”. The cryptocurrency community can now help spread greater awareness of such issues through this campaign.

The Corporation is available on its official YouTube channel:

The campaign can be found here: https://dana.io/cryptochallenge

More information about The Corporation can be found below:
http://www.thecorporation.com
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0379225

Building a Bitcoin Economy: How to Close the Loop

This guide is a continuation of a previous article at http://bitcoinmagazine.com/13104/building-bitcoin-economy-stimulate-adoption/

If you or someone in the area has been preaching crypto for a while, you probably have a few nearby businesses accepting Bitcoin by now. This is an important first step, and worthy of celebration over a few Bitcoin beers. Bitcoin evangelism never sleeps, however, so it’s time to grow the seeds you’ve sown into a sustainable Bitcoin economy. But before you get started, heed what I’ve learned from my latest efforts.

When you first bring cryptocurrency adoption to a community, it’s necessary to rely on promises of publicity, delivered in the form of organized events and media attention. The novelty will soon wear off, however, and you can’t volunteer to promote them forever. The Bitcoin economy needs to learn how to operate without the training wheels you’ve provided, and become stable on its own.

There are two main obstacles to accomplishing this. One is that a Bitcoin enthusiast drawn to a Bitcoin venue or store might not want to spend his or her bitcoins, due to the hoarding instinct. To an extent, this can be remedied by providing discounts: if people save enough money by using Bitcoin, it counteracts the cost of repurchasing their spent bitcoins. Unless the customers are lazy, apathetic to profit, and unconcerned with legitimizing cryptocurrency, this should alleviate the symptoms.

The bigger obstacle, however, is that many Bitcoin businesses are converting their bitcoins to cash. In contrast to commodities, a currency needs to have “velocity,” which is the rate at which it changes hands within the system. We need to “close the loop,” the point where you can pay a bitcoin to someone, who pays it to someone, who pays it to someone (and so on) until you eventually accept that bitcoin for your own good or service–just as with dollars, except now they can’t be arbitrarily printed by the government.

That’s what money is, and if you’re reading this guide, you’d probably rather it be created in a decentralized manner. Even if you think Bitcoin’s not a viable transactional currency due to deflation, slow block generation, etc, Bitcoin is what the public knows; so long as it’s leading the charge, we have to promote it as a currency. Once we’ve used Bitcoin to prove the viability of non-state currency, we can resume debates about whether to improve or change the system.

Many argue that the ideal way to go about this is by convincing employers to pay employees in Bitcoin. For example, the Co-op directors who run QuadrigaCX offer free conversion to the employees of merchants who do so. This is certainly a good idea, but neglects the root of the problem–it’s impossible (and illegal) to force this upon them. We could give bonus bitcoins to employees who accept, but most won’t accept a full salary in Bitcoin until it’s a more useful and stable currency, which brings us back full-circle. Even if employees do accept, they’re selling their bitcoins, which is a good exposure method, but not effectively closing the loop.

Before mass adoption, the other intermediary step we’re missing is the suppliers. Mainstream consumer demand for a new currency is still lacking due to ignorance, but business-to-business marketing and advertising (B2B) is a huge industry. I’ve spoken with many existing alternative currency gurus, like Steve Dale and Scott Berg here in Canada, and the majority of their business occurs in such a fashion. In addition to getting the coins flowing, this will continue to spread Bitcoin adoption throughout the business world, which is what the public is going to wait for.

If we’re to get as many businesses trading bitcoins as already trade things like Barter or Seedstock, we need to frame it the same way. Bitcoin needs to be a way for them to find leads, connecting producers to consumers. That’s the stage of the game we’re at in Bitcoin-friendly cities like Vancouver and others, and if you have enough merchants, it shouldn’t be too hard: since it’s still relatively novel, businesses engaging in such a practice will be subject to some publicity and fans for doing so. Once you get them started, they’re unlikely to stop so long as marketing companies continue charging huge finders fees for the same service.

That’s all good in theory, but how will it work in practice? In the process of writing this article, I reached out to Rollingdale Winery, which accepts Bitcoin for their organic wines. I explained to them that Bitcoiners would love to know that if they order Rollingdale at a pub in Vancouver, their bitcoins aren’t just going to an exchange to be sold. Local pubs are more than happy to carry an authentic Bitcoin beverage and advertise the fact, and several carry Rollingdale, already.

The results? We’re having Canada’s first real Bitcoin wine tasting this month, with Bitcoin wine at a Bitcoin establishment. Seating is limited; if you want to learn more or reserve a space, check it out at http://www.meetup.com/BitcoinCoop/events/192281872/

This how-to guide is part of a series written by director Andrew Wagner on behalf of the Bitcoin Co-op. The author is not compensated by any businesses mentioned in this article, except with the joy he gets from undermining the traditional financial system. If you want more information, or to join our non-profit advocacy movement, reach out at [email protected]. Stay tuned for part 3: How to Make the Transition.

Bitcoin Crowdfunding Campaign Sets Goal of Bringing Bitcoin to NASCAR

It’s time for the Bitcoin community to sponsor a NASCAR Sprint Cup Driver.

The bitcoin crowdfunding campaign called Bitcoin23 just launched this morning via popular funding platform Crowdtilt. The campaign will support rookie Sprint Cup driver Alex Bowman and his team, BK Racing, with the goal of fully wrapping the #23 car in a Bitcoin livery for the Labor Day weekend race at Atlanta Motor Speedway. The new campaign is focused on increasing awareness and driving the future growth of Bitcoin.

The time is now for the Bitcoin community to get a chance to see a Bitcoin themed car zoom by at 200mph on one of racing’s largest stages. The driver will be Rookie of the Year contender Alex Bowman. Both him and his NASCAR Sprint Cup team are setting their sights on raising awareness of Bitcoin within the sport. This means raising money to put a Bitcoin themed car on the track, bringing users and bitcoin businesses together to create a one-of-a-kind race car to be featured on a monumental stage, in one of the most popular sports in the world.

Alex Bowman began his career at age 7, driving quarter midget cars in the United States Auto Club (USAC). Alex’s passion was ignited from that point forward, consistently challenging himself and learning everything about racing and mechanical technology. In 2011, Bowman competed in the Pro Cup Series and took 6th place, along with a Rookie of the Year trophy. Shortly after, in 2012, he was a full-time driver in the ARCA Series and won four races that year. Also during that year, Bowman made his debut at the national level and competed in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. His passion for racing and his success throughout his entire career has brought him where he is today, driving the #23 Toyota Camry for BK Racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

Bitcoin23 is giving people a chance to get involved in bringing Bitcoin and NASCAR together, and to fund a driver who lives his life at over 200mph. It is a chance to witness history, the first ever Bitcoin car. It is an opportunity to support a very young team with ambitious goals, but little funding. It is also a chance to bring cryptocurrency to the spotlight. Imagine Bitcoin in front of over 80,000 attendees and 4.5 million viewers. We have seen the power of the NASCAR community when the Dogecoin car came on the scene months ago.

Alex Bowman and his team have set a goal of having the #23 Toyota completely funded in time for the race at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Labor Day weekend (Aug. 30 – 31). According to the team, the amount required to completely wrap the car is $100,000, which is because the team only runs in the NASCAR Sprint Cup and not the Nationwide series. This is a small amount in comparison to the larger teams in the Sprint Cup (take a look at the numbers from a larger team). However, there are other options as well: $50,000 will place Bitcoin on the hood, and $25,000 will cover the quarter panel with Bitcoin. The ultimate goal of the campaign is to raise awareness for bitcoin and support a young racing team and driver, and this is our chance to play a part. Bitcoin23 can also bring both users and bitcoin businesses together, by giving both the opportunity to participate in the campaign.

There are a variety of rewards including stickers, T-shirts, signed merchandise, tickets, hot and cold passes, or even the chance to feature your company logo on the car. “A user could even put their face on the car as long as it was approved by NASCAR,” according to a campaign organizer.

Individuals looking to contribute to the campaign can visit Bitcoin23 on Crowdtilt, review the details and take a closer look at contribution rewards. To donate Bitcoin, simply click on “Contribute Now” and follow the link on the right side of the page. Users will then send payment and send an email to [email protected] with their Reward Level and Transaction Identifier (use the Reward Level as the subject line). Once payment has been verified and received, the user will receive a follow up email regarding their chosen reward.

For individuals without Bitcoin, it can be purchased via Coinbase, or they can also contribute with a credit/debit card for a 3% transaction fee. The campaign also supports anonymous transactions for those who wish to contribute anonymously. Scan the QR code, send payment and that’s it.

To contribute to the effort to bring Bitcoin to NASCAR, visit https://bitcoin23.crowdtilt.com/bitcoin23-nascar.

This is an exciting time and opportunity for the Bitcoin community. The success of Bitcoin23 will provide an opportunity to build stronger relationships between users, fans and businesses, throughout each community. There may be some friendly competition between Bitcoin and Dogecoin very soon.

 

NASCAR Sprint Cup Driver Alex Bowman Embraces Bitcoin and Announces Support for Bitcoin Crowdfunding Effort

Rookie driver, Alex Bowman, is embracing the use of Bitcoin in what is the first chance to bring Bitcoin to the NASCAR stage. A press release from the team was released this morning.

 

BITCOIN AND NASCAR COME TOGETHER IN THE FIRST CROWDFUNDING EFFORT FOR A SPRINT CUP DRIVER

Alex Bowman, rookie driver for BK Racing, embraces the use of Bitcoin and emerging payment technologies.

STATESVILLE, NC — JULY 24 — Today, NASCAR driver Alex Bowman and his team, BK Racing, announce their support of a Bitcoin crowdfunding effort, named Bitcoin23, to bring a Bitcoin themed car to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. The campaign starts today and runs until August 20, and will be instrumental in the continued growth of Bitcoin in new markets. If successful, the team and driver will run the Bitcoin car during the Labor Day weekend race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

With a goal of raising $100,000 for a full sponsorship, the organizers hope to ignite the interest of the Bitcoin community to get behind Bowman and BK Racing to introduce bitcoin to NASCAR. Today marks the launch of Bitcoin23, a month-long campaign via popular crowdfunding platform Crowdtilt. More excitingly, in addition to conventional funding methods, all contributors to the campaign will be able to make a pledge with Bitcoin.

“This is an exciting time and opportunity for the Bitcoin community. The monumental success of the sport and Bowman and his team have made bringing Bitcoin to NASCAR possible,” stated Adam Hofman, Lead Writer for Bitcoin Magazine. “The success of Bitcoin23 will provide an opportunity to build stronger relationships between users, fans and businesses, throughout each community.”

BK Racing and Alex Bowman have shown immense support for Bitcoin, the emerging payment technology; Bowman even participated in a promotional video for the newly-launched campaign.

“Bitcoin is changing the way people think about how they spend money and pay for things,” Bowman remarked. “With as much that is sold at the track, I believe that a technology like bitcoin has a place in the sport. Introducing Bitcoin to NASCAR will bring new fans to racing and help drive mainstream adoption.”

The aptly named Bitcoin23 campaign is seeking the help of the Bitcoin community to make the dream a reality. Individuals and businesses who choose to pledge will also receive a wide range of rewards including Alex Bowman merchandise, tickets to the race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Minaal carry on bags and even the chance to put your company logo (or face) on the car.

To make your pledge to Bitcoin23, visit bitcoin23.crowdtilt.com and click on your funding level. If pledging via Bitcoin, users will submit payment and receive specific instructions to claim the chosen reward.

To learn more about the campaign and attending the monumental event, visit http://www.bitcoin23.co/. For any further questions or for interview inquiries, please contact [email protected].

 

About BK Racing

BK Racing is a stock car racing team that is focused on introducing technological innovation to NASCAR. The team competes in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and fields the No. 23 Toyota Camry for Alex Bowman, the No. 26 Camry for Cole Whitt, and the No. 83 Camry for Ryan Truex.

 

Why I <3 Bitcoin

Some people ask me why I love Bitcoin so much, given that I (at the time of this writing) don’t have very much. I wear Bitcoin shirts, talk about it way too much, and have convinced dozens of businesses to adopt it–I even got a Bitcoin tattoo on my left shoulder, paid for in BTC. No wonder they ask.

Usually, I just shrug it off (the question, not the tattoo), and say that I hate the government. That is fairly correct, but it’s not the real reason I’m so passionate about cryptocurrency. While Bitcoin certainly is able to fix some of our world’s biggest problems, and I’d like to think my motivations are as logical as that, the deeper reasons are more personal. Let me tell you the story of how I got into the scene.

When I first learned about Bitcoin, I wasn’t doing much with my life beyond the Meet Up groups I was organizing, and part-time tutoring work. Having done poorly at school for health and other reasons, I was unable to get a decent job in technology or writing, despite a predilection. It was almost out of frustration that I enjoyed the unregulated ease of buying and selling cryptocurrency: exchanges like BTC-e require little more than the capital to trade with, no stringest ID requirements or legal complexity.

Unfortunately, I didn’t have much capital to invest at the time. Somewhere around $80, however, I decided to take a chance and introduce Bitcoin to my daily life. I didn’t have any connections in the cryptocurrency industry, so I did what anyone who grew up on the Internet would do: I posted on a forum that I planned to make some event venues accept Bitcoin.

Adam Soltys answered almost immediately. His LinkedIn described his occupation as “Techno Hippy,” and he claimed to have around 1000 bitcoins. He said Bitcoin needed people who could sign up merchants, regardless of their background, and suggested I join a cooperative he was cofounding. He promised to provide all the funding and expertise necessary, and that it might lead to career opportunities for me.

We didn’t wait for the incorporation to be completed, or even for us to figure out how we wanted to do it. We took to the streets, and I signed up several more brick & mortar merchants, eventually arriving at Waves Coffee House. Despite being the youngest member of the Co-op at the time, I was made a director, and I was so proud–I was given the chance to really do something, and be appreciated for it.

Things were looking up, but I ran into problems in my personal life. I didn’t really have my own circle of friends here in Vancouver, but felt I had too much going on to leave. I had little other choice to but throw myself into what I was doing, and as I began to spend more and more time with my fellow Bitcoiners, I realized how passionate and dedicated they all were. People value a job well done in this community, sometimes as its own reward, and it’s evident when I watch them pour over GitHub and various wikis.

People began to notice my obsession, and to everyone who knew me before, I became Bitcoin Guy. I developed projects of my own, fueled by the support of friends at local (now international) exchanges like QuadrigaCX and CoinTrader. I gradually let go of my other responsibilities, until I was doing crypto full-time. Despite the long hours, I don’t feel too lonely, because almost everyone around me makes a good friend. I can talk about all of my favorite subjects, and people will actually pay attention. It’s a community for people who love logic but hate rules, and the easiest place I’ve found to be myself.

I probably won’t be so obsessed with Bitcoin forever, but even if I move onto other things, I’ll never regret my Bitcoin tattoo. It will be the stepping stone that got me there, and even if a new cryptocoin takes over, it will be all thanks to Bitcoin. I have a lot to thank Satoshi for, and I feel honored every day to be able to write for Bitcoin Magazine.

 Do you love Bitcoin, too? Tell the world why in a video at http://lovebitcoin.co/, and you might win some BTC! The prize pool is currently over 5 bitcoins.

Sovereignty 2.0

We are living in a new world.  As Andreas Antonopoulos put so eloquently, “now that we have crypto-currencies, it’s not sovereignty that determines currency, it’s currency that creates sovereignty.”

Bitcoin has helped declare independence for the Internet, and it appears it will continue to disrupt the status quo until that independence is recognized.  If we’ve learned anything from P2P technology, it’s that our rules bend around the tech, not the other way around. But if our rules bend around the tech, could we one day be living in a world where our borders do too?

Take the concept of decentralized autonomous states, or society if you like. The idea is that a political faction could be distributed throughout a global network and tied together with common currency, laws, and ethos. Voting could be done democratically and transparently through blockchains. Citizens would be able to see where their money is being spent in the system, and officials would be held accountable for where it goes.

Death Row Democracy, a cryptocurrency crowd-funded web series, takes place in a fictional universe where these states exist, in which blockchain technology is used to create more transparent and open political systems. Closer to reality, the tools for these systems are being built as we speak. I asked Permacredits and Ethereum team member Anthony D’Onofrio how a DAS might come to be in the future:

“Well, if you look at the way that states have traditionally been defined, it has been geographically bound.  We now have a global currency that demolishes previously established boundaries. What we can do is begin to codify a set of beliefs that defines who we are as global citizens, and this is the beginning of a sovereign state. Once Ethereum’s up and running, there will be no technical reason that someone couldn’t set up a state where anyone could agree to pay “taxes” and receive some benefit.”

 –Anthony D’Onofrio

As we narrow the scope, individuals could even gain tread towards their own sovereignty.  There are currently efforts being made towards “owning your own data.” Companies like Meeco.me and Maidsafe could feasibly build simple user interfaces for individuals to access their data in a completely decentralized internet.  Your info would be accessible only to you (no third party servers) and you could access it from anywhere in the world.  You could even sell your data to third parties, creating bidding wars for their services.

