|
|
|
|
|
by CryptoPunk
3053 days ago
|
|
I don't see how cryptocurrency and the issue of whether its mining is fair (I would argue its the fairest method of distribution ever devised, given in the case of every major cryptocurrency, 1. information about it was published before mining on it began, even if only a small number of nerds had the foresight to immediately take advantage of that information, and 2. its mining method makes for a totally competitive market that is blind to any factor except time and capital expended, but I digress) is relevant to a paper on the origins of money. If the OP has an axe to grind against it and those with the foresight to start mining early, maybe they can wait for a more relevant story to emerge. As it is, the comment is guaranteed to rapidly divert attention away from the main topic of the submission into yet another debate over cryptocurrency. |
|
While future iterations may change, we can examine existing implementations.
Upon investigation of the math/economics/game theory behind Bitcoin and most other existing altcoins it becomes evident that the longer a cryptocurrency has existed, incentive to opt in decreases due to the work economics baked into the code.
Old users expend low capital costs to produce a product (in this case an alternative money token), and then the rules change for new users who exert the same work energy to receive less payment. (early users were paid in larger block rewards for less effort, i.e. a user with a CPU on day 5 will be paid signifigantly more than a user with the exact same CPU on day 500, and by day 5000 the same work is worthless)
An economic model that pays some people more for the exact same work is exploitative.
If all users are paid a consistent amount for the same work, this particular disincentive for new users would not be a problem.