419 points

No one is ever concerned with how much energy is used to feed ads to the entire population of earth 24/7.

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156 points
*

Please propose a law or regulation structure for significantly reducing or eliminating advertisements. I’m serious. I fucking hate ads. I just don’t have a reasonable or effective way to get rid of them.

Edit: Hey actually I just thought of one! If the consumer is paying for the product, it can’t come with ads, including things like product placement or ad reads!

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97 points

In São Paulo, one of the biggest cities of the world, the municipality forbade by law all billboards and building disfiguring ‘decorations’ some 10 years ago. Since then, the city became much more bearable, aesthetically. Nothing special happened, everybody was happy, except a few bankrupt ads agencies. Maybe, you must be able to imagine that change is possible. However, there is this ideology, Americans seem to be so fond off, that seems to make such things very difficult.

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18 points
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New Jersey also banned billboards. That one is pretty easy and I vote that we should adopt that policy everywhere. It’s much harder to control digital adspace, since you can do things like astroturf campaigns and product placement. Great point though! I like that law.

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31 points

Hey actually I just thought of one! If the consumer is paying for the product, it can’t come with ads, including things like product placement or ad reads!

Smart TV manufacturers: “Impossible!”

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18 points
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Ban advertising to minors/for products intended for children

Ban ads/branding visible from roadways to prevent distracted driving

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2 points

Yes, those two are the most important and shouldn’t even be that hard to push. There are many laws that were pushed “to protect the children”, we might as well finally make some that actually do protect them.

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12 points

Serve ads inside the ads. It’s more power efficient—kill two birds with one stone?

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14 points

That’s called product placement in a Disney movie

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7 points

ads don’t go unless capitalism goes

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3 points
Removed by mod
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2 points

Make sending unrequested data like ads and trackers to web clients a crime akin to gaining unrestricted access to computers. No need for a new law, just a new interpretation on an older one.

Most jurisdictions prohibit unauthorized access to computer systems. What if we just say, “running Javascript code that implements functionality not specifically requested by the user is unauthorized tampering”.

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2 points

Got a better one: just ban marketing outright

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1 point

Are we all here because somebody “advertised” Lemmy on reddit?

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0 points

Where does it stop though? Will TV and super bowl still exist?

What about Facebook, the credit bureaus and Twitter? They’re all a waste of energy too.

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3 points
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Removed by mod
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63 points
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Same with porn. But I’m building a shake-power generator for fleshlites so it should balance out the power it pulls. Saving the earth one jack-off at a time.

Charging a hybrid car battery only takes 253.4 jerks. Pretty soon we will be expanding our charging service to parking lots across America and Canada! Most of them already have people willing to do it for you already …they were doing it there anyway… Win/win.

Powerjerk ™, we make perverts work for you!

Just roll up and say “Hey Jagoff, I need to get to x!” And you’ll promptly be taken care of.*

*Do not give them drugs to speed up the process. We are serious about our drug-free workplace.

Edit: steal my idea and I’ll find you

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25 points
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Energy isn’t free. More power captured from jerking will increase food consumed, meaning more energy used in farming. You’ll have to brand this as either a carbon capture fapture system or as a weight loss program

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6 points

1 kilowatt hour is about 870kCal.

Humans are incredibly inefficient power generators. I can buy 1kWh of electricity from the grid for about 18 cents (generation…transmission is extra).

I don’t think I can buy 870kCal of food for 18 cents. Certainly not a healthy source. And that’s even assuming 100% efficiency. Any high school physics student will tell you that won’t happen.

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3 points

The new Weight Loss Jerkoff System could solve part of that

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3 points
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Join our team of Jerks. We have a stiff sign on bonus.

By chance are you good at “shooting ropes”? Our clients love ropes.

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2 points

The studs at the local Blue Oyster don’t call me Spider Man for no reason.

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8 points

Porn is more beneficial for humanity than imaginary ownership.

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2 points

Capitalism is based on imaginary ownership.

