• marcos@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Yep. Just because one side is bad, it doesn’t mean the other is any good.

      Cryptocurrency is still dependent of a pyramid scheme and criminals-enabling. Credit card companies are still a private owned government branch with no concern for human rights and criminals-enabling.

      • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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        I learned recently FedNow is a payment processor ran by the Federal Reserve, with a fee of $0.043 per transaction. Making it much, much cheaper than every other payment processor out there.

        It just launched two years ago; I’m wondering if this might become more of a thing moving forward for digital payments.

        • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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          It’s also a heck of a lot quicker to process, (effectively instant) and works even on holidays.

          And of course, banks like Bank of America, Capital One, and tons of other financial institutions simply refuse to use it, because that would mean spending money on changing their infrastructure, and making it more convenient for people to also use accounts outside of theirs.

          Seriously, it’s been ages, and they’ve refused to use it at all, even though it’s purely a financial and technical upside for every user once it’s implemented.

          • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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            Every digital payment has transaction fees, yes.

            Credit card transaction fees for vendors are generally 1-3%, for example.

              • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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                8 days ago

                Which digital payment doesn’t have transaction fees?

                Credit cards (vendor side), debit cards (vendor side), and crypto (consumer side) all have transaction fees. Paypal, venmo, etc all make their money from (vendor side) transaction fees as well. Is there a different type of digital payment you are using that doesn’t have transaction fees?

      • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Cryptocurrency is still dependent of a pyramid scheme and criminals-enabling.

        As we all know, Visa and MasterCard have never been used by criminals. As soon as a criminal touches a card, the card turns into ash.

      • Pirate2377@lemmy.zip
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        Yep, but cryptocurrency isn’t dictating what you can spend with it…yet at least. So if no government does anything to help us, then we must adopt a cryptocurrencies like Monero to fight back against censorship as nothing more than a private citizen.

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        10 days ago

        “We should restrict the free use of oxygen because terrorists can breath it to sustain themselves.”

        C’mon. Crypto has issues, but this ain’t one of them. Pandering to people’s fear is how fascist seize power for themselves and perpetuate the horrors we feared in the first place.

        • nanoswarm9k@lemmus.org
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          9 days ago

          is the main problem with crypto who is on control? Bc it seems like ultra rich people. I have yet to see crypto become something people can do for themselves. You have to have the fastest gpu to solvw the puzzle first and get the coin, right? Maybe hierarchicalization is the problem.

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    Lmao, crypto tech bros coming out of the woodwork trying to get popularity for their bag holder’s game…

    Also pretending that shit hasn’t been bought up by wall street

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      What? They have like 5%. You should revisit your stance

  • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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    Crypto remains a pyramid scheme masquerading as a resistance against tyranny

    Ironically you know what ACTUALLY protects from powergrabs by payment processors? A fully centralised, government backed form of digital cash that is fully equivalent to paper money.

    Ask a Brazilian about pix. Super low fees (often feeling non existant). And transactions can’t be invalidated on the whims of a corporate board. For something to not be buyable by pix it has to be illegal, thus having to go through every layer of checks and balances a democracy has.

    The problem with visa and their ilk is that finance has been privatised. Too much power in the hands of corporations that have deftly dodged regulation that would keep them neutral and honest. Thinking privatising things further and turning everyone into a fully unregulated petty digital landlord is gonna solve anything rather than make it worse is foolhardy.

    • Kinperor@lemmy.ca
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      Adding a few more points to fully kill crypto as a “freedom currency”

      • Generating crypto requires capital; people with computers and access to energy will instantly get the ability to outgenerate any other crypto participant
      • Energy-centric currency just empowers the same rich lobbies; oil and gaz lobbies are delighted to see that there’s an uptick in energy demand
      • People with right material (read, capital) can track you, but low chance to track anyone doing crime at a national level (due to odds of them having a competent IT (baring the Hegseth drunkards out there))
      • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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        Also because the entire thing is backed financially by energy wasted, crypto has actually been slowing down the adoption of cheaper, safer renewable energy.

        People spend x dollars on generating crypto, they expect to sell it for x+profit

        Ergo if energy became cheaper, crypto would devalue and we can’t have that.

      • nanoswarm9k@lemmus.org
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        What keeps people from looking at point 1 and not totally stopping there, you think? The game is statistically unwinnable and the more rubes play, the bigger the leech gets.

        I looked into crypto seriously several years ago when a friend got interested. I had to inform them it was still a casino where Have’s print the cash and make the rules, specifically so the currency returns to them with interest off someone else’s(our) brow. ie, same scam as wall street stonks. Just reiterating Point 1.

        Pretty pointless unless there is an anti-fascist buying collective or something. Remember when reddit saved gamestop for a few years and, uh, very suddenly a lot of common investment apps ‘stopped working’ that week?