With the way things are going, it doesn’t seem unlikely to have a future where everyone has their own ‘coin’ and declares their own individuality through the representation of that coin. Imagine this scenario: everyone creates his or her own coin- say I create Camcoin, and you create Youcoin.  Camcoin is a collection or portfolio of all the different currencies / values that I accept and send, Solarcoin, Permacredits, Bitcoin, Ether, etc. but distributed in a pie graph to show what percentage of each coin or value I want to accept and send.  I owe you some value, but Youcoin doesn’t accept some of the values I do because we have different beliefs.  I send you Camcoin, anyways, proportional to how much I owe you, and the Tradenet does all the unmatched trading automatically in the backend. You receive all the coins or values you accept and our transaction is complete.

Not only can I choose to do business with you, but I can choose to not do business with you as well.  It seems likely we’ll trade our beliefs like badges, choosing what we want to support in society while maintaining our independence.

Communities, like colonies of the new world, could be formed from correlations of value, and the community itself could create its own sovereignty by trading a “basket currency”  (collection of multiple currencies represented by one) to other communities around the globe. Maybe this is where we’ll see the formation of decentralized autonomous states, and truly see sovereignty 2.0 in action, until then only time will tell.

 

 

 

Bitcoin to Earth: Don’t Look Now, but your Paradigm is Shifting

There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time has come.

Victor Hugo.  French poet and writer. 1802 – 1885

Historians may look back on these current days with fascination.  We may be living through the beginning of one of the biggest paradigm shifts in modern human history. The way the world actually thinks about money and stored value might be changing in a tidal wave of recognition. This article will define what a paradigm is and what a paradigm shift looks like.  Perhaps we may understand how to prepare and perhaps benefit from the embryonic beginnings of what may one day be seen as a titanic shift. The idea sparking this sea of change came from humble beginnings but has spread like wildfire accompanied by the necessary controversy one might expect from a monumental paradigm shift of understanding. One may seek learning opportunities from a rich history of previous major paradigm shifts and ponder the reasons for why some people flourished while others withered. As the cycles of paradigm shifts are recognizable and repeatable, this article intends to bring new understanding and context to the events now taking place. Those with the early grasp may draw from the lessons in history to prepare and anticipate the events as they unfold and perhaps discover an opportunity for profit.

What is a paradigm?

In effort to understand the world and events surrounding us, humans classify and categorize their own version of reality into a framework of reality we refer to as a paradigm, also known as a  model. We draw ’cause and effect’ relationships and begin to correlate groups of related information into patterns to bring understanding to our lives. In the discipline of science it has become known as the Scientific Model. Over time, cultures, trade groups, religions, etc. will espouse teaching that view and establish a consensus for a view of reality. This can sometimes lead to rivalries between different camps interpreting the world in different ways. This process runs the risk of reinforcing incorrect judgement and opinions that can side-track generations and go unnoticed because of the negative pile-on effects of  groupthink. The human natural tendency is to form into a hierarchy whose leaders determine “the official line” for the group.  Once this is established, any person, or observable fact which might throw into question the belief of the paradigm will be seen as irrelevant, or even willfully ignored in their group. One’s paradigm becomes the lens from where they view the world. Observation of the same data may be interpreted vastly different depending on the lens of those viewing it. girl witch The portrait above has been used in case studies about perception including research included in Stephen R Covey’s bestselling reference book “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”.  The first classroom students were were told to see the portrait of a young woman, after which the picture above was shown to them for a few seconds. Then another group of people were separately told beforehand about the portrait of an old lady facing to the left.  They too were allowed to view the picture for only a few seconds. Through simple power of suggestion, the definition of which figure they should find was already given to them. This act gave them bias – to only find and agree to what they were told they were seeing.  When they were finally allowed to gather as one group, each group was instructed to explain to the other group who the picture represented. Except for a few exceptions, many disagreements broke out, sometimes loudly, as each camp was convinced they alone were correct.  This example showed the dramatic difference people defend over only a difference of opinion created in just a few seconds. Covey went on to explain how we don’t see the world how it is in reality, but how we see ourselves projected into the world. We also project our backgrounds, education and customs into the paradigm and expect those around us will see the same thing.

What is a paradigm shift?

Thomas S. Kuhn, a noted scientist and author discovered a startling pattern that showed all of major scientific and technological breakthroughs don’t happen on a predictable linear scale as was previously assumed.  They happen with sudden insights, explosion of thought and eureka moments.  He challenged the entire scientific discovery process in his highly influential landmark book entitled “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions”, which was originally printed in 1962. The ideas espoused in this book triggered a worldwide reassessment which took into account several scholarly fields such as history, philosophy, sociology, and scientific knowledge. Paradigm shifts tear down the established models and completely rewrite the rules. These shifts are often unbelievable to the establishment at the top hierarchy of the previous model. The pattern emerges showing many of those leaders nearest the top of the hierarchy, who also have the most to lose in a paradigm shift, tend to fight the changes the most.

All the significant breakthroughs were “BREAK-WITHs” old ways of thinking.

Thomas Kubn. author of “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions”

Thomas Kuhn’s work with Structure of Scientific Revolutions outlined five major phases of a paradigm change. For the purposes of this article, we substitute the term “scientific” to mean economic, or monetary theory. This article goes on to give scenarios of how these phases might be applied to the paradigm change bitcoin is filling.

1.  Pre-paradigm period. Economic data is available but unorganized. There is little cohesion or organization for value for trade. Stateless bartering is the norm. Few records are kept and simple currencies are created.    

2.  Normal science. Data is gathered into patterns which can be predictable and repeatable. Trends emerge. Cause and effect are demonstrated. The first paradigm is created and general understanding among ‘experts’ is agreed. Schools of economic theory are formed. Governmental economic planning and central bank policy guidance begin to enforce.    

3.  Model Drift. Basic belief and understandings of the model begin to break down. Unemployment numbers rise, banks begin to fail. The law of unintended consequences result when overly broad central decisions are made for complex systems.  Today, government economic experts make regular ad-hoc adjustments for headline reports including the calculation of inflation and the method of which to calculate unemployment. They change the underlying definitions to make the data match the results rather than measuring data and coming up with different theories or models.  This results in a patchwork of  quiet adjustments in attempt to keep the current paradigm relevant.  Yet it continues to drift. ParadigmChange_KuhnCycle4.  Period of Crisis. Breakdowns in predictive models happen. In economics and currencies – we see unpredicted anomalies. Hyperinflation, financial bubbles, housing crashes, rising unemployment, and government budget shortfalls are all unexpected consequences resulting in a growing sense of something being fundamentally wrong. Without this necessary crisis phase there may not be need to evaluate and recognize that a new paradigm is even possible.    5.  Revolution. One paradigm is replaced by another believed to be better or more accurate. There will be “teams” that develop and divisions into their own camps that may be so different that they can’t agree even on the language terms and lens from which they view and speak of the data. In past paradigm changes there was little neutral ground to be found. Perhaps the concept of a complimentary currency system that combined current national currencies with a digital currency that is nation-less and trust-less and a strict creation limit will be favored.  The unemployed, unbanked, and underrepresented  population living in the margins of society see their hand held currencies becoming increasingly worthless. While the money printing press just keeps pumping out more of the same, the new paradigm needs might reach a tipping point. At one point, critical mass may develop and the floodgates open to people ‘opting in” to the new paradigm. People may simply ignore the old one as it becomes irrelevant. There aren’t many weeping over the loss of dial up modems to connect to the internet.

What does this have to do with bitcoin?

In many ways bitcoin is a complete break with the old ways. The fundamental principles are vastly different. It is a break with previous paradigms and rewrites money creation, protection, transfer, record keeping, validation, trust, privacy, and nation-created monopoly function. Many times throughout history it takes a crisis to completely motivate people to move from one paradigm to the other. With worldwide record deficits and money printing happening globally show we are in unprecedented times with the old paradigm of economics. New money is pushed to the banks without customer demand for it so banks invest it in alternative non productive places and segment bubbles form. When these bubbles eventually pop, the central banks take no responsibility for the ensuing trauma that displaces jobs and homes.  In the world’s largest single economy, the US money printing continues to accelerate while record budget shortfalls and unprecedented levels of debt and politicians and officials can’t balance the budget. Even new all-time highs in tax collection can’t keep up with spending in the US. Nobody seems to know or can predict how this will end on a global level. We’ve seen this happen ad infinitum from countries ruining their economies and their citizens’ life-savings through hyperinflation and retirement confiscation. One might ask if we’ve already begun the crisis phase where one perception of reality literally falls apart and the other opposing paradigm wins by default?  This cycle for the scenario plays out repeatedly in history – as Thomas Kuhn indicates in his book, citing several examples.

Money creation – as a currency

Old Paradigm: Created by central banks and lent to their respective governments based on supply and demand. It requires trust in the government to get it right to know how much currency is needed, but can be heavily influenced by politics and the human frailties. Politicians often mean well but often “paper over” problems by just printing more money to make bad financial decisions less obvious. It’s the hidden tax of inflation that benefits a government in the short-term with the ability to print its own money to pay for immediate needs, but at the expense of its population whose standard of living decreases with the then less valuable resulting currency. The resulting paradigm indicates that currencies created in this manner eventually becomes worthless.      

New Paradigm: Money is also created through a mathematical formula which forces it to be restricted and predictable. Changes can be allowed and the code can evolve to meet new needs but it must meet the approval of the network through majority consensus which is in effect, the democratization of money. The most popular digital currency, bitcoin, has a guaranteed declining rate of creation. With limited supply, usefulness and expected demand increase, experts predict the price will likely increase over time.

As a nation-less currency:

Old Paradigm:  Money as paper fiat currency’s value lessons over time. If you would have taken $50,000 of US dollars and $50,000 in gold in 1970 and buried them in two different boxes, which of the two would buy you more goods? Your paper money would only buy you about $8,200 (inflation calculator found here). Yet gold was about $36.00 per ounce in 1970 and today’s purchase value is $1,860,000. This indicates the US dollar, when compared to its predecessor form of money (gold), shows the value has declined on average 9.4% each year. Any country can easily print as much currency as they want to shuffle to another country for trade – but it is essentially passing pretty pieces of paper to each other (or the equivalent ones and zeros through a computer). The value is backed up by the reputation and economic prosperity of the nation which prints it. The government forces value by insisting their citizens pay taxes back in the currency.      

New paradigm:  It was estimated in February  2014 there are only about 1.2 million people own any bitcoin worldwide. There are numerous intrinsic economic qualities which make it unlike any currency created before. As it gains acceptance and understanding  the network effect for the idea whose time has come may create greater confidence. With regular everyday use, the expectation could be set where it will buy the same amount of goods or services on any particular day as it did the previous day. This expectation and regular heavy use may create a monetary “flywheel” with enough momentum it could become difficult to stop. With worldwide acceptance and not belonging to any country, some are now asking if it’s possible if this new paradigm could result in a new world reserve currency to work in a complimentary function to national currencies.

As a payment network

Old paradigm: The banking system has become enriched and one of the most powerful industries in the world. The mechanisms they use for the intra-bank money transfers is a closed system ensuring it retains the right to keep those rails private and profitable.  Banks tend to charge fees almost every time money changes hands or simple columns in a ledger. Money became a tool for surveillance through the same networks with government pressure.      

New paradigm: Digital currencies also act as the pay and the payment networks themselves. As transactions are simply verifiable data exchanges and they work on the open internet, on an open ledger without centralization or private books to keep. There are low fees, or no fees depending on the speed of the transaction. There is no need for a bank or company at all to transfer money on the payment network.  

How our paradigm is shifting

Where are we now? The World Bank, Federal Reserve, International Monetary Fund, Bank of International Settlements, and most recently, the BRIC nations have all sounded the alarm bells: it seems that we have been in a period of crisis for years. Governments have been printing money faster and trying to devalue their own money so they can export their goods to other countries in what has become a perverse competition some people call a “race to the bottom”.  Financial experts explain the consequence hurts wages, jobs, livelihood, and standards of living. The mix of conditions might all be ingredients for a worldwide fundamental shift in the concept of value and money, how it is created, transferred, and earned. Banning and fighting digital currency technology may prove futile in the long run. Those who adapt first to new paradigms often benefit most. We do not know yet where this experiment will lead… perhaps as a ‘co-currency’ to act as  a monetary shock absorber or throttle.  Maybe it’s used as a monetary backup plan or simply a trusted and efficient payment transfer mechanism. Perhaps digital currencies with limited supply might offset infinite money creation to bring stability and confidence as the two work side-by-side in a complimentary “yin and yang” relationship. One might imagine supplementing various national currencies with a common thread possibly underlining all of them. It’s doubtful that the world today would be aware of the potential boundaries of the new digital economy we are entering. Perhaps the new paradigm matches to the early days of the discovery of electricity and its potential. Early electricity pioneers such as Ben Franklin would likely have no conception of how far what began as a parlor trick using static electricity would become the basis from which the entire world would one day function. We might expect tragedies as well as triumphs, as history has given proof of major paradigm shift creating victims (deaths from electricity electrocution during experimentation), and air travel (countless early pilots) among just a few. Perhaps Victor Hugo’s powerful prophetic observations will apply again as the world comes to grips with the monetary revolution starting with the paradigm shift already in process. Perhaps this statement by Victor Hugo can give pause to those about to enter “crisis mode” and give hope and the possibility of prosperity for those preparing for a revolutionary stage of the cycle.

 There is one thing stronger than all the armies in the world, and that is an idea whose time has come.

Our Uncoinventional Journey to Bitcoin Boulevard US

20140702_192710Last month our family spent nearly a month living on the road while spending only Bitcoin. During the course of our travel we were invited via Twitter to make a change to our route so we could experience the cutting edge Bitcoin Boulevard, founded by Nikhil Chand and his amazing wife, Rebecca. The pair has helped dozens of restaurants and shops set up to accept Bitcoin through BitPay.

We immediately changed our route to include an overnight stop in Cleveland Heights, Ohio so we could test out the local Bitcoin scene and get to know their community. When we pulled up to their vintage 1920s house, Nikhil and Rebecca were waiting for us in their driveway. They helped us unload then took us on a stroll to Lee Road, also known as Bitcoin Boulevard.

Nikhil knew people everywhere we went. Neighbors, store owners, and folks strolling down the street all waved and greeted him with enthusiasm. I believe it is this close connection to his community that allowed him to so quickly launch this inspiring project.20140702_192716

Our first stop was The Tavern Company, an amazing Restaurant and Bar in the heart of Bitcoin Boulevard. I got the salmon roll salad and literally devoured every morsel. A reporter for the Sun News met us there. First she talked to my husband John Bush and I about our Uncoinventional Tour, then to Nikhil about his company, CoinNEO and the creation of Bitcoin Boulevard. Her article was also published in the Plain Times.

John made the payment via BitPay and we walked down the block to SweetieFry to try some handmade ice cream on BTC. This ice cream shop had a very unique and diverse set of flavors including French Toast! I had the dark chocolate and peanut butter flavors while my daughter enjoyed Strawberry. Once again we paid BTC directly through BitPay. Neither of these establishments had trouble accepting our payment and seemed casually accustomed to receiving payment with BTC.

 

sweetiefry

While we walked back to Nikhil and Rebecca’s house, John interviewed Nikhil for his Let’s Talk Bitcoin podcast, SovereignBTC. You can listen to the interview here when it is live. That night we enjoyed the company of our hosts while our kids played with their adopted dog, Clive. John showed Nikhil his NXT wallet and they geeked out on the bidding and sales system for this thriving non-BTC crypto currency. Our friend Mark thoroughly introduced us to the currency while we attended PorcFest and John has become passionate about showing others how it works.

When we woke, Rebecca made us espresso in her French Press. They were heading off to their respective jobs and we had to depart for our long journey to Saint Louis, Missouri. They recommended a breakfast joint called the Katz Club Diner, further down Lee Drive, part of Bitcoin Boulevard.

20140703_100605

What a great recommendation: this might have been the best meal of our trip to date. They offered local foods and had many gluten free options! Our kids got the pancakes that had local cherries and syrup on them. I had an egg scramble dish with goat cheese, black beans, and crispy tortillas underneath. I felt like I could have stayed there and ate all day. We purchased our meal easily with Bitcoin through their BitPay application on an iPad, but only after getting two gluten free cookies for the road. This was one of the most expensive meals we had on the trip, over $75 with the tip, but very much so worth it.

In review, if you are wanting to dine on BTC, Cleveland Heights is the place to go. Every bite of every meal was simply amazing. What a fabulous detour on our journey. Thank you Nikhil and Rebecca for the invitation and the hospitality!

Screenshot_2014-07-03-21-48-38

Constructive Reflections on Bitcoin in the Beltway

This past month was the Bitcoin in the Beltway Conference held in Washington, D.C. The event was planned by Jason King, who recently ran 3,214 miles on a tour called “Bitcoin Across America”. The Conference took place at the Marriott Renaissance in Downtown D.C. and proceeds went to King’s organization, Sean’s Outpost, a homeless outreach and advocacy group that operates on bitcoin donations. King defies the laws of physics with the amount of energy he pours into his advocacy. In addition to literally running across the country for Bitcoin and organizing this major event in D.C., he is also a regular speaker at BTC events across the country and a dedicated philanthropist.

