cryptocurrency & blockchain

in #cryptocurrency6 years ago (edited)

hello #steemit, CryptoCurrency and Blockchain, basically what they are, then look at some of the pros and cons and criticism of Cryptocurrency .Since it is often seen by many as the currency of the future we will also look briefly at what sort of challenges it might face in interplanetary and interstellar economies, where communications might make checking someone’s bank account balance a decade long process and where advanced automation might let you make perfect copies or forgeries of almost anything.On top of that we will also looks at some alternative uses for Blockchain which include some surprises like maybe being able to use it for conducting elections with a maximum of privacy and minimum of fraud.Before we can get into any of that we do need to cover some basics about currency and money in general and define some terms and concepts.I am going to try to keep this as brief and intuitive as possible, so for those of you want more detailed looks at certain aspects of it there will be a number of links to more detailed papers in the episode description.Banking is not usually considered an ex![imaciting aspect of technology and futurism, but it is a very important one so I will try to make it as interesting as possible.Money begins replacing direct trade of goods, or bartering, when you start having issues with what is called a ‘coincidence of wants’.Which is to say if Frank the Fisher wants something he needs to find someone who wantsfish.If Frank wants bread, but Bob the Baker does not want fish, then Frank Fisher has to findsomeone who wants fish and has something Bob Baker wants.In an increasingly specialized society that can result in a much longer chain of exchangesand you probably will lose a little bit on each step in the chain, even if just becauseyou are spending time trading goods that could be spent fishing.You make money to have something everyone wants so you can just sell your fish to someonewho wants them.Ideally this should be something light, durable, easy to identify, and hard to forge.There’s a couple ways you can do this.The first way is representative money, and this is where some token is used in placeof an item.Say a note that the person who has the note is entitled to fifty sacks of grain.Certificates from gold smiths who kept gold securely locked up for other people is anotherold example and one of the ways paper money came to be in common use.This often leads to fiat money, the one mostly in use nowadays, and a type of representativemoney where it is a bit nebulous what is being represented.Fiat currency is one where it isn’t representing any specific thing except maybe trust andstability.Trust is a huge factor in any representative money, of course, you need to trust you canredeem a grain token for the amount of grain it says it is worth.This is also where we get floating currency, which is what Bitcoin is and why were arelooking at this.Here the money is not tied to any specific commodity like gold or grain but simply existsand floats around in value.I make a million tokens and tell people they are the only legal tender anymore, good forany transaction or debt.Now for these million tokens I made, nobody actually knows how much it is worth at firstand it will just float around in value until it finds a comfortable place to more or lesssettle at.For the first couple days people might say one token will buy five sacks of grain, thena few days later it might be three sacks instead and finally settle at four, though it willalways fluctuate at least a little.But there is no commodity backing this money.The second type of money is the complete reverse.Commodity money, where the money itself has value and is reasonably compact and durable.You wouldn’t want use bananas or a haunch of meat.Obsidian arrowheads might have been used way back in prehistory, being useful, but alsolight and durable.Precious metals are a common example but can often slowly mutate into a representativefiat currency.You pretty much have to alloy gold or silver if you want to use them as a coin for instancesince they are soft, and your coins need to be hard to make tampering with them harder.Silver coins usually included a fair amount of copper, and often the amount slowly increasedtoo, even though the coins were said to have the same value.At one point in the Roman Empire the silver coins being minted contained less than 2%silver.So coins often take on a certain amount of trust value, though most commodity money eventuallydoes.Commodity money might seem the same as barter at first, where people just exchange itemsthat have worth, but it differs from barter because one type of item ends up being whateverything else gets valued in, if you have twenty different items you no longer needto know how much each is worth in terms of the others, just their value in that one keycommodity.Barter systems often mutate into commodity money, and while this is uncommon nowadayswe still see it pop up a lot.Barter is common after a disaster for instance, but we often see it develop in prisons, andeven in schools, where kids will trade lunch items or toys.Often you will see a commodity currency arise, cigarettes being the classic example fromprisons.And it is almost inevitably a single item, this follows from something called Gresham’sLaw, which holds that if you have two commodity currencies in play that people have to accept,pretty soon the one that is seen as more valuable, more