the start of a new era. But with that there will be large scale social
> Well, I think yes, widely successful distributed currencies will be the
> end of the government, but will also be the beginning of a really free
> market, where all services provided by governments will be now provided
> by private companies, faster, better, cheaper. From justice to
> retirement to fighting with crimes. How good of a job Governments are
> doing at all these things are quite debatable anyway. Many things
> governments are classifying as "crimes" are "victimless crimes" which
> are not real crimes anyways, from tax evasion to money laundering to
> growing weed or whatever. And many things like pensions are going away
> without bitcoins too, because they are the largest ponzi schemes ever.
>
>
>
> On Sun, Dec 8, 2013 at 3:44 PM, Amir Taaki <genjix@???
> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>> wrote:
>
> Here's a post I was reading by JR Willet (MasterCoin) which goes well
> with some chapters I was reading earlier from a 90s book called 'The
> Sovereign Individual' about the effects of cryptocurrency.
>
> http://imgur.com/a/eV74v#0
>
> The implications spelled out by that book and Willet's post are
> incredible and mind blowing.
>
> More than ever, I'm convinced that we need to use these new tools and
> the increasing unstable situation to construct a new reality that
> enables us all to persevere as free people and maintain our sovereignty.
>
> ---------------------------
>
> I have seen the future of Bitcoin, and it is bleak.
>
> ======================
> The Promise of Bitcoin
> ======================
>
> If you were to peak into my bedroom at night (please don’t), there’s a
> good chance you would see my wife sleeping soundly while I stare at the
> ceiling, running thought experiments about where Bitcoin is going. Like
> many other people, I have come to the conclusion that distributed
> currencies like Bitcoin are going to eventually be recognized as the
> most important technological innovation of the decade, if not the
> century. It seems clear to me that the rise of distributed currencies
> presents the biggest (and riskiest) investment opportunity I am likely
> to see in my lifetime; perhaps in a thousand lifetimes. It is critically
> important to understand where Bitcoin is going, and I am determined to
> do so.
>
> My hundreds of hours of thought experiments have been productive. I
> published a whitepaper about the future of Bitcoin, and because of that
> paper I’ll have the great privilege of sitting on the “Bitcoin in the
> Future” panel at the 2013 Bitcoin Conference in San Jose. Through these
> years of deliberation I have satisfied myself that the answer to the
> “Trillion Dollar Question” of whether any form of distributed currency
> can ever achieve a stable price, is “yes”. (There are three ways this
> will happen, as I have written elsewhere).
>
> I have been predicting for years that the world’s first trillionaire by
> USD valuation will be an early investor in distributed currency — quite
> possibly Satoshi Nakamoto, whoever he/she/it/they may be. I own a few
> bitcoins, and I intend to keep them until I find a more attractive
> investment (that is, I want to invest in whatever replaces bitcoin or
> builds on top of it).
>
> To many people, this sounds like an implausibly rosy future, and for
> early adopters that is true — it feels like winning the lottery every
> day. However, for most other people, the ascendancy of distributed
> currency systems will feel like a disaster. If you are involved in
> Bitcoin now, you should prepare to be almost universally hated someday.
>
> In this article, we will examine a few simple thought experiments to
> show how the rise of distributed currencies such as bitcoin could create
> massive social upheaval due to governments’ rapidly degrading capability
> to fulfill their core functions of taxation and regulation of commerce.
> We’ll see how the end result could be extremely painful for common
> citizens due to previously unimaginable wealth disparities,
> hyperinflation of previously stable government-backed fiat currencies,
> and a greatly empowered criminal class.
>
> ===================================
> The Bleak Future of Fiat Currencies
> ===================================
>
> Anarchists and hardcore libertarians love Bitcoin, but most people
> outside those circles are not in favor of completely doing away with
> their government. If you aren’t part of a fringe political movement,
> chances are there is something the government does that you like,
> whether it’s handing out entitlement money, killing enemies, putting
> people in prison, building dams and roads, funding research, or any
> number of other things. The government can do these things because the
> government can collect taxes, which in turn they can do because the
> flows of money are highly regulated and tracked at every level. Whether
> you are collecting a paycheck, buying furniture, cashing out
> investments, or simply dying and leaving an inheritance, the government
> knows about it and takes a cut.
