Sunday 9 September 2018

Hey, Paul Krugman: Here’s What Bitcoin Is Good for

Hey, Paul Krugman: Here’s What Bitcoin Is Good for

It will probably come as no surprise that Paul Krugman is a cryptocurrency critic. The Nobel-winning economist and New York Times columnist is a known skeptic of laissez-faire alternatives to government interventions, and it makes sense that this doubt would carry over to distributed digital money. In 2013, he went so far as to claim that "bitcoin is evil" because he dislikes the "libertarian political agenda" he perceives at its core.
Recently, Krugman issued a more measured take on why he distrusts cryptocurrency. His opposition boils down to two things, transaction costs and volatility, which I'll get into more in a minute. Admirably, he admitted that he indeed could be wrong, and issued a challenge: "if you want to argue that I'm wrong, please answer the question, what problem does cryptocurrency solve?" I am happy to help.
Krugman begins his article with a high-level sweep over the contours of monetary history, starting with metallic standards, and then banknotes, to central bank-created "fiat" money, and finally digital payment systems managed by third parties. He says that the prime mover of monetary destiny is a currency's propensity to reduce the frictions of making a transaction. Governments are so superior in the creation and management of money, in this view, so it is natural and indeed beneficial that we have evolved this standard. Cryptocurrencies challenge this government monopoly, so they are therefore undesirable or perhaps even "evil."
As he puts it: "cryptocurrency enthusiasts are effectively celebrating the use of cutting-edge technology to set the monetary system back 300 years. Why would you want to do that? What problem does it solve? I have yet to see a clear answer to that question."
So, what is cryptocurrency good for, anyway?
Contrary to Krugman's argument that cryptocurrencies present an insurmountable level of transaction costs to an exchange, they can actually be the only remaining option when fiat currencies have failed.
The reason that bitcoin is so attractive as an alternative currency is because it is a censorship-resistant means of payment online regardless of what happens to existing financial institutions. The blockchain technology at its heart replaces the need to rely on a trusted third party–like a central bank, or a commercial bank, or a credit card company—to make payments online. Transfers are facilitated by a network of distributed computers that blindly run the code to create new currency at an expected rate (which means no unexpected inflation) and transfer money between parties. So long as you hold the cryptographic private key to your cryptocurrency files, there is nobody on Earth that can inflate away or confiscate your money.
For one timely but tragic use case, we can look to the ongoing monetary crisis in Turkey. Last week, the lira began plunging in value to record lows after U.S. sanctions and rocky responses from the Turkish government spooked investor confidence in domestic markets. This comes on the heels of years of poor monetary and fiscal management by the Turkish government. Things had deteriorated so much that the economists and financial journalists who reported honestly on the monetary situation feared retribution from agents of the government. Now, the Turkish economy is caught in a downward spiral of inflationcapital flight, and probable capital controls.
Krugman argues that "fiat currencies have underlying value because men with guns say they do. And this means that their value isn't a bubble that can collapse if people lose faith." The Turkish government has a lot of guns indeed, and yet the lira is still losing more value each day.
People will try to save value in the face of an inflationary event through any possible means. They will try to exchange their increasingly valueless domestic currency for any kind of asset or safer foreign currency so that they can salvage whatever value for themselves that they can. But governments try to crack down on this kind of thing, and people of lower income classes often do not have the means or connections to monetarily "get out" while they can.
This is a perfect use case for cryptocurrency, and in fact it is a route that others in CyprusGreece, and especially Venezuela have turned to in hard times. We can expect that others in Turkey may also turn to cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin is often dismissed as "volatile," and Krugman repeated this criticism. Yet bitcoin's volatility pales in comparison to nations in monetary distress and is therefore very attractive in those cases. As bitcoin use becomes more widespread, it is possible that its volatility will flatten out over time.
People in developed, stable economies with access to traditional banking options take it for granted that we will always be able to get the funds to make the payments that we want. But this is not the case in much of the world, nor is it always ensured for us.
So, to answer Mr. Krugman's question most simply: Cryptocurrencies are good for facilitating permissionless direct digital exchange when no other institution can be counted on to do so. The value of a cryptocurrency like bitcoin is therefore not entirely "[untethered] to reality," but rather is partially backed by the knowledge that a holder can always exercise this fundamental ability to exit.
Of course, in the grand scheme of things, bitcoin is an infant currency. There are a lot of kinks to iron out. It is true that bitcoin is currently much more volatile than established currencies like the dollar. A lot of people don't like the idea that other people would be given the ability to transact however they would like. They will surely dislike cryptocurrency for that reason. And there are technical improvements to be made as well. Right now, engineers are working on symbiotic technologies to interact with the bitcoin blockchain that will hopefully increase the throughput and affordability of transactions.
A skeptic may counter that bitcoin's use case as a "currency of last resort" does not justify its prevailing market price of several thousand dollars. Well, maybe not. But it is simply ignorant to claim that cryptocurrency has not presented a major innovation in the fields of money and commerce. If that innovation is as revolutionary a benefit as its proponents claim, then maybe that market price isn't as misaligned as it might appear to a neophyte. On a long enough time horizon, we may all be cryptocurrency holders.
Fed Chair: Cryptocurrency Investors Are 'Unsophisticated'