good, will disappear from circulation.This is easiest to view in terms of coins, as all the silver coins minted last year with90% silver will start disappearing from circulation as the new ones with only 80% silver comein to circulation.People start removing the less debased and more valuable coins.It can happen with more classic commodities too, the nicer obsidian arrowheads stop gettingtraded in favor of cracked ones, or the cigarettes that are not as old and mangled don’t gointo circulation and you end up with almost empty crumbled tubes people have removed everyfleck of tobacco from.If people start trading cans of coffee around, pretty soon all that will be left is the cansof decaffeinated coffee, which is entirely worthless.Now if everybody is still fine using this as currency all is well though it is now notreally a commodity currency anymore.The negative context on this is that it gives people an incentive to misbehave and act dishonestly,which is generally considered a bad thing.It becomes more profitable to game the system then to actually do something productive,so you are not only not doing something productive like growing wheat or mining metal but actuallyhurting other people for your living.So we see a progression toward fiat currency in modern times and that combined with technologytends to lead toward digital and electronic money.Physical money, like paper money and coins, is decidedly in the minority these days.Unsurprisingly transactions of money tend to be pretty heavy on encryption too, butcryptocurrency is a sub-type of digital money, people often assume they are the same thing.Technically you probably don’t even need digital money to have cryptocurrency but thelogistics of doing it without computers would be a bit mind boggling.Obviously encryption is a big part of cryptocurrency, and to do that safely you need lots of computingpower, and rapid transmission of information is handy too.But let us examine the basic concept in a more primitive setup instead.Let us revisit Frank the Fisher and Bob the Baker from earlier.Bob is open to taking fish this time but Frank says he has none today, but he still needsbread.He will gladly pay Bob with a Fish on Tuesday if Bob will give him some bread today.Bob does not particularly trust Frank, he smells kinda fishy after all.Frank offers to write it down, an IOU or promissory note for one Fish, but they do not reallytrust each other and want witnesses and records.So Frank writes down on ten slips of paper, “Frank owes Bob one fish” and Bob handsone to each of the villagers who wander into the bakery during this time, and Bob now has10 different people he can call on to witness this debt of one fish.So he gives Frank a loaf of bread, and Frank says great, he is sure he will catch plentyof fish before then and takes a bite of the bread.Frank says next week is the right time to catch catfish by the ton.Bob groans, he hates catfish and says so, Frank looks apologetically down at the loafhe is chewing and shrugs.Now, Gabby the Gardener, who had just come in at the tail end of this with a bushel oftomatoes for trade, says she loves catfish.Okay says Bob, this one is easy.He takes back the ten slips of paper, from the 10 people, that say Frank Owes Bob onefish and scratches out his name and puts in Gabby’s name, and gives her only 4 loavesof bread of bread for her bushel of tomatoes instead of the usual 5.So now Gabby can redeem one fish from Frank any time even though she wasn’t part ofthe original deal and Frank didn’t actually agree to it.The debt has been transferred.Now Frank cannot easily erase his debt by sneaking into one of the other villagers homesand changing what the paper said or destroying it or bribing people to lose them.He would have to do this with 10 villagers, which would be way too difficult to be practical.If there was any discrepancy in what the villagers' papers said, the majority wouldoverrule any corrupted minority.In addition, it’s a fair sized village of a lot more than 10 people and he does notremember most of the people Bob gave them to.So, by giving a lot of people information about the debt, everyone is sure that it willbe accurately recorded.Also, by spreading the information to many people, none of whom have a stake in the transaction,nobody involved has to be trustworthy.That means you can trade with anyone, even if you don’t like them, trust them, or knowthem, such as folks from a neighboring village.That makes for much easier trade, which tends to be handy.Though it would not be for our example because we would end up with huge ledgers crowdingpeople’s houses that folks have to barge into in the middle of the night and spendtime hunting for each transaction and every copy of it.Obviously computers and the internet help with that, and we can finally move on to Cryptocurrency.Bitcoin, the best known of the Cryptocurrencies, is basically this village on a grand scale.The strips of paper, the public ledger of the debt or transaction, is the blockchain.Frank, the original issuer of credit, is the Bitcoin miner, the person who physically createsthe units of currency.The big difference between Bitcoin and our village is that the village uses a commodity-backedcurrency, in our case fish, but Bitcoin is a floating currency.That means it is not ultimately backed by any commodity.Its value only lies in the difficulty of creating Bitcoin with computers.More on that in a moment.The other big difference of course is that all your awkward ledger