        As soon as you get a hand in their game, they’ll show you right away you were meant to die slaving for them, not participating in decisionmaking (money AND politics).

      • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        “Difficulty adjustment” minimizes profits. You get a much higher return on the stock market than you do holding dollars.

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        I have an ignorant question: is gaz a French-Canadian spelling? I always thought it was Russian.

        • Kinperor@lemmy.ca
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          As far as I know it’s just french spelling, not limited to French-Canadian.

        • Kinperor@lemmy.ca
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          So according to you, there’s a crypto that 1. doesn’t need any capital (computers), 2. doesn’t need wastable energy (power that wouldn’t otherwise be used) and 3. is actually impossible to track across the board?

          • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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            From a user perspective yes to all 3.

            From a infrastructure perspective,

            1. You need capital to keep people honest. Nothing at risk means people can lie

            2. Some power is still needed, but Ethereum has gone from the consumption of Chile to a single windfarm.

            3. ZK proofs now allow anyone to create an anonymous token. Most blockchains are opt in for anonymity.

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        You’ve done it! You’ve fully killed Bitcoin! Now it will certainly become irrelevant! In 5 years, the top answer for “what would you do if you had a time machine and went back 5 years?” definitely won’t still be “Buy more Bitcoin.”

        • Kinperor@lemmy.ca
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          Have you heard of the lottery?

          Whole-ass time travel to “buy more bitcoin”, what a clown.

        • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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          Of course cryptocurrencies will exist in the future. Same as simpler pyramid schemes, corruption, human trafficking, and banging your finger on a corner of a table. It’s not an indication of any positive quality of those things.

          • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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            It’s Avon for Cis Dudes that make fun of Avon ladies

            It’s the Lottery for STEM Majors that make fun of grandpas that play the lottery.

            I’d say ‘it’s religion for reddit atheists’, but it’s not. AI is religion for reddit atheists. “The rapture AGI is right around the corner and when it comes around God will save the righteous and punish the sinners we will live in post-scarcity utopia. Just please ignore all the priests committing horrid crimes on children actual AI copmanies being owned by technocrats with fascist leanings who seem very horny for the idea of never having to pay a worker again. Until then we just need to pray and proselytize very hard keep investing on DA FUTER”

    • DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works
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      you know what ACTUALLY protects from powergrabs by payment processors? A fully centralised, government backed form of digital cash that is fully equivalent to paper money.

      Only if the government is democratic, many governments seems to be autocratizing these days, which wouldn’t help when they start enacting puritan policies and refuse payment transfers. Not to mention, even some democracies banned porn (South Korea, for example).

      • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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        You’re not wrong

        But keeping a government democratic and under check is a lot easier than trying to do the same to a series of corporations with anonymous investors calling the shots. Every corporation is in and of itself a dictatorship, dangerously close to an old noble clan, and we pretend we don’t see it because it’s been hypernormalised.

        I’d much rather take my chances with a government, that can in fact respond to the will of the people from time to time, than with a corporation that only ever responds to money with exactly no exceptions ever.

    • Mikina@programming.dev
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      As far as I know monero didn’t really have that issue, of being a pyarmid scheme, while also being privacy-respecting way more than Bitcoin.

      Which is also why it’s starting to get banned in Europe. As far as I know, most brokers don’t even sell it.

    • beejboytyson@lemmy.world
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      When I heard elon is the primary holder of bit, I knew it was to be trusted. He’s a liar and insecure. Plus his penis looks like a sick dogs vomit.

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    Benefits of centralization: Someone can counteract harmful interactions.

    Drawbacks of centralization: Someone can decide legitimate interactions are harmful.

    It does suck when the “harmful interaction management system” goes haywire. But I’m not sure it sucks enough that I’d rather simply not have one.

    • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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      I used to be one of the people firmly on the “someone can decide legitimate interactions are harmful, thus they should not ever exist” side of the argument, and I think this is certainly a good way of putting it.

      For a lot of people heavily into crypto, they see the drawbacks of the existing system, but instead of pushing for reform and legal changes, they try technological abolition of the entire mechanism altogether, without then realizing the tradeoffs that brings (e.g. how a lot of people will go “it’s instant! Sellers don’t have to worry about chargebacks! Nobody can take away your money from you!” yet don’t think about how that also means a scammer taking your money is a permanent loss you can never reverse. (or if they do think about it, will argue that risk can be reduced to a point it is less harmful than the alternative, centralized companies)

      I don’t deny crypto can be useful sometimes, or even be more beneficial when the centralized companies do eventually do something bad and people need an alternative payment mechanism, but I think a lot of people into crypto overestimate how beneficial it truly is compared to the tradeoffs.

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        About the “nobody can take your money” part.