Fed Chair: Cryptocurrency Investors Are 'Unsophisticated'


Cryptocurrency investors are "unsophisticated" bumpkins who wouldn't know what money was if it hit them on their heads, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell suggested during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Wednesday. No need to worry, however, because sophisticated folks like Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) believe Congress should "have the courage to ban cryptocurrencies" and save us from our misguided "animal spirits."
During Powell's semiannual testimony to Congress, Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) turned the conversation to the subject of cryptocurrencies. At first, Powell merely echoed his comments from last November, saying cryptocurrencies are not significant enough to threaten the financial system. But then he took a cheap shot at investors who have backed cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and ethereum.
"Relatively unsophisticated investors see the asset go up in price, and they think, 'This is great; I'll buy this,'" Powell said. "In fact, there is no promise of that."
All investments carry risk, and investors in any currency, stock, or bond should be aware of that. But that doesn't make cryptocurrency investors any less sophisticated, as a group, than other kinds of investors.
That said, it's important to understand the source of Powell's skepticism. He derided cryptocurrency as an "investment with no promise." Later in his testimony he said cryptocurrencies are not really currencies because they don't "have a store of value," have no "intrinsic value," and are not commonly used for payments.
It's clear that Powell, like his predecessor and many of his colleagues, believes bitcoin and its various cousins are built entirely on speculation. Driven by the Keynesian animus toward speculation, they cannot reconcile its potential with its speculative value. While cryptocurrencies lack the widespread use that defines a medium of exchange as money, their investment value encourages their use and brings us closer to a reality where bitcoin is money.
Contrary to what Powell said, cryptocurrencies already constitute a store of value, although generally not a stable one. Two Federal Reserve economists, Michael Lee and Antoine Martin, found that cryptocurrencies "provide a store of value" in "environments where trust is a problem." Lee and Martin also pointed out that Federal Reserve notes, like cryptocurrencies, are not backed by physical commodities and have no intrinsic value.
Powell's other comments about cryptocurrencies further illustrated his misunderstanding of their potential value. He called attention to money laundering through cryptocurrencies. There is no denying that cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin are used for less-than-legal activities, largely by virtue of their anonymity and radical decentralization. But that fact does not disqualify them as serious alternatives to the present monetary system. Nor does it mean that cryptocurrencies should be banned, as Sherman suggested. "Yes, it is true that criminals have used bitcoin," says Norbert Michel, director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Data Analysis, "but it's also true that criminals have used airplanes, computers and automobiles."
There is an upside to Powell's bearishness. As long as central bankers don't believe cryptocurrencies pose a threat to the monopoly of state-sponsored fiat money, we can expect fairly lax regulation of the industry. Powell made it clear that he has no intention of pursuing jurisdiction over cryptocurrency. It's better to have government officials mocking bitcoin than trying to regulate it out of existence.
Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? Peter Schiff vs. Erik Voorhees

