Sorry that what the post remember you of. Was not the intention.
I'm the first to say that Facebook Ads don't work for everyone. And in advertising you should immediately stop spending on anything that don't have a positive ROI.
Still before stopping you should learn a bit how to use the platform and give it a fair try.
Then if it does not work ... stop it immediately and move on testing another channel :)
I think the real benefit of sites like this are accountability and historic research. Having the ability to see what has been omitted or taken down is far more interesting.
I think what is missing or lost in all of these Bitcoin articles is they are reaction to a fatally flawed central banking system. Of course, anyone who says things like that is immediately labelled a gold bug or belonging to the tin-foil hat club.
The real danger of Bitcoins is not its volatility, but its potential to illustrate the downside of all fiat based currency when compared with something like Bitcoins whose money supply does not fluctuate based upon the needs of a few. If that fact ever reaches the consciousness of enough people worldwide, watch out.
I hate to say this, but at this point when I see someone use the words "fiat currency" unironically, I also expect to hear an argument about gold fringe on a flag, and other similar easily-repeated cargo-cult phrases/arguments against whatever the person doesn't like.
One of the real dangers to Bitcoin is precisely that sort of public image.
If mining additional Bitcoins at present is not economically viable than Bitcoins are not (currently) a fiat currency. The cost for the fed to increase the money supply is $0, the cost to produce a Bitcoin is equal to the cost of the hardware and electricity to produce it. I'm not sure if the definition would change once the maximum limit of Bitcoins is reached.
> If mining additional Bitcoins at present is not economically viable than Bitcoins are not (currently) a fiat currency.
Whether Bitcoin can be mined or not has absolutely nothing to do with whether it's a fiat currency or not, so your logic does not follow. Fiat doesn't mean "can easily manipulate". Any currency that isn't backed by (value derived from) a hard asset is a fiat currency. Burning electricity to create bitcoin's is not "backed by", that electricity is gone, used up, wasted. Other crypto currencies like peercoin or primecoin address bitcoins wasted energy, but they are all fiat currencies. Their value derives from confidence, not assets.
> Any currency that isn't backed by (value derived from) a hard asset is a fiat currency.
(I'm not a gold bug, I could care less about gold, if gold offends, substitute some other tangible commodity)
That's my point that Bitcoin is more of a commodity currency and is not (at present) a fiat currency. The fact that the electricity is gone doesn't make any difference. Mining gold requires fuel and labor which is gone, used up, and what remains is gold. This expense is what limits the production of and correlates the commodity to the underlying economy.
What is really interesting is your assertion that the value derives from confidence and not assets. I would argue that value derives from the fact that its supply is limited by the use of resources and labor.
I agree it's acting more as gold now, but there's no doubt it's intended to be a currency and as a currency it's inherently a fiat currency. However gold is a hard asset that has actual real world uses outside its monetary value; it's a fantastic metal.
Its limited supply doesn't give it value because it's but one of many crypto currencies[1] and its value is derived only from being the first mover and thus network effects and confidence. That money could easily abandon Bitcoin and flee into another crypto currency any time general confidence in it fails; for example if say LTC or PPC show more stability over time because of their differences from BTC and BTC fails to stabalize over time due to its deflationary nature.
But doesn't your non-ironic use of "cargo cult" permit unbridled use of other meme-like absurdities ad nauseam?
Like, now, I'm free to accuse you of being a secret agent of the notorious hacker group named Anonymous, infiltrating this site under an assumed pseudonym. And worst of all, I could make that claim non-ironically, if I so desired.
The cargo cults which sprang up after WWII were based around imitating the behavior of the airfield staff, in hopes that doing so would summon the airplanes full of supplies.
Use of terms like "fiat currency" is, in my experience, similarly an attempt to mimic the behavior of people they've seen winning arguments, in hopes that doing so will result in winning arguments.
Interesting that the mere mention of "fiat currency" invokes tin-foil hat. Whether Bitcoins can survive the volatility is indeterminate. If it does survive, however, and becomes an alternative to (avert your eyes) fiat currencies, the impact will be far greater than another obscure fiat currency suddenly being used.
A fiat currency can't become an alternative to fiat currencies; it can only become a better managed fiat currency by way of being an algorithm rather than a human. Bitcoin is an obscure fiat currency suddenly being used.
Thing is Bitcoin fails miserably as a currency TODAY(2013). It currently cannot be used as a currency because of its volatility, unlike other fiat currencies, it cannot be controlled, potentially destroying any economy based on it.
( Think of it, some random panic on the dollar supply would send the value of the dollar spiraling to 100 time its value over the course of 1 year, with absolutely no way the US could do anything about it )
Bitcoin is successful as a proof of concept of how you can create a modern currency that retains most the benefit of electronic and physical money. For the supply, I have just the opposite reaction. I used to think that the limited supply of bitcoin was a great idea, now I'm thinking all the clever people that wanted to get us out of the gold standard may have had a point after all.
