Showing posts with label Graham Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graham Smith. Show all posts

Monday, October 23, 2023

Join the Economic Freedom Nexus — No BS Crypto News in the Context of Permissionless Exchange

Join the Economic Freedom Nexus — No BS Crypto News in the Context of Permissionless Exchange

We all know central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are the furthest thing there is from actual cryptocurrency. That “financial inclusion” usually just means more laws preventing poor people from free exchange and survival in broken, state-run fiat madhouses. The Economic Freedom Nexus is a new bi-monthly newsletter sent straight to your inbox contextualizing the latest in crypto and finance news globally, through the lens of Bitcoin and crypto autonomy. The Nexus brings everything back to what this was all about in the first place — money without a middleman.

The opinions presented in this editorial newsletter are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views of Bitcoin.com or Bitcoin.com News

Join the Nexus: Crypto News Focused on Freedom

Taking a cursory scan through the news today, I see that decentralized social media company LBRY Inc. has called it quits, finally exhausted by the endless harassment and legal bullying of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). With LBRY getting nuked, the fate of its popular app Odysee — a Youtube competitor known for its truly uncompromising stance on free speech and quirky content — now teeters in the balance.

This, unfortunately, is a perfect segue into something Bitcoin.com News just reported Friday, namely that international crypto mixers are now likely to be viewed as criminal by the United States Treasury and related regulators, “because terrorism.” Which terror, of course, crypto is statistically hardly used for, anyway. No, that stuff is the specialty of government and central bank monetary systems.

Join the Economic Freedom Nexus — No BS Crypto News in the Context of Permissionless Exchange

And so, the ugly picture that’s been developing for years becomes clearer. Whether it’s speech, code, or money (all forms of information) these developments signal a grave and unyielding — and violent — push in the opposite direction of freedom and protection. A push towards a dark paradigm where individual expression must be approved before being uttered (as on Youtube, other mainstream social media, and in oppressive political zones), and financial transactions must be similarly stalked and surveilled and stifled every step of the way. After all, if you’re not a criminal and have nothing to hide, then what are you afraid of?

Information is like water — like air. Hard to contain. Decentralized blockchains and privacy protocols preserving human dignity can still be used in mass, decentralized non-compliance. They’re hard to stop. Thus the clownish fear mongering being put on by those in power. An example might be this telling sentence from a recent report by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS):

[Crypto] has so far failed to harness innovation to the benefit of society … it does not finance real economic activity. It suffers from inherent shortcomings related to stability and efficiency, as well as accountability and integrity.

This uttered by that paragon of integrity, BIS, who shamelessly funded and profited from both genocidal teams in WWII, as a matter of public record. The arrogance of ignoring how crypto has helped folks survive in developing and inflation-ravaged countries is also hard to believe. As for stability and efficiency, when I send bitcoin cash (BCH), it works for me every time, and is quite efficient and cheap. So there’s that.

Join the Economic Freedom Nexus — No BS Crypto News in the Context of Permissionless Exchange

The Nexus Newsletter is about the beauty of bitcoin and permissionless exchange in general, whatever the medium: I don’t need to prove I am not a member of Hamas, or one of those scary, scary Russians before buying food for my family. I’m not forced to show a social credit score or a “carbon footprint.” People shout for regulation, and indeed private, consensual free markets can and do handle such things well, but the regulation we see now is literal abusers and violent crooks controlling what the majority of non-violent individuals may or may not do in peace. I think we can find a better way.

Join the Nexus for no-nonsense crypto news through the lens of permissionless, economic freedom today:

What are your thoughts on the current state of crypto? You can share your views in the comment section below.



via Graham Smith

Saturday, July 29, 2023

‘Community-Based IP’ — Yuga Labs CEO Describes Web3 Evolution of Licensing to Japanese Government Official

In a recent “fireside chat” with the deputy director of the Web3.0 Policy Office of Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, Yuga Labs CEO Daniel Alegre noted: “We’re not even in the first inning” of where Web3 “evolution” is going to go. During the interview with the politician, Alegre described new models of IP (intellectual property) that transcend national borders and break down barriers traditional IP models impose.

Bored Apes: A New Paradigm for IP

CEO of Yuga Labs Daniel Alegre recently sat down with deputy director of the Web3.0 Policy Office at Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry to discuss the future of Web3 and product licensing, describing a new model of “community-based IP.”

Speaking to Waka Itagaki about the power of the Bored Ape Yacht Club global community at the Webx conference on Tuesday, Alegre described: “Whether it’s a Bored Ape brewing company, that the team introduced me to yesterday, or whether it’s new artists that want to create [gaming content] on their other side platform … it’s really creating and connecting culture on the blockchain, but at a global level.”

The executive, formerly COO of Activision Blizzard, went on to note that “Web3 brings creators and consumers and communities together, and they build these brands together,” emphasizing, “It’s a fundamental rethink of IP and IP rights.” Alegre detailed:

In a normal media environment, if you own IP, you license it very exclusively and for a very finite use case … when you buy a Bored Ape NFT, we are giving you an unlimited license to do with that IP what you want … If you want to start a restaurant chain, if you want to have a brewing company, if you want to create t-shirts that you want to sell, it enables that.

Alegre didn’t directly address one portion of Itagaki’s prompt when she asked “How are you planning to align with the government’s regulation?” He did, however, suggest a way for regulators to view Web3, noting: “And this is where I love your point of view from a government perspective — how do you think about enablement so that more people can actually leverage what Web3 can bring to bear.”

Animoca Rep and Other Speakers Share Similar Views on New, Decentralized Models of Business and Finance

Similar to Alegre’s enthusiasm for fresh ways of viewing intellectual property, later the same day, Evan Auyang of Animoca Brands also described a new way to look at competition in the marketplace, noting:

The whole point about this ecosystem … is that we’re trying to see if we can grow the pie bigger rather than dominating it ourselves, which is more Web2 thinking. If the pie grows bigger, then we will benefit … on the assets that we have at the same time.

In another talk at Webx, Ken Deeter, partner at crypto-focused VC fund Electric Capital in the United States, explained he was interested in defi as an extension of the Bitcoin ethos, which arose from a mistrust of central banks and traditional monetary policy. Like with the evolution in perspective on IP described by Alegre, Deeter and others at Webx expressed interest in setting up new models.