Is Bitcoin the Future of Money? Peter Schiff vs. Erik Voorhees


On July 2, 2018, Reason and The Soho Forum hosted a debate between Erik Voorhees, the CEO of ShapeShift, and Peter Schiff, CEO and chief global strategist of Euro Pacific Capital.
The proposition: "Bitcoin, or a similar form of cryptocurrency, will eventually replace governments' fiat money as the preferred medium of exchange."
It was an Oxford-style debate in which the audience votes on the resolution at the beginning and end of the event, and the side that gains the most ground is victorious. Voorhees won by changing the minds of 15 percent of attendees.
The Soho Forum is held every month at the SubCulture Theater in Manhattan's East Village. At the next debate, which will be held on August 27, William Easterly, professor of economics at NYU, and Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize Winner in economics and professor at Columbia, will discuss whether free markets or government action is the best way to eliminate global poverty. You can buy tickets here.
Produced by Todd Krainin.



source # reason.com

What Happens If Cryptocurrency Technologies Are Regulated as Securities?

What Happens If Cryptocurrency Technologies Are Regulated as Securities?


One of the hottest scenes in the cryptocurrency community today revolves around what's known as an "ICO," or initial coin offering. An ICO is a kind of futuristic fundraising round. Rather than relying on regulations and lawyers to guide investment, developers of an upcoming project solicit funds to build out a planned technology platform in exchange for tokens that investors can then trade or use on the platform itself when it is complete. Developers gain access to needed funding in order to make their vision a reality. Investors are rewarded for their early insight with profits and first access to the platform. Everyone wins, and innovation proceeds apace.
At least, this is the ideal. In practice, a lot of ICOs end up being unexpectedly complex works-in-progress (to be extremely charitable) at best and outright scams at the worst. A tiny handful—we're talking maybe two or three—of ICOs seem to have lived up to their promises. Maybe others will follow. But a worrying number of them have unfortunately looked more like fly-by-night get-rich-quick cons hoping to piggyback on the buzz of the cryptoeconomy than an innovative funding mechanism for the technologies of tomorrow.
For these reasons, securities regulators across the world have started to turn a sharp eye to the ICO space, with important implications for the future of this kind of project structure. In the U.S., the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been closely watching the ICO space for some time, and it has recently signaled that it may undertake more rigorous interventions in coming months.
ICOs in a nutshell
To say that ICOs are going gangbusters is a bit of an understatement: The total number of ICOs grew from a handful in 2014 and 2015, to a few dozen in 2016, to a whopping 343 in 2017. Roughly 300 ICOs have launched in 2018 so far, and we're only halfway through the year. According to CoinDesk's ICO Tracker, ICOs have raised some $14 billion in total funding since the model was launched in 2014. For context, the value of all above-ground silver stocks is around $17 billion.
Why all the fuss? To ICO believers, this mechanism represents the democratization of investment, delivered through blockchain technology. They point out that access to hot-ticket investment opportunities are often limited to the wealthy and well-connected.
Indeed, not everyone is a venture capitalist who receives pitches on potential unicorn businesses every day. And the regulations for getting involved with traditional securities can be hard to surmount: The SEC mandates that certain investment opportunities be limited to those with an income of more than $200K or a net worth of $1 million.
So this group of technologists wants to do away with the rules and lawyers and administrative overhead all together and just fund their ventures by bringing them directly to the people.
Here's how it's supposed to work. Some people think that they can improve or enhance the economics or applications of the original cryptocurrency, bitcoin, but they initially lack the funds to build the actual technology that they imagine. They generally first issue a white paper that describes their vision and provides a rough sketch of how a proposed new technology is going to achieve those goals. This generates buzz and critique, and other people who like that vision and believe in the team behind it have the option to purchase a token in what's called a "pre-mine." The funds raised from this token sale are then supposed to be channeled into development of the platform, sometimes overseen by a non-profit foundation established for this purpose. Token holders are theoretically rewarded for their foresight in the form of future profits, either through the increasing valuation of the token post-launch or a sale to other speculators.
You might be wondering why this kind of fundraising structure is necessary for some cryptocurrency projects, especially when bitcoin required no such hoopla. That's a good question.
In the case of bitcoin, its early obscurity was one of its core strengths. The few people who responded to Satoshi Nakamoto's early announcement on the Cryptography Mailing List included some of the most brilliant minds in digital cash engineering who had attempted similar projects themselves for years. Early bugs were quietly discovered and quickly patched without the pressure and liability of a billions-worth market capitalization at stake.
Satoshi didn't need a multi-million dollar cash infusion to build his technology. He just did it, with the help of the talented open source developers that contributed all over the world. In fact, Satoshi actively discouraged early hype around bitcoin. When Julian Assange was thinking about accepting bitcoin for Wikileaks donations in 2010, Satoshi asked him to hold off, since bitcoin was still "a small beta community in its infancy."
Shrewd scheme or rude scam?
But this kind of patience is a thing of the past in the crypto community. Today, entrepreneurs are eager to get the ball rolling, fast, and figure out the details later. This kind of fervent ambition comes at the cost of increasing the risks for costly public failures and regulatory scrutiny.
The most successful ICO to date is probably Ethereum, whose provenance lays in a very public and somewhat bumpy crowdsale in 2014. The smart contracting platform indeed delivered on the vision that its founder Vitalik Buterin laid out for investors, and today ethers (the platform's cryptocurrency unit) are one of the most valuable altcoins with the second-highest market capitalization to bitcoin.
This is not to say there have been no snafus. In particular, Ethereum's decision to hard fork the protocol in response to a programming error made by a project built on its network, called The DAO, proved controversial in the community and will be interesting to regulators, as we will soon discuss. But in terms of fidelity to vision and demonstrated outcomes, Ethereum is held up as one of the "good" ICOs.
Unfortunately, there are precious few other role models to which to point. The Wall Street Journal recently undertook an investigation of 1,450 ICOs to get an idea of how many were outright frauds. Of these, some 271 were found to have either plagiarized their white paper, stolen stock images and identities to display a fake development team, or used snake oil salesman-like language promising "guaranteed returns" and "instant riches."
And those are just the intentional cons. Other ICOs have started with good intentions and great ambitions, only to find that their dreams extended beyond the skills that so many investors poured good money into backing.
3 Steps to Buy and Store Bitcoins Anonymously

