As the AI market continues to balloon, experts are warning that its VC-driven rise is eerily similar to that of the dot com bubble.

  • @aesthelete
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    1 year ago

    You don’t have to trust a bank or some company. Nobody can deny you access to your money or prevent you from using it. It’s not something you make use of, it’s just a property of cryptocurrency.

    Nope, you just have to make sure that you don’t accidentally get swindled or defrauded online (often in ways that aren’t possible with, you know, a normal bank account or a wallet with some money in it). Also, I don’t have to trust the bank to keep my deposits. The FDIC exists. Frozen assets and bank accounts aren’t something I concern myself with daily as a normal person who isn’t running a money laundering, mail fraud, or other type of crime ring.

    EDIT: I also left out here that you also have to make sure to remember your password / passphrase information so that you won’t lock yourself out, as many people have already done and will continue to do because there’s no really good way for most people to store this information.

    But using the currency still doesn’t require trust. You are wrong though, since there are decentralized exchanges too and they don’t require trust. I’ve already told about Bisq. Other ways of getting cryptocurrency are buying it from an ATM (done that) or accepting it as payment for your work (this is rare, but I’ve heard of it).

    How do you convert USD to one of your crappy coins with a decentralized, trust-less exchange? I get how you can transfer around between cryptocurrencies (though I have no idea why you’d want to) once you’re inside of crypto, but how about when you are holding actual money?

    Never mind, you just do it through a cEnTRaLiZEd service (that already has your banking information…see step #3 of “getting started”): https://bisq.network/getting-started/

    Wow, I can really see the usefulness of this “feature”. Also, how does that ATM to bitcoin conversion happen, pray tell? Through magical pixie dust, or through a series of services provided to ATM vendors, which almost certainly comply with existing banking laws?

    Cryptocurrency or any other technology is not an indecipherable mess.

    The tech sucks (blockchain is more of an albatross than a gift given from the heavens that crypto fellaters seem to think it is), but more than that the rhetoric and philosophy around it is an indecipherable mess. It’s buzzword soup, full of people who are trying to “invest” in a currency when that’s not what you’d ever do with a currency in the first place. Payment systems and currency aren’t the same thing…except in crypto because everything is a knotted mess and it’s a Ponzi scheme masquerading as some leap forward in tech…a solution looking for a problem.

    There is nothing that can let you figure out someone’s transactions with 100% certainty. Governments could try this and they might be able to track some targeted individuals, but not everyone. This is better privacy than any other payment option provides. There is a whole video series about Monero’s security, but I haven’t watched it yet: https://youtu.be/WOyC6OB6ezA

    Again, cash exists which offers much better privacy protection than Monero. If I want privacy in transactions I’m going cash 10 times out of 10. The security of Monero is again a tack-on because it cannot change the way that crypto works generally (a huge ledger which cannot be altered ever and records every single transaction):

    https://www.wired.com/story/monero-privacy/

    • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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      11 year ago

      You don’t get defrauded, unless you willingly give someone your money. This is not a valid criticism of cryptocurrency.

      Also, I don’t have to trust the bank to keep my deposits. The FDIC exists. Frozen assets and bank accounts aren’t something I concern myself with daily as a normal person who isn’t running a money laundering, mail fraud, or other type of crime ring.

      Good, but PayPal has locked me out of my account multiple times. So I prefer to use cryptocurrency where that can’t happen.

      How do you convert USD to one of your crappy coins with a decentralized, trust-less exchange? I get how you can transfer around between cryptocurrencies (though I have no idea why you’d want to) once you’re inside of crypto, but how about when you are holding actual money?

      You go on (for example) https://localmonero.co and you buy it with your preferred payment method.

      Also, how does that ATM to bitcoin conversion happen, pray tell? Through magical pixie dust, or through a series of services provided to ATM vendors, which almost certainly comply with existing banking laws?

      I was just giving you alternatives to mining. It’s irrelevant how you got your cryptocurrency.

      The tech sucks, but more than that the rhetoric and philosophy around it is an indecipherable mess. It’s buzzword soup, full of people who are trying to “invest” in a currency when that’s not what you’d ever do with a currency in the first place. Payment systems and currency aren’t the same thing…except in crypto because everything is a knotted mess and it’s a Ponzi scheme masquerading as some leap forward in tech…a solution looking for a problem.

      A distributed ledger is not a scam. The only way that a technology could be scam is if it didn’t work as advertised, but it does. As I said it’s not anything new and we know exactly how it works. I don’t understand why you can’t accept this. I don’t care if people are trying to invest in it. Feel free to criticize their behavior, but that is not valid criticism of this technology. What people say about cryptocurrency is also irrelevant to this discussion.

