• Ninmi
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    42 years ago

    I believe that already exists. The real problem is creating a cryptocurrency that doesn’t destroy the planet.

      • @Jeffrey@lemmy.ml
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        72 years ago

        Proof of stake is fundamentally regressive. Literally, whomever has the most tokens also has the most governance weight. It is basically “1 dollar, 1 vote” rather than “1 person, 1 vote”.

        • @iortega@lemmy.eus
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          2 years ago

          On proof of work, whomever has the most tokens (I guess you mean “money”?), can have the best hardware, so also has the most governance weight. But on proof of work, it seems like you get discounts the more money you are ready to invest. So PoW would also be worse in those terms. Anyway, both algorithms work by providing more voting power to the richest, one a little more than the other. So I wouldn’t personally argue about proof of stake being bad because of that reason. Both algorithms are basically shit (in terms of democracy or whatever). I don’t have much knowledge about that, but there might be a better alternative than Proof of stake, don’t know.

          • @Jeffrey@lemmy.ml
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            22 years ago

            I am not aware of any crypto consensus algorithm that is not regressive. This is an argument against all cryptocurrencies and blockchains, not just Proof of Stake.

            What has proven far more equitable than any decentralized consensus algorithm is a fiat currency issued and controlled by an institution accountable to a democratic constituency.

  • mekhosM
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    12 years ago

    It’s very unstable at the moment and that’s unattractive for day-to-day purchasing. If speculators would loose interest it would be great for using it more like functional money.

  • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    02 years ago

    People saying “Monero” - How is Monero a store of value if its price is volatile? The whole “Store of value” argument is nonsense

    • Amicese
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      32 years ago

      How is Monero a store of value if its price is volatile?

      How is Fiat money a store of value if its price is volatile?

    • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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      22 years ago

      All currencies are volatile. Your dollar or euro today does not have the same value it had yesterday, or will have tomorrow. Currencies are merely commodities that have no utility in their own right beyond their fungibility.

      Often, your dollar or your euro fluctuates in value due to any number of manipulations that various actors (both government and private) perform. Monero should be more resistant to that.

    • @jucheguevara@lemmygrad.ml
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      02 years ago

      I don’t worry about the DXY when transacting in dollars. The exchange-value isn’t what I’m after. I’m after the hardest, best money.

      • @FruitFactory@lemmy.ml
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        12 years ago

        Edit: I have the feeling people fail to understand this comment ;)

        Maybe attempt to expand upon it then. So that more people might come to understand it.

  • Jesse
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    02 years ago

    Pretty much every financial system in the world requires you to know your customers. This means the gov’t will eventually catch up with you and either shut you down or you’ll roll. The days where you could hide behind certain banking laws are basically gone now. For a crypto to be a credible store of value, it has to be expected to be so for, well forever. That’s what makes it credible.

      • @beansniffer@lemmy.ml
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        52 years ago

        Mullvad actually allows you to generate a random user id number string, write that on a piece of paper, then send that paper and cash through the mail to pay for VPN time. It wouldn’t be quick, but its possible.

        • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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          12 years ago

          Ah yes ProtonVPN, the service that takes the worlds most traceable payment method (BTC) and where my account magically stopped working one day with no recovery.

          No thanks

  • @pinknoise@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    a currency like Bitcoin credible as a store of value

    No

    without impinging on the privacy of the currency creator

    I think you will have a hard time in any jurisdiction if you want to stay anonymous as a creator of such a system without making a loss

    or holders

    There are schemes that use cryptographic tokens instead of blockchains that can actually provide some anonymity and they don’t even waste that much energy. (e.g. GNU Taler)

    • Amicese
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      32 years ago

      (e.g. GNU Taler)

      Today, I learned that the FSF has cryptp software.