Rickard Falkvinge: Bitcon as Economic Revolution

Design, Economics/True Cost
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Rickard Falkvinge
Rickard Falkvinge

Bitcoin’s Real Revolution Isn’t Hard Money, It’s Economic Panarchy

Posted: 06 Nov 2013 03:00 AM PST

Diversity – Zacqary Adam Green:  The earth-shattering thing about bitcoin isn’t its fixed money supply. It’s not the carefully tuned algorithm that keeps its growth at a steady rate, or the inability of a political body to play with its value. What’s new and government-toppling about bitcoin is that it’s a framework for starting a new economy.

Many different currencies - CC photo by epSos.de

Gold and silver have coexisted with governments and nation-states for thousands of years. If the economic properties of bitcoin — its finite supply — were inherently state-smashing, we’d be living in a very different world before the computer were even invented. No, bitcoin’s revolution isn’t what the Bitcoin Foundation calls its “non-political economy.”

In fact, you could argue that “non-political economy” is an oxymoron. If we define “political” as only referring to the workings of a state, then sure, you can have a non-political economy. But in the colloquial way that people often talk about “politics” — the “internal politics” of a workplace or social club, for example — there’s no such thing as a non-political economy. Any kind of money — whether it’s gold, dollars, bitcoin, or licking things to claim them as your own — only has any value if everyone in the economy agrees that it does.

What about supply and demand?
You could say that this observation doesn’t challenge the neoclassical economic theory of money very much at all. For example, bitcoin has value because there’s a demand for it, plus it’s in short supply. This is like saying that general relativity is consistent with the Genesis story, because the Earth could have been created in six “relative” days. It’s not technically wrong, just not a very helpful way of looking at the world.

I like the way David Graeber puts it in Debt:

[Money] is not a “thing” at all. You can no more touch a dollar or a deutschmark than you can touch an hour or a cubic centimeter. Units of currency are merely abstract units of measurement…If money is just a yardstick, what then does it measure? The answer [is] simple: debt. A coin is, effectively, an IOU.

Brett Scott expands on this:

Perhaps we can tinker with the word ‘money’ itself. It’s a mass noun, like you’d use for some kind of tangible substance, and it makes money sound like a ‘thing-in-itself’. As a kind of mental discipline, I prefer to use a different word: COGAS. It stands for ‘claims on goods and services’, which is all money really is.

So money is just a way of measuring who owes what: you give me something or do something for me, and now I owe you something equally valuable in return. That’s a social relation. And if a big group of people get together to agree on how their social relations should work, it suddenly starts to look political. Even the decision to use bitcoin requires the initial political decision to not screw with its politics in the future.

But wait just a minute. You see what just happened? A group of people decided that instead of using a national currency, with properties they don’t like and can’t control, decided to instead use bitcoin. That’s your revolution.

Bitcoin’s real contribution to the world is its source code. The blockchain, the network protocol, the cryptographic verification — anyone can take this and build a currency with any economic properties their community needs. I’m not convinced that bitcoin’s Austrian School properties can sustain a global (or even local) economy, but you know what? That’s okay. If I ever feel the bitcoin economy has become too unequal, unbalanced, or stagnant, it’s now trivial for me to start my own damn currency.

A single bitcoin belongs is a measurement like a centimeter, but the bitcoin community is a social network. People use bitcoin because other people they trade with use bitcoin. If my town is running low on bitcoin but has a lot of resources to share internally, we can create our own local currency to free up bitcoin for importing and exporting. Or I could join an online network of artists who work on one another’s projects, and we’d create our own internal currency that plays by whatever rules we need it to.

There is no perfect monetary system for every situation. Bitcoin is not going to be the one world currency, and it doesn’t need to be. A lot of people compare Bitcoin to the Internet, but it’s more like CompuServe. It’s the first of many digital, non-state currencies to come, that will all interoperate with each other in ways we can’t even dream of yet.

More on currency diversity
Definitely read the whole Brett Scott article quoted above. It’s a great piece on the nature of money, and what inventing a bunch of different currencies could mean.

 

SchwartzReport: Lies & Truths That Matter

Commercial Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence
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schwartzreport newThe latest data from NASA on climate change. Click through to see charts and to use the hotlinks to get documentation for this report.

Hottest September On Record, Fastest Pacific Warming In 10,000 Years, Warmest Arctic In 120,000 Years
JOE ROMM – Think Progress

Anyone who reads SR regularly knows that I don't believe we have a healthcare system in this country, we have an illness profit system. The function of healthcare in the U.S. is to produce profit not wellness. Here is an excellent assessment of the situation.

Rip-Off: How Private-sector Health Costs Are Killing the ‘American Dream’
JOSHUA HOLLAND – Moyers & Company/The Raw Story

Here, in a British publication is an excellent assessment of what is happening in the financial world. It is unlikely you will read this in the American corporate media, but it is going to impact your life in a number of ways. Click through to see the charts.

Rise of the Distorporation
The Economist (U.K.)

Yesterday's story about the middle class brought me a slew of email including this report. Since most SR readers are or, increasingly according to the emails I get formerly were, middle class this report should be very alarming.

The Decline of America’s Middle-class Neighborhoods
BEN WALSH – Reuters

Here is an extended essay advancing an argument you have been hearing me say for several years now.

The Super-rich No Longer Need a Middle Class
THOM HARTMANN – Salon

Berto Jongman: Bits, Bytes, & Stuff

Cultural Intelligence, IO Impotency
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Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

BOOK REVIEW: Implosion: The End of Russia and What It Means for America

BOOK REVIEW: Intelligence and Surprise Attack – New Lessons on What Works, What Does Not

CIA Cash Behind Westgate Mall (Kenya) Massacre?