      Again, cash exists which offers much better privacy protection than Monero.

      Yes, but cash can’t be used for online payments. Monero is the most private way to pay online.

      The security of Monero is again a tack-on because it cannot change the way that crypto works generally (a huge ledger which cannot be altered ever and records every single transaction):

      This doesn’t disprove the fact that Monero is the most private way to pay online and the article you linked doesn’t disprove that either.

      • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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        11 year ago

        How do you convert USD to one of your crappy coins with a decentralized, trust-less exchange? I get how you can transfer around between cryptocurrencies (though I have no idea why you’d want to) once you’re inside of crypto, but how about when you are holding actual money?

        You go on (for example) https://localmonero.co and you buy it with your preferred payment method.

        I might have been wrong there. I’m not sure how trust-less that is. But cryptocurrency is still a trust-less system.

        • @aesthelete
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          11 year ago

          https://web3isgoinggreat.com/?id=shibarium-bridge-failure

          Someone keeps track of all of the widespread fraud, rug pulls, and generic bullshit around crypto and the losses are in the billions of dollars (if you count it at conversion rates, which I largely don’t actually… Because if everyone pulled their money at once there’s no way the conversion rates would hold).

          • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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            11 year ago

            That’s very sad and proves that we need better education. There are scams in every area of life unfortunately. Most people are bad at understanding modern technology (including cryptocurrency), which makes things worse. I’m for exposing and punishing scammers, but blaming technology for this is not a solution.

            I don’t think people should invest in cryptocurrency at all, even when there isn’t any scam going on. Unless maybe they are rich and can afford to lose money.

            • @aesthelete
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              1 year ago

              Most people are bad at understanding modern technology (including cryptocurrency), which makes things worse. I’m for exposing and punishing scammers, but blaming technology for this is not a solution.

              It’s akin IMO to saying that guns are the root of the problem with gun violence in America to say that crypto is the root of the problem with crypto scams.

              The type and frequency of these scams just isn’t possible using any other technology.

              I consider technologies generally to be advanced tooling, and with just about any other type of tool I think it’s important to analyze what it’s useful for and what it isn’t useful for: what it enables, what it disables, what it makes possible, what it makes impossible, what it makes likely, what it makes unlikely, etc.

              I think crypto is perfect tooling for scams, ponzis, money laundering, confidence schemes, ransomware, fraud, and the transfer of dark money.

              It’s not good tooling for quick payments between people (which are is more easily possible through paypal, venmo, etc.) and it is not particularly good for online payments for the type of goods most people purchase online either. It may be (as you say) one of the only semi-private ways to conduct online transactions, but I have not encountered anyone in my life who regularly required such a thing.

              As you state, the understanding and adoption of new technology is already a hurdle for most people, and crypto adoption requires you to not only be good at technology, but also have a good understanding of finance and financial instruments. The number of people who are experts (or have even advanced knowledge) in both areas is infinitesimal, and that’s a large part of the reason why scams run amok in this area, some even amongst those creating or deploying the technologies themselves. The overwhelming majority of people simply do not meaningfully understand either thing separately, and definitely don’t fully understand the intersection of the two.

              • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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                1 year ago

                It’s akin IMO to saying that guns are the root of the problem with gun violence in America to say that crypto is the root of the problem with crypto scams.

                I’m pretty sure there are states with very little gun violence. But regardless, crypto is not the only technology where scams happen. Many scams happen through a phone, but it wouldn’t make sense to blame phones for this. We could get rid of phones and even though I hate them, it would be a ridiculous solution even to me.

                The type and frequency of these scams just isn’t possible using any other technology.

                Maybe, but many scams don’t require much use of technology. For example multi-level marketing is a pyramid scheme, which is completely legal in the US.

                I think crypto is perfect tooling for scams, ponzis, money laundering, confidence schemes, ransomware, fraud, and the transfer of dark money.

                That’s because of lack of regulation and education in our society, but I agree. I’m only not sure about money laundering. Most crypto exchanges require identification and have limits. So I’m not sure how much it helps the more serious criminals, who need to withdraw significant amounts of money.

                It’s not good tooling for quick payments between people (which are is more easily possible through paypal, venmo, etc.) and it is not particularly good for online payments for the type of goods most people purchase online either. It may be (as you say) one of the only semi-private ways to conduct online transactions, but I have not encountered anyone in my life who regularly required such a thing.

                Waiting 40 minutes for a payment to go through might not always be a big deal to people, but yeah faster and more convenient methods exist. Most people don’t care about privacy, so they will just use the most convenient method. Just like they use WhatsApp for messaging.

