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Bradford City Possible takeover ( + lots of associated crypto discussion)

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  • seth plum said:
    I am sure that to run a bank or credit card company or print and distribute money costs something. However isn’t it the case that banks take customers savings and make money from that whilst they have it, but because of scale can make enough to run the bank?
    If I buy the mythical cauliflower with Sterling are you saying I will get a discount on it if I buy with Sethcoins that I dream up?
    My point that currency is eventually related to productivity is what needs to also be addressed. Otherwise a dreamed up currency is very similar (but worse!) to a currency based on Tulips.
    You realise there are literally tens of thousands of projects and dApps that run on the ethereum network, as well as NFTs? So it is productive (the current ludicrous gas fees tell you that enough!) and verifiably so (you can watch each transaction happen as each block is done in real time).
  • But we've already established it does add benefit as it allows a system in which you don't have to have trust in institutions in order for it to work - just because you don't get it/refuse to engage in understanding it doesn't mean it doesn't have value. It's like saying websites have no value - as they're not tangible real things - they are literally lines of code represented graphically on a screen through using other lines of code. 

    You plainly don't understand how currencies work (they're not backed by anything, except a central bank, which is backed by... the currency itself ie literally trust), crypto is backed by mathematics, which means you don't have to trust it - it just is. 

    Have you read the bitcoin whitepaper by satoshi nakamoto i linked to earlier? It goes into far more depth and described far more simply than I ever could.
    What you seem to be saying is the present system isn’t to be trusted, but the cryptocurrency system is.
    Why?
    Websites are manifestly tangible real things. To say they are not is like saying Music isn’t a tangible real thing.
    You have a dig by telling me I don’t understand, yet am I right in assuming that you work in this cryptocurrency field, so you have an interest in trying to make it all sound kosher?
  • Sometimes that possible, although sometimes negative interest exists and I’ve heard in Australia some banks charge simply to check a balance at an atm. 

    Free banking is like free postage, it’s incorporated into the price of what you buy.

    Its my understanding that lots of processes and services, especially internationally banking can be streamlined using blockchain technology. 
    Are you suggesting things will have two prices? A Sterling price and a cheaper price if you use cryptocurrency (which you have to have paid for)?
    As for streamlined, I have described how I use credit cards and banking, that is streamlined already.
  • seth plum said:
    What you seem to be saying is the present system isn’t to be trusted, but the cryptocurrency system is.
    Why?
    Websites are manifestly tangible real things. To say they are not is like saying Music isn’t a tangible real thing.
    You have a dig by telling me I don’t understand, yet am I right in assuming that you work in this cryptocurrency field, so you have an interest in trying to make it all sound kosher?
    - the present system is run by various middle men all taking their cut, who employ people who are falliable, make mistakes and can and often do do stupid things. Blockchain technology is based on code - mathematics which is infalliable - 2+2 will always = 4, you can automate a lot more things and the system is far more transparent on a widely accessible ledger in which all transactions are public. 

    - Websites are just as much "real things" as cryptocurrency, they're literally just lines of code. 