The event featured speakers such as Patrick Byrne, CEO of Overstock.com, Jeffrey Tucker, Founder of Liberty.me. and Davi Barker, of Bitcoin Not Bombs. I sat on a media panel with Perianne Boring of Forbes, who gave great advice on how to get coverage of Bitcoin stories in mainstream media. A few of the heavy hitter speakers on the bill did not show including Cody Wilson, infamous for 3D printing gun parts through his company, Defense Distributed, and Charlie Shrem, who was recently arrested on money laundering charges in connection with his role in the bitcoin company, BitInstant. Charlie was not able to attend as the court handling his case reversed their decision on his right to travel.

While I had a great time at the event, I do have a few critiques that are intended to help other organizers put on the most constructive experience possible for speakers and attendees. Many of these critiques are not unique to this event, and I will try to be clear about this when I mention them.

I think a common mistake of event organizers is to try and squeeze in too much programming for the scope and size of the event. This often results in a chaos of sorts as people try to shuffle from one speaker to another, all of whom are spread between various locations. I have found that events which funnel the crowd into one place with only a few break out sessions flow much better for the speakers and the attendees.

As the organizer or co-organizer of many large conferences, I have learned this lesson the hard way. I think the diversity of subject matter and quality of speakers were phenomenal at this event, but many people reported having trouble figuring out where to be and when.

For future event planners, I suggest the following daily structure for maximum attendance at each of your speeches and breakouts. Start the day with a full crowd every morning followed by a break out session before lunch. Eat lunch as a group and follow with another break out session. Finally, end the day as a large group and save the evening hours for mingling.

My second critique is that the vendor booths were in the same room as the main stage. I find this highly distracting as an event attendee and highly frustrating as a vendor. I have two small children and it is absolutely impossible for me to work our vendor booth with my children in tow if the event is in the same room as the vendors.

Inevitably you will have vendors who arrive to set up late and break down to leave early.  This creates noise in addition to the chatter that take place in every vendor area. I have attended Tenth Amendment events, Liberty events and Bitcoin events set up like this. It never works out well. Ideally you want your vendors close to the entry and exit ways so the crowd naturally forms around the booths. This keeps your vendors happy in addition to those trying to listen to the presentation.

My third critique is having the event spread out too far. The main room was large enough to accommodate the keynote and breakouts, which would have funneled everyone nicely.  When people have to wander too far away from the main stage doors, they usually turn around, confused. Our screening of Sovereign Living had the lowest turnout we have experienced at any conference, and we later heard that people could not find the room.

Overall the event was positive. The speakers were dynamic and resourceful. I was introduced to new ideas about media and met new personalities while interacting with many movers and shakers in the Bitcoin world. I felt blessed to be a part of the event and hope this article can serve as a lesson learned for those planning events in the future.

Uncoinventional Tour in Review, Our Month on the Road Spending Bitcoin Only

Uncoinventional: the Tour in Review

Last month, our family traveled the U.S. spending only bitcoins.  We documented our travels for Bitcoin Magazine through a live blog.  As we embarked on this journey, I had no idea what I had got myself into. Still, I felt compelled to try. For those of you who weren’t following our ups and downs in realtime, here are the highlights:

The Numbers

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The trip took a total of 24 days and brought us to stops in 12 cities. We traveled a total of 4,600 miles and pumped gas 16 times. We stayed in eight hotels, crashed in three guest bedrooms and camped at one campground. We paid seven businesses directly with Bitcoin and used three gift card services to pay indirectly with Bitcoin. We stopped at three local MeetUps, attend one conference, one festival and conducted four screenings of Sovereign Living, the reality show about our lives.  It was a whirlwind trip, but we learned a lot.

The Logistics

Bitcoin is still in the days of early adoption. This means a lot of research is needed to find Bitcoin-friendly venues for smooth travel. During our trip, places that accept Bitcoin directly were rare, so we supplemented with gift card services such as Gyft and E-Gifter.

Booking Hotels

There are actually many options for booking hotels with Bitcoin. We tried them all to see how they each worked. We had a very easy time using our Gyft app to purchase gift cards for GlobalHotelCard.com. we used this method twice with no issue. We also used CheapAir to book our hotel and pay directly with BTC. This was actually the most simple service we found. Quick, easy, no complications. We even paid a Holiday inn Express in Brooklyn directly with Bitcoin.

Screenshot_2014-06-23-13-52-51

Our major complication was using Expedia. We had a rough enough time using their service that I published an article titled, Our Nightmarish Experience Using Bitcoin on Expedia. After publishing the article they contacted us and were able to make some immediate changes to their technology. Now you can pay with both a gift card and Bitcoin, whereas you could not when we tried from the road. They are also working with CoinBase, their Bitcoin payment processor, to develop a training program for their call center.

Wait, what about gas?

For gas, our family used CoinFueled, a website that allows you to order gasoline gift cards with Bitcoin. It takes about two weeks to process orders, so this avenue required a bit more forethought on our end than a traditional road trip.

After an hour of mapping out our journey, calculating our gasoline needs, and looking at what  gas stations were in each city so we bought the right gift cards, we finally opted for $450 in Exxon Mobil and $300 in BP cards. This amount was actually short of we needed for the trip by around $300, as we forgot to account for the vendor items loaded in our trunk and roof.

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When we arrived in D.C., we placed an order for another Exxon Mobil card that CoinFueled rush delivered to our campsite in Lancaster, NH. When we arrived in Kansas City my mother served as a proxy for us by purchasing a Shell gift card with her debit card that we replaced by ordering her a gift card with BTC.

A few times we had to drive slightly out of the way to get to a gas station we had a gift card for. Even though I planned out each stop, we decided to keep driving if the kids were asleep. This added an element of surprise to our gas purchases. Thankfully our in-car GPS helped us find appropriate stations on our route.

Food

Gyft, a gift card services that takes bitcoins, had most of our food covered. I ordered cards to Amazon, where I ordered healthy snacks from before the trip. At Whole Foods, our favorite meal and grocery stop, we used Gyft’s app on our phone.

The process of buying a gift card was so simple and easy that we would wait to hear our total from the cashier, open the Gyft app, order the appropriate Whole Foods gift card, scan our Bitcoin QR code, then hand our phone or tablet displaying the electronic gift card to the cashier for payment. It took about the same amount of time required to dig your debit card out of a large purse. We were also able to use Bitcoin to eat at Applebee’s, T.G.I.Fridays, T. Rex, Papa Johns, Cracker Barrel and On the Border, again with the help of Gyft as well as EGifter.

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When we hit D.C., New York City, Cleveland Heights, and the Porcupine Freedom Festival, we were able to buy meals directly with bitcoins. There is a wonderful website called CoinMap.org that allows you to search for brick-and-mortar merchants that accept Bitcoin.

However, being listed on Coinmap didn’t guarantee ease of use. Some businesses had a hard time figuring out how to take our payment, resulting in long conversations and phone calls to the owner. As Bitcoin is still fairly new, I suggest calling ahead to make sure they are ready for you before you arrive.

We were also tipped off on a Bitcoin business directory called AirBitz. I heard rave reviews, but their app was incompatible with my tablet. I tweeted them about it and they quickly made an update that allowed me to download it, but it still crashes. I tweeted them the crash error, hopefully it will be dealt with soon and I can try out their service.

Summary

Our trip was full of unexpected twists and turns, but we feel it was a major success. We did use Federal Reserve Notes to pay toll roads, something the Bitcoin community will hopefully have developed a work around before our next annual trip to PorcFest.

Our obstacles and challenges will help make the Bitcoin ecosystem stronger. Restaurants with little BTC experience got to practice with us and will be more equipped the next time a Bitcoin customer arrives. AirBitz discovered a flaw in their programming and will have a stronger product when they make their next app update. Expedia learned of the user-end difficulties with their website and call centers, and are actively working to become a better and stronger part of the Bitcoin ecosystem.

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Hopefully, our successes have inspired other Bitcoin fans to use it more often in their daily lives. We have already been contacted by multiple people telling us how they purchased a hotel room or bought a meal with Bitcoin.

We hope to continue the experiment on at least four more road trips to Bitcoin conferences and events this year. You can keep following our Uncoinventional blog for the latest!

TXT Coins NOW Launches on STARTJOIN

Lee Gibson Grant of TXT Coins Now has launched a project on Max Keiser’s Cypto crowd funding platform STARTJOIN with the aim of integrating StartCoin and Maxcoin into TXTCoinsNow.

TXT Coins Now is a mobile-to-mobile payment service that allows users of basic feature phones (i.e. not smart phones) to send and receive crypto-currencies to each other across the world. Their platform is currently integrated with NXT, BTL, Scotscoin, LTC and BTC and they are aiming to support many more crypto-currenices in future. 

Grant launched the project on StartJoin ten days ago  with a target to raise $20,000 and StartJoin is offering 10x Startcoins for every dollar donated to the the TXTcoinsNOW project as a reward for donors who wish to see the project succeed. The hope is that, once the new currencies are integrated into TXT Coins Now the supported currencies will go up in value and serve to increase the ease with which crypto-currencies can be used across the world, particularly in developing nations.-

Grant is entering into talks with the Ethiopian embassy, offering to provide them with a payments back-end solution for Ethio Telecom so that 23 million subscribers can start to use mobile money in the same way that Kenyans use M-Pesa in Kenya. He also started discussions with a representative of Manx telecom ”Isle of Man” at CoinSummit last week, hoping to provide the same services for Fiat and Crypto Currency on the island, and consequently to the whole of the UK.

TXT Coins Now is also working on is its own Crypto Secure MVNO Global Network enabling users to Roam globally with discounted internet pricing with Free Roaming in over 100+ Countries. This would mean more security on the TXT Coins Now Mobile MVNO Network than traditional Mobile Networks, giving Crypto Currencies listed on TXT Coins Now more success to Mobile payments globally and further options for alliances with other mobile money operators.

TXT Coins Now is flexible in that it can be integrated into Mobile Networks just like M-Pesa is or it can run outside of the networks like other micropayment solutions. This is a cutting edge difference between TXT Coins Now and other mobile money solution providers in the Crypto Market Place. Ultimately, TXT Coins Now is aiming to be the gateway bridge between the Fiat world and Crypto world.

NXT and TXT Coins Now have always had a close relationship, NXT having crowdfunded TXTCoinsNow via their Nxt Asset Exchange in return for being listed on the TXT Coins Now platform.

Grant believes this is part of the reason why NXT has grown in value and reached number 3 in the CoinMarketCap charts, up from number 6 earlier this year.  Crucaillly, NXT have been doing a lot of work promoting and supporting their developers, sponsoring Pay Expo 2014 as ‘Crypto-Sponsors’ alongside Barclays bank. NXT also reports that and they have secured the title of Crypto Sponsor for Pay Expo 2015 as well.

For donors to the Start Join project, the questions are: will the TXT Coins Now platform be successful in integrating with the government and telecoms infrastructure in Ethiopia and other developed and developing countries? Will the system get traction enough to be used by users around the world, and will international diaspora communitites easily be able to learn and adopt the  TXT Coins Now system?

TXT coins Now started out 4 years ago under a slightly different name, but their model turned out to be an unviable due to money transmitter regulations, but since regulations do not apply to handling crypto-currencies yet, their operational risks are somewhat mitigated, particularly as: a) They don’t actually handle fiat currency at any point, and b) there’s a public audit trail by virtue of their use of the block chains they use that handle the crypto-curency transmissions, but with regulators nervous over the transmission of crypto-coins, how long  might those mitigating circumstance prevail? 

When asked about the project, Max Keiser said that the test of how successful Grant’s project to integrate TXT Coins Now with MaxCoin and StartCoin is, will be in whether the community assess them to be competent to reach their business objectives. Keiser said it was “The community will decide” – in other words, it is up to the community to do their due diligence on ether they think they’ll get a return on their investment. Payments to the project are donated to StartJoin via Paypal, and if the project doesn’t reach it’s $20,000 target within the next 60 days, the money will be returned to the donors. If TXT Coins Now do reach their target, donors to the project will receive StartCoins, (of which there are a maximum of 84,000,000 coins) and which, based on the strength of the crowd’s ability to choose winners for the StartCoin platform, could increase in value overtime, and hence act as a potentially profitable reward mechanism, akin to owning equity in the StartJoin platform. 

Kickstarting projects with rewards in Crypto-coins is very popular at the moment, SWARM are also offering a form of ‘crypto-equity’ for the projects being launched on their platform, but offering any kind of security in return for a donation is a regulated practice and as such, these rewards do not represent legally defined equity, and there are no guarantees of a return.  

Close scrutiny of the individuals and companies involved in every venture listed on Crypto-equity platforms is therefore a major activity for every potential investor to engage in. Keiser’s approach to simply ‘let the market decide’ is fair enough, but responsibility ultimately lies with the investors. Those projects which succeed in their crowd funding goals may well grow into successful businesses, but it is still unclear as to how the success of the TXT Coins Now platform itself will have an effect on the value of Maxcoin and Startcoin.

StartJoin and TXT Coins Now are also aiming to support a charity worker known as ‘The Machine Gun Preacher’ in South Sudan. The Machine Gun Preacher became famous after a life of crime and violence, for finding religion and turning his cause to freeing child soldiers from the Lord’s Resistance Army and opening orphanages. Keiser aims to have the celebrity on his show to talk about the project soon as, currently, he’s the ‘preacher’ is only able to accept a moderate amount of donations through normal banking channels in Ethiopia and Uganda. 

Again, questions of due diligence and accountability arise. Bringing mobile payments to Africans and shielding them from the risk of volatility is a undoubtably a noble aim as BitPesa have tried to do in Kenya with a little success already. Bringing transaction costs down and undercutting Western Union and Moneygram worldwide  are arguably (in line with the World Bank’s thinking) an essential target for the global money remittance industry, and TXT Coins Now may well help bring down transaction fees to Africa and other parts of the world, but is involving the Machine Gun Preacher a good idea to attract publicity? 

Grant already has strong connections across Africa due to his previous work there in the Telecoms Industry and Carbon Credits. If the Crypto-community believes in his cause strongly enough, and the crowdfunder is successful, he has plans to visit Ethiopia, Uganda and South Sudan to get the project going there.

 

Cable TV Joins Digital Currency Network, DISH Network to Accept Bitcoin

Bitcoin, a digital currency once described by critics as unusable, unreliable and even a scam, has defied those remarks as it becomes accepted by a company maintaining over 14 million subscribers and employing 34,000 workers.

DISH executive vice president and chief operating officer, Bernie Han, said beginning in July the satellite TV company will accept digital coins through the payment processor, Coinbase.

Coinbase is a bitcoin consumer wallet and merchant payment processor that powers 1.3 million consumer wallets, and supports 31,000 merchants.

The payment processor, Coinbase, will convert bitcoins to cash using their “Instant Exchange” feature, in order to prevent DISH from being affected by value fluctuations. Coinbase was chosen as the payment processor due to their significantly lower operational fees.

“We’re excited to support DISH and their current and new subscribers for their bitcoin transactions,” said Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam. “This is a large step forward in the growing momentum of customers paying companies in bitcoin for things we do every day, like watching premium TV,” said Ehrsam.

Coinbase will make it extremely easy “to receive immediate credit in dollars, at an attractive cost for DISH,” said Han.

The corporation, which provides cable, internet, audio programming and interactive TV services, is the first only TV provider to accept digital currency as payment.

It’s also the largest company yet to accept bitcoin.

“The move comes amid a time of drastic change and consolidation in the pay-TV and telecommunications industries, while Dish, run by Charlie Ergen, has largely remained on the sidelines,” said The Wall Street Journal.

Customers will soon be able to pay their bills online with the bitcoin wallet of their choice, and still be able to use previous methods of payment including cash, credit card and check.

“We always want to deliver choice and convenience for our customers and that includes the method they use to pay their bills,” said Han.

The cable provider said they recognized a flourishing desire in customers to participate in the digital currency buzz, and also employed many avid bitcoin users.

“Bitcoin is becoming a preferred way for some people to transact and we want to accommodate those individuals,” said Han. Individuals that aren’t so familiar with bitcoin will have no problem learning the ropes. The Coinbase processor is expected to make the experience easy for customers.

The public seems to be quite enamored with DISH’s decision to accept bitcoin, and also supportive of using Coinbase as the payment processor. The San Francisco based company has received several positive reviews since they opened in June 2012.

Redditor user BrazenAmberite wrote: “Easily one of the most professional exchanges out there. I’ve bought a lot of coin on there all without issue.”

Coinbase even has a new feature that allows you to claim a URL and share it with your friends and family, enabling them easily to send you bitcoin.

Reddit0829 wrote: “Don’t forget they also just integrated two huge features, device authentication, and user names. They’ve also really stepped it up in the customer support category. Coinbase is doing big things.”

The relationship created between DISH and Coinbase is sure incite similar moves by other large corporations, further expanding the bitcoin market.

Bitcoin Megaphone and Anonymous Affiliates

A little while back I reported on a fascinating project I had been following. I have continued to follow this project with interest. As the world’s first Bitcoin-powered pay-per-character publishing platform, Bitcoin Megaphone peaked my interest. Truly innovative and original ideas in the space can be difficult to come by, even with so much happening.