>
> For our first thought experiment, let’s imagine a world where
> distributed currencies like bitcoin have become wildly successful due to
> technological advances which make them easy to use and completely
> stable. In this world government-issued money is as good as dead. It may
> take a few years for everyone to realize it, but there will come a point
> when the ever-increasing outflows of money from fiat money into
> untaxable, unseizable decentralized currency will reach a tipping point,
> and we’ll have a financial panic like the world has never seen.
> Frightened lawmakers and banks will try to stop people from cashing out,
> but that will just increase the panic. Those who don’t get out before
> the door closes will be in dire straits indeed. This is the ultimate
> bank run — the run on the world’s central banks, and who could possibly
> step in and restore order?
>
> When people think of hyperinflation, they usually envision a Zimbabwean
> printing press running around the clock in the dark corner of a mud hut,
> putting ever more zeroes on cheap paper. Has it ever occurred to you
> that hyperinflation can happen while the printing presses are off? The
> value of the money in your pocket is not ultimately guaranteed by your
> government, but by simple supply and demand. The government controls the
> supply, and we control the demand. If demand falls precipitously, we
> have hyperinflation without ever needing to print another dollar or
> euro. If people start fleeing government currencies en masse,
> hyperinflation is the inevitable result.
>
> The good news is that you don’t need to worry about current government
> debt in this scenario. If government currencies lose their value
> rapidly, debts which previously seemed overwhelming suddenly become much
> more manageable. Perhaps your debt-laden government will someday
> completely pay off it’s national debt by simply selling a few gold bars
> and a couple national parks.
>
> ==============================
> The Bleak Future of Retirement
> ==============================
>
> For our next thought experiment, let’s consider what will happen to
> Grandma. For her whole life, she has carefully saved her money, and now
> she is living in reasonable comfort. She gets money and health care from
> the government, and she has her own savings to fall back on. Grandma has
> done everything right, including taking her savings out of the stock
> market; most of her savings are now invested in the safest asset known
> to man: U.S. Treasury Bonds.
>
> Rather suddenly, things start to go wrong. At the same time all her
> expenses start skyrocketing, the government has a liquidity crisis; they
> are having trouble collecting taxes and can no longer pay for her health
> care. Her savings are still “safe” in the sense that she will get U.S.
> Dollars out of them, but that is little comfort when those dollars which
> should have lasted years can barely pay her weekly grocery bill.
>
> Grandma’s retirement has been sabotaged by the rise of a new kind of
> money that she can’t even begin to understand. All she knows is that she
> did everything right, and now she has nothing.
>
> ===================================
> The Bleak Future Wealth Disparities
> ===================================
>
> All the world’s wealth has essentially been stolen, but by whom? By you,
> dear reader.
>
> We’ll be very lucky if we aren’t all rounded up and summarily executed.
> Thankfully, you’ll be able to use some of that money to purchase
> protection, but I’m not at all convinced that it will be enough. A
> wrathful government backed by an enraged population is a fearful enemy.
> Satoshi foresaw this long ago, and I doubt he/she/it/they will ever
> voluntarily come into the light.
>
> If there are enough of us, and we are very careful and charming, we may
> be physically safe. However, the massive displacement of wealth will
> still have some awful consequences. People argue all the time about the
> societal benefits and drawbacks of wealth disparities, and the rise of
> distributed currencies will create disparities that previously did not
> seem possible. It seems clear that there will be a lot of jobs created
> by the new wealthy, but whether the average person is better off or not,
> one thing is sure to rise: resentment. What right do we have to take all
> the wealth of the world and put it in our pockets? Sure, a nifty new
> idea should pay off for early visionaries, but nobody ever expected a
> new idea to suck all the wealth out of the world like a financial black
> hole!
>
> ===================================
> The Bleak Future of Law Enforcement
> ===================================
>
> This is where things get really bleak. Currently distributed currencies
> facilitate money laundering, black market commerce (the Silk Road), and
> insider trading (TorBroker). These applications in their current form
> are just a snowflake on the tip of the iceberg. Not only will they get
> MUCH bigger, but we will see applications which are much less savory.