keeping is now beingdone on computer and by computer, not by hand on paper.This ledger of transactions is called a BlockChain.A BlockChain is a database of who transferred what to whom and when it happened.It differs from just a plain old spreadsheet in that it is broken up into batches of transactions,called blocks, and distributed all over the place, with chains leading to appropriateblocks.Multiple copies of each block exist, but nobody has to have them all, which is nice if youare not a village of a few hundred but several billion people all over the planet each conductinga dozen transactions a day.Obviously our paper ledger system could not handle something like that.Nor could it be easily encrypted and decrypted to allow privacy.This, by the way, is where the money is actually stored.There’s no physical form or location of it nor file for a specific bitcoin, somethingthat sometimes confuses folks.Now the next problem of this sort of currency is that you have to have some sort of controlover how much of it is around, and how much if any new coins get made.Bitcoin’s approach to this is to have miners, who are basically mining new coins by keepingthe blockchains up and running.There’s an elaborate and computation heavy process you have to go through to competefor a new coin that relates to the process of maintaining the blockchains themselves.So the system keeps running because the only way to mine new coins is to keep those ledgers.It is a nice setup since it ensures the people mining the new coins always have a motiveto maintain the system.But for practical purposes this amounts to huge computational race to get that next coin,because maintaining those ledger does not take nearly as much computing power as thatcomputing power would be worth in actual dollars.But the reward is based basically on who is doing the most mining.Let me give a quick non-computer analogy.Thirty years from now there are very few libraries leftover, the hard copies of the books arejust too expensive to maintain.Then a big computer virus comes through and just scrambles all the data.Fortunately one very wealthy billionaire who still collects books realizes she has a hardcopy of almost everything.She wants copies made and fast, so she tells people that every day she is going to handout big chest of gold.She randomly picks a dozen books out of her collection and says whoever made a copy ofthose books today wins, and if many people have made one of those then whoever made themost copies win.And she’s going to check a few random pages out of each and also every page needs to betimestamped and has to be from today.If no one has one of the books no reward is given, but it is a big chest of gold.Thing is, as long as your odds of winning making it profitable to crank out books, youwill keep doing it, so anyone keeping track of all the money spent on paper and ink andcopier repairs for everyone involved will notice that amount of money is going to rapidlyrise till it isn’t much less than the chest of gold is worthWhich raises two of our first popular criticisms of cryptocurrency.First, since the folks most likely to win a race are those with the most computationalpower, the currency is arguably based on the commodity of computational power, or for ourlast example, who owns the most and best copy machines.That’s not the criticism, most currencies are based on something even if it is a bitabstract and this is the information age where computers are king.The criticism is it gives people an incentive to steal other people’s computing powerand electricity, as it is arguably easier to hack a few million people’s machinesto run a program in the background just computing away then to buy yourself a lot of computers.Or for our book analogy, people break into other people’s homes to steal their paperand pens.Second, these computational races are wasted processing power.They are arguably not doing anything productive and they are not doing a lot of it.I saw one article that said over a hundred times more processing power was being spenton Mining than what Google has in total.Processing power costs money and energy, a lot of energy, and we as a civilization arenot exactly brimming with cheap renewable energy.Now that is an entirely valid criticism but I personally have to reject arguments by folkswho say that means Bitcoin and other crypto currencies are not Green.A classic mint, run by dragging metals out of the ground or cutting down trees for paper,is also not exactly super-environmental friendly, and paying lots of people to stand at coinor printing presses or guarding those presses and vaults is not exactly productive either.Plus we already use a lot of computers and electricity for financial transactions today.So it is a valid point but only in comparison to what we do now and I have not seen anyonewho raised this one do such a comparison.The other objection, about hacking people’s computers to steal their processors, is morevalid, and this comes back to Gresham’s Law which I mentioned earlier.Again the mining process sucks up a lot of processing power and electricity, but it servesthe purpose of keeping the system up and running.If people can steal other people’s processing power and electricity to do the job it becomesbetter to do that then to honestly mine by buying and maintaining a top quality systemof your own.Of course we also have the concern of hacking people’s actual accounts and stealing theirbitcoins, but that is an existing problem of any electronic