What do you think? Is Web3 leading a positive evolution away from outdated, coercive models of business, law, and finance, or is more regulation needed? Let us know in the comments section below.



via Graham Smith

Thursday, April 13, 2023

ETHGlobal Hackathon Kicks Off in Tokyo With First Ever Pragma Summit

As previously announced by ETHGlobal, the first-ever Pragma summit kicked off the wider ETHGlobal Tokyo hackathon on Thursday as a “hub for high-quality talks and as a forum of discussion for builders and leaders from the Ethereum ecosystem and beyond.” The event, emceed by Kartik Talwar of ETHGlobal, featured on-stage interviews with Aya Miyaguchi of the Ethereum Foundation, Juan Benet of Protocol Labs, The Network State author and bitcoin proponent Balaji Srinivasan, and Stani Kulechov of Aave Companies. Product announcements were also made by several featured speakers.

First-Ever ‘Pragma’ Summit Lands in Tokyo

On April 13, Ethereum proponents from around the globe converged on Tokyo’s Shibuya ward, at the Digital Garage, to engage in on-stage interviews, product announcements, and networking. The application-only Pragma event is said to be the first ever in-person version of such summits for ETHGlobal, and kicked off the wider ETHGlobal Tokyo hackathon which lasts until Sunday, April 16.

Kartik Talwar, co-founder of ETHGlobal, began the series of interviews by inviting Aya Miyaguchi, the executive director at the Ethereum Foundation, to the stage.

Miyaguchi commented on the general culture in Japan, saying people are very humble and “there are a lot of talented developers, but it’s not embraced enough. Like, acknowledged enough. It’s like, okay, at a company … management makes the decisions and they tell developers what to build.” She emphasized:

But the Ethereum way is that you need to include these developers in the idea generation, brainstorming stage.

Miyaguchi went on to note: “One thing Japan is very good at … They are good at team work.” The executive director says this is a real strength and that Japanese are diligent to learn new things like programming languages, but events like the hackathon and the Ethereum community can “teach or inspire” a new way of openness outside of the traditional cultural constraints.

Juan Benet of Protocol Labs spoke on the creation of IPFS, preserving archives on blockchains, and future possibilities for various blockchain transformations, stating:

My prediction is that most of these chains are going to recombine in super interesting ways … some L1s [layer one] will turn into L2s, some L2s will turn into L1s, and it won’t matter that much in the long term.

He noted that blockchains should be able to scale much more than what people think is possible, noting “scaling laws work” and citing similar structures that already exist.

“Today, we’re reaching for tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of transactions per second on each chain,” Benet noted. “We need to be reaching for billions or trillions of transactions per second. That’s the real benchmark. The moment where you can have something like all of Twitter built onchain … that’s the kind of scalability that we need.”

Stani Kulechov, founder and CEO at Aave, discussed among other topics ways to make products more customizable by users:

If you think about most of the products in the world, you really can’t go and make a pull request. You can’t go and make a pull request to your iPhone or your Android phone and expect something good to happen if your idea’s good and you fix the problem. But what if in the future you can actually build this way? Protocols, products, and algorithms. And it’s possible when you build things in a more open way.

Rounding out the day’s talks was tech entrepreneur, author, and angel investor Balaji Srinivasan, who though unable to join in-person, delivered a politically and philosophically-charged remote presentation on the fall of Western fiat currencies. He also gave an extended Q&A session.

Srinivasan told attendees that Eastern fiat currencies like the Chinese renminbi and Indian rupee may outlast Western currencies like the U.S. dollar.

He also explained why he made his now famous million-dollar bitcoin bets, citing the current global financial chaos, clarifying:

I’ll have an update on the bet also soon … I think it’ll be satisfying of course for everybody. The reason I did that was to draw attention to this crisis.

Product Announcements

Between interviews, attendees of Pragma heard talks and watched presentations on several product announcements. Presentations included Masa ‘Senshi’ Kikuchi of Secured Finance, Lukas Schor of Safe, Harsh Rajat of Push Protocol, and Jason Goldberg of Airstack.

The wider ETHGlobal Tokyo Hackathon will be ongoing through Sunday, April 16. Follow Bitcoin.com News to receive updates on the event, including thoughts from participating builders and engineers testing new ideas and competing for $375,000 in prizes.

What are your thoughts on the first Ethereum Pragma conference? Let us know in the comments section below.



via Graham Smith

Friday, March 31, 2023

‘Panic of 2023’: James Corbett Explains How Bank Crisis Could Lead to CBDC ‘Nightmare of Total Monetary Control’

Investigative journalist James Corbett has recently referred to the ongoing global banking crisis involving SVB, Signature Bank, Credit Suisse and others as the “Panic of 2023,” drawing comparisons to what he views as historical precedents, and pointing ahead to an inevitable and bleak, technocratic surveillance future leveraging central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) should nothing be done to stop it. The answer to the CBDC “total nightmare of monetary control,” as Corbett puts it, is cash, creativity, and to “choose to inform ourselves about agorism and the countereconomy.”

James Corbett on Crisis, CBDCs, Cash, and the Countereconomy

Investigative journalist and freedom activist James Corbett of The Corbett Report, a popular alternative news source based on the “principle of open-source intelligence,” has weighed in recently on the current global banking debacle and its echoes across recent history. Further, he has been cautioning his followers for years about the dangers of giving up their financial freedom, and uncritically accepting burgeoning state-created financial technologies such as central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

Bitcoin.com News sent Corbett some questions on the topic, asking for his views on the current crisis, its causes, and ways ordinary people can weather the current so-called banking contagion. Below are his responses.

Bitcoin.com News (BCN): In your recent work you’ve drawn similarities between the current banking debacle and the Panic of 1907 and the 2008 financial crisis. How does what we’re witnessing unfold now with SVB, Signature Bank, Credit Suisse, and others, compare to past financial crises?

James Corbett (JC): In 1907, a run on Knickerbocker Trust, one of New York’s biggest trust companies, precipitated a bank run and a 50% drop on the New York Stock Exchange. In its official page on the event—dubbed “The Panic of 1907“—the Federal Reserve calls it the “first worldwide financial crisis of the twentieth century.” According to the Fed, the panic was caused by rumours about Knickerbocker Trust’s insolvency and the crisis was ultimately averted by the “legendary actions” of J.P. Morgan, who personally oversaw the bailout of the banking system.