> Historically, the “Dark Net” accessible by Tor and private networks has
> been nothing more than a hidey-hole for illegal files and a hangout for
> paranoid schizophrenics, but it is quickly becoming the platform of
> choice for large-scale illegal commerce.
>
> For this thought experiment, we will imagine that your child has been
> kidnapped and put up for sale on “TorSlaver”. Their business plan is to
> kidnap children and sell them to the highest bidder, whether parent or
> pedophile. The winning bidder is sent the location of the child,
> probably bound and gagged and dumped somewhere. As long as they don’t
> get caught doing the kidnapping, the kidnappers can do this again and
> again with complete impunity. Once someone proves it can be done,
> copycats will come out of the woodwork, and it won’t matter if the first
> mover gets caught.
>
> As a parent of three small children, I cannot describe to you how awful
> this makes me feel. I have always been a very reluctant bitcoin
> investor, for this very reason. I don’t invest in bitcoin because I
> think it will bring about a happy utopian world. Quite the opposite. I
> invest in bitcoin because the rise of distributed currency is
> inevitable, and owning some bitcoins seems to be the best way to prepare
> for the chaos ahead. And just maybe, if I position myself correctly, I
> can make things a little less awful.
>
> ===========================
> The Government Strikes Back
> ===========================
>
> Does anyone really expect the government to sit back quietly and watch
> while their currency is debased, terrorism is funded, and children are
> kidnapped? The only question is when and how they will strike back
> against these forces. While the government does have a lot of options,
> ultimately those options only slow things down. At some point, we
> collectively with our governments face a difficult choice between trying
> to survive this deadly storm or attempting to destroy all decentralized
> computer networks (including the internet). The former seems
> unthinkable, the latter, impossible.
>
> I wouldn’t be surprised if this chaos gives rise to a strong,
> centralized, one-world government which gets its revenues by tightly
> reigning in freedom of commerce in order to collect taxes. For instance,
> I will not be surprised to see a requirement someday that every person
> buying or selling have an implant which tightly binds their identity to
> the sale. Perhaps the implant will even be located on the back of the
> right hand or the forehead! This may seem repugnant to you now, but wait
> until you have lived in the storm for a while before you call it
> impossible. The natural reaction to the deadly chaos of decentralized
> currency is for the populace to embrace increasingly centralized
> controls on commerce. The battle lines are only just starting to be
> drawn, and your guess is as good as mine for how it will play out.
>
> ==================
> What Should We Do?
> ==================
>
> We need people thinking about this. I’ll admit that many of the things I
> wrote about may not happen at all, or may happen very differently than I
> imagine. However, there are lots of people touting the fantastic
> benefits that bitcoin and its children can give us, and I don’t see
> anybody talking about how bad things could potentially get.
>
> We need solutions. When the government finally starts taking
> decentralized currency seriously, it will probably be doing so in a
> state of panic. We need to be advising governments now about how they
> can survive the storm and protect their populace. We need to think of
> ways the government can pay for its most critical operations, and what
> legislation makes sense to mitigate these new risks while preserving as
> much freedom as we can.
>
> The Lifeboat Foundation is attempting to provide this thinking, advice,
> and solutions. They are already getting ready for a new advisory board,
> culled from computer scientists, economists, and bitcoin experts. If you
> make a fortune from your investments in decentralized currency, I urge
> you to consider how you can help all the people harmed by these rapid
> changes. Many bitcoin enthusiasts seem to think they will get to retire
> on a private island with a harem and a stable of Italian sports cars.
> This is wrong. Bitcoin investors need to someday become bitcoin
> philanthropists, and our giving needs to be targeted at helping all the
> people we have harmed. The Lifeboat Foundation is one option, but I’m
> sure there will be others.
>
> I first published this article on the blog of the Lifeboat Foundation:
> http://lifeboat.com/blog/2013/04/bitcoins-dystopian-future
> Reddit version is here:
> http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1cos8x/bitcoins_dystopian_future/
>
> tl;dr: Wildly successful distributed currencies could hurt a lot of
> people.
>
>
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