It is also not a ponzi scheme, just a risky investment.
(no sarcasm intended) Are you saying that a currency that cannot be controlled (e.g. the money supply controlled by something like a federal reserve) is more dangerous than one that is?
Just to reply in my own words without being labelled as "having my stake in the Keynesian camp". I don't know what that means (not exactly anyway) but that does not seem like a compliment here on HN. I'm a regular IT guy, unless I create a hot startup I will always be a guy whose influence can only be measured by statisticians.
With that out of the way. I don't want to live in a country or principally trade in a currency that can react as bitcoin. I don't have a lot of cash sitting in my bank account, instead I have a small amount of debt (only Banker salary allow you to buy a flat cash in London) so I fail to see any situation where a 10,000 % deflation rate can affect me positively. (Similarly 10,000% inflation - actually 0% inflation is the stuff I can deal and be happy with)
So I don't mind a uncontrollable currency as I don't mind the wind being uncontrollable. I mind hurricane and if I cannot afford to deal with it, I simply prefer to live in an area without hurricane or as a last resort, government provided countermeasures. So in my situation, one I share with the majority of the first world, I prefer a currency controlled by FED-like central banks, than a currency without control that can increase my debt by 2 order of magnitude and at the same time likely put me out of work. So it is a choice 100% pragmatic rather than based on any type of economic theory.
I would not mind to be convinced otherwise, preferably without assumption like "when everybody uses it", or "if a country like China uses it as its currency".
But right now, it seems opinion are split between people in denial with 10,000 bitcoin in their wallet assuring me that what is happening with bitcoin right now is Good (sometime with the argument "deflanationary currency is good" as if that did not require further explanation). Others are blog like this one made by doomsayer simply angry they didn't buy 10,000 bitcoin last year.
I suspect most people here will be in the Keynesian camp; folks heavily invested in Bitcoin probably aren't (specifically, most folks who tend to be heavily free-market/hardline capitalist tend to favor Austrian economics), but I would be surprised if that's the majority position. Other than a small bump in the 1970s, we've more or less been operating on Keynesian economic policy since FDR.
Inflation and deflation only really impact you when a) your wages get out of sync with cost-of-living prices, or b) you are borrowing or lending money (or just have cash sitting around that isn't being utilized in any fashion). If your wages and prices all fell to 1/10000th of what they are today, your purchasing power (in terms of hours worked per loaf of bread gained) would remain the same.
Deflation would harm your ability to (responsibly) take on debt. But, it's arguable that our current economies are so heavily debt-fueled because of our inflationary policies, as well, so it's worth keeping in mind as a variable when processing the concept that deflation = less borrowing. Deflation is scary to Keynesian economists because the Keynesian model only works when people aren't significantly saving anything beyond what they invest - that is, their money is all either spent on goods, or is loaned to other people. Holding money in an inflating economy is irrational since it is constantly losing purchasing power; thus, since it is in your best interest to spend your money as soon as you make it (either on goods and services, or by investing it somewhere that will offer a return greater than the rate of inflation), money keeps on rolling around in the economy.
The theory is that once people start socking away money in their mattresses, you get recession or depression. Deflation would encourage lending (either directly or through investment), but since it discourages borrowing, people may end up unable to find people to accept their money, and the economy grinds to a halt.
that's the Keynesian viewpoint. The prevailing wisdom right now is that policy-controlled inflation helps prevent a wide range of issues. Bitcoin is inherently deflationary, which scares the crap out of people with their stake in the Keynesian camp.
Well, yes -- the Keynesian school of economic thought dominates our political economics right now. The folks in charge tend to subscribe to Keynesian economic theory.
The tl;dr on "inflation is good" is that it benefits people borrowing money. If your wages keep pace with inflation, then things like your car loan and mortgage ultimately cost less, leaving you with more inflation-adjusted money to lubricate the economy with. Inflation stalling (or even receding into deflation) means that it's much more expensive in terms of wage-hours to pay back an existing debt, which discourages people from taking on new debt. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/business/economy/in-fed-an... is a decent article on the concept.
A deflationary currency, by contrast, will heavily discourage borrowing. This analogy is a little stilted by the BTC<->USD conversion, but if I agree to loan you 10 BTC to be paid back over 5 years so you can buy a $10,000 car, and over the term of the car loan, let's say that the value of BTC is going to increase from $1000 to $4000 (that is, the amount of value traded in BTC is increasing faster than the amount of BTC in the market), then you'd be a fool to take my loan, since you would effectively end up paying me $40,000 worth of BTC for a $10,000 car. This would discourage you from taking my loan and buying the car, just because of the behavior of the currency.
(That said currently, since lenders get a chunk taken out of their loan by inflation, they make it up in the interest rate. In a consistently deflationary market, it seems to my non-economist brain that the answer would be a smaller - potentially even negative - interest rate, which would be pegged at a point that the lender still makes money over the course of the loan without being overly discouraging to borrowers.)