    - Lol i don't work in cryptocurrency, i wish i did, solidity developers are in incredibly high demand and get paid a fortune. 
  • edited December 2021
    seth plum said:
    Are you suggesting things will have two prices? A Sterling price and a cheaper price if you use cryptocurrency (which you have to have paid for)?
    As for streamlined, I have described how I use credit cards and banking, that is streamlined already.
    streamlined maybe for you as the end user, but not streamlined at all under the bonnet. Stu is correct, a shop has to pay to have a card machine installed in their shop, for instance - this is factored into the price of the items you buy. You then go through visa/mastercard payment which is then contacting your bank to move money they possess (that they owe you) and have invested and pay the vendor through a similar process (and may even be to an account the bank themselves own) - how is that streamlined? And how is it more streamlined than approving a transaction of something you directly own and only you have custody of directly to the wallet of the person you're paying?
  • seth plum said:
    Are you suggesting things will have two prices? A Sterling price and a cheaper price if you use cryptocurrency (which you have to have paid for)?
    As for streamlined, I have described how I use credit cards and banking, that is streamlined already.
    If credit cards could be cheaper to use, do you really think companies would say no? I think you’ve confused blockchain with something that is going to replace existing currencies, I can’t see that happening in our lifetime. The technology has far more uses than that that can save millions of pounds right now. 
  • If credit cards could be cheaper to use, do you really think companies would say no? I think you’ve confused blockchain with something that is going to replace existing currencies, I can’t see that happening in our lifetime. The technology has far more uses than that that can save millions of pounds right now. 
    crypto"currencies" is a misnomer imo. You're not going to go into a shop and buy things with an unregulated decentralised cryptocurrency imo - why would a government give that up? But to suggest they don't have any worth is equally as silly. What's more likely is there will be government issued stablecoins that you'd be able to use, that may replace the current system.
  • What seems to be seemingly happening here is someone seemingly telling people what they seem to be saying. Badly.
  • another publicity seeker .. and the article has a very brief description oh how Bitcoin 'works'
    Bedford FC: Bitcoin podcaster Peter McCormack has Premier League dream for 10th-tier side - BBC Sport
  • crypto"currencies" is a misnomer imo. You're not going to go into a shop and buy things with an unregulated decentralised cryptocurrency imo - why would a government give that up? But to suggest they don't have any worth is equally as silly. What's more likely is there will be government issued stablecoins that you'd be able to use, that may replace the current system.
    Haven’t we agreed that worth is related to faith?
    Is that any different to believing that Tulips are worth something?
    I really struggle to see how a serious currency is not related to something tangible.
    Nobody wants the North Korean Peoples Won because (outside North Korea at least) you can’t get anything tangible with it.
    I doubt that Sainsburys will exchange a box of tea for a couple of my home grown Tulips…they might in certain very narrow circumstances mind you.

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  • another publicity seeker .. and the article has a very brief description oh how Bitcoin 'works'
    Bedford FC: Bitcoin podcaster Peter McCormack has Premier League dream for 10th-tier side - BBC Sport
    In that article the cryptocurrency bloke says ‘this might not work’.
    He also seems to say it will take off because people will buy cryptocurrency sweatshirts and other merchandise.
    Growing and selling Tulips might be more substantial.
  • edited December 2021
    seth plum said:
    Haven’t we agreed that worth is related to faith?
    Is that any different to believing that Tulips are worth something?
    I really struggle to see how a serious currency is not related to something tangible.
    Nobody wants the North Korean Peoples Won because (outside North Korea at least) you can’t get anything tangible with it.
    I doubt that Sainsburys will exchange a box of tea for a couple of my home grown Tulips…they might in certain very narrow circumstances mind you.

    Well, tulips are worth something, aren't they? However you can't create and host a dApp on tulips, you can't write a smart contract with tulips, you can't really do anything with tulips except grow more tulips. I agree with you - it has to be related to something tangible, which cryptocurrencies like ethereum have tangible benefits and uses. The huge advantage of crypto is you don't have to have faith in a centralised entity like a government for it to have value. The faith exists because the code is sound, so there doesn't need to be countless middle men and institutions enforcing that trust whilst simultaneously automating whatever functions those middle men perform.
  • Well, tulips are worth something, aren't they? However you can't create and host a dApp on tulips, you can't write a smart contract with tulips, you can't really do anything with tulips except grow more tulips. I agree with you - it has to be related to something tangible, which cryptocurrencies like ethereum have tangible benefits and uses. The huge advantage of crypto is you don't have to have faith in a centralised entity like a government for it to have value. The faith exists because the code is sound, so there doesn't need to be countless middle men and institutions enforcing that trust whilst simultaneously automating whatever functions those middle men perform.
    The point about a government (theoretically at least) you can establish or remove them and find ways to hold them to account.

  • seth plum said:
    The point about a government (theoretically at least) you can establish or remove them and find ways to hold them to account.