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3 points

Bur, what if they prematurely finish and my car isn’t charged yet?

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1 point

Fired!

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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2 points

I have an ancient hermetic method of getting off that requires neither computer or phone. Enquire within if you seek this ancient knowledge.

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1 point

Please elaborate

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36 points
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I am. Same loop of crap blasting on 20x massive screens 24/7 at the station.

Every store that keeps light on at night is also an ad.

My hate for them is one of the main drivers behind my radicalization.

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15 points

My grandfather worked in the ad industry and couldn’t stand ads. He’s always mute the TV when they came on and we sat in uncomfortable silence.

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9 points

What do you mean ‘uncomfortable’?

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1 point
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At least lighting has become more efficient than 20-30 years ago.

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22 points

Most people aren’t loudly in favour of that, especially not the ones concerned with the power usage of blockchain

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6 points
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Perhaps, but you also never hear them complain about it anywhere near as loudly as people complaining about blockchains.

Yes, they’ll grumble about ads being annoying or YouTube blocking people who block ads, but the amount of power that gets wasted on this never even crosses anyone’s mind, meaning on some level, there exists agreement that advertisement are a necessary and responsible use of electricity while blockchains are not.

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3 points

That’s because ad serving doesn’t set a lower bound on the electricity price. The value of crypto and the value of electricity are linked.

For the sake of simplicity I’ll just say Bitcoin.

If the price of Bitcoin stays constant (big if), and the rate of Bitcoin per watt does too, then everyone would start mining until the demand for power is so high that the price increases until it’s as high as the Bitcoin per watt.

Sure, they are unrealistic assumptions, but it’s easier to see this way that the value of Bitcoin is (almost) the same as electricity. If it were lower, noone would mine it, if higher, people would buy electricity with bitcoin for a profit until the 2 equalize.

Electricity will never be much cheaper than Bitcoin, market forces will make sure of that, causing a huge environmental impact. Ads, however, only use as much electricity as they need to operate, their amount is not decided based on how much electricity they waste.

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19 points

Yes but what about this whataboutism? And honestly I am fairly certain it ain’t as much as Bitcoin. People usually focus on 1 thing to get it done because moving to the next. I bet you try to do that at work too.

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16 points

No way ads consume less power than bitcoin. Just the lights for ads probably consume more than bitcoin, not even talking about creating ads, which I assume consumes a double digit percentage of the global work force.

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2 points

I did a back of the envelope a few comments up. How it looks to me, just sending internet ads around the world consumes 20 times as much as all crypto mining combined.

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2 points

You assume wrong. In the UK, about 0.3-0.5% of people work in marketing or advertising, and that’s one of the most extremely financialised service economies in the whole world. No way is the number anywhere near even that high in countries where people actually work for a living.

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5 points

Yes but what about this whataboutism?

Blockchain user.

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0 points

What are you on about?

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17 points

Lets do an advertising tax 10% of all add revenue.

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8 points

Unironically this.

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15 points
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I went and did some mafs.

This thing says the world consumes 180k TWh of energy per year.

This study estimates (with a considerable uncertainty) that the Internet amounts to around 5% of the world’s energy usage.

Apparently, 48% of consumer web traffic is ads.. That is dystopian in itself, that means around half the content floating around the internet is stuff the client does not request but is pushed to them.

That would put the ad industry at 4500 TWh per year. However, this is back of the envelope.

Going off of this, a high estimate for crypto mining is 230 TWh.

That means the ad industry costs us around 20 times the cost of crypto in terms of power. Feel free to check me because I don’t know shit about most of these things.

That said, this does not account for the entire ad industry, just the cost of sending internet ads around the world. Ads are made, ads are displayed in various media other than websites, and most importantly, ads have the sole purpose of driving further consumption, which all contributes to the societal costs of the ad industry.

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48%? Fuck i love my adblocker

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2 points
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Tbf most ads are on text news articles, one image can take up thousands of times more data than a few words.