Bitcoin Megaphone, the cutting-edge micro-publishing platform, has just unveiled its affiliate program. The program works by instantly paying affiliates 30% of the profits generated by referrals. Since Bitcoin Megaphone uses Coinbase as its merchant platform, the affiliate transactions happen off-blockchain and without fees.

What is most fascinating, and only really possible because of Bitcoin itself, is that all that’s required to sign up for the affiliate program is an email address. If someone wanted to set up an anonymous Coinbase account, he or she could accumulate funds from Bitcoin Megaphone via Coinbase, and transfer them to an external Bitcoin address at any time completely anonymously.

This is the kind of exploitation of the unique aspects of Bitcoin itself that has fascinating implications and ramifications. In an environment where the push towards mainstream adoption is making anonymity somewhat of a dirty word, Bitcoin Megaphone have sought to embrace that aspect of the technology in a useful and innovative implementation. What is more, anonymity here, it is difficult to argue, has anything but benefit for the user.

Added Bitcoin Megaphone creator, Mike Solomon:

“Unlike many affiliate programs where earnings slowly trickle in, the earning potential here is huge. For example, if a Bitcoin Millionaire decides to spend a few hundred dollars on a big post, you can easily start making real money instantly. Besides gambling, there’s really no way you can easily make so much bitcoin so easily.”

Before the affiliate program, the only way to make money on Bitcoin Megaphone was by creating a post and collecting tips. But according to Solomon, people wanted another way to monetize.

“Since the site launched, I’ve gotten so much support from people who love the idea but didn’t think they could post anything interesting enough to generate tips. The affiliate program finally offers these people the chance to make money without having to spend money. It’s a way for everyone to get involved.”

A signup form for the Bitcoin Megaphone affiliate program can be found here.

Since Bitcoin Megaphone launched in March 2014, hundreds of people have anonymously posted jokes, advertisements, art, conspiracy theories, commentary, and more for .00001 BTC per character – all in the hopes of earning tips. As of July 2014 it has generated more than 75 bitcoin in anonymous tips for its authors.

Bitcoin Megaphone was created as a side project by Mike Solomon, who lives in New York where he works as Digital Director for Glamour Magazine at Condé Nast Publications. Condé Nast Publications is in no way affiliated with Bitcoin Megaphone.

I will continue to watch the work of this micro-blogging platform, in the hopes that they continue to innovate in exciting ways with Bitcoin’s infrastructure. To incentivize people to contribute while allowing the same users to maintain full anonymity, as they collect tips, is purely in the spirit of Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Magazine and College Cryptocurrency Network Team Up for Special Back-to-School Issue

JULY 16, 2014 — Bitcoin Magazine and the College Cryptocurrency Network (CCN) are pleased to announce the first ever, “Back-to-School with Bitcoin” issue this coming September!

Guest-edited by CCN Executive Director, Jeremy Gardner, this issue of the magazine will be dedicated to covering youth in bitcoin, perhaps the most important demographic in bringing blockchain technology to the mainstream.

To ensure that this issue of Bitcoin Magazine is chock-full of the brightest young minds in cryptocurrencies, the magazine will be rewarding the top-five student submissions with Bitcoin prizes, which will be made possible by generous donations from our sponsors, in addition to being published in both the print and online edition! Furthermore, there will be a graphic design competition for students who, if selected, will see his or her work featured as the cover of September’s issue of Bitcoin Magazine. Lastly, the issue will feature academics and other top thinkers regarding the exciting innovations in the space.

Students and educators interested in submitting articles must abide by the following rules and formatting guidelines:

  • Students must be enrolled in or currently attending high school, undergrad, or graduate school
  • Story must be on a topic related to Bitcoin
  • Submissions must be between 1200-2000 words
  • Deadline is August 7

Students interested in submitting graphic design entries for the cover must use these rules and formatting guidelines:

  • Must be enrolled in or currently attending high school, undergrad, or graduate school
  • A4, 3mm bleed, CMYK

To submit your Bitcoin story or graphic design, please email [email protected].

To sponsor a reward or advertise in the first-ever Back-to-School with Bitcoin issue, contact [email protected].

The team at Bitcoin Magazine and the College Cryptocurrency Network look forward to reviewing your submissions in what is an exciting first for the Bitcoin community.

 

BitPay Releases Copay Beta – A New Multi-signature Wallet

The Atlanta-based company, BitPay, has been hard at work developing solutions for businesses and individuals in the bitcoin space, and from this, recently released a beta of their new multi-signature wallet, Copay. The wallet is completely open-source and aims to provide a multi-signature transaction that occurs on the blockchain and allows complete control of user funds.

Released early last week, Copay can change the way bitcoin users think about transaction processes. Multi-signature technology eliminates having to rely on a third-party to store your bitcoins. Instead, what this technology brings to the table is an easy way to safely maintain possession of your funds, with a wallet that has a wide-range of use cases and will likely become the norm for bitcoin in the near future. Similarly, companies like Xapo, BitGo and BoostVC-backed Cryptocorp have unveiled on-blockchain technologies, all working to provide a solution to the central security issue of the use of the private key. Although Bitcoin remains the most secure form of payment, the fact remains that bitcoins can be stolen if someone fraudulently gains access to a user’s wallet. This is what multi-signature technology can solve.

What does Multi-Signature mean for the future?

Multi-signature technology opens the door for a wide range of uses, both for businesses and individuals. For businesses, Copay can provide a great way for small businesses to manage their bitcoins by requiring 3 of 5 authorized members’ signatures in order to approve a transaction and spend funds. At an individual level, a family can create a 2 of 3 wallet for their child to control their spending habits and ensure that the funds are not lost due to a virus or lost password. Each use case can be further secured by one signer controlling a device in a secure, offline location in case anyone loses the online wallet.

Implementation of multi-signature transactions requires multiple signatures from authorized members in order for a transaction to be approved. Furthermore, each member of a Copay wallet can sign a transaction without needing the private key to reside on a single shared device, further solidifying the security of each multi-signature transaction. This means that a thief would need to compromise two or more machines in order to gain access to the funds. In terms of transaction validation, the correct number of signatures is required in order for bitcoin miners to approve the transaction. If there are not enough signatures, miners will reject the multi-signature transaction.

In terms of on-blockchain technology, multi-signature transactions have only scratched the surface. We have only begun seeing the real-life uses and future implications that technologies like Copay can provide. Because Bitcoin (both as a technology and payment method) is so young, it makes little sense to craft regulations around Bitcoin at its current state. We have only seen the beginning of what bitcoin makes possible in terms of frictionless payment, the blockchain, open source technology, the Internet of Things; all of which are very important inventions and can each contain some groundbreaking legal implications.

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BitPay initially created Copay to help internally manage company funds. Because of the company’s vision of actively growing bitcoin technology, BitPay believes it is essential for wallet technology to be open source and peer reviewed. Copay is built upon BitPay’s open source bitcoin stack, bitcore, along with Insight, an open source blockchain explorer and API. Copay can be installed as a Chrome or Firefox browser extension as well as a full web version, with easy to understand instructions. To start using the Copay beta visit https://copay.io.

Many experts in the cryptocurrency space believe that this will be the year of Multisig and with companies like BitPay amongst many others leading the way, these predictions may be very accurate.

 

The North American Bitcoin Conference Welcomes Bitcoin Novices

Curious about cryptocurrency? Everyone is invited to learn the what and the how of bitcoin when The North American Bitcoin Conference descends on Chicago, July 19­-20.

The North American Bitcoin Conference and the College Cryptocurrency Network will present the Bitcoin Beginners Workshop, hosted by Pamela Morgan (Empowered Law), Will Pangman (Tapeke), and David Silva Smith (So What’s Bitcoin). This first-­of-­its-­kind workshop event will take place on both days of the conference. It will be free and open to the public, and all attendees will receive $10 worth of bitcoin, courtesy of Coinbase, for a truly hands­-on bitcoin experience. The hosts will provide a mini­-lecture explaining bitcoin basics followed by Q&A. Representatives of the College Cryptocurrency Network will be on hand to guide participants through setting up and properly securing a bitcoin wallet. Registration is required.

The North American Bitcoin Conference aims to make understanding and using bitcoin accessible for the average, non-­technical user through community­-oriented, adoption-­driven programs like the Bitcoin Beginners Workshop. The event intends to attract those who may be interested to experience bitcoin on a trial basis, but feel hesitant or intimidated to do so on their own without the guidance of trusted experts.

Hosts David Silva Smith, Pamela Morgan, and Will Pangman are always excited to introduce bitcoin to new and non­-traditional crowds. Their goal for this event is to demonstrate that bitcoin is ready for mainstream use, and to provide a friendly risk-­free setting in which Midwesterners can experience the visceral joy of testing it for themselves.

“Six months ago bitcoin wasn’t ready for mainstream. Today it is,” says Smith, as he hints at the blinding pace of innovation and user­ adoption around the five­-year-­old cryptocurrency. Morgan, a Chicago-­based attorney and educator, has been working with Pangman on a university outreach program to bring bitcoin education resources to students and academia. She says, “Bitcoin is a tool artists, musicians, writers, and other creatives can use to fundraise. It’s a tool students and faculty can use to conduct research across campuses and in a wide variety of disciplines.” Pangman adds, “Bitcoin is still in its infancy, but it’s never been easier to get started, but it’s never been easier to get started. This free Beginners Workshop is the best opportunity yet for folks who’re curious about it but need some in-­person support. There’s still time to get involved before the early majority.”

The workshop is designed for users with no prior bitcoin experience. Attendees will:

  • Receive free bitcoins and a bitcoin wallet
  • Learn how to make purchases from bitcoin­-accepting retailers
  • Learn how to donate to bitcoin­-accepting charities
  • Learn how to buy and sell bitcoins on exchanges
  • Learn how to secure a bitcoin wallet to prevent hacking and theft

Registration is online through Eventbrite.

The North American Bitcoin Conference takes place in Chicago, Illinois, at McCormick Place on July 19th and 20th. Over 1,000 attendees will meet and hear from the biggest names in the bitcoin industry, as well as powerful newcomers such as regulators and bankers. For more conference information, visit here or call (845) 319-7420.

For more information about the workshop, or to schedule an interview with organizer Will Pangman, please call (414) 213­-8905 or email [email protected]. For David Smith, call (517) 944-­1872 or email [email protected].

How Cryptocurrency Opened the Software Industry

Open source technology is fundamental to the cryptocurrency movement, and that’s a good thing. Bitcoin wouldn’t have the same appeal if it were copyrighted by a company, or if any of the underlying code were hidden from the public. The free and transparent nature of open source projects was necessary for the success of Bitcoin, and cryptocurrency appears ready to return the favor by decentralizing software distribution as we know it.

One of the most important ideas to emerge from the movement so far are decentralized exchanges. These allow one to (without trusting a central authority) trade different cryptocurrencies on smart contract-enabled platforms like Counterparty, Mastercoin or Ethereum. The additional invention of smart property–the owners of which can be tracked using a blockchain–means that one will be able to buy and sell not just digital coins, but even things like houses and cars!

Among the many things one can trade in a decentralized fashion are software and data, which is relatively simple to accomplish compared to a car: no physical change-of-hands or lengthy paperwork is required. Finding software currently requires a lot of effort if the software is obscure, unless you’re willing to use a centralized marketplace which can charge whatever extra fees it wishes. Services like Steam or the iStore maintain a lot of control over what users can access, and often have ongoing restrictions–we’re moving towards a licensing model, wherein many of our favorite programs are not actually ours.

These monopolistic software distributors will inevitably support the developers that profit them the most, which are usually not of the open source variety. Given the tenacity of the open source community, one might wonder why nobody attempted to solve this problem, before. To a degree, they already have: programs like FrostWire hope to decentralize access to software via their P2P networks, and cryptocurrency is already supporting the cause.

frostwire

FrostWire, if you didn’t know, allows one to download programs uploaded to the network from other users. Although they already accept PayPal donations, donating to the creators of your favorite content requires tracking them down, and of course incurs unnecessarily-high fees by virtue of them being a middleman. Your average Internet user is too lazy to track the source of content if it requires any effort, and will be unwilling to send very small donations given the fees attached.

FrostWire has solved this problem by integrating Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin and Peercoin. Funds sent to a torrent in the FrostWire program go directly to the uploader, untouched by the FrostWire developers or network. Bitcoin’s well-known suitability for microtransactions means that even the poorest of fans can send donations–whatever amount they can afford, even pennies–with relative ease. Bands like Radiohead have had amazing success with the “pay-what-you-want” model, which takes power out of the hands of record producers who leech off their artists, and cryptocurrency will take things even further. It’s conceivable that most music will exist in the free domain in the future.

This is a great innovation, but it’s likely that not all software is suitable for the freemium model, especially if development costs are high–songs are cheap enough that many will be willing to donate extra for them, helping make up for the free riders. If you want to sell your software at a cost, you currently have to use a centralized software distributor, like those mentioned above. Unfortunately, reliable methods of selling software in a decentralized fashion have not yet been developed, but recent innovations called MaidSafe and the API Network hope to solve that problem, too, while providing further benefits to the open source community.

MaidSafe_Project_Logo

MaidSafe you might have heard of, since it’s been around for years, and raised millions of dollars via a cryptocurrency crowdsale. They created the SAFE Network, which hopes to revolutionize the Internet as we know it. Currently, if you want to put something on the Internet, like a website, you have to distribute it from one or more central servers, which you may or may not control. If the authorities want that data removed our intercepted, they can go to wherever that website is hosted from and use coercion or force to make that happen.

The SAFE Network stores data in encrypted form, in bits and pieces in every computer connected to it. At least four full copies are maintained at any one time, in case somebody leaves the network or service is otherwise interrupted. If the data is private, the system ensures that it can only be decrypted by the intended user’s client. None of the data can be decrypted by anyone outside of the SAFE Network, nor effectively removed without confiscating every single connected device. One can store files and programs, and others can download or access them for free or for a specified number of safecoins, the network’s native currency.

You can buy safecoins on the Mastercoin network, or you can earn them, such as by volunteering more disc space to the network than you consume in storage (proof of resource, as opposed to the proof-of-work mining in Bitcoin). Open source developers can design and upload applications to the SAFE Network for free, and all developers get safecoins from the network when their content is accessed. This provides a subsidy for open source developers (as opposed to just relying on donations), and reduces their distribution and hosting costs to practically nothing. Those who want to sell their application’s services and keep the programs to themselves can still do that.

api network

This allows one to run an online service or distribute digital content without the use of a central intermediary. The first system to take advantage of this is the API Network, which runs on the SAFE Network. The reason you’re likely less familiar with the API Network than MaidSafe is that relatively few people understand what an API is, or their importance. API stands for application progamming interface, and is how programs talk to each other: just like a graphical user interface (GUI) specifies how a human and a program communicate, an API instructs other programs. Instead of going through the program to find out where it stores data, how, and the format of its inputs and outputs, an API tells you that.

This is most common (by far) in web services–for example, if you want to include a Google map on your webpage, it’s vastly easier to use an API than to figure out how to get the right data from their server on your own. A web API exists on the side of the web service provider, and is “called” over the Internet to retrieve and display the correct data locally. The Google Maps API makes things relatively plug-and-play compared to the programming required to reconstruct their work, and versatile enough for most scenarios. They are useful enough to have spawned several online marketplaces, and when they’re unable to find and get an API directly from the developer, people are willing to pay a middleman for easy access.

The API Network has its own native coin, called APIcoins (XAP). Although the API Network uses the SAFE Network, XAP utilizes the Mastercoin protocol, so they are stored on the Bitcoin blockchain. These can be purchased using mastercoins, but hopefully you will get yours by providing API calls of your own. They are constructing a marketplace wherein anyone can list their own or a licensed API (or rather, the data it provides when called), and allow API Network users to access it for a designated cost. No centralized marketplace is required.

You can see for yourself how they handle all the data if you suspect shenanigans. Better still, the API Network will hold a public marketplace, for the most commonly-used APIs like Google’s. Anyone can access these at virtually no charge! The API Network team is very committed to the open source movement; they want to see it (and their marketplace) grow, so 20% of all XAP that will ever exist will go to paying for the acquisition and open sourcing of APIs and related software. That’s the same amount given to the developers themselves, intricately tying the success of their team and their coin to their contributions to the open source movement.

This is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what crypto can do for the open software movement. It’s both decentralizing distribution of software, and promoting open source development. Their initial crowdsale is almost over, but if you want to see more things like the API Network develop out of MaidSafe, consider buying a couple APIcoins!

Don’t Raise Bitcoin Transaction Fees

There’s been some concern about Bitcoin transaction fees, lately, and the outlook appears grim. A new study by Dr. Kaskaloglu claims that our low fees are unsustainable, and Gavin Andreson’s proposed new system could raise them drastically. While changes will need to be made, eventually, most of this F.U.D. is unnecessary, and contrary to the ideals of Bitcoin.

What’s true is that Bitcoin miners are subsidized by the reward for producing a block, and that the supply of new bitcoins decreases every 4 years. This will make miners increasingly reliant on transaction fees. A century and a half from now, transaction fees will be their only income, so how do we insure that people will continue to be willing to mine for coins?