    I wouldn't be surprised in the future we will vote in elections using blockchain technology. Instant, undisputed results for everyone to see.
  • I wouldn't be surprised in the future we will vote in elections using blockchain technology. Instant, undisputed results for everyone to see.
    Already happening in certain parts of the world 
  • stonemuse said:
    Already happening in certain parts of the world 
    but hey, apparently it has no value, right @seth plum
  • edited December 2021
    but hey, apparently it has no value, right @seth plum
    What?
    Electronic voting?
    I have been discussing cryptocurrencies right, @kentaddick
  • seth plum said:
    What you seem to be saying is the present system isn’t to be trusted, but the cryptocurrency system is.
    Why?
    Websites are manifestly tangible real things. To say they are not is like saying Music isn’t a tangible real thing.
    You have a dig by telling me I don’t understand, yet am I right in assuming that you work in this cryptocurrency field, so you have an interest in trying to make it all sound kosher?
    Really? 
    I have a website and I can make it disappear with a click of the mouse.
    What tangible real things can I do that with? It would be nice to know. It might at least save me some trips to the dump.
  • seth plum said:
    What?
    Electronic voting?
    I have been discussing cryptocurrencies right, @kentaddick
    Yes. Voting can and is done using crypto. 
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  • Really? 
    I have a website and I can make it disappear with a click of the mouse.
    What tangible real things can I do that with? It would be nice to know. It might at least save me some trips to the dump.
    You can make music disappear by stopping it/switching it off.
  • Yes. Voting can and is done using crypto. 
    I doubt I will have to pay in bitcoins to vote in the local elections in May.
  • seth plum said:
    You can make music disappear by stopping it/switching it off.
    Yes you can. 

    You can make poo disappear by flushing the toilet.

    Now where were we?
  • seth plum said:
    I doubt I will have to pay in bitcoins to vote in the local elections in May.
    I think this is the mistake your making, cryptocurrency is just a name, you to stop thinking about it as a currency is the same way you think of €$¥ etc. 
  • I think this is the mistake your making, cryptocurrency is just a name, you to stop thinking about it as a currency is the same way you think of €$¥ etc. 
    I think the problem is conflating a technological development called blockchain with currency.
    Technological development is relatively commonplace, we now have ear buds when before there was the clunky Sony Walkman cassette player.
    I am accepting that computers and the World Wide Web will develop, as it does.
    What I am sceptical about is a dreamed up currency where it’s value is a dreamed up act of faith. I entered this conversation talking about buying Bradford City with bunches of 🌷 Tulips which would have been a possibility in Holland back in the day (if Bradford City had existed near Venlo or something).
    If I wanted to get some bitcoins I would have to pay for them in pounds Sterling. If those bitcoins were churning around and growing in perceived value how would I realise that value so as to buy cauliflowers down Lewisham market?
    I would have to change them back into Sterling.
    Life is difficult enough without that kind of rip off palaver.
  • seth plum said:
    I doubt I will have to pay in bitcoins to vote in the local elections in May.
    that's not what i said at all lmao.

    You're being wilfully ignorant and trolling - I've been patient enough with you, but you keep looping back round to the same misguided and uneducated statements even when you've been corrected.
  • edited December 2021
    seth plum said:
    I think the problem is conflating a technological development called blockchain with currency.
    Technological development is relatively commonplace, we now have ear buds when before there was the clunky Sony Walkman cassette player.
    I am accepting that computers and the World Wide Web will develop, as it does.
    What I am sceptical about is a dreamed up currency where it’s value is a dreamed up act of faith. I entered this conversation talking about buying Bradford City with bunches of 🌷 Tulips which would have been a possibility in Holland back in the day (if Bradford City had existed near Venlo or something).
    If I wanted to get some bitcoins I would have to pay for them in pounds Sterling. If those bitcoins were churning around and growing in perceived value how would I realise that value so as to buy cauliflowers down Lewisham market?
    I would have to change them back into Sterling.
    Life is difficult enough without that kind of rip off palaver.
    You're skeptical of the US dollar and Sterling?

    https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/fiatmoney.asp
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