        Etherium Classic exists because somebody hacked an extremely valuable wallet and funneled 13% of all eth into their wallet. The people who control the mining pools, (rich assholes) wanted that transaction reversed, so they hard forked. Classic is the main fork that didn’t reverse that transaction. It’s much less popular, despite being run by people who are demonstrably more principled.

        Paraphrased from Dan Olson’s video “line goes up” about crypto’s history and affect on the world. Spoiler: it’s a scam, and a tool for the wealthy to get even richer. Computing power can be bought with dollars.

        • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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          Technically true, but chains nowadays aren’t really vulnerable to that same kind of attack just due to their sheer scale and diversification of controlling stakes compared to what they used to be, so I wouldn’t consider it a particularly relevant issue today.

          • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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            The relevant part isn’t which mistake happened, but that the fact that no mistake can be reversed.

            Fixing one mistake is great and all, but it’s still a method of accounting whose ledger — by design — cannot be revised.

    • infinitesunrise@slrpnk.net
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      Yeah it’s a personal level of comfort sort of thing. Some people value one side of the equation while some people value the other side. Strong case for vendors accepting both cards and crypto instead of just one.

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        I trust completely in the central bank to fight fascism. It is necessary. The central bank fights for the laborer, not the capitalist. The central bank fights for freedom, not authoritarianism. The central bank ensures democracy, not an oligarchy. Without a central bank, our entire society would be doomed to fall to fascism. A centralized currency is a major facet between a free society and one with a corrupt dictator surrounded by crooked cronies where the wealthy have all the power and the common man is reduced to crumbs.

        The central bank is divine and good.

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        Regulation prevents that. You can’t regulate decentralized currencies, meaning you have zero protection 100% of the time.

        • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Ah, the regulations that judges can just deem not legal? You do understand that checks and balances, right now, are pretty much gone? I’m not for a decentralized currency, I am just against irrationally worshiping centralization with zero concerns. Regulation capitalism is putting a band aid over a gaping wound, the real cure is socialism and socialism isn’t regulations, it’s a complete and total change of the system. If you think regulation is how we achieve socialism, you are wrong. Money shouldn’t even exist, IMO, so I don’t really care for the ‘centralized’ argument of something I fundamentally don’t want to exist. Unless you can tell me how centralized banks are going to bring about socialism, I’m not sure what you’re arguing in favor of if not capitalism. I’m sure there are ways of achieving gift economies and the like without centralized authorities and the possibility of unchecked executive power.

          • tyler@programming.dev
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            uhhh… so the logic here is that if regulation isn’t even an option then… what exactly? What’s better, wearing a helmet so your head doesn’t get broken in, but leave your arms and legs uncovered, or just not wearing any protection at all?

              • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                Nah man, you have to want fiat currency! Fiat currency is necessary, man! It’s the only way for a safe and civil society! You want a gift economy? Who the fuck wants to give away shit haha. If I have money, I can keep my community safe by blasting away people who want to take it. In a gift economy or any other kind of anti-capitalist economy people would be incentivized to care for one another, which is unrealistic. We just have to regulate the people who want to kill over their money in a way that they can only kill for their money in socially acceptable ways like through cops and the criminal justice system. People need to know that money is deadly but we don’t need to let them see the blood on the streets. As long as we get to say some people are criminals, people are happy that they got their money in a safe and legal way and followed all the regulations.

      • AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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        Doesn’t protect against:

        • Social engineering
        • Contract code vulnerabilities
        • Untrustworthy/Compromised controlling stakes in that escrow, whether they be people or autonomous systems
        • False reversal claims made against the escrow

        It has the same possible issues for your financial sovereignty as a regular, centralized financial institution, plus technical issues with the way the underlying infrastructure is built.

    • polle@feddit.org
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      That’s what i thought, too. I would never believed if someone telled me some years ago that there will be another scam (ai) that wastes even more power.

    • sun@slrpnk.net
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      I am NOT a crypto fan, but not all cryptocurrencies are bad for the environment. Ethereum is proof of stake.

    • O_i@lemmy.world
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      Over 52% of the bitcoin network is renewable energy and growing. Y’all need to update your info, damn

      • qaz@lemmy.world
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        Yes, but that still means that the other half is fossil fuel.

        Bitcoin mining’s distribution makes it difficult for researchers to identify the location of miners and electricity use. It is therefore difficult to translate energy consumption into carbon emissions. As of 2025, a non-peer-reviewed study by the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance (CCAF) estimated that bitcoin consumed 138 TWh (500 PJ) annually, representing 0.5% of the world’s electricity consumption and resulting in annual greenhouse gas emissions of 39.8 Mt CO2, representing 0.08% of global emissions and comparable to Slovakia’s emissions.