'Panic of 2023': James Corbett on Cash, Countereconomy, and the CBDC 'Nightmare of Total Monetary Control'

What the Federal Reserve does not note in its official history of the 1907 panic is that—as even Life Magazine conceded decades later—the rumours that sparked the entire affair were themselves planted by George W. Perkins, one of J.P. Morgan’s business partners. Also missing from the Fed’s whitewashed history lesson is the fact that Morgan used it as an excuse to eliminate his banking competition (the Knickerbocker Trust) and rescue his banking associates (the Trust Company of America, which had extensive ties to many of Morgan’s clients.)

Fast forward to 2023 and it’s interesting to note that even Bloomberg is reporting an eerily similar pattern of rumours and Morgan-as-saviour in the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank:

“Prominent venture capitalists advised their tech startups to withdraw money from Silicon Valley Bank, while mega institutions such as JP Morgan Chase & Co sought to convince some SVB customers to move their funds Thursday by touting the safety of their assets.”

And, as The Financial Times later confirmed, the immediate effect of SVB’s trouble and the resulting regional bank instability was to send depositors flocking to the perceived safety of the largest banks, including, of course, JPMorgan Chase.

BCN: In your latest episode of New World Next Week with James Evan Pilato, “Crypto Contagion Banks Get the Runs,” you allude to discrepancies in the official story surrounding the recent collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, referencing audits of the institution just prior to its demise. Similarly, Signature Bank board member Barney Frank said recently he was surprised at the collapse of Signature bank as well, and that regulators were trying to send an “anti-crypto message.” In your view, is what we’re seeing now engineered?

JC: Yes, this bank “contagion” is an engineered phenomenon. But in order to understand that phenomenon, we need to ask a further question: On what level has it been engineered?

As it turns out, although there are multiple factors that contributed to SVB’s downfall—including its concentration on ESGs and DEI and other forms of “woke” investing—the immediate proximal cause of the bank’s crash was its weird predicament: it had too much cash.

As it turns out, although there are multiple factors that contributed to SVB’s downfall … the immediate proximal cause of the bank’s crash was its weird predicament: it had too much cash.

You see, banks make money by lending out their customers’ deposits . . . and when I say “make money” I mean they literally make money. In the topsy-turvy world of banking, a high loan-to-deposit ratio (LDR) is seen as a good thing, with an 80-90% LDR held up as an ideal figure. However, SVB, with just $74 billion in loans against $173 billion in customer deposits, found it had too much cash sloshing around its coffers.

'Panic of 2023': James Corbett on Cash, Countereconomy, and the CBDC 'Nightmare of Total Monetary Control'

So it decided to park that money in the safest (but not really safe), risk-free (but not actually risk-free), good-as-gold (bur not literally good-as-gold) investment: long-term US Treasuries. After all, the only way it could possibly lose money in US Treasuries is if the Fed started hiking rates like crazy, and they haven’t done that in decades! What could go wrong?

Oh, wait…

So, long story short, SVB loaded up on nearly $120 billion worth of long-term Treasuries when they were at 1.78% yield and the climb to 5% yield meant SVB had to book billions in losses. In fact, their 2022 Annual Report, which came out in January, showed that the bank was sitting on $15 billion in “unrealized losses” from their bad bond bet, which, for a bank with $16 billion in total capital, is kind of a bad thing.

So yes, the fall of SVB was engineered . . . by the Fed. This crisis is the direct result of the Fed attempting to back out of the disastrous, decade-and-a-half-long artificial bond bubble it blew to stop the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. And what caused the Global Financial Crisis? The disastrous, nearly-decade-long artificial housing bubble that the Fed blew to stop the dotcom bust and the 9/11 slowdown and the Enron/Worldcom fraud fallout.

BCN: You’ve noted that the current crisis could be used as an excuse to usher in central bank digital currencies more quickly. In your view, how might such an event play out and who would be the biggest winners and losers?

JC: To answer this question, let’s ask another question: Why is the Fed so interested in The Panic of 1907, anyway? It’s because, as they themselves assert, the crisis caused by that particular banking panic “inspired the monetary reform movement and led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System.”

Of course, like everything else that comes out of the banksters’ mouth, that statement is a lie. Actually, it’s two lies.

First, it’s a lie of commission: the monetary reform movement—which became a popular political force after The Crime of 1873 and encompassed the Free Silver movement and bimetallism and William Jennings Bryan and the cross of gold and, yes, The Wizard of Oz—was most certainly not “inspired by” The Panic of 1907.

And secondly, it’s a lie of omission: the Fed conveniently leaves out the other part of its creation story, not just the Morgan-backed rumours that precipitated the panic in the first place, but also the infamous Jekyll Island meeting that actually led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System.

Those reservations notwithstanding, the general point stands: the generated crisis of The Panic of 1907 did lead to an upending of the existing monetary order and the creation of the Federal Reserve.

Similarly, it would be hard to imagine a full-scale revolution in the banking system today that didn’t originate with some kind of banking crisis. What is beyond doubt is that governments the world over would not hesitate to use any such crisis as an excuse to implement their new digital monetary order. After all, the House Financial Services Committee tried to slip the creation of a digital dollar into the original COVID stimulus bill. Do we really think that emergency legislation for a new digital currency isn’t waiting in the wings, ready to be unleashed on the public in the event of the next crisis?

'Panic of 2023': James Corbett on Cash, Countereconomy, and the CBDC 'Nightmare of Total Monetary Control'

When that crisis does lead to the pre-planned CBDC “solution,” we can expect that it will play out in a broadly similar fashion as The Panic of 1907 and the Global Financial Crisis of 2007—08. In both cases the fallout just so happened to benefit certain interests. In 1907, Morgan managed to consolidate his banking interests, eliminate his competition, act as the benevolent saviour of the economy and convince the public of the need to hand the monetary reins over to the banking cartel. In 2008, it was croney-connected institutions like AIG and (of course) JP Morgan that benefited from the unprecedented banking “bailout,” and the crisis helped cement the rise of new financial giants like BlackRock. So it would not be surprising to find certain banking interests using the opportunity of a generated banking crisis to eliminate their competition and consolidate their control in the banking world.