CIA Will Keep Running the Drone War

Cloud-Based Storage Without the Cloud (Transporter Sync)

Cyber Pearl Harbor (Winn Schwartau Thought of This First, in 1988)

Cyberwar Escalated by Edward Snowden?

DOCUMENTARY: Tahrir Square and Egypt's Revolution

NSA and the Fall of the US Empire (John Galtung)

NSA Sweeps Must Continue (Never Mind the Lack of Processing or Effect)

Thorium-Fueled Automobile Engine Needs Refueling Once a Century

WHITE PAPER: Anticipating Rare Events (DoD)

Mini-Me: NYT Discussion of Cutting Military Flag Officers + Meta-RECAP on Flag Waste and Corruption

Ethics, Government, Military
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Who?  Mini-Me?
Who? Mini-Me?

Huh?

Weighing the Brass

New York Times, 5 November 2013

One of the hardest-hit areas being discussed in federal budget talks is the Pentagon, which would take an automatic $20 billion cut in January under sequestration. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel proposed a 20 percent cut in his own office’s budget, but command headquarters around the world doubled in cost from 2007 to 2012, the Government Accountability Office found. And while Hagel’s predecessor, Robert Gates, said at least 50 generals and admirals should be eliminated, few of the cuts have occurred.

Trim the Top, Like Most Innovative Organizations

With cuts coming, the best junior officers will see a surfeit of generals and seek a future elsewhere than in a top-heavy bureaucracy

Why Cut the Leaders We May Soon Need?

The past isn't a model for the future. More troops and money on the battlefield might not be the most efficient allocation if more drones are used

The Costs Are Crippling

The bureaucracies that surround top commanders have grown drastically, and the taxpayer-financed perks these commanders enjoy is immense

Cuts Are Needed, but Shouldn’t Affect Diversity

The number of minorities serving in the military's highest ranks has risen, but there are still so few, that cuts, without care, could almost eliminate them.

Continue reading “Mini-Me: NYT Discussion of Cutting Military Flag Officers + Meta-RECAP on Flag Waste and Corruption”

Jon Rappoport: USG Ends Rule of Law for Vaccine Malpractice

07 Health, 07 Other Atrocities, 09 Justice, Commerce, Corruption, Government
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Jon Rappoport
Jon Rappoport

The vaccine mafia and its jury of thugs: your rulers

by Jon Rappoport

November 6, 2013

www.nomorefakenews.com

I’ve written several articles on this subject. As vaccine supporters, enthusiasts, liars, and poisoners keep showing up, I’m sure I’ll write several more.

Here’s the drill. If a parent believes her child has developed autism as the result of a vaccine(s), she must enter the maze of the US government compensation system. Why? Because she can no longer go to court and sue the vaccine manufacturer directly. That’s out.

The manufacturers and the federal government have conspired to erect a wall against those lawsuits, to protect the manufacturers from high-priced judgments.

Continue reading “Jon Rappoport: USG Ends Rule of Law for Vaccine Malpractice”

Noam Chomsky: Should World “De-Americanize?”

Cultural Intelligence
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Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

De-Americanizing the World

Truth Out, 5 November 2013

Originally written in 2012

During the latest episode of the Washington farce that has astonished a bemused world, a Chinese commentator wrote that if the United States cannot be a responsible member of the world system, perhaps the world should become “de-Americanized” — and separate itself from the rogue state that is the reigning military power but is losing credibility in other domains.

 

The Washington debacle's immediate source was the sharp shift to the right among the political class. In the past, the U.S. has sometimes been described sardonically — but not inaccurately — as a one-party state: the business party, with two factions called Democrats and Republicans.

 

That is no longer true. The U.S. is still a one-party state, the business party. But it only has one faction: moderate Republicans, now called New Democrats (as the U.S. Congressional coalition styles itself).

Continue reading “Noam Chomsky: Should World “De-Americanize?””

Stephen E. Arnold: Google Banner Ads Displace Search Results

Commerce, Corruption, IO Impotency
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Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

Google Banner Ads Take Over Results Pages

Google is always striving to improve their flagship search engine. Well, improve its profitability, anyway. Ars Technica reports that “New Banner Ads Push Actual Google Results to Bottom 12% of the Screen.” These new adds do not unobtrusively hug the top of the page; for thirty companies lucky enough to be part of this “experiment,” their ads can dominate the results page. Reporter Casey Johnston reminds us this is a tactic Google pledged eight years ago never to employ. Have dollar signs have weakened the company’s resolve? The article observes:

“The rollout of banner ads comes only days after Google’s most recent earnings call, where financial results showed that Google is struggling with falling mobile ad sales prices. As The New York Times reported, Google sells mobile ads for half to two-thirds as much as desktop ads, but the mobile ads are only a third to a quarter as effective. It bears mentioning that before scrolling, real search results on mobile don’t get much real estate, either.

“Google will not publicly address any aspect of the banner ad experiment beyond saying that it is a ‘very limited, US-only test, in which advertisers can include an image as part of the search ads that show in response to certain branded queries.’”

It is worth noting that last bit—”. . . in response to certain branded queries.” In other words, if you search for “Southwest Airlines,” you might get a really big ad about Southwest Airlines. That’s much more reasonable than getting such advertising if you just searched for “airplanes” or “air travel.” (I would not put that evolution past them, though. Stay tuned.) Still, the tactic is bound to rub many searchers the wrong way. Johnston delves into specifics, augmenting her analysis with several screenshots. She concludes with a prediction—she will not be surprised if this experiment turns into a fixture. Neither will I.

Cynthia Murrell, November 06, 2013

Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, developer of Augmentext

Continue reading “Stephen E. Arnold: Google Banner Ads Displace Search Results”