        I think people should really reconsider using PoW cryptocurrencies. Ethereum was able to reduce their energy consumption by 99.95% by switching to PoS and it’s still doing fine. IMO Bitcoin is outdated technology that is just used as a pyramid scheme due to its name recognition.

        • O_i@lemmy.world
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          Compared to our current system though? How much does the entire banking and credit card industry contribute to emissions for almost the same service? Bitcoin incentivises energy companies to mine BTC with excess energy.

          • qaz@lemmy.world
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            The current systems used by VISA use significantly less energy compared to PoW cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin

            statista.com - Bitcoin average energy consumption per transaction compared to that of VISA as of January 19, 2025

            Ethereum was able to cut their energy usage down drastically by moving away of PoW. Windmills and clean energy aren’t the solution, getting rid of PoW is. Why build more solar farms if you could just not use so much electricity?

            • O_i@lemmy.world
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              I think I haven’t explained myself properly. I will admit it seems bitcoin uses more energy in this case. However, we’re comparing Bitcoins entire currency system with that of a processor of fiat. I’m on mobile right now but I would like to see that comparison for arguments sake, bitcoin ecosystem vs fiat ecosystem (including mining, storing and transport of gold)

              • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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                Ah, moving the goal posts, aren’t we?

                Did you know that gold has nothing to do with the fiat ecosystem? In fact, the whole point of the word fiat in fiat ecosystem means that it is not based on gold at all. And if you include gold in the equation because some people use fiat to buy or sell gold, then you need to include gold in the energy costs of bitcoin as well, since people also use bitcoin to buy/sell gold.

                • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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                  They’re not moving the goalposts.

                  How much does the entire banking and credit card industry contribute to emissions for almost the same service?

                  The current systems used by VISA

                  bitcoin ecosystem vs fiat ecosystem

                  Ah, moving the goal posts, aren’t we?

              • qaz@lemmy.world
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                fiat ecosystem (including mining, storing and transport of gold)

                Gathering / transporting valuables is not a part of the fiat ecosystem. The value of fiat currency does not depend on any underlying materials (like gold, silver, etc.) like the currencies before.

              • Auli@lemmy.ca
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                So does the fiat system then get added to Bitcoin? Since it’s only value is it can be exchanged for fiat currency.

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                Don’t engage with these ignorant assholes man, they are all in banking’s pocket. We are at war, you know that right? Who the hell would be this passionate about protecting a slimy, evil ass legacy network without any audibility, responsible for countless wars, death, usurping of democratic governments, literally the death of this planet via global warming…

                Traditional banking supports and incentives genocide.

                It supports and incentivizes oil.

                It shut down nuclear power.

                It limits renewable power.

                It is the engine of our destruction.

                Do not justify yourself to it. You are the correct one. Anyone who cannot see this will never see it now. Leave them on their path to die. They will go down with the ship. I feel for them, but it is too late now.

                • qaz@lemmy.world
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                  Don’t engage with these ignorant assholes man, they are all in banking’s pocket.

                  Shit you got me, you ruined our perfect psyop!

                • O_i@lemmy.world
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                  Oof yeah I looked back and noticed I’m arguing on memes😵‍💫 it’s amazing we’re on the fediverse but they can’t see the parallels

            • survirtual@lemmy.world
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              BULLSHIT.

              You aren’t computing the cost in blood, censorship, wasted time, the lives employed by these evil orgs wasting their lives scamming people, the loss of revenue from value-producing business, the waste of banking cards, and the COUNTLESS other energy-guzzling mechanisms involved.

              Bitcoin eliminates ALL these problems. It is by far more efficient, it isn’t even close. Also, it isn’t a payment system like visa, what an ignorant ass comparison. It is literally a sovereign currency with publicly auditable minting & ledgers. It replaces MONEY. Payment processors are built on top of it.

              Yea, even the shit visa and mastercard can switch to payment processing on top of Bitcoin. It would actually be beneficial. When they decline a transaction you just directly use the network instead.

              Btw PoS is also bullshit, in a completely different and inferior class of crypto. It requires HUMAN CONSENT to enter the network. PoW requires COMPUTATIONAL CONSENT. PoW lets anyone into the network if they can follow the rules of minting. This is HUGE when talking about a freedom-preserving system.

              Put more simply, PoS systems are aristocracy owning an apple orchard (you ask an authority if they are allowed to take an apple), PoW is like an apple orchard deep in the woods that anyone can take from (you just have to walk there). Understand the difference?

              One OWNS THE ORCHARD. They will protect it from people they deem unauthorized. They demand people go through them for permission. It is no different than what we have now, abstracted further and digitized.

              • Auli@lemmy.ca
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                What a bunch of bullshit Bitcoin is not more efficient and gets less efficient the more coins get mined.

              • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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                Btw PoS is also bullshit, in a completely different and inferior class of crypto. It requires HUMAN CONSENT to enter the network.

                That is specific to delegated proof of stake, not PoS in general.

                • survirtual@lemmy.world
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                  9 days ago

                  Proof of Stake = I have a stake in preserving this network, and I am rewarded by receiving an increased stake in the network.

                  You cannot organically enter a PoS network without having a stake in it. That requires acquiring the network’s token somehow. That means you must use a different token to purchase it, do work for someone who will pay you in it, or otherwise perform an operation organized by people in order to acquire the token to have a stake.

                  That’s what I mean by human consent.

          • Rayquetzalcoatl@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            I think what I’d suggest is that the entire global banking and credit card industry is likely to contribute more in total to our climate catastrophe, just due to the difference in scale between that and a relatively small and lesser-used alternative like Bitcoin.

            • O_i@lemmy.world
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              10 days ago

              I do see where you’re coming from for sure. I just think it’s worth noting where it is and where it’s going given it’s managed to grow to 52% in an anti bitcoin world. If bitcoin allows to be “legitimatised” I think those goals are achievable

          • Auli@lemmy.ca
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            10 days ago

            There is no excess energy though. They wouldn’t be making that energy if it wasn’t for Bitcoin.

      • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        10 days ago

        It should also be noted, that using more power isn’t fine just because it’s renewable. It’s still worse for the environment, and especially not until it’s 100%

        • qaz@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          The ASICS also produce e-waste, the electricity could have been used for other things, and the energy use puts more strain on the energy grid when that is already an issue in many countries.

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          9 days ago

          Even at 100%, there’s still better things to do with electricity than Bitcoin. Like hydrogen and fuel production (for planes, ships, heavy industry).

        • O_i@lemmy.world
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          I agree, but it’s still early days. I’ll keep pushing for a greener development of the network, too

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    9 days ago

    Isn’t this a right wing meme about centrists, but with the text changed?

    The Bitcoin side wouldn’t catch you, because that interferes with the user’s choice to hit the ground.

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      I’m in Germany and people believe this. I say, if I have my credit card stolen, I can stop the card with my bank app and be refunded for the purchases the thief made.

      If they have their 500€ of cash stolen, that’s it. It’s gone. No amount of crying about how cash is king will bring it back.

      • Beacon@fedia.io
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        10 days ago

        So then don’t carry 500 in cash then. You only need enough cash in your wallet to cover the expenses you might encounter in a single day. And having cash on you doesn’t mean you can’t have cards too in case you need more money

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          No it doesn’t. Shops pay transaction fees and pass that cost into all customers equally whether they’re paying cash or card.

          Taking physical cash, counting it, loss of cash through error or malace, buying change, physically banking it (taking it themselves or using a cash collection company) costs businesses too. So actually maybe they’re passing on the cost of this rather than the transaction fees.

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          10 days ago

          I’ve almost never seen irl stores charge more for paying by card, definitely not anything that wasn’t a small family business. The only place I see it is sometimes on webshops

          • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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            10 days ago

            I’ve almost never seen irl stores charge more for paying by card

            It’s a violation of visa/mastercard’s TOS, but also smaller stores get much higher transaction fees so they have further incentive to do so.

    • Forester@pawb.social
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      10 days ago

      Cash is dead deserped from its place by alternative means far before we invented crypto

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      Crypto grifters trying to capitalize on the payment processor censorship drama (by portraying it as pushing people towards crypto)

      • Lfrith@lemmy.ca
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        Which is funny because many crypto people don’t spend it like currency because to them it is another asset they hope rises in value like stocks to get rich like the early bitcoin holders. And it’s why many if they spend it go and rebuy the same amount to not get spenders remorse in the future spending what could have been a house on a video game.

        Now I know the decentralized value of crypto and the tech is cool. Just more sick of the overall greedy culture around it of people wanting to get rich quick off it, but masquerading around as though they actually care about the tech or are anti-capitalist. When it really is just about trying to get rich.

        • outhouseperilous@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Crypto has all the same vices as government and corporate currencies, just arranged a little differently. It’s not the revolution.

          You can do various flavors of anarchism or centralism or the weird shit in between, but the only way for someone to not be able to say what you can spend your money on is to abolish money or get rid of all the people who could tell you what to do.

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    10 days ago

    I honestly never understood how Lemmy, a privacy and decentralisation focused community, is so vehemently anti-crypto. It’s worse than genAI. Every time it is mentioned, everyone goes “crypto is a scam”. I don’t think I’ve ever seen any good faith discussion around it, just “scam”, “pyramid scheme”, and “only criminals use it”.

    Let’s get something out of the way immediately: shitcoins are a literal pyramid scheme and a scam. Anyone can make their own cryptocurrency in an evening, and anyone who throws money at them is either a fool or a gambler.