The extra work required to process another transaction is actually quite negligible–the reason a miner might choose not to include yours in his or her block is that they can only fit so many. Unless your transaction is marked “high priority” (for which designated space is reserved in each block) by the network, it will not be included if enough other transactions offer a higher transaction fee. This leads to a free-market competition in which impatient Bitcoin users compete for who is willing to pay the most, as Satoshi intended.

The problem here is that Bitcoin’s appeal is partially the facilitation of microtransactions: people rely on low transaction fees in developing countries and when tipping other users. Even if they’re willing to wait for more confirmations, transaction fees must be competitive with state-backed solutions, and 0.002 BTC (the upper extreme suggested by Gavin) doesn’t cut it. Somehow, miners need to make more money from transaction fees, or not enough people will mine for the network to be secure. Raising fees, however, is no the only way to do that.

What’s important to remember is how far away this is from happening. Despite the doom and gloom, those with expertise or investments in Bitcoin mining seem relatively unconcerned. “It’s an issue that will have to be dealt with after a few more block reward halvings,” said Bryan Hellard of Newnote Miners.  “We have at least 10 years.”

Cryptocurrency is reaching the cusp of adoption right now, and if Bitcoin’s exponential price trend continues, the price of a Bitcoin should be orders of magnitude higher by then. The most likely reason otherwise would be that another cryptocurrency has been stealing the spotlight, which it would be unlikely to do without offering negligible fees. It’s worth pointing out that cryptocurrency itself is prone to free competition, and the possibility of losing premier status will motivate the Bitcoin development team to update Bitcoin with a solution.

If an altcoin does manage to solve the problem with some radical new protocol, then we’ve really not much to worry about. Otherwise, it will be decades before block rewards are too little to incentivize mining. Serious issues like quantum computing will have arisen by then, and the physical Internet network will be far more advanced. Bandwidth will likely increase to the point that relaying more transactions per block isn’t very expensive–I’d argue that it’s inevitable, as the percentage of people using bitcoins increases. The system will otherwise grind to a halt.

Since the bulk of processing work done is not in processing the transactions themselves, this will mean that miners make more money from transactions by increasing transaction volume. A successful and growing Bitcoin necessarily implies that more transactions are being made, as Bitcoin increasingly becomes the method of choice for online and offline payment. The development team will have no choice but to increase the data size limit for blocks to be accepted, allowing more commerce to be done–and taxed by the miners.

Rejecting transactions means rejecting income, and it’s futile if other miners–which they will–are willing to accept it. Some might stop mining in response, but that leaves more money for the rest, and there will always be enough miners to keep the network secure. If that ceases to be the case due to some intrinsic deficiency with the Bitcoin protocol, it will adapt or die. That’s what Satoshi would want.

Bitcoin Growing Up in Ireland

Bitcoin has suited up before, but at BitFin 2014, bitcoin doesn’t wear a tie.

Every bitcoin conference has a unique vibe. While Americans were barbecuing for freedom, Ireland’s bitcoiners were hosting a two day conference, BitFin 2014, and the vibe was…let’s get practical, lets get down to business, let’s get working.

Suits can be an anathema to bitcoin purists, but good developers know that the suits can be useful sometimes. What was interesting about BitFin was how suits were talking about bitcoin and other “crypto-ledgers” seriously, and how integration with the existing financial system is going to happen, it’s a just a matter of how and when.

This was not an invitation only conference, which allowed many curious newcomers to interact with Bitcoin luminaries, finance ministers, and industry leaders. The attendance was less than expected, but it provided for a more intimate Q&A.

After attending numerous conferences this past year, BitFin sets a standard. The speakers list was impressive. Notable speakers included Max Keiser of The Keiser Report, Nicholas Carey of Blockchain.info, Bobby Lee CEO of BTC China, and Michael Terpin, CEO and founder of the bitangels.  The panel moderators facilitated robust discussion, scheduled coffee breaks provided enough time for networking opportunities, and the “Dublin distributed dining” and social event gave all the attendees a taste of Dublin, and a chance to continue the discussion late into the night, pints in hand.

BitFin offered a glimpse into the talent in Ireland:

Jean-Pierre Rupp & Ronan Lynch of Haskoin, an HD & multisig developer platform using the Haskell programming language

Martin Harrigan – founder of Quantabytes, a blockchain analysis suite for exploring and visualization (in beta)

Karl Gray – co-founder of the cryptocurrency crowdfunding platform startjoin.com

Flavien Charlon – founder of Pixoide, the company behind the largest bitcoin prediction market predicitous.com and first colored coin web-wallet coinprism.com

Thomas Kerin – creator the of bitcoin p2p marketplace bitwasp.co

Kevin Loac and and Alex Beregszaszi – inventors behind Signatur,  a cold storage solution company

David Flemming – creator of Eirecoin, a bitcoin broker service

The conference organizer, Fergal Murray (co-founder of Bitcoin Ireland) was able to bring together international bitcoin industry leaders as well as government officials from Isle of Man and the States of Alderney. Fergal is a management consultant, IT industry veteran, and partner Whitepeak Group. As Coindesk reported, BitFin 2014 gets to lay claim to first public statements from a Central Bank official on Bitcoin at a Bitcoin Conference, and how blockchain technology will integrate with fiat. “We wanted to help put Dublin on the map,” says Fergal. “I wanted to do a conference where we could have a wide ranging discussion about bitcoin and cryptocurrency, and have serious people talk about how we get this mainstream.”

What was very good to hear from the speakers was the emphasis on the protocol, governance, and reimagining the global financial system with cryptocurrency.  Discussion over money transmission laws was light (thank goodness); there were several panels discussing bitcoin with proper nuance.

Jonathan Levitt, postgraduate virtual currency economist at Oxford and cofounder of Coinmetrics, voiced concerns about mining centralization: “…we need to be less concerned over the ‘51%’ number per se, selfish mining is a potential threat, and even when you aggregate the three largest pool operators you are well above 60% of the network…[regarding the recent 51% breach] it will be good to see the guys from ghash.io come to the public and provide some transparency.”

Robert Sams, of Kryptonomics, explained the serious liquidity issues within the bitcoin economy, and how even during the gold standard, supply changes help coordinate some flexibility for money growth.  Currency as a bare-asset, in his analysis is problematic.

Jeremy Kanadah of TeamBlockchain discussed how “appcoins” or tokenization can change the way we think about open source and incentive models.

Simon Dixon, CEO of BanktotheFuture described his experience as a trader, when he discussed the practices as a serial price manipulator the audience was aghast with sheepish laughter.  He went on to describe how radical transparency with blockchains and p2p crowdfunding models, are all serious threats to the incumbent actors.

The last panel was special. Despite BitFin’s attempt to get bitcoin straight laced, bitcoin runs better barefoot. Although not in attendance, discussion about Amir Taaki’s Dark Market and the implications of bounties and prediction markets for sensitive information came to light. The disruptive nature of a p2p money protocol as a financial disintermediation tool makes it censorship-proof. EFF director of activism, Rainey Reitman explained her concerns about government pressure on companies to surveille, or more perniciously, block payment services. A valid concern, especially if bitcoin needs Circle, Coinbase, and similar services to go mainstream. In such a future, it’s possible people will not have access to their private keys, and could be subject to censorship by companies afraid of losing their proverbial “bit-licenses”. If this is the road bitcoin takes, well, nothing will have truly changed except reduced fees (and that’s if we can figure out the scaling issues).

There is a prevailing view among experienced investors and industry leaders that the guys dawning Guy Fawkes masks at conferences don’t help the bitcoin brand. Unfortunately for those in anonymous, this is probably true. Jeremy Allaire, CEO of Circle, kicked off BitFin; he is an experienced entrepreneur, visionary, someone who is ready and willing to dance to the right tune with regulators to bring valued services to customers. Bitcoin purists are probably still brooding over his comments about bitcoin leaving its libertarian roots, but he still brings an important legitimacy to the table. Many will write a conference (or even this article) off with such flattery. Bitcoin doesn’t care about regulation or what the anarchists think, its software. As more government agencies start seriously investing in blockchain analysis software, privacy activists will likely gravitate to competitors like razorcoin, darkcoin, x11coin, bytecoin, monero or the long anticipated zerocash.

Bitcoin isn’t changing. As we welcome more people to the party, the flavor of the punch changes, and there are probably more chaperones monitoring its toxicity.  The Anons will still have the coolest after party.

CoinPip Supports Merchants Internationally

Singapore-based bitcoin payment solution CoinPip Pte Ltd has been working tirelessly to make accepting digital currency even easier for its clients and for merchants in over 122 countries.

Using CoinPip’s recently updated system, merchants can now instantly convert their bitcoin transactions into 70 regional currencies. Merchants use CoinPip’s point-of-sale system or online payment gateway to directly accept bitcoin payments. The funds are exchanged and deposited in the merchant’s CoinPip account and can be withdrawn via traditional wire transfer.

Anson Zeall, co-founder of CoinPip, expects to see rapid global adoption of bitcoin by merchants in coming months, particularly in Asia and in countries with emerging markets.

“CoinPip has been hard at work at improving our infrastructure and user experience for the past few months,” said Zeall. “Starting in Hong Kong and Singapore, we’ve built a system that will process payments for any merchant with a bank account that is connected to the international financial system.”

Joining the CoinPip program has been made as simple as possible. Merchants visit the CoinPip website (www.coinpip.com) and sign up for an account. From there, merchants select the appropriate country and verify their bank account details.

Using an easy-to-understand interface, merchants check the status and history of their payments, displayed in their local currency. Payments in South Africa will be denominated in Rand, for instance, while Indonesian payments will be shown in Rupiah. As one of the most innovative bitcoin startups in Singapore, CoinPip has been hard at work improving their APIs, allowing developers worldwide to connect with their payment system.

Asia is still fairly virgin territory for merchant payment processing. Giants like BitPay have yet to gain a strong foothold in the region. This leaves things open for local companies to take a share of what is potentially an enormously profitable market.

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CoinPip’s vision is to make bitcoin as safe and easy-to-use as any other form of money. Based in Singapore, its team boasts experience working on high-tech projects across the globe.

With Coinpip the team aims to bring a friendly, powerful payment system to world marketplace by distributing SMS, Card and Mobile wallets, and by providing an outstanding suite of merchant services. Asia will be its launching point.

CoinPip.com was founded by entrepreneur Anson Zeall, Alexander Angerer, and Arseniy Kucherenko, its Chief Crypto Technologist.

Coinpip is no stranger to the grass-roots development of Bitcoin in Asia. They have experienced success with their Boost events, which introduce local merchants and counsumers to Bitcoin and provide personal instruction on how to get started and interact with the technology.

They are also on the leading edge of the space, being one of the first companies to integrate SMS technology into their systems and prepaid cards for distribution at the Boost events and regionally.

As soon as the larger players in the Asia region begin to integrate Bitcoin payments Coinpip hopes to be perfectly positioned. The value proposition for merchants is so clear that, regulations permitting, it should only be a matter of time. No doubt Coinpip’s fierce product development and pioneering spirit will ensure these opportunities are realised.

Where Cryptocurrency and Fiat Collide

The line between fiat and cryptocurrency is getting fuzzier. With the advent of Bitcoin 2.0 technology, we can now use cryptocurrency to exchange stocks, property, commodities, and even state-backed money. But if the whole point of cryptocurrency was to decentralize the financial system, what’s the point of a dollar-backed coin?

Dollar-backed digital coins have been attempted many times before. The Canadian government even tried to get in on the action, and unsurprisingly failed. Some claim that the first cryptocurrency to attempt this was Coinaaa, but this is technically incorrect. Coinaaa sells premined coins, and does invest a lot of the revenue in Norwegian krone, but their intention is to maintain a stable value independent of any state-backed currency. The company invests their earnings, and uses some of the money to buy back coins when the price drops, or sell coins when it rises.

The company promises 0% transaction fees, but at the cost of a centralized mining system. While this fails to represent actual kroner one could trade in a decentralized manner, it does serve as a great transactional currency. This is theoretically possible without having to rely on humans–decentralized autonomous software could do this by adjusting block rewards or destroying transaction fees in response to price fluctuations–but if they make the right investments, it functions for now.

Given the possible and existing options available, one might then wonder why Brock Pierce chose to introduce Realcoin, the first cryptocurrency backed by US dollars. Although they claim to hold US dollars in “conservative investments,” this probably means they’re doing the same thing Coinaaa is with your money. The major difference is that they aren’t trying to maintain a stable value: Realcoin claims they will maintain a fully-auditable 1-to-1 reserve of US dollars, which can be redeemed for their coins. This is all enabled by the Mastercoin protocol on the existing Bitcoin blockchain.

This will cause Realcoin to fluctuate with the value of the dollar, for better or for worse. It will inflate with time, as all fiat money does, meaning you won’t want to keep your savings in it–Bitcoin would be a better choice. A good transactional currency should be neither inflationary nor deflationary, so Coinaaa is clearly the superior choice for daily use; both will likely make their profit by trading and investing with your money, and require very similar amounts of trust.

Why, then, create Realcoin? Although the Coinaaa company will definitely hold some kroner, a Coinaaa will not represent the value of a Norwegian krone. This means that if you want to do FOREX trading involving Norwegian currency, you have no choice but to return to centralized exchanges. Even if you don’t want to hold or use kroner, there’s profit to be had in exchanging it.

Realcoin, therefore, represents an opportunity to speculate with fiat currency for the first time. If you have reason to believe its price will move for or against a digital currency on the market, now you can take advantage of that. Given that the Mastercoin protocol will almost certainly contain a decentralized exchange, Realcoin allows you to trade in US dollars without ever touching a traditional financial institution. The state is just like any other company, issuing money that you can choose to use–or not.

Q&A with GoCoin’s Steve Beauregard

I visited Los Angeles Bitcoin Incubator Bitropolis earlier this year, and I got to meet Steve Beauregard, the founder of GoCoin. While in his office in the scenic Santa Monica, CA,  I had a few questions for him– and he was kind enough to answer them.

What is GoCoin and what do you guys do?

GoCoin is the first e-commerce checkout solution empowering merchants to accept multiple digital currencies like bitcoin, litecoin and dogecoin. We guarantee merchants receive the fiat value of every transaction, and give them the choice of taking all or partial settlement in coins.

What is your professional background?

I’m a serial entrepreneur with a knack for identifying emerging technologies.

In the early 90’s, I helped DIRECTV launch the first commercial satellite television service in the US and Latin America. A few years later, I launched a successful Enterprise Messaging and Collaboration practice and later became the first BlackBerry partner in the western US bringing mobile email to west coast law practices and entertainment industry giants.

After the Y2K craze, I launched REGARD, an Internet strategy firm with clients like Sony Pictures, Universal Studios, Wells Fargo Bank, Countrywide, LIONSGATE Films, and a myriad of state & federal government agencies. We were early pioneers in offshore development, opening an office in Nagpur, India in 2003.

In 2007, I formed REGARD Venture Solutions, a software incubator to help early stage entrepreneurs reach venture viability.

I co-founded GoCoin in 2013, and for the last year, have been on a worldwide tour evangelizing the benefits of bitcoin and digital currency payments.

What are you currently occupied with?

At this stage, my primary activities are focused around global expansion. I’m dealing with contracts, fine tuning internal procedures, preparing for speaking engagements, and talking with prospective merchants. To put it in perspective, I’ve traveled over 130,000 miles since last September. I just returned from my latest speaking circuit for the iGaming Super Show, BitFin conference and CoinSummit.

What is your vision for GoCoin?

I see GoCoin playing a significant role in worldwide merchant adoption of digital currencies so people can reap the benefits of low cost, secure transactions. We believe in the ability to travel freely and instantly exchange value with anyone in the world connected to the Internet in a secure fashion without the need for a government-issued currency or intermediary of any kind.


“Bitcoin users need to think in terms of all of the situations they exchange value and encourage others to accept coins instead of cash”, concludes  Steve. “It’s incumbent upon those of us in the know to teach and evangelize if we are going to bring about real change.”

GoCoin is ultimately contributing to the Bitcoin space by providing an e-commerce checkout solution that gives the merchant the option of choosing different cryptocurrencies; no other  popular e-commerce checkout service currently provides this option. The future looks bright for GoCoin, as developers are creating new and innovative cryptocurrencies on a daily basis. Who knows what other choices they will provide for merchants? Only time will tell.

How an Economy Grows and Why it Doesn’t: A Review

This article first appeared in Issue 21: Bitcoin & Art

A Book by Irwin Schiff

I often cop a lot of flack for claiming that the fundamental laws of economics, like the laws of physics, are immutable. I stand by this statement because the basic principles of economics are based on scientific logic. The only reason they are so poorly understood is because they are made deliberately confusing by those who benefit from your ignorance.

Economics is routinely cloaked in technical jargon and obscure terminology. I am a huge fan of any work that can explain these principles simply and make them accessible. For this reason I maintain that Irwin Schiff’s ‘How an Economy Grows and Why it Doesn’t‘ is the single best book on economics ever written. It was adapted recently by Irwin’s son, Peter Schiff, and re-titled ‘How an Economy Grows and Why it Crashes.’

