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I think you are confusing commodity and currency. Bitcoin isn't a commodity.
If you read back through the thread, I wasn't the one getting the two confused!
I think you are confusing commodity and currency. Bitcoin isn't a commodity.
If you read back through the thread, I wasn't the one getting the two confused!
My apologies. I see it was disruptive who should know better!![]()
So many people are buying up peoples MT-Gox accounts for next to nothing in the hope that they resolve their "technical issues"
Bitcoin is a figment of programmers' imaginations, nothing more. Commodities exist - they can be touched and used (eg coffee, copper, oil, gold etc.) There is nothing at all behind a Bitcoin, on the other hand. They're inherently worth exactly zero - everything above that is "froth" from tulip speculator-like behaviour!
I agree the numbers don't quite add up, i personally wouldn't go anywhere near Gox even at £30 a pop but there is a slim chance that it could pay off, it will be interesting to see.
Feels like the whole bitcoin thing has lost momentum recently - still too shaky for genpublic to use at moment.
On the subject of comparing bitcoins to currencies and commodities and the point that bitcoins are not backed by anything, the same can be said of most currencies including the UK pound and US dollar. They are not backed by gold or anything else either and are only worth something because people are conditioned to think they are.
At least with the bitcoin concept, in theory inflation should be kept under control and the benefit from any expansion of the bitcoin supply shared by the users/ miners. Unlike any currency, bitcoins have been going up in value, though admittedly this is due to heavily increasing demand rather than a change of supply. If the bitcoin infrastructure can be made secure and deposits guaranteed, it would have a huge advantage over currencies because the banks in each country keep creating more and more units of the currency out of thin air each day when they issue loans hence the money supply increases and we have inflation, eroding away the value of the currency to the population's detriment. This is happening much faster than people realise. People think inflation is about 2%, not worth worrying about. But that's based on the CPI which is a deceptive statistic as it includes stuff like computer goods which get cheaper and excludes house prices, by far the largest expenditure for most people and the country as a whole! It's bullshit.
I was chatting to my father-in-law the other day who told me that the first house he bought when in his 20s in the 1960s, cost about £2500 and now that house would cost at least £250k or around 10000% inflation! So in one man's working lifetime, the pound has lost as much as 99% of its purchasing power, all because greedy banks are allowed to create millions of mortgages and loans out of thin air each year, diluting our money supply. Think twice before you keep your money tied up in crappy 1% per annum savings accounts for a prolonged period.
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