    But I really don’t understand what people mean when they say Bitcoin, or Ethereum, or Monero are a scam. Sure they can be used to scam you, just like Amazon gift cards can. Maybe it’s about the price volatility, but the price of all 3 mentioned before is up on a day, week, month, 6 months, year, and 5 year scale. It’s volatile, but is not a scam. If you bought and sold at two random points in time, it’s more likely you made a profit than “got scammed”. You know what actually is a scam? Credit scores, overdraft fees, having to pay to check your balance, and so many other fucked up practices in the US banking system.

    “Criminals use them” is just the worst fucking argument, especially in a space like this. Are PGP, VPNs and TOR for criminals too? Do you think getting rid of crypto would stop crime?

    And yes, proof of work fucking sucks. The energy consumption of Bitcoin mining is a problem. I am not a cryptobro who spends all his time making trades and is here to tell you that crypto is the salvation. They are far from being “good” for everyday use. I just wanted to point out how it seems that critical thought gets shut down at the sight of those 6 letters, and I hope someone can explain to me what they find so terrible about crypto (aside from environmental concerns and shitcoins)

    • sobchak@programming.dev
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      10 days ago

      Lemmy is quite left-leaning, and the impetus behind creating Bitcoin was right-wing Austrian school economics. Now, it’s being pushed by literal fascists.

      • floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I can’t say I’ve ever seen fascists pushing Bitcoins, but then again I don’t frequent those spaces. I struggle to see how they are ideologically similar though. Doesn’t seem like a very authoritarian concept

        And can we really say we know what brought about the publication of the bitcoin whitepaper?

        • sobchak@programming.dev
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          10 days ago

          Trump, Bukele, Milei, Orban, Thiel, Musk, etc. It’s the “Dark Enlightenment” and “Network State” type of fascists that want to replace democratic government with stuff like corporate-controlled city-states, and crazy shit like that. They see it as a means to starve the government so they can run their own corporation-like governments.

          The message in the genesis block alludes to the ideology (as that kind of stuff was a major talking point for right-wingers back then), though I guess it’s not definitive proof. The early community was definitely Austrian-school adjacent right-wingers though.

          • TheButter_ItSeeps@lemmy.world
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            10 days ago

            Many MAGA/libertarian/fascists love ice cream. Does that mean ice cream is bad? We should be able to make up our own minds about things instead of turning everything into a partisan issue. A broken clock is right twice a day.

            • realitista@lemmus.org
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              9 days ago

              Crypto is stupid for entirely different reasons that I’ve enumerated in other threads in this post. I’m just observing a correlation I’ve noticed here which directly runs counter to another statement.

        • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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          9 days ago

          The Republicans in US congress just forced through a bunch of pro-crypto crap, if you’re looking for undeniable proof.

        • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          I think we can. Have you not heard of this phrase before?

          The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks

          Satoshi Nakamoto put it in the zeroth block of the Bitcoin blockchain.

    • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      Have you noticed that people who work in tech tend to be less excited about cool new flashy tech developments than the average person?

      It’s similar to how people who have worked in fast food aren’t quite as keen on eating out than the average person.

      Same as watching your co-worker who hasn’t washed his hands after his last shit collect the pieces of a burger that dropped on the dirty floor to sell them to a customer isn’t exactly appetizing, knowing what goes on behind the scenes with tech developments doesn’t really get you on board for that either.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        9 days ago

        I think it’s because we get excited super early, and by the time it goes mainstream we’re tired of seeing it shoved into every place it doesn’t belong

        And it’s probably still not being used for what we looked forward to about it

    • realitista@lemmus.org
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      10 days ago

      I think it’s because, at least in the case of bitcoin, it has no practical real world use other than hoarding like beanie babies, and therefore no real value. As a currency it’s entirely useless.

      I have a bit more sympathy for ETH, maybe someday DeFi will produce something truly useful enough to justify the money in crypto, but it hasn’t so far.

      • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        This is really getting into the weeds of what you define “value” to be. You could equally argue that a banknote also has no practical real world use other than hoarding (and to trade to others).

        • realitista@lemmus.org
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          9 days ago

          A banknote is accepted as a means of exchange, ie a currency in a way that bitcoin and other crypto coins are not and cannot ever be due to the fees and delays in the system, not to mention the absurd volatility or lack of liquidity in the smaller coins.

          • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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            9 days ago

            Crypto is also accepted as a means of exchange. There are plenty of merchants willing to accept it as payment, but they are just not geographically concentrated in one location like banknote-accepters are. With a banknote, you have a very high concentration of merchants who will accept that as a means of payment in one geographic area (i.e. the country or region whose central bank issued that banknote), while it is not accepted anywhere else. With most cryptocurrencies, they will be acceptable worldwide, but the concentration of people willing to take it in any given geographic area is low.