I’m a greater fan of the original work by Irwin Schiff, with its emphasis on simplicity. The story is an allegory. It is presented as a children’s picture book. The fundamental role of savings, inflation and capital formation are presented clearly. Economics makes perfect sense after reading this book. There can be no confusion about its fundamental operations and laws.

The Allegory

We start from the earliest possible point with an economy. There are three men stuck on a deserted island: Able, Baker and Charlie. They are living a life of subsistence. They fish. Whatever they catch, they eat. They catch just enough to live, with their bare hands. There is no savings, no capital, no investment and no credit.

Able is struck with inspiration one day. He has the idea for a ‘net’. He becomes the first entrepreneur. He sacrifices eating one day (underconsumption). Instead, he spends the day building the net. The risk he takes is rewarded. He is successful and the island now has its first piece of capital. This allows Able time to catch more fish on a given day. He now has spare time to do other things.

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The net also provides lots of extra fish. The island’s first savings (fish) accumulate. Able has a choice. He can relax for a while, taking a holiday and consume all the extra fish. He can also loan them out, invest them, or any combination of these choices.

Able is greedy. That’s okay. Abel is also fearful. There is the chance to have more. However, he could lose everything. The two forces play on his mind.

Able can only do so much. The surest way to increase his wealth is to loan his savings to Baker and Charlie. It’s better than going on holiday. He has a chance to benefit even more in the future. Assuming, of course, that Baker and Charlie can make good use of the loans, they will all benefit. That, again, is Able’s risk.

Able loans the capital to them, on the condition they spend it on further capital production (net production), not on a holiday (consumption).

Baker and Charlie do well, they use the large amount of savings to build an even bigger net. The savings (fish) really start to roll in. This is free market capitalism in all its glory. There is no zero sum game. All three participants benefit.

The savings accumulate to the point that they must be stored. A bank is started by Mr. Max Goodbank: ‘Fish Savings and Loan.’ Mr. Goodbank lives up to his name. He only lends to people who have good project ideas to build capital, creating the chance for a better standard of living in the future.

The island is really flourishing at this point. It is a fully functioning economy. The island now has savings (underconsumption of fish), credit (through Mr. Max Goodbank) and investments (loaned out fish). The loaned out fish continue to sustain people while they are working on projects that will increase the amount of capital (nets), providing the possibility of greater future consumption and a better future for their children.

In a decisive move, the Islanders decide they will form a government. This government will help them grow by doing the simple task of protecting life, liberty and property. That is all. The islanders will feel safer this way. This will help them work.

Franklin Dee is eventually elected as a Senator. He makes some decisive moves. As a politician he does not have the correct incentives. Only interested in reelection, he passes a law forcing Mr. Goodbank to extend credit to different groups who can never pay it back. The economy is drained of critical savings.

Franklin Dee also creates the Franklin Reserve Note system. These notes are bits of paper that will fund the government’s ambitions beyond the island. Every note is declared redeemable for real fish with Mr. Goodbank. The government goes nuts creating these notes.

Mr. Goodbank eventually realises there are too many notes floating around the island. Worse still, his vault has no more fish. The people cannot eat the paper. What savings will they use to feed themselves while they build important capital (nets) for the island?

Franklin Dee and his senators have another plan. It’s a fraud. They employ some ‘fish technicians’. They pass a law forcing islanders to deposit any fish skeletons with Mr. Goodbank. The senators plan to engineer fish that look like the originals but are really half the original size. These are deemed Official Fish by the Senators. Only these Official Fish can be used. Mr. Goodbank does not like the fraud. He protests and is removed by the senators.

They are able to create so many fake fish with this scheme that prices on the island double, a result of the excess of so-called Official Fish in circulation. The island has inflation for the first time.

The senators get even more greedy. These fish skeletons are eventually engineered with only one-third the amount of flesh as the real fish from the ocean. Prices skyrocket.

Eventually the islanders notice these fish are not sustaining them, there is not enough flesh on them. They are clearly less valuable than what they catch in the ocean.

The islanders start using offshore fish banks. The senators realise there is a threat if no one is using their fake fish and their Franklin Reserve Notes, issued against them. They pass laws to stop islanders from using these fish banks on other islands.

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The islanders go to the underground economy for real fish. Real fish become so scarce that there is a shortage. No one wants to exchange them for the fraudulent Franklin Reserve Notes. Prices increase rapidly. Inflation gets out of control. Unemployment is a problem for the first time on the island.

The senators initiate an unemployment insurance scheme. They print so many notes to cover it that there is a run on the fish bank.

The senators at this point are out of ideas. There are no real savings and capital accumulation is stagnant. The senators have come to the limit of their fraud under the Franklin Reserve Note scheme. The fish engineers cannot help.

Franklin Dee begs the islanders to start fishing again. However, there are too few people who know how to fish and many more that need fish.

The Legacy

When the fundamental principles and operations of an economy are presented so clearly it is difficult to refute them. This is Irwin’s Schiff’s legacy with this book. The key operations themselves are clear.

You first need sacrifice and risk to create capital, which leads to savings. Savings are the physical representation of human sacrifice. They demonstrate a desire to consume more in the future, by consuming less now. They are the manifestation of our will to leave our children a better future. They cannot be printed. YOU CANNOT PRINT HUMAN SACRIFICE. Only savings allow you to invest in further capital production. Anything else is just inflation. This positive feedback loop allows for greater future consumption, provided the savings are invested wisely.

Economic actors must be motivated by both fear and greed. Anyone motivated by votes will act irrationally and to the detriment of the economy. Greed is good, so long as it is also balanced by fear. You can not have greed and remove fear. In this situation, again, economic actors will act irrationally and to the detriment of all others.

Most importantly, free markets are not zero-sum. That is why they are noble. When they are left to function rationally all benefit from their operations.

Ultimately the island must start again, by sacrificing. All individuals must forego present consumption to build real savings and create the economy anew. This means the senators must get out of the way of the process’s good operation.

Dogecoin Does Games Best

Dogecoin Games

Dogecoin was only a newborn pup six months ago. A big congratulations to the Dogecoin community. The coin has come far in this short time.

It seems like an eternity. Such is the skewed nature of crypto-time. The space develops at such breakneck speed. It really needs its own calendar. Blink and you’ll miss it.

At the time of Dogecoin’s birth I wrote a tongue-in cheek little piece detailing what Dogecoin would have to do to succeed. This was based on the assumption that Dogecoin would have to follow exactly in Bitcoin’s footsteps. In hindsight this was a little misguided.

Dogecoin decided to blaze its own trail. At the core of its success is the ability to carve out a space for itself in niches. Among these are charitable giving and tipping.

At the time I wrote that Dogecoin would benefit from a SatoshiDICE clone. On-chain games act to drill the network. They provide necessary mining fees and incentives to secure the network. The call was answered very early with a few clones.

More recently Dogecoin, driven by its clique of passionate ‘shibes’, is finding another niche in the gaming space. This consists of gambling style gaming and video games.

Most notably:

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Being 6-months old, Dogecoin is a little thin on good betting games. The few that are available look more like malware than games.

It seems that good design still eludes the Dogecoin community. Perhaps they have been too restricted by all the ugly, bright-coloured comic sans. I try not to let my comic-sans phobia affect my love for Dogecoin. But, dear reader, it is difficult.

So it was with joy that I discovered Wheel of Doge recently. I have become quite obsessed. It’s a fun little betting game with a low house edge. Best of all, it’s pleasing to the eye and fun to play.

With an emphasis on minimalism and aesthetics I often end up playing all night.

At the same time it does still pay homage to all the things that the Dogecoin community has come to embrace. It’s the attention to detail that gets you: the fun sounds and subtle moonscape background.

It’s certainly a quantum leap in the Dogecoin gaming space to-date.

Cliffhorse:

I know exactly who Notch is. I have a brother who lives and breathes Minecraft. My brother maintains emphatically that notch is ‘the chosen one’.

I’m always quick to point out that if there can only be one, then it must surely be Satoshi. Hell, I’ve even been to Minecon. It’s the only non-crypto conference I’ve attended in recent years. It was also equally thin on females…sigh.

When Notch announced his newest release, Cliffhorse, would be available in pre-release via Dogecoin payment, I was quick to notify my brother of this holy union.

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Of course, as Notch notes: “The entire thing is a joke.” That includes the game, which he says is “…about two hours of work in Unity, using standard and free assets.” This works perfectly with Dogecoin, which also started life as a joke on Twitter.

As Notch notes, “maybe being a joke is ok?” Dogecoin certainly became something more. The future of Cliffhorse will be interesting. Especially considering Notche’s standing in the gaming community.

Considering both Notch and Satoshi are contenders for the title of ‘God’, this marriage of crypto and gaming makes perfect sense.

VoidSpace:

VoidSpace is set in a world called The Void. It is in the top-down style and you are playing with thousands of other players worldwide.

The game is very much in Alpha still, but upon release they aim to use Dogecoin transactions to pay players for goods and services. This means that players will be able to make real money by starting their own in-game businesses: a truly exciting paradigm.

The world of VoidSpace is vast and untouched, with nothing but raw natural resources. Like Minecraft, players will need to create their own infrastructure to survive. Exploring the world can yield valuable resources that are used to construct inventions that improve your lifestyle in the game. Banding up with other players offers benefits. Player created societies are a big part of VoidSpace.

(Note: The author advises organisations that make digital currency games).

B.J. Guillot for Congress Now Accepting Bitcoin Donations

Washington State’s congressional candidate B.J. Guillot announced last week that his campaign would now be accepting Bitcoin donations via BitPay. The Republican has been a staunch supporter of Bitcoin since 2013 and attained his first bit of the digital currency in May of the same year. Guillot has since advocated for the use of Bitcoin throughout commerce and most recently, campaign support. Surprisingly, the candidate also spends time mining Bitcoin, something that is almost unheard of in the political arena.

Earlier this year, Congressman Jared Polis became the first US Representative to purchase bitcoin, when a Bitcoin ATM was put on display in Congress. It seems that Polis, the Colorado Democrat, may now have some company in regards to Bitcoin support if Guillot receives the congressional seat. Unlike Polis, B.J. Guillot is an avid bitcoin user, miner and believer in bipartisan support of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

To this day, the Washington candidate continues to stick to his mining efforts, focusing on bitcoin solely and has not ventured into mining any of the popular altcoins. Apart from Bitcoin, Guillot is also a strong supporter of Internet security and privacy rights, a monumental issue that remains of utmost importance throughout the cryptocurrency space.

Guillot is running for the seat in Washington state’s 2nd Congressional District, which contains his family’s home in Maryville. He is very well-versed in established and emerging technologies and received a B.S. in Computer Science and Mathematics from the University of Houston. From that point, Guillot has been highly involved in software development and management, which seems to solidify his passion for new technologies. Most of his main issues revolve around internet freedom, NSA spying, patent reform, Bitcoin and bringing manufacturing and jobs back to the United States.

Strangely enough, a majority of his issues do not seem much like that of a “normal” Republican candidate. Guillot defends this by reinforcing the importance of keeping an open mind, going against the grain and that being involved with a political party does not mean you have to agree with the entire party platform. “My educational background in computer science and mathematics along a love of science and technology have shaped many of my opinions and beliefs,” Guillot stated in a recent interview.

Since the candidate began accepting Bitcoin donations there has been a lot of success. According to Guillot, over 10% of campaign revenues have come from bitcoin donations. Although donations cannot be anonymous due to FEC compliance, many users and supporters are taking advantage of this great opportunity. Because of the FEC rules, contributors must share their name and address in order to donate, which could cause controversy within the Bitcoin community due to the lack of anonymity. However, Guillot’s campaign is a monumental step forward for Bitcoin’s future role in politics and mainstream commerce.

Primary voting begins on July 18 and continues for nearly a month, until August 5. To make a bitcoin donation to B.J. Guillot’s Washington congressional campaign, users can visit http://www.vote4bj.com/ and click the “donate” button and follow the instructions. Building support for Bitcoin throughout the United States government is very important and with the success of Bitcoin in the Beltway, the excitement and support is hopefully going to continue.

 

Cryptocurrency: Fundraising Evolved

If you read my previous articles about energy companies in the crypto space and a bank-free investment company, you might have noticed a growing trend. Most of the energy companies were using cryptocurrency to enhance fundraising efforts, and I also talked about crowdfunding. Although Bitcoin was inarguably designed to revolutionize currency, its initial appeal was largely as an investment, and cryptocurrency developers continue to focus on new fundraising applications.

The ability to raise money on a massive scale was actually one of mankind’s most important inventions. Before the development of financial systems, the most efficient way to finish monumental projects was by forced labor, either as the result of capture or misdeed, or regular service required by many or all members of society. While ancient wonders have been built this way, it was at great expense, and humans didn’t undertake large projects regularly until the invention of financial systems. Paid work forces are better motivated and trained, but the money was stolen, either as conquests of war, or as taxes from their own people. Seldom was it allocated appropriately.

Ethical musings aside, the main problem was that they couldn’t get as much money as they needed: whether levied at a flat rate or as a percentage of a subject’s wealth, taxation leaves massive amounts of potential funding untouched. Peasants and members of the lower class would starve if their remaining income were taken, and skilled craftsmen or merchants might hide it or flee. Those with money to spare needed to be convinced to part with it willingly, in return for something other than religious reward or nationalism.

Investment itself is at least as old as Hammurabi of Babylon, invented when the first farmer accepted seeds with the promise to repay in crops. It wasn’t until around the time of the Renaissance that merchants started doing this in a large and organized fashion. Eventually, competing monarchs began to encourage these enterprises as sources of tax revenue, and in 1602, the first stock exchange was born. The first public companies sailed the high seas, exploring and colonizing the globe for profit, and then paved the way for the Industrial Revolution.

Stock markets still rule the investment world, and were necessary for all of the technology and infrastructure we have, today. They’ve come a long way from men shouting on the exchange floor, but while automated trading is now a reality, it still has its limitations. Due to the continued reliance on human traders and bureaucrats, we often can’t trade on weekends, and fees are unnecessarily high. Moving funding onto and off of an exchange should be an equally trivial affair. The stock market was revolutionary because it made investment more fluid, inclusive and open, but at the cost of the centralization of the investment business.

Cryptocurrency will bring about the next evolution of fundraising. Bitcoin is already alleviating many of the aforementioned problems, by promoting 24/7 exchanges with speedy and nearly free deposit and withdrawal. Notable exchanges like CAVirtEx have been lowering their fiat trading fees as competition rises, and trading Bitcoin for another cryptocurrency is negligibly cheap, with less inherent restrictions. Better still, Bitcoin has been eroding the monopoly on large-scale charitable projects, previously held by governments and international organizations. Crowdfunding on platforms like Indiegogo has already begun to change this, but Bitcoin will make that easier with low transaction fees, as well as instantaneous donations that can be made on a whim. Pseudo-anonymity also makes it easier to support causes without suffering political repercussions, and Bitcoin-centric crowdfunding websites have emerged left and right.

The upcoming Satoshi Vote is a demonstrable example of such a platform. It has all the bonuses of any other Bitcoin crowdfunding site, with relative anonymity, negligible payment fees and overhead, and the ease of clicking a button. Extreme utilization of Bitcoin’s low transaction fees has enabled a new way to support projects: rather than making a one-time donation, it relies on small ongoing donations over time. Charities that do this already rely on a few donors willing to contribute a significant amount per month, but phrase it as a daily donation. Due to Bitcoin’s revolution of microtransactions, however, it is now possible to send pennies a day, or pennies a month if a large enough crowd of people are ready to contribute. As a bonus, you can cease contributing if and when the charity or project becomes undesirable.

Despite all of these improvements, Bitcoin alone doesn’t solve the larger issue, which is that the fundraising platforms are still centralized. Even if we trust a Bitcoin-based investment vehicle or exchange, they are still in control. Some emerging cryptocurrencies like NoirShares hope to cut out the middleman by going straight to the consumer: NRS is redeemable for equity in the decentralized autonomous projects they’re working on, in addition to being transferable as a normal cryptocurrency. It’s notable for it’s hybrid PW/PoS mining system, in which proof of work is gradually phased out as the network gains strength to conserve energy. As NoirGroup develops more and more profitable decentralized autonomous software, NoirShares becomes more useful.

Developers have also designed coins for non-profit fundraising. CharityCoin gives 10% of all mined coins to democratically-selected charities, which benefit more as the coins increase in value. SwarmCoin lies somewhere in-between, being intended for decentralized crowdfunding in general–holders of swarm coins vote upon which projects to launch on the SwarmCoin network, and Swarm enables those project managers or organizations to launch a coin of their own with no programming knowledge. SwarmCoin holders receive the transaction fees applied to these coins in the form of more SWARM, and can directly exchange those coins for project-specific coins. This would cause a project’s coin to go up in value, making them analogous to stocks or equity, and SwarmCoin not unlike a stock exchange communally owned by those with swarm coins.