And, as I’ve talked about before, not every banker stands to benefit from the implementation of a retail CBDC. In fact, to the extent that CBDCs cut the commercial banking middlemen out of the existing monetary circuit, it actually goes against the interests of the commercial bankers.

But, of course, the real losers in the event of such a crisis, as always would be us: the general public. In the worst-case scenario, the central banksters would seize the opportunity to implement the “programmable money” nightmare of total monetary control.

BCN: If nothing is done to check the implementation of CBDCs and the financial surveillance and spying they potentially afford, when will we see them reach global ubiquity?

JC: I can’t give you a date. But I can say that if nothing is done to check their implementation, CBDCs will reach global ubiquity.

If I were to make a forecast about their implementation, my prediction would be that we will not go from a zero-CBDC monetary system to a 100%-CBDC monetary system all at once. CBDCs will co-exist alongside other forms of payment for some period of time, and they will look and function differently in different jurisdictions. Some will be full retail and wholesale CBDCs, some will serve one function or other, some retail CBDCs may be administered directly by the central bank, others will certify banks and other financial institutions to act as intermediaries, issuing wallets to the public.

But in whatever form they come and at whatever time they arrive, the initial CBDC implementation will be the proverbial camel’s nose in the tent. From that point, it’s only a matter of time before CBDCs start to become instruments of monetary surveillance and control.

BCN: How can everyday individuals help maintain and improve their financial privacy and economic sovereignty in the current chaotic climate of so-called banking contagion?

JC: Are you ready for some good news? We don’t need some elaborate plan or high-level access to high-tech gadgets to thwart the CBDC agenda. The simplest tool for preserving our economic independence is already in our wallets: it’s cash.

As I said above, CBDCs will almost certainly co-exist with other forms of payment when it is first introduced, so cash will still be an option unless and until the public is conditioned to accept a completely cashless economy.

The simplest tool for preserving our economic independence is already in our wallets: it’s cash.

Of course, the ongoing War on Cash is already making it more and more difficult to use cash for conducting certain transactions and “coin shortages,” the fear of “dirty money” and incentives for using electronic payment are further enticing people away from using cash. That’s why we have to make a conscious decision to support businesses that accept cash and commit ourselves to using cash on a regular basis. Numerous such ideas have been proffered in recent years, from agorist.market‘s “Black Market Fridays” to Solari.com‘s “Cash Friday.”

That’s not to say that cash is our only (or even our best) option. I have long advocated a “Survival Currency” approach where people experiment with different forms of money to find out what works for them. There are community currencies, barter exchanges, local exchange trading systems, precious metals, crypto, The miracle of Wörgl and many other examples of ways that people can transact outside of the purview of the central bankers.

As long as you are part of a community of like-minded people that are willing to participate in free exchange, there will be no shortage of monetary ideas to try out.

BCN: And speaking of contagion, there are some connecting the recent banking turmoil with the World Economic Forum’s Great Reset initiative, designed ostensibly to address the so-called Covid-19 pandemic — essentially asserting it is all part of a larger plan to set up a global financial surveillance grid. Is there any basis for such ideas, in your view, or is this just the stuff of wild conspiracy theory?

JC: On one level, the intense focus on the World Economic Forum’s Great Reset and its supposed threat that “You will own nothing and you will be happy” is misplaced. Yes, Klaus Schwab and his cronies are certainly power-hungry schemers, but the Great Reset is simply the latest rebranding of a very old game of global control, and the World Economic Forum is only one (relatively minor) player at the table.

Call it the New World Order or the International Rules-Based Order or the International Economic Order or The Great Reset or whatever you want, and pin it on the Bilderbergers or the Trilaterals or the World Economic Forum or whoever you want, the threat is the same: a world in which humanity is at the mercy of a clique of unaccountable technocrats.

I do not invoke the name of technocracy loosely. I mean it in the real, historical sense of the term, as “a system of scientifically engineering society” that is predicated on an economic system in which every transaction is monitored, calculated, databased, tracked, surveilled and allowed or disallowed by a central governing “technate” in real time. Such a system will involve digital IDs for every citizen, and, of course, a digital currency that can be programmed to function at the whims of the technocrats.

That such a system of control is now technologically possible is now undeniable. That there are interests like the World Economic Forum that are working toward the implementation of such a system is only deniable by those who refuse to listen to the technocrats’ own pronouncements.

'Panic of 2023': James Corbett on Cash, Countereconomy, and the CBDC 'Nightmare of Total Monetary Control'

BCN: From where you sit, is there a cryptocurrency white pill in all this?

JC: The promise of cryptocurrency continues to be what it has always been: a cryptographically secure tool for transacting in the countereconomy.

But if people don’t know what the countereconomy is (let alone why they would want to be transacting in it), then what good is it? If it’s seen as just another get-rich-quick investment, just something whose measure is to be valued in dollars, just another asset that should be regulated by the SEC and dutifully listed on your tax form, then it will be nothing more than a convenient stepping stone to the CBDC nightmare.

We can either choose to inform ourselves about agorism and the countereconomy or we can continue trading in the bankster-approved mainstream economy and accept whatever monetary order the banksters thrust on us.

The choice is ours. For now.

What are your thoughts on James Corbett’s statements on the current banking crisis, the global economy, and the nature of CBDCs? Let us know in the comments section below.



via Graham Smith

Friday, November 26, 2021

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

The World Economic Forum (WEF) has released its latest report on “digital currency governance” this month, addressing stablecoins, cryptocurrencies, and “barriers to financial inclusion.” Like most central banks, regulators, think tanks, and politicians, the WEF publication gives lip service to the power of crypto, but never addresses the elephant in the room: instead of actual access to the utility cryptocurrencies already freely provide, the “unbanked” and impoverished individuals of the world are forced to use a co-opted, fiat 2.0.

‘Financial Inclusion’ and ‘Sensible Regulation’: Freedom for Me, Compliance for Thee

According to the World Economic Forum’s November 2021 White Paper Series Report “What is the Value Proposition of Stablecoins for Financial Inclusion”:

Financial inclusion is a complex global problem that existing systems
and offerings have so far failed to solve.