            It is important to note that you can’t take properties of the smaller coins (the ones which you are probably thinking of are derisively referred to as “shitcoins” and most are deserving of that epithet) and apply them to every cryptocurrency. Just like you can’t use properties of the Zimbabwean dollar to smear all fiat currencies in general.

            Bitcoin transactions on its Lightning Network are typically instantaneous, and fees are lower than most credit cards (usually on the order of 0.1%). An on-chain Bitcoin transaction currently has a fee of about 1 USD, which would make it competitive to credit cards for transactions greater than 40 USD. Bitcoin fees, despite being notorious for being the highest among all cryptos, are actually very competitive with most traditional payment methods. This transaction from the most recent block at the time of writing paid about 117 USD to move over 411 BTC worth 48.5 million USD. That means they paid about 0.00024% in fees and this is the highest-fee transaction in this block (meaning they paid the highest fee rate of any transaction in this block). The going rate for this block was actually much lower; whoever sent this transaction overpaid by about 50 times.

            • realitista@lemmus.org
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              9 days ago

              It’s accepted almost no where. And the list of issues go on. Crypto is easily stolen, very difficult to secure. Difficult to use for most people. Proof of work crypto is still in the majority and wastes absurd amounts of energy, etc. But the biggest issue is that it doesn’t solve any problems that were not solved long ago unless you are conducting criminal activity (which I do have to acknowledge as it’s one stand out use case).

              • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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                9 days ago

                The notion that “crypto is easily stolen” is completely false. It’s definitely harder to steal than, say, cash in a wallet. That it is “accepted almost nowhere” is also false. Look hard enough, and you can find someone who will sell you almost anything for crypto.

                • realitista@lemmus.org
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                  9 days ago

                  It depends greatly on how it’s stored. Most people just keep it in an exchange, which are robbed fairly often. Which wouldn’t be a problem with real cash as there are laws in place to protect you. With crypto you have no recourse.

    • DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      I think the Lemmy userbase is too small and its easy for a few vocal voices to dominate the conversation.

      There are often contradicting points that the Lemmy hivemind holds.

      Like Lemmy wants to abolish the police but also wants to empower the police to take away people’s guns??? (Talking about the US btw)

      Lemmy loves their doublethink

    • pcrazee@feddit.org
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      9 days ago

      You forgot shoes! Criminals use shoes, too! So everyone wearing shoes must be a criminal. Either that, or they were scammed into wearing shoes.

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      10 days ago

      After a few cycles people start to realize blah blah blah explanation is really just when is the price going up. We’ve all heard it all by now. It starts feeling like being sold on a timeshare. We aren’t new clients to try to sell this topic too

      We already know all the explaination and blockchain crap. We know the spiel and sat through it all through multiple cycles. It’s at this point like trying to sell a car to a car salesperson using tactics they already know.

      So that’s the lack of enthusiasm. We are less likely to be new to this.

        • Mniot@programming.dev
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          Because (like genAI) crypto-coin people as a general population will not shut up and it gets annoying to keep hearing the same spiel. And it’s an insulting one, about how everyone not on the Bitcoin train is a stupid loser and we’ll be kissing their ass and wishing we were them when the whole thing really rockets off. Sometimes that part isn’t entirely explicit, but I hear it in almost every pro-Bitcoin rant.

    • nao@sh.itjust.works
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      Bitcoin is a pyramid scheme because it only keeps its value as long as people are constantly buying it. If no one wants to buy it, the value of any amount of bitcoin is zero. This is why people who have bitcoin are trying to convince anyone else to keep buying.

      Your local government-backed currency does not have this problem, because you get paid with it, you pay taxes with it and vendors in your country have to accept it.

      • nitrolife@rekabu.ru
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        Bitcoin is a pyramid scheme because it only keeps its value as long as people are constantly buying it. If no one wants to buy it, the value of any amount of bitcoin is zero. This is why people who have bitcoin are trying to convince anyone else to keep buying.

        any currency is initially a bank’s promissory notes, and then a promise to exchange the paper for some kind of labor. As a person who has experienced at least one default in his life and whose entire toilet is covered with USSR money, I can say that in this regard, no currency is different from bitcoin.

        • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          Well, gold might be a little bit different. It derives its value not because of a government mandate but because monkey brain like shiny

          • nitrolife@rekabu.ru
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            9 days ago

            The value of gold, silver and platinum is determined by two factors: there is little of it in nature and you cannot take more at will and it does not oxidize, which ensures good storage.

            I really don’t know about you, but in my country you can’t take gold out of the bank. You buy gold from a bank and it stays in the bank longer without the possibility of taking it out. What a joke. Guess what happens to the bank and the gold in it when the economy collapses.

