• teft
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      491 year ago

      This man doesn’t have the lobes for business.

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      If you can’t create artificial demand in a utopian society, what kind of Ferangi are you?

    • Flying Squid
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      121 year ago

      Post-scarcity societies are good for business. Rule of Acquisition #74.

      • teft
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        1 year ago

        Rule #74 is Knowledge equals profit. Are you reading some pirated copy of the rules?

        • Flying Squid
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          161 year ago

          Don’t give Hu-Mons the actual Rules of Acquisition. Rule of Acquisition #23.

          • teft
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            1 year ago

            I see this is actually the Grand Nagus’ account. I’m sorry Grand Nagus. My apologies.

          • @n3m37h
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            1 year ago

            Removed by mod

    • Bonehead
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      21 year ago

      Define “post-scarcity”. You can’t replicate everything (without programmable matter, anyways…), and some raw materials are needed to build the replicators. And latinum is a rare commodity, though I don’t know why it’s so value beyond its scarcity. Greed will always be there as long as some things remain scarce yet required for a functioning society.

      • @c10l
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        91 year ago

        Latinum is only valuable outside of the Federation, where societies are not post-scarcity.

        Now, before you argue that there are no material conditions demanding scarcity in (some of) them, I’ll add that artificial scarcity is scarcity nonetheless.

        • Bonehead
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          41 year ago

          In societies outside the Federation, where they don’t have replicators, things have value due to being able to use them for other purposes. Latinum has never been shown to be used for any other purpose except to trade. Its not clear why a useless material is considered valuable, except for the fact that its rare.

          • @marcos
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            51 year ago

            Says a huh-man that uses paper to trade…

            • Bonehead
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              21 year ago

              That paper is at least backed by the GDP of my country.

              • @c10l
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                81 year ago

                That reminds me of that joke:

                Two economists are walking side-by-side.

                One tells the other: I’ll give you $100 if you take a shit on the pavement.

                He proceeds to shit on the pavement and grab the $100.

                He then tells the other economist: I’ll give you $100 if you eat my shit.

                The other does the deed and collects his $100.

                After walking a few more blocks, one of them says: both of us left our dignity with that work back there and neither of us are any richer!

                To which the other responds: no, but we grew our combined GDP to $200.

                And they both walked away happy, patting each other on their backs.

                • Bonehead
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                  31 year ago

                  The point is that we understand the actual paper has no value itself. It’s the commitment of the government backing it that has the value.

      • teft
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        51 year ago

        Latinum is valuable because it can’t be replicated.

        • Bonehead
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          31 year ago

          Yes, but beyond its scarcity, what other purpose does it have? Lots of things are rare and can’t be replicated, but their value comes from the need to use them for some purpose such the ability to build other things that you wouldn’t be able to build otherwise. Latinum has never been shown as anything more than a currency with nothing behind it to give it value.

          • teft
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            81 year ago

            What value does gold have other than it doesn’t rust and it looks pretty?

            It’s the same thing essentially. Latinum looks pretty and can’t be replicated therefore it’s a good currency.

            • Bonehead
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              61 year ago

              Gold is used in a variety of applications. You’re likely holding a device filled with gold right now. Even before the computer revolution, is was still used in medical applications. There are tons of uses for gold that don’t involve currency.

              • teft
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                1 year ago

                Yes it does have applications nowadays but when gold was used as a monetary store we didn’t have electronics. Gold was mainly used because it is shiny, easily workable, rare, and never corroded.

                • Bonehead
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                  31 year ago

                  It was shiny, easily workable, and didn’t turn your skin green. As a jewelry metal, it was much more valuable than as a currency. It had uses other than just money…

              • Troy
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                31 year ago

                The microgram of gold in my phone pales in comparison to the gold used in jewellery or hoarded.

                • Bonehead
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                  11 year ago

                  Yes, but again even by your own admission, it has uses other than just currency.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              You missed a big advantage of gold: for most of human history, gold was the densest material known to man by a wide margin, making it very easy to verify that a piece of purported gold is real.

      • Pons_Aelius
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        31 year ago

        When everyone has unlimited access to stuff, one person wanting more does not deprive others of anything so it does not matter if it exists.

        IE: In a post scarcity society, greed becomes irrelevant.

        • Guildo
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          01 year ago

          but it still exists - even in Star Trek

          • @c10l
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            81 year ago

            You’re arguing against a straw man. They never said it ceases to exist, only that it’s irrelevant.