And it’s cached… and there are CDNs… Still way more energy than you want, but not quite as panic inducing as it sounds.

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2 points

Damn, I knew the numbers would be crazy, but that’s absolutely bonkers.

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10 points

Or how much is spent on the global banking industry…

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0 points
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Deleted by creator
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3 points

That is why I only block ads when I’m on a plane 👍

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3 points

That’s such a great point wtf

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3 points

Exactly! Blockchain and PoW are terrible but id really like to know how much time and electricity is consumed to serve ads, cool servers, train and educate people to effectively become ad engineers.

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3 points
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How much does facebook, the banking system Google search need and does it even make sense to compare this against a small country?

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0 points

Instead of actually talking about it you’re lazily using it to deflect criticism of unsustainable cryptocurrencies. Your input was worthless.

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0 points

Or that tumble dryers in the USA alone use more energy than Bitcoin.

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-9 points

Yes, but it’s almost certainly a multitude less electricity than bitcoin.

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17 points

it’s almost certainly not

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-29 points
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Yea the rally against block chain tech is stupid as fuck. It consumes nothing in the grand scale…do people not realize a lot of large enterprises have ~200k nodes give or take? Bigger companies can have in the million range. 200k machines is a joke.

Edit: I can see a lot of people just hate block chain tech without understanding anything tech wise lol

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40 points
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The nodes aren’t the issue. It’s the fact that those nodes have to expend at least the same amount of energy every single time a record is added and the larger the ledger, the more energy is needed. Blockchain is somewhat unique in that regard.

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24 points

It really feels like SOMEWHERE there was a legitimate use for this for very mission-critical stuff that might need to be immutable once published and kept for posterity…

…but then it just became yet another speculative asset to make magic money that fueled stupid monkey jpegs.

The pursuit of profit benefits mankind only by the occasional anomalous accident.

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-7 points

You do understand what a DB is right? Like there’s millions of them…hell right now typing out this comment has one marking it. And then you’re downloading it to read it… that’s a transaction. Except there are millions of people reading comments constantly on all social media platforms.

My comment here has more bits in it than a single transaction.

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1 point

You don’t even understand blockchain so I’m not sure what your edit is all about. You’re comparing blockchain to a database in your replies as if they’re comparable.

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-1 points

When it comes to power…it absolutely is comparable…but most of you have no clue how much compute we use daily in terms of power. Acting like the block chain sucks down anywhere near the amount of power we use on even in the corporate world is hilarious…you know a lot of colos have their own sub stations right?

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-5 points

Yeah, people tend hate what they don’t understand. Especially when most people think think every blockchain performs exactly like bitcoin (which is proof of work). Bitcoin is slow and power hungry and would never actually be usable by the masses for everyday transactions. But it was the first and will likely be a “digital gold” for a long time

But it’s not the only one and in time everyone will be using blockchain technology. It’s so much more convenient and useful than most realize. The Solana blockchain has secured a big partnership with Visa that can be read up on if anyone is interested.

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201 points

Distributed hashed linked list is so yesteryear. These days we’re into text autocompletion instead.

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110 points

Hey, it’s not just fancy autocomplete!

Thanks to years of innovation, it’s now copyright infringement as well.

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31 points

I wish copyrights will die to this technology! <3

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31 points

The thing is its only the copyrights of individual artists and creators that will die to this.

The big corpos will find a way to protect their value, just you wait.

They will steal from every single creative in the world and then sue them to hell and back if they use anything they them selves “own”

This is not a threat to the copyrights that you want to die.

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18 points

Well I’ll be a little more enthused if that would ever apply to regular people as well, rather than just people with several billion in VC money to buy lawyers.

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8 points

I completely agree.

The philosophy behind modern copyright is completely out to lunch.

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4 points

You don’t hate copyright.

You hate that entertainment megacorps have set up a massive toll booth between creators and audiences, thwarting their ability to connect and collaborate, and crippling the average person’s ability to meaningfully participate in culture unless it happens to be profitable for those in charge.