            And now look at Bitcoin. there is a little of it, you can’t increase it at will, and it’s convenient to store. Does it remind you of anything? And it’s always with you.

            • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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              8 days ago

              Yes, but the overwhelming majority of the value of gold is because it is shiny. Up until very recently, it had almost no other practical use other than being shiny. Plenty of other objects meet the definition of “rare” and “cannot make more at will” and “doesn’t degrade over time”. Gold is just the prettiest.

              • nitrolife@rekabu.ru
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                8 days ago

                Well, what kind of items are these that are rare, they cannot be made as much as you want, they do not deteriorate over time And allow processing?

                • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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                  8 days ago

                  For most of human history, salt met this definition. Ever wonder why it’s called a salary?

                  Tungsten is also one of the rarest minerals on Earth despite being relatively cheap.

    • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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      The entire concept is fundamentally flawed

      You are basing a economy with real economic stakes on something that is massively unstable and very resource intensive.

    • Tartas1995@discuss.tchncs.de
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      I was excited for Bitcoin but the more I learned and the more the public used it, the more I hated it.

      EDIT: FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH IS A BADLY PHRASE EXPLANATION, PLEASE READ MY COMMENT BELOW TO UNDERSTAND MY POINT

      Bitcoins timestamp only supports dates up to 2106 because they decided on an UNSIGNED value. You don’t need negative values… You know when the network starts, that is 0. Without network, no Bitcoin.

      That is how bad it is engineered.

      And we are not even talking proof of work or whatever. Crypto is a scam because the creators made it very obvious that they didn’t really care about the project and the community is just gambling.

      • beegnyoshi@lemmy.zip
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        I don’t get why using an unsigned value is bad in this context. Like you’ve said yourself, why would you add support for dates that happened before the creation of the network?

        • Tartas1995@discuss.tchncs.de
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          Sorry my phrasing was bad and made it confusing. Let me explain it in detail.

          They correctly choose a unsigned int for the time but they based it on Unix time, and Unix time is signed. So they choose a system that would require an conversion from Unix time to Bitcoin time (or the other way around) anyway. But you don’t need to be able to have a timestamp for 1970, which their timestamp system supports, because instead of counting from 2008 (the invention of Bitcoin) they count from 1970. Wasting 38 years and as you know Unix time is hitting a limit in 2038, 68 years after its start, Bitcoin time is unsigned and so it gets to 2106. 2106-1970= 136 years. And they are wasting 38 years!!! Why? You need a conversion between both after 2038 anyway. And if they really care for cheap conversion, a signed 64bit value would be much better, because after 2038, that will probably be the standard. So they chose to waste 38 years for compatibility which will break after 2038, instead of choosing compatibility after 2038 for 292 billion years.

          And if size was the reason and 64bit timestamps would have been too big, just start counting from 2008 (or better 2009 when the network started) and get all those juicy 136 years instead of 98 years.

          It is stupid.

          • nitrolife@rekabu.ru
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            9 days ago

            or they can simply inherit the UNIXTIME library, in which 0 has shifted from 1970 to 2038, and add one additional “time epoch” flag. Think about what’s easier - create your own time library or inherit from unixtime?

          • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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            The choice of a uint32_t for time saves 4 bytes per transaction. That doesn’t sound like much, but with 1.2 billion transactions recorded, it adds up to almost 10 GB of space saved.

            They could, ultimately, just replace it with a uint64_t some time in the 22nd century without much fuss. In the late 2000s when Bitcoin was created, storage space was at a significant cost, but now it is quite cheap and in the 2100s it will undoubtedly be even cheaper.

            • Tartas1995@discuss.tchncs.de
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              10gb, on a 670gb big Blockchain. Those 10gb are super important.

              And again, size would an ok argument if they didn’t go for uint32 instead of int32. Because they broke compatible with Unix time for no reason at that moment. Unless they wanted to min/Max every bit and then why did they start with 1970? And not 2008/2009?

              It makes no sense.

              Also in 2008, 10gb would have cost you around $1. Ofc, each node would have required the 10 additional gb, so each node would be $1 more. Of course, there weren’t that many transaction in the chain and it wouldn’t actually cost that much, but ok.

  • skisnow@lemmy.ca
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    9 days ago

    The insane thing about Bitcoin’s continued popularity is that out of all the thousands of cryptocurrencies out there, it’s easily the worst in every regard.

    I’m not going to name names for fear of being called a shill, but if you want a cryptocurrency for just buying stuff there’s a ton that are more stable, faster, don’t cost a fortune to process, and don’t destroy the planet.

  • InfiniteHench@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Yes let’s definitely side with the scam that’s been around for two decades and its only practical use is to rug pull chumps yes this is good advice