These coins effectively represent equity in their associated projects–if more people want them than the issuer and others are selling, the price goes up, along with the value of the issuer’s remaining stash. This leaves one final problem: where do we buy NoirShares or SWARM, or any of the aforementioned cryptocurrency? What if we want to exchange between them? Swarm itself is hosted by another protocol called Counterparty, a next-generation addition to the Bitcoin blockchain that allows a variety of new functions. In addition to the ability to create new coins on the Bitcoin network, Counterparty allows the virtual representation of any currency, asset or equity, and a decentralized way to exchange them with no central authority involved, all on the blockchain. Traditional stock and currency exchanges are now obsolete.

Counterparty’s intermediary currency, XCP, can be directly acquired with Bitcoin, using a process known as “proof of burn.” One might think this could lead to a Bitcoin/XCP monopoly, but Counterparty is only one of many next-generation blockchain applications. Mastercoin is also built on top of the Bitcoin protocol, and also allows for decentralized exchange in addition to virtual property. Ethereum is based on its own blockchain, and promises an even wider variety of features, but it’s hard to know which ones will last in the myriad of emerging platforms. Rest assured that Bitcoin 2.0 is coming, and fundraising will never be the same.

The main image is a modification of ingimage stock art.

Blocktech Launches A New Business Model for a New Era of Technology

This week, the Blockchain Technology Group, known as Blocktech, announced the creation of a business model for a new era of technology that will enable the cryptocurrency space to sustainably monetize a bitcoin business. Blocktech, led by CEO Devon Read and supported by a large group of some of the best and brightest in the cryptocurrency space, has established the company to actively develop hardware to carry, accept and spend cryptocurrencies easily and securely. The team is working to cultivate cryptoeconomies around the world through the development of open source hardware, intuitive design, sustainability and socially just manufacturing. The company announcement follows below.

SAN DIEGO, July 1, 2014 — Blockchain Technology Group is a new Bitcoin-related startup. Also known as Blocktech, it is apparently the first integrated, or “full stack,” company in the cryptocurrency space, with teams building distributed applications, cryptoeconomies, open source hardware and a multimedia knowledge base for a blockchain-integrated world. Like others in the industry, Blocktech’s founders believe that the blockchain protocol is revolutionary and has wide-reaching, yet-to-be-imagined applications. And they claim to have figured out a new kind of stable and sustainable business model, quite a feat in the decidedly volatile Bitcoin space.

The novel business model was inspired by the conversations had during the process of bringing together a multi-disciplined team of domain experts. Until now, the only companies that have been able to thrive in the crypto space have been online wallets and exchanges, as they can produce reliable profits with simple transaction-fees. However, other entities have struggled to monetize their work. They often finance their development through pre-sales, a practice which has proven increasingly problematic. Distributed Applications have tried to fund their efforts by selling pre-mined coins, but issues of low liquidity and the possibility of the code being forked and the coins losing value have deeply plagued this model. Mining hardware makers have also often gone the pre-sale route, and as a result many have suffered serious repercussions from what are essentially run-of-the-mill manufacturing delays.

Blocktech’s founders believe in the share and share alike ethos of the open source community. “We are announcing Blocktech by publicly releasing the details of our business model because we believe ‘coopetition’ will benefit the whole ecosystem,” says CEO Devon Read. “The world needs the tools that the blockchain offers, and the more people working to develop them the better. The blockchain is the road to the internet of things, and the money of things – because it allows, for the first time in history, a way to incentivize distributed micro-work.”

As he started recruiting in February of this year, Read knew that he wanted to build the business around some basic values, saying, “we talk about ecological sustainability and social justice as part of the context of every decision.” But even as he built the team, he wasn’t sure how the company would make money. “In my previous company we had some big wins – but we suffered from not controlling the whole prototype-to-distribution pipeline. I knew that this time I wanted to control the start-to-finish customer experience and would need a big team to do it.” In only 90 days, Blocktech has grown to a 20 person team, with two open source hardware projects underway, a number of consulting contracts in negotiation, and their first distributed application in alpha. But the lightbulb moment really happened when they figured out how to effectively monetize it all.

Blocktech’s revolutionary model breaks down into two basic sides: mining and utility. The mining department provides cash-flow for Blocktech’s operational expenses, network security for new blockchains, and a steady return for investors. Meanwhile, the utility department is working to attract and convert more users to crypto, thereby increasing daily volume, demand, and ultimately, coin prices. “The utility makers increase demand. If demand increases faster than supply, the price goes up – basic supply and demand. And the miners know the whole alt-coin market well enough to generate steady returns,” Read explains. “But our real advantage is in mining our own distributed applications and regioncoins early as well as other new blockchains that we anticipate to have significant growth potential based on our market expertise.” Like early miners did when Bitcoin experienced its meteoric rise in 2013, as these young coins mature, Blocktech and its investors will benefit from their dramatic increase in price.

By bringing together both sides of the equation – utility makers imagining new blockchain applications and the market intelligence of experienced miners and traders – Blocktech is pioneering new ground in the crypto space, and just may have invented the next big business model.

For more information on Blocktech visit http://blocktech.com/

 

Adam Draper of Boost VC to Address Cryptolina Bitcoin Expo

Coming in mid-August, Bitcoin will take over the Carolinas. The conference, accurately named Cryptolina, will focus on bringing education and insight within what hopes to be the defining Bitcoin event for the Carolinas. The conference is taking place from August 15-16 in Raleigh, NC, and will be the first event bringing together entrepreneurs, startups, crowdfunders, financial professionals and VC and angel investors, all looking to network and learn more about Bitcoin and the cryptoeconomy.

Organizers of the event announced today that widely-known venture capitalist Adam Draper of Boost VC will be speaking to attendees at Cryptolina, and will also be providing advice to local startups and entrepreneurs within the cryptocurrency community.

Draper is the founder of Boost VC and is an investor and mentor for Bitcoin startups and entrepreneurs. He began his venture capital firm to focus on building the Bitcoin community and as a fourth generation venture investor, Draper has since invested in companies such as Coinbase and Practice Fusion. Boost VC has very ambitious plans for investing in Bitcoin companies, stating in March 2014 that it plans to invest in 100 bitcoin companies in the next three years, with over 250 total investments by 2017. Draper’s involvement in Cryptolina further validates the future usability of bitcoin as a payment protocol and a growing technology.

“I’m excited to visit Raleigh and be a part of the Cryptolina Bitcoin Expo,” said Draper regarding his involvement in the event. “This effort to push forward the future of Bitcoin, crowdfunding and startups will be very successful in such a flourishing market.”

Carolina’s first Bitcoin Expo will be held at the Raleigh Convention Center and will feature other big names from the cryptocurrency space, as well as Duke University Professor of Finance Campbell R. Harvey, PhD, and former Director of the United States Mint, Edmund C. Moy. Cryptolina will bring together more than 500 new faces from the Bitcoin community who are expected to attend, providing an opportunity to network and discuss the emerging digital currency industry. The event will feature more than two-dozen speakers discussing current issues pertaining to emerging bitcoin trends, technologies and regulation, in addition to crowdfunding, entrepreneurship and venture capital.

The Cryptolina Bitcoin Expo will take place in the Research Triangle region of downtown Raleigh, which is very close to the the worldwide headquarters of Red Hat and other growing tech companies like Citrix, Ipreo and Bandwidth. The area is becoming increasingly popular within tech circles and is surrounded by a flourishing startup scene and entertainment, a great place for the Bitcoin community to come together.

Early-bird registration is currently open for the event until July 15, with ticket prices ranging from $125USD for Students, $250USD for early-bird, which includes access to the Cryptolina Hackathon, and $275USD for standard admission. Tickets can only be purchased with Bitcoin. For more information on attending, sponsorship, scheduling and ticket prices visit http://www.cryptolina.com/.

 

Bitcoin Millionaire Announces the Winner of His $100k Bounty

This is a guest post by Richard Boase.

A Bitcoin millionaire from Monaco who recently posted a bounty on Reddit for $100,000 for a proposal that could replace the Bitcoin Foundation has announced Mike Hearn’s Lighthouse initiative as the winner of $40,000, with a further $50,000 pledged to any developers who put significant work into the development of the protocol itself on the Lighthouse platform. Janssen has also offered the remaining $10,000 as a runner’s-up prize to Casey Kuhlman and Dennis McKinnon for their Project Douglas/ERIS platform, the first legally structured DAO which runs on the Ethereum test-net.

Janssen said: “First of all I want to thank everyone for their submissions, ideas and positive feedback.  There were a lot of great candidates, and it was initially very difficult to make a choice.  I am now confident though that I have selected the best possible winner.  I have also selected a runner up because these guys deserve to get a prize for what they accomplished.“

Janssen’s bounty was originally conceived as a way of funding a platform that could effectively replace the foundation’s role of paying Bitcoin core developers, an issue which has been hotly debated since the formation of the foundation in 2012. Janssen posted a reddit post in June asking: ‘why do we need a Bitcoin Foundation in the first place? …the main thing they are doing right now is funding some of the core Bitcoin developers…[but] there is no real initiative to fund the developers directly.  As a result, the developers are underfunded, because the Bitcoin Foundation does not have that much money […] We also don’t know how much they are paying the developers and how much money they have left, since their transparency is pretty much non-existent. The funding could stop at any time and endanger Bitcoin even more. As such, and to guarantee the (political) independence of the developers, the community should start funding the developers directly.” Which is precisely what Hearn’s lighthouse initiative aims to do.

Hearn has been extremely vocal about this fact in recent weeks, arguing on the Bitcoin Foundation blog that ‘underfunding is leaving Bitcoin development in a state of crisis,’ going into detail in his interview with Brian Crain on Epicenter Bitcoin last week where he explained how Lighthouse would effectively act as a platform where anyone would be free to suggest an update or improvement to the protocol, and offer a bounty for a successful implementation. His talk on the subject at Bitcoin 2014 was covered in Coindesk here and his Epicentre interview was covered again here.

Hearn says of the protocol itself:  ‘there’s absolutely lots to do: things that could be done but which aren’t really making much progress [are] proper resource scheduling for DoS resistance (our current anti-DoS strategy is not excellent) – […] chain pruning, vending high quality IP address lists in getaddr so SPV nodes don’t have to rely on DNS seeds so much, link-level encryption (maybe), a new transaction version that fixes malleability and allows low trust calculation of floating tx fees, improvements to Script such as new signature types, better unit testing infrastructure, better monitoring and metrics infrastructure …. and that’s just Bitcoin Core consensus related code, it doesn’t include any wallet features.”

Janssen’s motivation for posting the bounty was politically motivated, reasoning that he felt the Bitcoin Foundation was “re-creating the same archaic political system that fails to work for society”, and criticising the foundation as ‘a non-transparent, political and secretive elite… [who are] creating even more political structures inside, such as committees, which can only be accessed by knowing the right people”. He goes on to say that, by their own admission, they cannot continue to keep funding the core developers forever with the membership model they have; and he’s also adamant that the Bitcoin community doesn’t need celebrities to decide what’s good for the community,  believing instead that the developer community must stop getting distracted by internal politics and start focusing on funding the core development as a matter of urgency.

At the Amsterdam Bitcoin 2014 conference this year, Gavin Andresen in his keynote speech alluded to the fact that proposals to changes in the Bitcoin core protocol had become overly contentious,  saying: “I hope someone will come up with a way of solving ‘the troll problem’, a problem Hearn seems to have addressed admirably.

For those unfamiliar with ‘the troll problem’ it’s perhaps best exemplified by this post on Reddit.com  seven months ago in which jdillonbtc accused Hearn of ‘secretly pushing black lists’; an idea that would conceivably destroy the fungibility of bitcoins and creating a two-tier system of miners. One which accepted transactions with stolen bitcoins and one which wouldn’t, a measure that could ultimately undermine the value of the entire Bitcoin economy, and though the term ‘black-listing’ was later dropped and replaced with the term ‘red listing’ Hearn himself admits that in retrospect it was a bad idea, and he caught a lot of heat for it.

However, at the time the general consensus from most right-thinking bitcoiners was that Hearn was simply tabling a point of discussion, rather than actively pursuing an agenda that would ‘destroy Bitcoin’, and Andresen’s point in his keynote address was simply that Bitcoin core development needs a forum in which both radical and original ideas and solutions can be suggested without fear of reprisal or recrimination from the knee-jerk revolutionaries of the Bitcoin fringe.

But Janssen’s decision to fund Hearn’s lighthouse initiative possibly only fulfils half of the criteria. As he says himself: “We need a project to have lobbyists in Washington, to fight the anti-bitcoin lobbyists from Mastercard, and to prevent the government from destroying the currency. Basically, we don’t need another intermediary. We can do this ourselves.“

But does Hearn’s lighthouse initiative also address the issuing of lobbying?

Janssen thinks it can: “I am thinking of a system where prominent people can voice their opinion, where people can propose projects, and where the core devs can actively show their roadmap with detailed features + costs, and where we can vote on the features being implemented by sending bitcoins towards the feature of our choice. This will allow the core dev team to expand by being able to add/pay more devs for feature requests which are fully funded. Maybe we can even evolve to a system later where anyone can work on a feature, which, when programmed properly (approved by the core team), will receive the bounty. The same applies to lobbyists, we just send bitcoins towards the one that we consider the most competent for the job. This will allow Bitcoin to grow and expand at a rate it deserves, a rate that a political organisation such as the foundation can never accomplish.

When contacted and asked for his response on the matter, Hearn said openly: “”I’m extremely happy that Olivier Janssens has chosen Lighthouse as the winner of his bounty. We are both passionate about decentralisation and have both been thinking about new Bitcoin-native funding models for some time, so it’s great that we were able to team up. Not only is this an impressive example of someone putting their money where their mouth is, but by doing so he has considerably simplified and sped up Lighthouse development. My original plan was to release a proprietary and crippled version of the app so it could be used to raise the funds for its own open source release. Olivier’s commitment makes this intermediate step no longer necessary and so the app can be open source from day one.

Social Media that Pays in Bitcoin

Social Media that Pays Users in Bitcoin

On February 1st of this year, Film Annex announced that it would be the first website in the world to pay its users in Bitcoin. The social media platform has over 300,000 registered users in 245 different countries worldwide. Users are rewarded Bitcoin for creating content such as films, blogs and images. Content creators are measured by the Buzz Score, an algorithm that measures the impact and quality of the content provided. Users are then financially rewarded in bitcoin based on their personal Buzz Score.

Francesco Rulli, an Italian businessman and philanthropist, founded Film Annex in 2006. It was very difficult and costly to pay users from 245 different countries. Bitcoin simplifies the payout process and eliminates the need for currency conversion. Francesco states in a recent press release, “The ideal users at Film Annex are those who believe and think in Bitcoin as their primary currency.”

Michael Sweeney is the Managing Partner of Film Annex Capital Networks. I was able to communicate with him to learn more about Film Annex and the decision to pay users in Bitcoin. The following is a written interview between Michael Sweeney and Steven Carpenter:

This is a two person image of Mike Sweeney (Left) Steven Carpenter (Right)
Mike Sweeney (Left) Steven Carpenter (Right)

Steven Carpenter: Were you involved with Film Annex Networks when you first discovered Bitcoin?

Michael Sweeney: I had heard about Bitcoin in 2012, but we really only took notice when the US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke made his comments last November 2013 that we decided to focus on it. In December we purchased our first Bitcoin and then on January 15, 2014, we made a formal announcement:

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/01/prweb11489527.htm

As of February 1, 2014, Film Annex will be paying its community of Content Partners (Filmmakers and Bloggers) in Bitcoin (BTC). Film Annex registered users had the option to request Bitcoin payments since December 2013, and now Bitcoin will be Film Annex’s official currency. Film Annex is known as the “#SocialMediaThatPays” due to its unique “BuzzScore” payment system, where Film Annex Content Partners get paid for their content contributions.

With a community of 300,000+ registered users from 245 countries, Islands and Territories, Bitcoin is a more efficient payment system and digital currency for Film Annex. Francesco Rulli Film Annex Founder and President stated, “The ideal users at Film Annex are those who believe and think in Bitcoin as their primary currency. We work with and continue to seek out the person who wants to earn Bitcoin, hold it in her/his wallet, invest it and/or spend it as Bitcoin. For this type of user, the eventual conversion of Bitcoin to other currencies is a possibility, but not the primary goal.

SC: Why does Film Annex Networks choose to pay users revenue in bitcoin?

MS: The main reasons were:

  •      Cost – It is very expensive to move money internationally and PayPal is not available in many countries where we work.
  •      Safety – Our partner in Central Asia is Roya Mahboob who was named as one of the TIME100 Most Influential People in the World in 2013. It is much safer to send her Bloggers and Filmmakers direct payments rather than send her a big wire that she has to then manually pay people in cash. As Roya states on Blog at www.WomensAnnex.com:

http://www.womensannex.com/blogs/bitcoin-as-a-digital-currency-to-overtake-banking-limitations-of-developing-countries/87148

The use of Bitcoin in Afghanistan and other countries in Central Asia is a great step to involve people online with international currency without limitation of borders around the world. All the users can spend their Bitcoin all over the world or they can change it with their own currency.

Well, with the new payment system of FilmAnnex and WomensAnnex, we can open a door of opportunities for female students in Afghanistan to start a new online business on money transaction with no limitation of the boarder. We can send direct money to the users who don’t have bank accounts and so they can simply save their Bitcoins and leave them in exchange online, they can simply transfer their Bitcoins in their wallet or their own computer. They can sell their Bitcoins and get cash in their own exchange currency or hey can spend their Bitcoins to buy online shopping, clothes, food and etc.