And soon you will hate that AI megacorps have set up a massive toll booth between creators and audiences, thwarting their ability to connect and collaborate, and crippling the average person’s ability to meaningfully participate in culture unless it happens to be profitable for those in charge.

What they did to us by forcing us to obey copyright, they will now do by disregarding copyright.

You can be pro-piracy because it distributes power, and be anti-AI because it consolidates it, without legitimizing copyright as a fundamental principle of ethics.

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3 points
Removed by mod
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11 points

Autocomplete is the most important thing in your life.

That sentence was brought to you by autocomplete. Autocomplete, you know it and you can do whatever you need.

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57 points

This is revolutionary

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11 points

This is de-evolutionary!

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54 points

The real charlatans were the “the technology has promise” people. No, the technology was dumb.

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-27 points

He says on a decentralized platform that became popular because the centralized equivalent became hostile towards their users.

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60 points

“Blockchain” and “decentralised” are not interchangeable words

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-10 points

Yes, in the same way that federated and decentralized aren’t interchangeable.

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12 points

I don’t think Lemmy counts as popular yet.

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48 points
Deleted by creator
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76 points

Sure, but what real-world problem does a trustless solve? I thought this was all very interesting years ago but now that we’ve had blockchain for years it seems it’s only good for illegal or morally questionable transactions.

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53 points
Deleted by creator
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23 points
*

See I think more nuanced takes like this are good. I’m not familiar with the Chinese banking issue that you are describing, but it sounds like deposit insurance (like the FDIC) might be a better solution than cryptocurrency, and it’s definitely better understood. Since the real world value of cryptocurrencies are so volatile they are a questionable store of value, and taking a risk on a poorly regulated bank might be better than taking a risk on storing your money in a volatile and unregulated security like cryptocurrency. Honestly it’s hard to know which is the better risk. So it could be better or it could be worse.

I agree with your point about transferring money internationally, and even within the US transferring money used to be a real pain. So I’m still interested to see if cryptocurrency can be a better medium of exchange or medium of transfer than traditional ways, or at least give traditional systems incentive to improve. But again the volatility is a concern so for most people the best move is probably to get in and out of the crypto market as quickly as possible or else risk getting a vastly different amount of money out of it than you put in. Admittedly it could appreciate, but when I’m transferring money to someone I don’t want that to simultaneously be an investment. The few times I have used Bitcoin to purchase something the whole process has taken hours, and there’s no guarantee there won’t be price swings — a lot could happen in those hours.

I appreciate the brutal honesty about cryptocurrency not being for the average Joe. It’s not that long since many cryptocurrency boosters were hoping it would replace fiat currency, but now that I think about it I haven’t heard as much about that recently. In its current state it is really not for the average Joe.

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4 points

How would using blockchain fix the liquidity of a bank?

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17 points

There’s a case to be made for a currency that facilitates illegal transactions, or transactions that corporations object to. Just because something is legal in your country doesn’t mean it might not be unjustly restricted. Or could just be unjustly illegal in your country or another country. The problem of course is that distributed currency also facilitates things that should be illegal.

But WikiLeaks is a good example - their legacy is a little mixed now, but when they first came on the scene they were doing work which was a valuable service to the public. If you wanted to donate money to support wikileaks you couldn’t because the credit card processors shut them off. Blockchain lets you get around that.

Likewise it’s the combination of distance and direct - I can give $5 in cash to my local leaking consortium, but I can’t give $5 to the leaking consortium on the other side of the world without relying on the knowledge and consent of third parties.

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5 points

I agree there’s something to be said for this — If you have a above-board business that credit card companies don’t want to service because they think it makes them look bad, that should not shut you out of electronic payments yet that’s basically where we are at least in the US.

This is a little hard to balance with the fact that the same things that let you circumvent gatekeepers like credit card companies also make it attractive for genuinely immoral things, but that’s a trade-off. Every currency can be used for immoral things and just because cryptocurrency might make it a little easier doesn’t mean it’s inherently immoral.