3 Steps to Buy and Store Bitcoins Anonymously


Bitcoin is the first uncensorable digital currency: When it moves between buyers and sellers, there's nothing anyone can do to stop it. The now-shuttered online marketplace Silk Road couldn't have existed before bitcoin, because it's unfathomable that Visa, Mastercard, or PayPal would approve transactions on an e-commerce site for buying and selling illicit drugs.
Bitcoin is often mistakenly described as a "fully anonymous" cryptocurrency. In fact, while global superpowers can't prevent you from spending your bitcoins, that doesn't mean they can't figure out what you bought. More than 100 Silk Road users have gotten into trouble with law enforcement since 2012, and the Snowden leaks revealed that the National Security Agency has worked to uncover the identities of other bitcoin users as well.
Though you don't need to give up your real name to use bitcoin, transaction histories are fully visible in an online ledger called the "blockchain." Skilled digital forensics investigators can link your real identity to a bitcoin address by extracting information from pervasive "web trackers." These are hidden programs installed on your computer that capture information about your browsing and purchasing habits. Trackers, which are used by Facebook, Google, the FBI, and all sorts of malicious actors, can also record an IP address, the numeric code that identifies a home internet network. "Anonymity is misrepresented in popular culture…it's not an absolute," cryptocurrency researcher and security consultant Kristov Atlas writes in his self-published 2014 book Anonymous Bitcoin, a practical guide to concealing your identity. "The question at any given time is not, 'Am I anonymous?' but rather, 'How anonymous am I, and to whom?'"
There's no such thing as perfect anonymity, but a handful of best practices can go a long way toward shielding your transactions from government spies and other malevolents.