Financial inclusion is not really that complex, but existing systems most definitely are failures. The current paradigm of centralized economic control and central bank fiat currency issuance has so far failed to help those who need economic freedom to survive and thrive the most. An admission from the horse’s mouth, then, if you will. In order to change these old, broken systems, the solutions presented by politicians are always the same: more of the exact same economic dysfunction that created the chaos in the first place.

There’s no denying that access to reliable financial services and sound money is an issue plaguing billions of people on this planet. Considering the foundations of fiat currencies themselves, it can be rightly said that the entire global population (aside from those few at the top of the Ponzi scheme fountain of coercive, centralized fractional reserve banking) suffers from a lack of access to fair, secure, and sound financial services, markets, and opportunities.

The simple (and sadly, still “controversial”) reason for this is that there are ultimately two classes of people: those who think violence against the non-violent is required for economic order, and those who value freedom and consent in markets. The simple solution is to let individuals own their own money and stop robbing them with taxes and inflation.

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

The former group of people (pro-violent economic interference) incessantly parrots the same lines when it comes to cryptocurrencies. It’s the sort of repetitive, wide-eyed propagandizing one might expect to hear at a holy roller tent meeting, or in some fringe cult, but not from any level-headed economist:

“Bitcoin is used mainly for illicit activities and crime.” Of course this is not only statistically false, but compared to fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar, the state is by and far the winner in the “funding-crime” competition. This is common knowledge by now, and so well-documented one is left to conclude that either these regulators are blindingly stupid, or lying.

“We need to foster an atmosphere of trust.” That is, trust in the very same financial institutions and political entities that have consistently — and over decades and centuries — proven themselves to be untrustworthy and even malicious.

Then there is the blatant hypocrisy, also reminiscent of a cult, where these perceived leaders give lip service to high humanitarian values and virtues, like “financial inclusion,” but never live them out in practice, and never lift a finger to help the poor.

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Gary Gensler says that Satoshi “Nakamoto’s innovation is real,” but proceeds to threaten businesses attempting to provide services via that same innovation, even breaking the SEC’s own legal protocol to do so, applying extremely antiquated laws to this brand new economic paradigm.

Likewise, centralized exchanges and financial institutions kowtow to regulators, making it impossible for folks who could once access and trade crypto without an ID, and without threat of being jailed, to reap the benefits of the tech. This is especially true for impoverished areas, which we will touch on below.

Even the most so-called progressive politicians and regulators, who make a show of standing against cryptocurrency regulations they deem unfair, still cannot match the elegant peer-to-peer simplicity described in the Bitcoin whitepaper:

“A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution.”

And they do not wish to. Even to the most forward-thinking statist, there is a ruling class and a servant class. In India masses of individuals are currently waiting on the decisions of strangers in parliament to determine if and how they may use their own money. It doesn’t matter if they approve of the final decision or not. Or if they support the state. The law will be forcefully applied to them under threat of violence. Same in the U.S. Same in Europe. Same everywhere. How very inclusive and innovative.

Buzzwords like “financial inclusion” and “banking the unbanked” are used, then, to co-opt a technology that is already functional and efficient and does not require violent interference from the state.

Still, the bizarre prescription from central banks remains: Use central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) or pre-approved crypto from a state-licensed exchange. You may do whatever you like in complete freedom, as long as we define it.

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

Biggest Examples of Economic Ineptitude and Financial Crime Ignored

The WEF report raises two key points in the section titled “Special characteristics of stablecoins for financial inclusion.” Namely, that “Stablecoins (and cryptocurrency) may side-step issues related to consumer mistrust in traditional financial services,” and that they “may uniquely provide digital financial accounts that malicious or untrustworthy actors cannot steal from.”

Clearly proponents of economic freedom, and Satoshi Nakamoto himself, have been aware of point two. That was the whole point of bitcoin in the first place. There is no need for a trusted third party to foul things up in one’s transactions anymore. Of course, WEF manages to mangle even this simple point by qualifying the unparalleled security and safety crypto brings:

That said, for many end-users today, the overall risk of losing funds through user error, or through financial or technical problems with the digital currency issuer or wallet, is likely to be higher with stablecoins (and cryptocurrency) than with accounts held at regulated financial institutions or providers.

This of course ignores the wide range of non-custodial solutions that currently exist for backing up wallets, storing seeds and passwords, and even holding crypto via joint wallets or smart contracts that function as a bank, without the compromise in privacy and trust required for legacy banks. And, if the issue is a risk of losing funds, perhaps it’s good to look at the undisputed grand champions in the contest of losing money: governments. And that will lead us back around to the first point raised by WEF. There is no need to repair trust with governments that will recklessly devalue and stifle assets they force people to trade with. They should most definitely never be trusted.

As late, then-U.S. secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld admitted about department of defense accounting systems in 2001:

Our financial systems are decades old. According to some estimates, we cannot track $2.3 trillion in transactions. We cannot share information from floor to floor in this building because it’s stored on dozens of technological systems that are inaccessible or incompatible.

If one thinks this centralized ineptitude and inefficiency doesn’t apply to central banking and treasury systems as well, one would be mistaken. Obviously, printing trillions of dollars from thin air to shore up an economy destroyed by the same reckless policies is a fool’s game — and literal counterfeiting scam — but beyond that, there’s plenty of proof blind trust equates to disaster.

Mexico’s banking system, as a one-off example, “misplaced” at least $18 million in transfers back in 2018, bringing time-sensitive transactions to a standstill. What’s more, the world’s largest and most trusted names in banking like JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, Chase, and others are frequently tied to criminal activity like money laundering, and even drug and sex trafficking.

All this in view, it is unclear why any sane market actor would trust the same institutions anymore, where there is a better solution, and where security, order, and governance are still possible, but based on verification and not trust — a level playing field created by mathematics and decentralized systems, not politicians.

‘Financial Inclusion’ — A Buzzword for Central Banks Who Secretly Despise Economic Freedom

Africa, a Prime Example of Crypto’s Utility

In Africa, crypto’s practical utility is on display already, as individuals in countries like Zimbabwe, Nigeria, and Kenya leverage the sound economic principles and efficiency of private digital assets to preserve value and send cross-border payments. Their own centralized fiat systems have failed them immensely, and continue to do so.

