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by lowkey
1483 days ago
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It is incorrect to assume that the only, or even the most important, purpose of bitcoin is for transactions. Bitcoin users primarily hold Bitcoin as a store of value or speculative savings technology, typically held over long periods of time (years) with an expectation of price appreciation at the expense of short-term volatility. It is not, as many on HN have correctly pointed out, a viable transactional currency for most use cases due to price volatility, taxation related friction, limited real-world adoption for payments or transaction costs. The only compelling transactional use cases I know of are censorship resistant payments (e.g, Wikileaks) or high value international funds transfers outside G8 countries where wires are slow and risky. Most Bitcoin is held by savers or speculators over long periods and transactions are infrequent. Therefore the primary purpose of Bitcoin mining is securing the network from bad actors. Bitcoin is a secure vault on the internet. Just because people put money in and take money out of a vault doesn’t mean the purpose of a vault is transactions. It is security against 51% attacks. Therefore, the appropriate measure is not cost per transaction. It is cost per total value secured. |
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Specifically, mining exists to ensure that if you send me Bitcoin, I can be quite confident you haven't sent the same Bitcoin to somebody else. All that expenditure is there to guarantee nobody double spends. It facilitates trustworthy transactions.
Now, it's fair to say that in a way, that also protects people who are just sitting on their Bitcoin not transacting it, since their Bitcoin wouldn't be worth anything if they didn't believe that they could transact if they wished to. But the literal, direct purpose of mining is to protect people receiving Bitcoin in trade, not people sitting on it, who are protected from theft by the secrecy of their private keys.