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by pcthrowaway
1904 days ago
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To be clear, these are very specific problems to proof of work. It's almost to the point where I'm in favour of banning or heavily taxing proof of work mining. There are lots of things driving for crypto besides speculation though. Suggesting cryptocurrency supporters are sociopaths is quite simplistic, and overlooks the majority who are not involved in anything like this article discusses |
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Like what? I mean aside from crime.
E.g. the "Venezuela argument" has been debunked, from my reading.
In my own life I've seen employees ask to be paid in bitcoin, because of the large fees involved in getting your salary and transferring it into Brazil.
So… those "fees" are mainly taxes, and not paying them is illegal.
To steal manned argument I guess is that some people actually do want to buy stuff online without a third party knowing who paid whom.
First of all BTC is terrible for that. But second, most people don't care if a third party knows they bought pizza. Especially since the pizza place still knows, and they need to keep records anyway, because tax laws.
Fourth, if they don't keep records then they can just say you didn't pay them. They can say "oh, that was not our wallet, you must have mistyped".
Fifth, if the pizza has poop on it you can't even reverse the charge.
Sixth, every pizza place will now be a money laundering scheme.
This is not what we want as individuals, nor as a society.
But yes, some people do want to buy a pizza online and not have a third party know. It's basically LARPing.
Buying a house or a car anonymously? That was made illegal on purpose.
Buying a big mansion anonymously? Well that's clearly at the very least tax fraud.
Anyway, I truly want to hear about any legit use case for cryptocurrencies that is not just LARPing, because as far as I've seen nobody in the 12 years since bitcoin launched has come up with one that actually makes sense.
> Suggesting cryptocurrency supporters are sociopaths is quite simplistic,
Yeah, it is. It's like the old expression "it's very hard to make someone understand something when their livelihood depends on them not understanding it", or something like that.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hn1VxaMEjRU
But the amount of rationalization from cryptocurrency proponents I do think is sociopathic.
> and overlooks the majority who are not involved in anything like this article discusses
When you're in the mob you're still one of the baddies, even if you're not actually the one murdering.
I do blame every cryptocurrency supporter. They are complicit in making the world worse for their own profits. They have a moral obligation to recognize their supporting role in this, and to stop it.