SC: Do you believe Bitcoin will help empower women and other individuals in developing countries?

MS: Yes, but it is better to hear it from our partners. Fereshteh Forough sits on the Board of the Women’s Annex Foundation and she states about the women in her native Afghanistan:

http://www.womensannex.com/blogs/bitcoin-film-annexs-digitalcurrency-to-support-sustainablephilanthropy-and-digitalliteracy-in-afghanistan/88528

Fereshteh Forough: As an Afghan girl who was born and raised in Iran from an Afghan parent, moved to Afghanistan after the fall of Taliban, studied in Germany and right now is living in New York City. I have learned the value of being under Digital Citizenship in a Digital World using a Digital Currency – which all together conclude in Communication without Borders.

For the first time, It looks complicated to every body starting from myself, when I was asked if I know BTC or not, but eventually I started to investigate about it and create my own BTC account and digital wallet. Everyday many educational institutes have started to accept BTC as the valid payment from student’s side.

SC: Which countries do you believe will benefit the most from Film Annex and Bitcoin?

MS: Clearly countries with small banking infrastructure and unstable governments will benefit the most. It will take years and years to change the banking system in the USA, and obviously the USA banks don’t necessarily want change. However, developing countries are a natural target for Bitcoin and other digital currencies.

SC: Why do you believe in Bitcoin and how can Film Annex help educate and empower developing countries with Bitcoin?

MS: The Women’s Annex Foundation is a pioneer in using Bitcoin as a payment system in developing countries. For reasons of safety, convenience, and cost, we believe the Digital Currency movement will help elevate the lives of women around the globe. We believe that Bitcoin is the reason why we can create Digital Literacy with Digital Currency. Digital Literacy is the ability to effectively and critically navigate, evaluate and create information using a range of digital technologies. “Digital” information is a representation of data, and “Literacy” refers to the ability to read for knowledge, write coherently, and think critically about the written word.

SC: Do you view Bitcoin and Film Annex as an opportunity to change the world?

MS: Changing the world is hard. I have an Autistic son who is now sixteen years old and he is doing better everyday. It is a step-by-step process to change his world, and the same is true in developing countries. The goal is to empower women by paying them directly for their work.

SC: Where do you see Bitcoin and Film Annex Networks in one year from now?

MS: Our goal at Film Annex Networks has never been towards being big or being a public company. The Founder of Film Annex Networks is Francesco Rulli and he has a very European style of business. Our focus is being a Thought Leader in:

  •      Digital Literacy
  •      Digital Currencies as payment systems for developing countries
  •      Sharing advertising revenues with Content Partners
  •      BuzzScore – Establishing our proprietary BuzzScore algorithm as a digital algorithm that measures reach, influence, engagement, and the quality of content created. The BuzzScore model is pioneering a shift from measuring people’s eyeballs to measuring user engagement and connection for Advertising Networks and Brands.

I think the Wall Street Journal stated it better than I can:

“Film Annex (Networks) will go to an all-bitcoin payment model. The site has made waves with a radical new business model by which it shares part of its ad revenue with the independent film makers and bloggers that provide its content.”

Our Nightmarish Experience Using Bitcoin on Expedia

Our family is now on Day Nine of our cross country Bitcoin-only tour and we have used various Bitcoin friendly services to book our hotel rooms. The first service we used was Gyft to purchase globalhotelcard.com gift cards. We booked our hotels in Baton Rouge and Atlanta this way without a hitch. The payment confirmed instantly and our hotel room was ready for us upon arrival.

The third night we decided to use Expedia because we heard they recently started accepting Bitcoin on their site. We found an affordable room and paid with bitcoin through Coinbase. We waited for a confirmation but nothing happened. We called the hotel to see if they received confirmation of our itinerary and they said nothing had come through. Not only did they not receive the confirmation, but we were informed they were overbooked.

At this point we got worried. When you pay with bitcoin, transactions are final. Had we sent the money to the wrong address?

We called Expedia and waited on the phone while their call representative contacted the hotel. After 20 minutes the payment finally confirmed with Coinbase and Expedia gained access to our itinerary. This began an hour long process of repeating our story to various customer service supervisors and account specialists.

An hour later, with sleeping kids in the car, we found a woman who switched us to a new hotel. She offered a 100 dollar voucher and a 25 dollar refund from our original purchase. We felt whole again as we slept in our swanky hotel, despite waiting 1.5 hours to resolve the situation.

Five nights later we took off from NYC toward our destination of Lancaster, NH. We left way later than planned for various reasons. The first delay was a last minute invite to screen our sovereignliving.tv show at the NYC Bitcoin Center. The second delay was a mugging that we witnessed in Manhattan on our way home. We stayed to comfort her and walk her to safety.

We decided to try and drive to Springfield, MA, the halfway point to Porcfest in Lancaster, NH. This would give us enough time for a slow morning with the kids, grocery shopping, and still arrive to the event in time for my Women in BTC Panel at 3pm the next day.

After we hit bumper-to-bumper construction traffic in southern Massachusetts we decided to stop as soon as possible and sleep. We went online to book a hotel with our Expedia voucher, but found that it had not been applied to our account.

When I called to talk to customer service I was directed to a supervisor who offered a 200 dollar voucher and no BTC refund as initially offered. We excitedly accepted and waited on hold. I was using John’s phone new phone and didn’t realize it was dying. We got disconnected and tried to call back.

This began yet another string of conversations with customer service and supervisors. They refused to route my call to the same guy, Paul, who was thoughtfully helping us before. At one point I spoke to Supervisor Jessica in Central America. She raised her voice to me, told me I could have either a 25 FRN refund or a 100 FRN voucher. Those were my only options and she told me I could call the next day to talk to someone above her.

Out of the ten customer service representatives we spoke to that night, only one even knew what Bitcoin was. It happened to be Jessica, the angry supervisor. The lack of knowledge of Expedia’s acceptance of BTC was extremely discouraging.

In exhausted tears I asked for the voucher and to be transferred to someone who could book our room. She then put me on hold for over 20 minutes until I hung up and called back. The next representative tried to book our room, but could not figure out how to apply a voucher and let us pay the difference in bitcoin. I then tried to book the hotel on Expedia’s website, but it was after midnight and I could no longer pick the right date.

I then tried our trusted Gyft site to purchase a globalhotelcard.com gift card, but ran into the same problem. It was after midnight and I could not select the right dates.

Again we called Expedia back and asked if they could give us another 25 FRN voucher instead of the 25 BTC refund so we could book our room. They said yes, gave us a $50 voucher, then informed us they could not apply two vouchers to one transaction.

I told the woman we were trying to travel on BTC only and that the situation was really jamming us up. At this point she said the only thing we could do was to pay the 21 FRN tab with a card, or not get a room that night. We literally had no way to pay with BTC and John was exhausted to the point of near tears himself.

I sobbed like a baby as he read the card number to her. I was devastated that we could not pay with BTC. We finally checked in to our hotel after 3 AM. Thank goodness our babies slept through the entire ordeal.

While we were initially excited that Expedia is accepting Bitcoin, they still have a way to go in terms of customer service. Third party merchant services are a necessity until more hotels are accepting Bitcoin directly, like the Holiday Inn Express where we stayed in Brooklyn, NY. For now, when booking hotels our family will stick with Gyft to buy globalhotelcard.com gift cards.

You can follow the rest of our journey via www.uncoinventional.com.

“Uncoinventional” Family on Bitcoin Only Cross Country Tour to Visit Ohio’s Bitcoin Boulevard

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 2, 2014 Contact:

John Bush, Uncoinventional Tour
[email protected]
(512) 773-6102
Www.uncoinventional.com
Www.sovereignbtc.com

Nikhil Chand, Founder, CoinNEO
[email protected]
(216) 202-0423
www.coinneo.com
www.bitcoinboulevard.us

“Uncoinventional” Family on Bitcoin Only Cross Country Tour to Visit Ohio’s Bitcoin Boulevard

A family of four has finished their first two weeks of Bitcoin-only travel. Tonight they will arrive in Cleveland Heights, OH to shop and eat at Bitcoin friendly establishments on Bitcoin Boulevard (www.bitcoinboulevard.us).

The founder of Bitcoin Boulevard US, Nikhil Chand, says “Attracting Bitcoin tourism is one of our primary goals for Bitcoin Boulevard US, especially for travelers driving through Cleveland via I-90. We are delighted to host Catherine and John’s family during their journey across the US, and are sure they will have a warm and welcoming reception here in Cleveland Heights.”

The group plans to dine at the Tavern Company (www.thetaverncompany.com) followed by dessert at Sweet Fry (www.sweetfry.com). The Blush Family will be available for interviews with the media Wednesday July 2nd from 8 to 9pm on the Bitcoin Boulevard.  Media is welcome to join the meal with RSVP. Questions can be answered via telephone as they drive from New York.

John Bush and Catherine Bleish, the stars of the Sovereign Living (www.sovereignliving.tv) reality show, began their journey of 4,400 miles in San Marcos, Texas where Bush broadcasts his widely followed Bitcoin Podcast SovereignBTC (www.sovereignbtc.com).

Bleish says she is “excited to test the practicality of Bitcoin-only travel”.

During the journey they have purchased gasoline, food and hotels with BTC. The so called “Blush Family” used the service CoinFueled (www.coinfueled.com) to purchase gasoline gift cards with bitcoin. Most of their food purchases were through a gift card service called Gyft (www.gyft.com) that has allowed them to eat at places like Whole Foods and Applebee’s on BTC. For hotels they have used Gyft, Expedia and CheapAir with varying results.

Their only unexpected obstacle to date has been the toll roads in New York.

Despite their use of the Federal Reserve Note on tolls, the family feels the trip has been a smash success. “This has been an experiment in Bitcoin-only travel and we have learned many lessons along the way,” says Bleish. “Next time we know to find a proxy for an EZPass.”

One of the goals of their trip is to encourage greater use and adoption of Bitcoin. According to Bush, “the trip has been a great success so far. We are excited to visit Bitcoin Boulevard, a location that is really leading the way when it comes to Bitcoin adoption. We hope that by visiting this area and sharing our experience with the world, we can inspire more business districts to follow suit.”

Bleish has kept a live blog on Bitcoin Magazine to document the experimental adventure. You can follow their successes and failures at uncoinventional.com.

Significant stops along their journey include:

– BitPay (www.bitpay.com) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia
– Blue Ridge Liberty Project (www.blueridgelibertyproject.org) located in Asheville, North Carolina
– Bitcoin in the Beltway conference (www.bitcoinbeltway.com) in Washington DC
– NYC Bitcoin Club, Brooklyn Holiday Inn BTC Pilot Program
– Porcupine Freedom Festival in New Hampshire (www.porcfest.com)

Future stops include:
– Bitcoin Boulevard in Cleveland Heights,  OH
– Kansas City Bitcoin Club

More information on Bitcoin Boulevard can be found via: http://bitcoinboulevard.us/lee-road-businesses-embrace-digital-currency-bitcoin-boulevard-us/

Sovereign Living is a project of the Center for Natural Living, a Texas based 501(c)3 nonprofit whose mission is to “Demonstrate the value of voluntary cooperation and natural living in the areas of sustainability, family, and health by creating educational media and helping families to fulfill their basic needs”. www.centerfornaturalliving.org

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Newegg Jumps On Board with Bitcoin

Newegg, one of the largest online electronics retailers, made the announcement today that it will begin accepting bitcoin. To many of the company’s customers, the announcement was a long time coming. After Overstock began accepting bitcoin in January, Newegg shoppers took to social media, wondering when the company would open up the option of bitcoin as a payment method. Newegg will now be able to offer bitcoin payment options to its over 25 million customers for its extensive product offering of over 10.5 million products.

The computer hardware and software e-retailer is one of the largest in the industry, with nearly $2.8 billion in revenue. Unlike Overstock, Newegg selected the Atlanta-based payment processor, BitPay as its payment processor for its family of e-commerce websites. BitPay is currently processing bitcoin payments for over 35,000 merchants and recently raised a total of $32m in venture capital, the largest of any bitcoin company to date. Newegg’s choice to accept the rapidly growing digital currency adds another secure and convenient way for customers to fulfill their electronics needs.

For a forward-thinking e-commerce provider like Newegg, Bitcoin delivers a new look into mobile payments and payment processing, in an environment driven by fraud prevention and payment security. For every retailer processing payments via credit card or bank information, the risk of security and fraud are imminent. Bitcoin, however, is a cryptocurrency developed to provide a more secure form of payment, while eliminating fraud and fees. Many e-commerce retailers are trying to gain insight into how Bitcoin can benefit their business and their customers, and it seems that Newegg understands the variety of benefits. Not only will the company be able to process frictionless payments via bitcoin, but Newegg will likely see a drastic increase in sales and huge savings on payment processing fees.

The company is very excited to unveil bitcoin support for their line of e-commerce sites. “Newegg’s customers are among some of the earliest bitcoin miners and are enthusiastic proponents of the crypto-currency. Adopting bitcoin as a payment method is another way we’re responding to our customers’ diverse needs,” Soren Mills, Chief Marketing Officer for Newegg North America remarked in a company release.

Completing a purchase with bitcoin on Newegg.com can be completed using BitPay through a variety of options. During stage two of the checkout process, customers can select “Bitcoin” from the list of available payment methods and continue the process from there. If the customer has digital wallet software installed, that customer can complete an order by clicking the “Pay with Bitcoin” button. If the customer’s digital wallet is stored in a smartphone, a QR code can be scanned on the Bitcoin Payment page to complete the transaction. Additionally, if the customer’s digital wallet is hosted on the web, the customer clicks the “View Address” link to display the digital wallet address and send the bitcoin amount due.

Newegg.com customers are now able to execute Bitcoin transactions as of early this morning. For more information on the annoucement and to learn more about Bitcoin, visit http://www.newegg.com/bitcoin.

 

The ATMs of Vancouver

Cryptocurrency had a lot of firsts in Vancouver, but nothing brought more media attention than the world’s first Bitcoin ATM. Installed by the Bitcoiniacs (now CoinTrader) in partnership with Robocoin, it found its home in a Waves Coffee House. Originally signed onto Bitcoin by the Bitcoin Co-op, CoinTrader soon moved in and made it their Bitcoin headquarters, which it still is, today!

Although traffic has dwindled since the famous launch event, Waves continues to be one of Vancouver’s Bitcoin hot-spots. It held one of CoinFest’s most popular events–the mining and hardware demonstration–where they also unveiled the world’s first Dogecoin ATM. The jury is out on whether they’ll ever bring another Bitcoin ATM to Vancouver, but if they do, you’ll probably see it on the news.

The competition is fierce, however! Before most cities could get their own Bitcoin ATM, Vancouver quickly had its second, a Lamassu model. A new exchange called QuadrigaCX stepped up to the plate in full gear, ordering over 100 of the ATMs for resale. Although they can only do 1-way Bitcoin transactions, their cheaper price and portability made them a popular choice, and they have popped up all over the city: A steamed burrito restaurant called Steamrollers, a cafe called Lost and Found, a permanent one at their office building, and more around the country.

Still not content, the directors of QuadrigaCX then acquired dozens of Skyhook-model Bitcoin ATMs, which have proven even cheaper and more portable, although slower to use. None have yet been permanently placed–which almost makes sense for such a compact machine–but this is soon to change, given the ATM Partnership Program they’ve announced. Any physical venue accepting Bitcoin can get one of their QuadrigaCX-brand ATMs, earning a share of the revenue and a new source of customers. In this manner, they hope to spread Bitcoin adoption even further.

Others have followed in their foot steps, and acquired 1-way ATMs of their own. The Co-op launched a traveling ATM project, although that appears to be on hold for the time being. Meanwhile, Newnote Financial has brought a Lamassu ATM to BCIT campus, home of the second Bitcoin student club on Vancouver’s cryptocurrency scene. They are one of British Columbia’s most prominent technical schools, home to many technophiles. Newnote Financial has 4 more Lamassu ATMs on the way, but mum’s the word on their planned locations (if any).

Given the Bitcoin-friendly environment Vancouver has become, ATMs are now almost mainstream as a business idea. As such, new operators are arriving from outside Vancouver’s established cryptocurrency scene, and it’s sometimes hard to predict where. Vancouver’s 2nd Robocoin ATM arrived with little warning to the community, in direct competition with CoinTrader. Although the restaurant holding it is open 24/7, it does not yet accept Bitcoin, and hasn’t garnered the same level of publicity. The operators, claim, however, to have more plans underway.

As the battle of the ATMs rages on, ATM fees continue to drop. Many future ATM operators are likely holding their cards close, to keep their plans hidden from competitors. Rumors abound about more announcements from QuadrigaCX, Logicoins, CAVirtEx and others, but nobody knows what or when. It’s safe to say, though, that Bitcoin ATMs will soon be ubiquitous in Vancouver city, which is fitting for one of the world’s premier cryptocurrency hubs. If that seems like a bold claim, you’re welcome to come see for yourself.