commerce.Now the rebuttal to that is while BitCoin mining was originally expected to use people’sCPUs, before long it was found that graphics cards were way better at it, and not longafter that we had the emergence of specialized processors, called ASICs, Application SpecificIntegrated Circuits, in this case specific to bitmining, which hugely outperform bothnormal CPUs and graphic cards at this task, costing much less to do much more mining.This decreases the motivation to hack other people’s regular old computers.So that was a good objection but is less so now with ASICs.You don’t break into people’s houses to steal their pens and notebooks when you havesome top line copy machine that turn pages on its own and Xerox them, because very fewpeople will have one lying around their home.Same reasoning mining firms don’t break into your house trying to steal your non-existentmulti-million dollar excavator or the shovel in your shed.They have no incentive to go to the effort of doing that and risk going to jail for it.We also see cooperative efforts where miners team up and divide a coin when they get one,probably not a surprising outcome in light of Game Theory.Incidentally I am lifting quite a few of these criticisms from an essay by Sci-fi AuthorCharles Stross, which I will attach in episode description.He is quite critical of Bitcoin, as you might guess from the title “Why I want Bitcointo die in a fire”, and there are some good rebuttals to his arguments so I will alsolink an article by Daniel Jeffries, “Why Charles Stross Doesn’t Know a Thing aboutBitcoin”, which was printed in BitCoin Magazine, and so may not be that neutral.Another of the objections raised hits at what many see as Cryptocurrency’s biggest strength,which is anonymity.This is after all an unregulated and untraceable type of money.So it permits a lot of nasty transactions to be conducted with greater ease and lessrisk.Contract killings, selling drugs, trafficking in people, and a lot of other even more heinousthings, can be conducted with less risk to people who might otherwise be caught easierand who might be more likely to engage in such behavior when there is less risk of gettingcaught.Of course it is not entirely anonymous since a careful study of IP addresses can potentiallyexpose a transaction, meaning investigators find it irritating because of how hard trackinga transaction is while users find it irritating that it is possible at all.The other big problem is tax evasion, it is kind of hard to monitor people’s incomesif they are doing all their exchanges in this type of currency.Now, again, many people say that is a big plus, and that obviously depends on your personalideology about governments and taxes so I won’t comment on that.We’ve got more to cover still, so you can see some of the other criticisms and rebuttalsin those links I provided.Another interesting thing about this sort of concept is it is not just limited to money.When I was getting asked by a lot of the audience to cover this topic, which is a bit outsidemy normal topic zone, I got approached by Edwin Rosero, one of the audience members.He’s an artist and musician and he was experimenting with an application called Ascribe that usesa similar technique to bitcoin in order to allow folks to market limited editions oftheir artwork with validation of authenticity.Obviously with digital mediums you cannot stop anyone from making and distributing asmany copies as they want.Normally in art you’ve got the original and then you have copies of it.That includes paintings, there’s a good few companies that will print you out a VanGogh for a couple hundred bucks with digital accuracy of reproduction on a nice canvasjust as good as the original, and these are entirely legal and respectable enterprises,newer works tend to be more expensive simply because they are giving the artist a royaltyon the work.The ability to track and authenticate authorized pieces, while in its infancy, offers somealternatives to copyright piracy.Edwin donated two of his works to the channel, one appropriately titled Bitcoin and the other,Archeometry, which had caught my eye.So Blockchain, this concept of distributed and tamperproof ledgers, has non-currencyalternative applications, sometimes called altchains.One ironic application is the exact opposite of the anonymity application many like aboutCryptocurrency, in that you can use blockchain to establish and confirm identity.Part of the point of blockchains is to allow us to track who did what and when via a hugedistributed and constantly updating database so you can extend that out to permit verificationof identity or authenticity in the case of artwork or contracts.Something called Smart Contracts are an example of this where essentially the distributeddatabase has an “If X happens, do Y”, so I could put out a contract X, say, getthis episode a million views by next Thursday, get Z amount of money, and that contract isout there verified to pay up against that eventuality.A person could put out a contract, good for say a thousand bucks, and a buy-in to grabthe contract of a thousand bucks, so if it isn’t met that is forfeit as penalty.It circumvents a lot of lawyer clauses in contracts and the need for a lawyer, and itdoes appear these concepts are gaining some ground in asset trading and crowd-sourcing.It also circumvents classic escrow accounts, these being funds held by a third party, andthose tend to charge fees, highly automated ones could basically minimize or