In Nigeria, for example, instead of looking squarely at the reality of trade on parallel markets, the central bank is arbitrarily assigning unrealistic, official valuations to the fiat currency, shunning crypto users, and pushing an IMF-associated CBDC known as the e-naira. If inclusion is truly the goal, it should be asked why central banks in these struggling regions exclude the crypto sector and stifle innovation. Especially when it’s helping people in need to live and thrive, right now. As financial service Kurepay’s CEO Abikure Tega recently lamented:

Due to this recent clampdown which we find difficult to understand considering that Nigeria is not a lawless country, Kurepay, Africa’s foremost social payment app for cryptocurrency & fiat — is announcing the suspension of business operations in Nigeria.

Economic Governance Does Not Require a State

This article likely has some asking: “But who will make the rules?” To which I reply with the question: “Does each transaction you make in the crypto economy, or on the blockchain, require the oversight of centralized law enforcement to make it reliable?” The issue of private law societies based on objective reality and consent — and not arbitrary statist violence — is a critical one, but is somewhat beyond the scope of this writing. That said, crypto has already shown us that business can be done much easier where trust is not compulsory, and verification goes both ways — not just the serfs presenting their KYC papers to mysterious rulers in shadowy banking edifices.

On November 24, there were 1,342,491 ETH transactions according to the Ethereum blockchain explorer etherscan.io. Keep in mind this is only the ETH network, where fees are currently insanely high and moving tokens can be difficult. Imagine the staggering number of transactions, then, that occur across all of the decentralized finance (defi) landscape daily. While there are scams, most of these transactions are successful and peaceful, with no centralized oversight. This is because everyday people wish to trade, succeed, and cooperate. And the complexity of this decentralized economy is mind-boggling.

Crypto is said to be full of scammers and risks. While that may be true, it doesn’t begin to compare to the greatest rug-pull of all time — hands-down — which is when the state took the power of money from the individual. Central banks suffer virtually no consequence for fraud, theft, or damages. The paycheck is guaranteed from your taxes. Unlike that restaurant on the corner, which if they poisoned someone would face severe market consequences, the state has made itself the market, and the arbiter of justice, albeit an artificial and violent one. Blockchain, however, is just math, and sound economics gives no quarter to wacky religions, which is why regulators fear things like bitcoin, and must resort to violence.

Around the world, central banks, financial regulators, and think tanks are aping the same mantras from their ivory towers to the struggling masses: “We are working for you.” “We want everyone to have access to these innovative financial systems and opportunities.” But what they do is make the solutions crypto provides either impossible to efficiently access, or outright illegal.

The truth of the matter is quite simple. This is not about financial planners rallying behind financial inclusion. Rather, it is just the opposite. The self-appointed leaders of the dinosaur systems and institutions of the world are petrified because individuals are now waking up to new possibilities in money via crypto, and they know soon they may be financially irrelevant, themselves completely excluded from the new, freer paradigm being built.

What are your thoughts on financial inclusion? Let us know in the comments section below.



via Graham Smith

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Satoshi Versus the ‘Infrastructure Bill’ — Political Permission Not Required

When Satoshi Nakamoto released the Bitcoin white paper in October 2008, it likely wasn’t with the idea that governments and central banks needed to recognize, adopt, and regulate Bitcoin for everyone’s benefit. To the contrary, if anything can be taken away from that document and the message encoded in the genesis block, it’s that centralized institutions need not have any place in our financial lives outside our freely chosen, express consent for them to do so.

Separating Money From the Church of Politics

“A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution.”

Bitcoin white paper

“The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks”

-Bitcoin genesis block’s coinbase parameter message

In the same way it would be absurd for the Catholic Church — or any church for that matter — to violently force their beliefs on others via a government, it is the height of folly to believe that complete strangers involved in this collective abstraction called “the state” should be able to tell us how to spend our money, or be allowed to interfere with our private financial lives.

Imagine having a neighbor down the road demand you show them your wallet every day, and if the money ever exceeds a certain amount, you have to pay them a percentage — or else. And further, imagine there’s another neighbor down the road this first neighbor doesn’t like, with whom you are now prohibited from transacting. Even lending this friend five bucks, for example, could be strictly off-limits and come with brutally inhumane, violent consequences. Break these arbitrary rules and you will pay a hefty price in time, health, and money. The ostensible justification for all of this is that the nutty neighbor is just trying to protect you from bad actors.

Infrastructure Bill Shows Regulators Continue Sapping Bitcoin of Its Utility

This past week many in the crypto community have been in a tizzy over the new $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill that was just approved by the U.S. senate. The controversial legislation’s vague definition of who or what might constitute a cryptocurrency “broker” has individual crypto asset holders, node operators, app developers, miners, and major corporate players in the industry saying that if this thing goes through, innovation will quickly flee the draconian U.S. for friendlier and more open-minded crypto shores.

Technically, the verbiage of the massive 2,702-page bill could even classify someone who merely facilitates trades of crypto and fiat for a friend regularly as a “broker” responsible for reporting to the IRS. And we all know what happens if you raise the hackles of those weird neighbors. They’ll show no mercy, and even eat their own. That’s not to mention that for most of the concerned parties the logistics of said invasive reporting would be virtually impossible, anyway.

Satoshi Versus the 'Infrastructure Bill' — Political Permission Not Required
H.R. 3684 updates the 1986 Internal Revenue Service tax code to expand the definition of “broker.”

The strangers down the road peopling the large edifices in D.C. take on much greater importance to most than the aforementioned crazy neighbor in the example. People generally have an idea that these strangers in government edifices across the globe are somehow special. Exempt from the common morality and justice we expect from our neighbors. They are gods, well within their rights to arbitrarily decide how money may or may not be used. With or without your consent.

Here is a tragedy: an alarming number of crypto enthusiasts are ready and willing to let these suited strangers in D.C. determine their financial fates, and even go so far as to beg and plead them to please show mercy and favor regarding their own personal finances.

Perhaps this isn’t the place to get into the “but that’s just how it is, that’s how society is set up” objections here, because this article would become far too long. Suffice to say, there are ultimately two roads we can go down regarding crypto: live and let live via voluntary consent, or violent force against peaceful people. The latter is the lazy and so-called “pragmatic” path, but this pragmatism sure has led to a whole lot of heartbreak and tragedy. And that’s got to be the biggest understatement in all of recorded history.

