• @roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
    cake
    link
    fedilink
    1
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    That’s a good way of looking at it.

    I guess part of the idea way taking the power away from the greedy people, which fixes one small part of the problem.

    Part of it was fixing the implementation details, which solves another part of the problem. But yes a purely technical solution is not enough on its own. Bitcoin is not a magic bullet to solve greed. My answer below talks a bit about that.

    • @rysiekOP
      link
      13 years ago

      Bitcoin is not a magic bullet to solve greed.

      It’s way worse than that. Cryptocurrencies are a way to supercharge greedy and corrupt people, by giving them a powerful unregulated tool to play with. And all at a tiny cost of emitting thousands of tons of CO2 at a time when parts of India are already starting to become uninhabitable.

      • @guojing@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        23 years ago

        How many emissions do you think millions of bank employees cause with their cars, flights, heated houses, and general consumption? Particularly as most banks are located in the U.S, which has the highest pollution levels in the world. Surely thats much worse than mining farms.

        • @rysiekOP
          link
          13 years ago

          This is hardly a reason to add more to that, is it?

          • Johnny, everyone’s trying to clean up and you’re making more mess!
          • Yeah, but Adam also made a mess!

          Seriously. 🙄

          Plus, the financial sector can process thousands of transactions globally per second. Bitcoin, on the other hand, about (checks notes) seven.

          • @guojing@lemmy.ml
            link
            fedilink
            1
            edit-2
            3 years ago

            Here you go again, taking a weakness of a single cryptocurrency, and pretending that it applies to all coins. No point arguing with this nonsense.

            • @rysiekOP
              link
              1
              edit-2
              3 years ago

              Look, cryptobros have been pushing cryptocurrencies using cherry-picked “arguments” for years. I don’t see why this can only work one way?

              On a more serious note, I am quite tired of the moving of goalposts practiced by cryptocurrency shills. “Oh, no, that only applies to some coins, not all of them!”, “hey, that one also only affects some blockchains!”, “no no, you can’t say that, there’s this <edge case> coin out there that happens to not have this one specific problem”.

              Somehow problems they point out with the financial sector are supposed to apply to the whole sector, but problems with cryptocurrencies are only ever relevant to one very specific coin and in no way should reflect on the whole scene.

              Give me a break. 🙄

              Also, nice evasion there, just ignoring the main part of my post, which was: the fact that some other industry happens to generate emissions doesn’t make it okay to create a completely new source of emissions.

              • @roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
                cake
                link
                fedilink
                1
                edit-2
                3 years ago

                Somehow problems they point out with the financial sector are supposed to apply to the whole sector, but problems with cryptocurrencies are only ever relevant to one very specific coin and in no way should reflect on the whole scene.

                That’s what you were doing though. Cherry-picking faults from many different currencies.

                Your original point was that crypto-currencies have no value and are ponzi schemes. Have you been convinced to change your mind about those two things? They are concrete statements, strong arguments. So they are easy to prove/disprove.

                I’m afraid the discussion has gotten too broad now. You would need to start a new thread for each point. Otherwise it becomes circular. For example several or your points here I’ve already answered in another part of the thread.