eliminatethose.Now I have mentioned that it can be used to validate identities with both discretion andcertainty, that leads to an obvious application: voting.At the time this episode is coming out we have a major election coming up in the UnitedStates and as sure as the sunrises, regardless of who wins, there will be issues raised aboutthe legitimacy of the election.Voter fraud, tampering with ballots, privacy of ballots, and so on are always major concernsin any electoral process and rightly so.There is also always a strong desire to make voting more electronic to save money, electionsare incredibly expensive, and I mean on the operating end too not just the campaigningend, and I’m very familiar with both, I am after legally obliged to be.Many of those costs are things you could normally reduce to pennies on the dollar with electronics.Problem is, electronic voting scares people even more than electronic commerce and bankingso we basically use paper for everything.Yet we will probably transition to doing this electronically as time goes on.I have difficulty imagining a high-tech futuristic society still using pen and paper ballots.The ability to have a genuinely secure electronic election offers huge advantages in money andtime saved and convenience for voters, which would presumably increase voter participationand also maybe let you have elections on more things and more often.Things like Blockchain could hold the key to something like that being possible.If so, I would rate this application as the most useful of the alternative applicationsand maybe even equal to the primary banking application itself.Okay, so I mentioned near the beginning we would talk about interplanetary and interstellareconomics and banking, and some of the hurdles to doing that.Lots of couples have joint bank accounts either can withdraw funds from.You’re not limited to just two people either.Right now I can open up a joint bank account with 9 buddies, we start up a club and putmoney in it we can each withdraw from and we can all get an ATM and debit card and gomake purchases.Now that is fine on Earth.Communications time is under a second and banks can keep copies of their database atmultiple places at once, so you only lose access to accounts if the terminal you areusing is offline.If people are all over the solar system though the game changes a lot because you have gotlight lag of hours, not seconds.You and your spouse could put your whole savings in a joint checking account and travel toMars and Jupiter when they were on the other side of the Sun, an hour communication timeeach way, and each of you could withdraw the full balance and have two hours before anyalarm bells would even go off.A group of ten people could all borrow heavily and stick everything they can get their handson into one joint account and withdraw it all from ten different locations scatteredaround the solar system and again have hours to make a get away.Or even days, the solar system doesn’t stop after Neptune and Pluto, a point we will belooking at in November.Neither does the galaxy, at the interstellar scale it could be years before anyone evenknew about the theft.Now there’s workarounds to this, most have some sort of downside to them like going backto hard currency or banning joint accounts or having long lag times on any major transaction.The channel has a lot of clever folks on it so I’m sure some might think of better ways.Those are just off the top of my head because I have never seen anyone look into this issuebefore.Banking is kind of boring and doesn’t tend to show up in science fiction too much inany real detail.For that matter I have only seen one academic article on cryptocurrency over interplanetarydistances, Abrahim Ladha’s “Hypothetical Problems concerning the Theory of Relativityon Cryptographic Currency Implementations”, and it is sadly a neglected area, interplanetaryand interstellar economics.About the only paper of significance was Paul Krugman’s 1978 “Theory of InterstellarTrade” which he wrote as a bit of joke back when he was teaching at Yale.He treats the topic seriously enough, which is mostly how to treat interest rates whenyou have time dilation from interstellar travel, but the tone is humorous and non-rigorous.Still it’s a good read so I will attach both his and Ladha’s paper in the episodedescription too.We just can’t get around that time lag concern for cryptocurrency and blockchainwithout some sort of Faster Than Light Communication but we would have similar problems with othersystems too and banking long predates light-speed communication so I imagine it is a manageableproblem.It is worth keeping in mind though when we try to consider civilizations on the scaleof solar systems or galaxies, what are often known as Kardashev 2 and 3, or K2 and K3,civilizations.

images.jpg

source

thanks @shahid-koka

#keep_ #resteeming

Sort:  

Upvoted.

DISCLAIMER: Your post is upvoted based on curation algorithm configured to find good articles e.g. stories, arts, photography, health, community, etc. This is to reward you (authors) for sharing good content using the Steem platform especially newbies.
If you're a dolphin or whales, and wish not to be included in future selection, please let me know so I can exclude your account. And if you find the upvoted post is inappropriate, FLAG if you must. This will help a better selection of post.

Keep steeming good content.
@Shares - Curation Service

Posted using https://Steeming.com condenser site.

thanks for upvote