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4 points
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You totally can give cash anywhere in the world. You post it as a letter

This was common before electronic transfer

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8 points
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I was hoping it would help me save on international transfer fees when I was an overseas postdoc, but it would have actually cost more between the exchange fees and my time setting up all the exchanges in various countries, meanwhile also introducing risk in me being robbed of said money and screwing something up and introducing myself to some sort of tax liability. Needless to say, I continued to just pay for the bank transfers

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5 points

That’s really the thing, isn’t it? In my experience cryptocurrency fees are quite high. I bet there’s a way to find a lower fee but then I’d have to do a ton of research and hope it’s accurate. I’d rather just pay a bank that requires me to do no research.

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0 points
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6 points

Also, the unbanked.

Also, privacy and anonymity (to an extent).

Also, complete predictability in the system (its at least domain constrained).

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5 points
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There’s no privacy, it’s an open ledger, only anonymity

It’s a bad way of hiding money if you’re about to be investigated for crime

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2 points

the unbanked

Can the unbanked still benefits from crypto these days though? How can you cash your crypto without doing KYC? Even localbitcoin got folded due to increased regulation. If you can pass KYC, then you’re probably not the unbanked. Less and less business accept crypto these days, it’s hard purchase daily necessities without cashing out your crypto (except probably in venezuela).

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0 points

Thanks for your input, dingdong.

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5 points

Trusting Humans is literally a security flaw. Any system with trust you can find examples with fraud and abuse from those who held power by holding that trust.

We trusted bankers to invest our money, and some short sold the housing market with that money

I could go on, but trust really is a security issue. Decentralization has its efficiency issues, but saying “Bitcoin uses as much power as the 90th largest nation” is peanuts when you consider the energy inequality that America spends and compare what Bitcoin delivers with that energy versus how much energy centralized banks need to deliver a system that’s easier to fraud

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17 points

Trusting Humans is literally a security flaw.

Exactly, and using Bitcoin does not solve that because you still have to transact with humans. If you buy something with Bitcoin and the seller never sends you anything, you’re out of luck. Your money is gone.

If you use a regulated financial system you have some options. If you paid with credit card you can charge back and dispute the charge. Your money in the bank is backed by insurance that is guaranteed by the government.

Bitcoin only cuts out the middleman. Every other issue of trust with the recipient still exists, and those are the problems regulation solves, and the reason fraudsters love Bitcoin so much.

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14 points

Ah yes Bitcoin, famously free of fraud and abuse.

More seriously, every system can be used for fraud. The question is whether the solution is actually better overall. We could prevent all wire fraud by returning to a cash-only economy. But that would be hugely inconvenient and therefore create a huge drag on the economy compared to a world where we can do electronic transfers even though electronic transfers open us up to wire fraud. Returning to cash-only is not worth the increase in security, and it opens us up to other issues (e.g., bank runs and someone stealing all the money under my mattress).

And while power use is a problem with Proof of Work coins, it’s not my biggest concern about cryptocurrency because Proof of Stake can fix that issue. It’s a shame that the biggest coin now is PoW but hopefully that will change. The bigger issue is “is cryptocurrency better than traditional currency?” So far it hasn’t proven to be better except in extremely limited circumstances. And a lot of the ways cryptocurrency is better will go away if governments start regulating it like other forms of finance. Having your money in cryptocurrency won’t protect you from the police and courts.

We trusted bankers to invest our money, and some short sold the housing market with that money

Okay? You could do that with cryptocurrency if traders started accepting cryptocurrency for shorts. The only reason you can’t do that today is traders won’t accept cryptocurrency for shorts, and that’s basically security through obscurity.

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4 points

it’s only good for illegal or morally questionable transactions.

Good thing laws are always just and everyone agrees that following every law is the most important thing a human being can aspire to do in their lifetime.

^^/s

Seriously though, I’m someone that uses credit for 90% of my purchases, but I also enjoy consuming cannabis and I’m well aware how horrible it would be if it wasn’t possible to make “illegal or morally questionable transactions.”