Step 1: Hold Your Own Bitcoins

Don't keep your bitcoins on a custodial exchange such as Coinbase. These sites store your identity and may share it with law enforcement agencies, making transactions about as private as mailing a personal check with a return address. Instead, set up a bitcoin "wallet"—a software application that enables you to send or receive bitcoins in a peer-to-peer fashion, directly from your own computer. With a wallet, the secret codes required to spend bitcoins aren't stored by a third-party company or somewhere in the cloud. You maintain them yourself.
Atlas recommends running your bitcoin wallet on a cheap, dedicated PC laptop with the open-source Tails Linux operating system, which makes internet use hard to track. Tails Linux is designed to run off an external USB drive. (Since your laptop won't be functional until you have a working operating system, start by downloading Tails Linux on a different computer and saving it to your external drive.) Every time you finish using your dedicated bitcoin laptop, turn it off, unplug it, and disconnect the battery. This creates a fresh, anonymous session for next time that throws off trackers.
Electrum is an excellent bitcoin wallet that comes preinstalled on Tails Linux. Supplement it with a hardware USB device like a TREZOR or a Ledger Nano S, which add additional security layers that make it harder for an attacker to steal your bitcoins. The extra device will also help you detect if malware that compromises your anonymity somehow made it on to your computer. You can set the Electrum wallet to open only if one of these devices has been inserted into your computer and verified with a pin.

Step 2: Buy Bitcoins in Person

Start the buying process with the anonymous Tor internet browser, which comes preinstalled on Tails Linux. (You can download Tor on any computer, but you're less likely to be tracked if you use it on your dedicated bitcoin laptop.) Navigate to LocalBitcoins.com to look for a nearby bitcoin seller. Don't use your real email account to register. You can generate a temporary, anonymous email address using a service like Dispostable.com.
Meet your seller at a coffee shop with a public WiFi network. Bring your laptop, and pay with cash. Once you're there, with a click of the mouse in your bitcoin wallet, you can generate a "receiving address"—an alphanumeric code that's the equivalent of a bank routing and account number—which the seller can enter or scan into his or her wallet to execute the transfer. Arrive in a borrowed vehicle or park far away. Don't give the seller your cellphone number, and don't show him or her pictures of your kids while waiting for your multiple transaction confirmations.

Step 3: Bury Your Trail With a Bitcoin Mixer

To obfuscate the movement of your funds, use a bitcoin "mixing" service. These are websites that accept your bitcoins and send you back different bitcoins that have no connection to your previous activities. It's like swapping cash for bills with different serial numbers. To make the transaction record harder to follow, mixing services will generally send the "clean" coins back to you in multiple transfers over a staggered time period.
The first step is to use your bitcoin wallet to generate several receiving addresses. (Again, a "receiving address" is the equivalent of a bank account and routing number—but bitcoin allows you to generate a fresh code with every transaction for better security.) Enter your receiving addresses into the mixer's website so it knows where to send your money when the time comes. Next, enter the receiving address of the mixer service into your bitcoin wallet. Execute the transfer.
After the payment is confirmed, the mixing service will send back the clean currency. Some services let you specify the intervals in which the payments will be made.
Bitcoin mixers do have downsides: Their fees can run as high as 3 percent, and they involve a degree of risk. You're trusting that the service won't maintain a record of your activities and that it won't abscond with your funds. But if you care about anonymity, mixers are an important tool for covering your tracks.
Take precautions, like using an established service, and test it with a small amount of currency before risking a large sum. The review site Darknetmarkets.co currently recommends Coinmixer.se, Helix, and Bitcoin Blender. Keep in mind, however, that bitcoin mixers can shut down or be compromised—a service that's reliable today won't necessarily stay that way. With bitcoin, you're in control of your own money. Use that power with care and caution.
source # reason.com

Saturday 8 September 2018

Monday 15 January 2018

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