                As you state, the understanding and adoption of new technology is already a hurdle for most people, and crypto adoption requires you to not only be good at technology, but also have a good understanding of finance and financial instruments. The number of people who are experts (or have even advanced knowledge) in both areas is infinitesimal, and that’s a large part of the reason why scams run amok in this area, some even amongst those creating or deploying the technologies themselves. The overwhelming majority of people simply do not meaningfully understand either thing separately, and definitely don’t fully understand the intersection of the two.

                You don’t need to be good at finance to use cryptocurrency for payments. I certainly am not. Being good at technology helps of course, but I doubt that every cryptocurrency user is. There are tutorials for non-technical people. I think things like that should be taught at schools though. It would be harder to mislead people then.

                • @aesthelete
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                  1 year ago

                  Many scams happen through a phone, but it wouldn’t make sense to blame phones for this.

                  A phone is a communication device…crypto isn’t.

                  multi-level marketing is a pyramid scheme, which is completely legal in the US.

                  The answer here IMO is to ban MLMs, though it’s worth pointing out that naked pyramid schemes are illegal in the US.

                  That’s because of lack of regulation and education in our society,

                  What society? The global society? Crypto isn’t just scamming people here in the US, but in every place crypto is used.

                  I’m only not sure about money laundering.

                  A common method of money laundering is to sink money from ill-gotten gains into a volatile asset that can be said to either appreciate or depreciate in value to fuzz the numbers. Crypto is at least a reasonable tool for the job.

                  I think things like that should be taught at schools though. It would be harder to mislead people then.

                  I think this is an easy thing to say about lots of things. But schools have enough trouble teaching kids to read in this country…which I think would be a prerequisite to figuring out whether the Internet weirdo you’re transferring your PooCoin™ to is a real deal “PooHead” or a scammer looking to scam people.

                  • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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                    11 year ago

                    A phone is a communication device…crypto isn’t.

                    Correct. It’s a currency and payment method.

                    What society? The global society? Crypto isn’t just scamming people here in the US, but in every place crypto is used.

                    Crypto isn’t scamming anyone. Scammers are doing it in multiple countries. I am not being scammed by using crypto.

                    A common method of money laundering is to sink money from ill-gotten gains into a volatile asset that can be said to either appreciate or depreciate in value to fuzz the numbers. Crypto is at least a reasonable tool for the job.

                    Make sense. I think converting all of it to regular money might be difficult, but I’m not that familiar with how those criminals operate.

                    I think this is an easy thing to say about lots of things. But schools have enough trouble teaching kids to read in this country…which I think would be a prerequisite to figuring out whether the Internet weirdo you’re transferring your PooCoin™ to is a real deal “PooHead” or a scammer looking to scam people.

                    The first advice would be to not transfer your coin to anyone. Changing the education would certainly be difficult and there are many more important things that should be taught first. Like critical thinking, the ability to find and verify information, the scientific method. Technology is just another one of those things.

      • @aesthelete
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        1 year ago

        You don’t get defrauded, unless you willingly give someone your money. This is not a valid criticism of cryptocurrency.

        I’m not sure that’s always even true, but it’s a lot easier to get defrauded when everyone you’re transacting with is online people with a series of randomesque “hashes” tying them to a wallet…and more importantly…the fraud is often irreversible. I’ve had people steal my credit card multiple times and not paid a dime when it happened.

        Good, but PayPal has locked me out of my account multiple times. So I prefer to use cryptocurrency where that can’t happen.

        I haven’t had this experience as a user…so I guess for doing whatever likely weird things you’re doing Monero is best. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

        That doesn’t mean it’s good for most, or even many people though.

        You go on (for example) https://localmonero.co and you buy it with your preferred payment method.

        I’m guessing they too use a payment gateway (often PayPal), and I have no idea who these people are and have no guarantee that they aren’t going to defraud me or that they will keep my information private.

        A distributed ledger is not a scam.

        Nah, the whole ecosystem is though. There was an era where cryptocurrency felt somewhat less scammy, but it was also worth less (or worthless) during that time. A distributed ledger is just not that useful of a technology. Especially one that works the way blockchain works, that’s why it’s being used almost 100% for fake-o “currencies”, NFTs, and ponzis.

        Yes, but cash can’t be used for online payments. Monero is the most private way to pay online.

        Again, I don’t have a need for this and like I’ve also said several times most people also do not. Hell, most people make online payments peer-to-peer using venmo with their transactional history set to fucking public. Just because you sit in some weirdo niche category doesn’t mean that this is an overall useful thing for many or most.

        EDIT: And actually now that I think of it, you could just buy a prepaid credit card using cash and buy shit online using that.