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3 points

Bingo. Capitalism has thus far rejected the blockchain, which is generally evidence that it doesn’t solve an important problem either efficiently, safely or cheaply.

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27 points

Capitalism rejects solutions to climate change as well

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23 points

To be fair, there are plenty of other reasons capitalism might have rejected blockchain: market failure, interference by government, etc.

I’m not saying that to defend cryptocurrency, by the way, but rather to point out that capitalism isn’t perfect at allocating resources in every situation.

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7 points
Deleted by creator
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-1 points

With all the information available at your fingertips being ignorant is a choice.

“this parallel financial system can also serve a tangible social good, offering an onramp to the financial system for people who would otherwise be left out. In countries where the vast majority of the population is unbanked, national currencies are no longer a safe store of value, remittances comprise a hefty portion of GDP, and international sanctions complicate connections to the global economy, a virtual currency that doesn’t require an intermediary to approve transactions can be a vital lifeline for survival”

Bitcoin is poised to blow up Africa’s $86 billion banking system

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2 points
*

This isn’t Reddit, you don’t have to turn every discussion into a fight. I’m genuinely interested in cryptocurrency for reasons such as the article you linked: there are areas where traditional finance genuinely has failed to meet people’s needs. Providing a medium of exchange for the unbanked is a great example of something it could possibly help with, and I think that’s a good thing if it happens. But we should also be able to talk about the problems with cryptocurrencies and the cases where it doesn’t work as well as traditional finance. And if this prediction doesn’t pan out and cryptocurrency doesn’t become a major way of banking the unbanked, we should be able to consider what could accomplish that goal. It might be a different cryptocurrency, or a new thing inspired by cryptocurrency, or something that has nothing to do with cryptocurrency. After all, cryptocurrency is not a goal in itself.

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28 points

TPS metrics of the most popular blockchains

Blockchain TPS Max TPS
Ethereum 13.15 57.91
Bitcoin 7.35 9.87
Algorand 6.99 221.01
Optimism 4.74 20.66

As a global payments network Visa has the capacity to execute more than 65,000 transactions per second.

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0 points
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11 points

Yes but 65000 TPS for Bitcoin would likely have the planet glowing much brighter in the infrared… possibly even the visible, for all the heat we’d need to dump.

A rich, warm, and sterilized world!

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6 points

Isn’t that still an order of magnitude less than what Visa can do? Or is there some extra math involved that I don’t know about

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0 points

Where are you getting the TPS report for the Lightning Network? I thought its theoretical max TPS was in the millions.

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-8 points

Oh nice, that’s how high Solana’s TPS has gone in testing (in practice it hovers around 5-10k TPS). There’s also newer chains like Aptos that claim to be able to handle 150k TPS with subsecond finality. Of course, neither of these chains are very decentralised, but at least they aren’t fully permissioned and centralised. Especially on a network belonging to a partisan, anti-competitive, anti-trust law-breaking, Wikileaks funding thieving Israel supporters like Visa.

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8 points

And of course we can rest assured that nobody profiting off bitcoin is morally questionable

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5 points

General question, because I don’t give a shit about blockchain to research it.

Does it have a way to quickly and effectively handle fraud? And don’t tell me “there’s no way to commit fraud” because people can steal wallet passwords no fucking problem. With most banks they will actively track fraud, cancel those transactions, and restore your funds and possibly shut down the card automatically while still allowing the account to exist so you can access your money. Is that the case with blockchain?

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8 points

there’s the small issue of proof of stake being subjective…

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0 points

but a bank’s opinion, that’s fact

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6 points

But if you’re using layer 2 solutions, then you’re not actually using the blockchain directly, right? Might as well use credit card then?

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0 points

All transactions are still eventually commited to Layer 1 though, so you’re still using the Blockchain when using L2s.

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2 points
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No, just the final state. And you are changing into trusting a centralised node, which makes no difference compared to existing systems

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