Satoshi Versus the 'Infrastructure Bill' — Political Permission Not Required
With all the regulatory concern about Bitcoin’s energy consumption, one is led to wonder what the carbon footprint of 20+ years of sustained U.S. bombing in the Middle East adds up to. Image: ART production

The Scapegoating of Bitcoin: Climate Change, Terror, and Money Laundering

With this new U.S. infrastructure bill (now moved to the House of Representatives which is on recess until September 20), the EU’s plans to track all bitcoin transactions and ban anonymous wallets, the massive momentum CBDCs are gaining worldwide as countries responsible for 90% of the world’s GDP research and trial them — it is clear we are on the cusp of something unprecedented. Even the sacred realm of decentralized finance (defi) is no longer safe, with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler recently calling for more authority to regulate decentralized finance.

Contrary to Satoshi’s vision for peer-to-peer electronic cash without the need for a financial institution, the picture taking shape is one instead of complete, centralized, coercive control of private finance. Privacy and autonomy in money, in other words, are being made out as relics to be traded in for antiquated ideas of kings ruling peasants, disguised as modern and sensible “regulation.”

If crypto’s excessive regulations are meant to include the financially excluded and give them access to financial tools, it stands to wonder why debilitating limitations and KYC requirements must be centrally forced upon them, when these matters of security could be handled locally.

In lockstep with a discrepancy-riddled narrative about a deadly virus, we find a new virus growing ever stronger: a mutant strain of unapologetic economic surveillance and the invasive co-opting and destruction of useful and groundbreaking financial technologies for individuals everywhere in real, dire need of economic freedom. The supposed justification given for this is that Bitcoin is economically dangerous, bad for the environment, and used by criminals. In psychology, this is what is called “projection.”

But the cold, hard realities remain:

  • Terror and destruction of the earth are the specialty of the state, not internet money.
  • Destruction of economies and livelihoods is the specialty of the state. Permissionless internet money is saving people from government folly.
  • Statistically, almost all financial crimes are still conducted in fiat currencies. There is no contest. Reports for 2020 show that crimes in fiat were estimated to account for $1.4 trillion dollars. The same estimates put crypto crime at about $10.5 billion.
  • Slavery and stealing are wrong, no matter what form they take, or how stylish they are made out to be.

I will get to the slavery part at the very end. Suffice to say that although democracy is given endless lip service by politicians, the individuals’ representative government is meant to comprise are becoming increasingly voiceless. Some advocate from a well-intentioned place that we politely ask these dangerous neighbors of ours in D.C. to change things. But when the channels for change themselves are foundationally corrupted, no amount of pleading will ultimately do us any good. Luckily, crypto doesn’t require political permission.

How to Experience Crypto Freedom Right Now

In three words: just use it.

Pay for things. Tip your friends. Invest it. Keep it in non-custodial wallets. Buy it from people face-to-face or online. Conceal it from immoral and privacy-invasive institutions and governments. Ignore them. Build a hugely successful start-up. Or do none of these things. Do everything completely in line with legacy finance models or anything in between. I do not care. The difference is I will never try to violently attack you or cage you if you don’t do things my preferred way. That’s government’s game.

There is now serious risk to doing even peaceful, completely moral things without permission in our current paradigm. This says a lot about the state of the world. And while it may not be advisable for everyone to run headlong into the offices of the IRS shouting they will never pay them a dime again, without direct, permissionless economic action, crypto’s utility is all but lost.

“Just use a credit card, bro.” “Just use a CBDC.” “Just do the KYC thing so the number keeps going up.” “Sure, bro, we can no longer use crypto freely and need to report everything. Sure, its utility has been stripped away. But I’m going to be rich.”

“I just passed my KYC bro. Now I can use my Visa card to pay for things with crypto as soon as my Paypal crypto account is unfrozen so I can top up the card.”

Yes, you’ll be rich alright — in a bleak, dystopian, locked-down world that’s not even worth living in, anyway. Maybe you can spend your fortune on something to help improve your social credit score so you’ll have a chance at flying out of the country for a vacation next year.

No, money is a tool to help us enjoy our lives. And without economic freedom, there can be no such enjoyment of life’s ups and downs, no love or adventure and fun. Many folks in the cryptocurrency community these days seem to have little to no understanding of what this freedom really is. But for those that do, the philosophical battle is worth fighting, even if it ends up costing us dearly. That may seem paradoxical on the surface, but it’s not. The battle may be lost, but the war is already won. The idea’s already out, and that’s what matters most.

“Number go up” is thus very exciting for one reason: it means greater access to tools, opportunities, and leverage to make the world a more happy and free place:

To say these goals — maximal peace, economic freedom, and non-violation of the non-violent — are “utopian” or unworkable because the present system finally holds no water. It’s tantamount to saying years ago that because farming relies on slave labor, we cannot change things. This is a lazy excuse. Satoshi Nakamoto pushed things forward and helped evolve finance into a much freer place. If money can evolve in such a way, so can societies across the globe.

Personally, whether I win or lose in my lifetime is not what is most important to me right now. I’m happy because the idea is here, because I can fight for it, and because I can use crypto however I damn well please, right here, and right now. To me, this is about human dignity. Hopefully, my son’s generation and those after him can laugh in disbelief at how silly this whole tragic clown show has become. And slough off the religion of politics for a free economy.

What are your thoughts on the new U.S. infrastructure bill as it relates to Satoshi Nakamoto’s white paper? Let us know in the comments section below.



via Graham Smith

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Hyperbitcoinization has been defined as “a state where bitcoin becomes the world’s dominant form of money.” But what actually needs to happen for bitcoin to ‘go viral’? As it turns out, a hyperbitcoinization event may be more likely than many suspect, especially in the current economic climate. However, there’s one big caveat: it requires human action.

Also read: Disney World Economics: How Coronavirus Could Be Used to Justify a Global Financial Reset

Contagious Currency

The current covid-19 panic and pandemonium gripping the world has brought economic issues to the forefront of conversation, as economies across the globe are stunted by government orders to shutdown. Whether this is the best way to contain a contagion is hotly debated, but the paranoia about getting sick has stretched so far as to even touch the safety of paper cash.

Some nations, China and the U.S. among them, have been quarantining and disinfecting physical cash, for fear that it could spread the covid-19 virus. This potential transmission vector is viewed as an important threat, and many businesses across the globe are encouraging customers to use contactless payment systems in lieu of the dirty paper stuff.

There’s even been a buzz in the bitcoin space about this being an argument for crypto adoption. But for bitcoin to catch fire and really spread around the world in viral fashion, a number of factors must be present.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Conditions Necessary for Hyperbitcoinization

In order for “Bitcoin-induced currency demonetization” to take place, three main factors must be present so that a competing money “will rapidly lose value as bitcoin supplants it.”

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?
Unemployment insurance claims from the state of Texas illustrate a remarkable spike in job losses due to covid-19 shutdowns, and have resulted in processing systems being overwhelmed. Source: bizjournals.com

Loss of Faith in Established Systems: Individuals across the globe are losing jobs and losing trust in their governments, their monetary systems, and in many cases, the broader global economic paradigm itself. Before covid-19 showed up, the world was already in the throes of widespread protest and unrest surrounding corrupt governance and economically unviable situations at a systemic level.

Now states have leveraged coronavirus to justify shutting down innumerable businesses and halting critical industry, many more are asking questions, and some are losing faith in the Modern Monetary Theory magic, which says that you can always “just print more money” when times are hard. The thing is, you can’t “just print more” goods and services. As currencies across the globe lose value, hyperinflation is also not an entirely impossible outcome, meaning dollars could potentially turn into valueless scraps of paper.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Viable Alternatives to Fiat: Bitcoin is permissionless, fast, borderless, low-fee, and decentralized. While the issue of which version of bitcoin would best serve as a global money is debated, the critical fact is that an alternative to government fiat does exist, has active use cases, and is at this point time-tested. It is also hard-capped in supply and looks promising as an inflation-resistant asset.

Further, with governments now in development and research for CDBCs (central bank digital currencies) even so-called “normies” are being primed for understanding how crypto and digital assets work. The corona zeitgeist is one that includes mainstream media buzz about a “digital dollar” and “digital yuan.” This presents a unique window of opportunity for a shift away from fiat currencies.

Open Markets: Of all the prerequisites for hyperbitcoinization, this is arguably the trickiest, and will be dealt with more in-depth at the close of this article. Suffice to say that without the ability for individuals to transact freely and voluntarily no currency — not even national currencies like the yen, dollar, or peso — can be successful.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?
Nobel Prize-winning mathematician and economist John Nash

‘Ideal Money’

Late Nobel Prize Laureate John Nash, an American mathematician known for — among numerous other accolades — being the namesake for game theory’s Nash equilibrium, developed a notion he referred to as Ideal Money.

Ideal Money would be, simply put, a money whose value is not foundationally subject to political special interests and conflicts of interest like the USD, and which is not inherently subject to inflation. Loosely comparing modern economic planners with Bolshevik communists, Nash once wrote:

So there may be an analogy to this as regards those called ‘the Keynesians’ in that while they have claimed to be operating for high and noble objectives of general welfare what is clearly true is that they have made it easier for governments to ‘print money’.

Nash’s words sound hauntingly on target today, as we witness nations like the U.S. create unprecedented amounts of fiat out of thin air, ignoring that eventually, someone must pay the piper.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Though Nash had his own ideas about what might best constitute this so-called ideal, the renowned mathematician did not rule out bitcoin.

In fact, he wrote in his paper Ideal Money: “My personal view is that a practical global money might most favorably evolve through the development first of a few regional currencies of truly good quality. And then the ‘integration’ or ‘coordination’ of those into a global currency would become just a technical problem.” Nash went on:

But the famous classical ‘Gresham’s Law’ also reveals the intrinsic difficulty. Thus ‘good money’ will not naturally supplant and replace ‘bad money’ by a simple Darwinian superiority of competitive species. Rather than that, it must be that the good things are established by the voluntary choice of human agencies.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Human Action: The Final Ingredient

It is interesting that Nash describes “a few regional currencies of truly good quality” coming together someday via technical integration. Could this be an unintended, prescient nod to bitcoin, blockchain, and the various integrations and ideas the crypto space has seen over the years like atomic swaps and network interoperability?

Only time will tell. What is certain, and what Nash notes explicitly in the passage, is that no matter how seemingly fit the conditions, no exodus from the broken world of fiat can happen without voluntary human action.

This is a tricky thing. Those that use bitcoin know its value and utility, but they are limited in some ways as to how they can leverage digital cash due to enforced regulations. Those that don’t know about crypto in a meaningful way remain the unable-to-act majority, presenting a two-faced challenge. Standing in the way of hyperbitcoinization, then, is the obstacle of “going viral” and that of forced censorship. The first obstacle shouldn’t be hard to overcome, on surface view. The second is more daunting.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

According to marketing group Outgrow, novelty and “information gaps” play a major role in determining what type of content goes viral online. The group notes:

Researchers have found that a part of our brain actually feels rewarded by novel ideas rather than the familiar. When consumers feel they’ve been led to a new notion or concept, their brains flood their bodies with dopamine.

A lack of desperately sought info — or “information gap” — can also lead to virality, according to the group, when that info is found.

So in this context of the current mass unemployment, crashing stock markets, and an increasingly questionable world reserve currency, emotions, which are another major indicator for virality, are running extremely high. And lo and behold, there is a novel proposed solution which fills the info gap of the “what is good money” question.

Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event?

Still, there’s something of a catch 22. If the masses aren’t using it, it’s not going to be very useful in a situation like this. If they don’t start, a dire situation like this is bound to perdure, and repeat. Whether in compliance with laws and regulations or otherwise, individual actors have proven bitcoin’s strength by trading regardless, and such use is required to show the world bitcoin’s utility.

From feeding the hungry in Venezuela and South Sudan during a global crisis with borderless BCH, to making money for survival by selling goods peer-to-peer with no middleman or political permission, bitcoin is virtually unconfiscatable. It allows a shift from the broken fiat paradigm if individuals so choose. This core utility is what could ultimately trigger hyperbitcoinization, and what a “digital dollar” can’t hold a candle to. Then there might be a real shot at a peaceful, sound, and sensible global economy.

Do you think hyperbitcoinization is possible? Let us know in the comments section below.

The post Making Bitcoin Go Viral: Could Endless Printing Trigger a Hyperbitcoinization Event? appeared first on Bitcoin News.



via Graham Smith