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Bitcoins burning a hole in your pocket? Try ordering some takeout – GigaOM


GigaOM

Bitcoins burning a hole in your pocket? Try ordering some takeout
GigaOM
Paying for food online with Bitcoins isn’t new. Pizzaforcoins has famously set up a site that takes Bitcoins in exchange for ordering a pie from your local Domino’s. Some entrepreneurial food purveyors online, such as Bitcoin Coffee, also deal in the

and more »


GigaOM

Bitcoins burning a hole in your pocket? Try ordering some takeout
GigaOM
Paying for food online with Bitcoins isn't new. Pizzaforcoins has famously set up a site that takes Bitcoins in exchange for ordering a pie from your local Domino's. Some entrepreneurial food purveyors online, such as Bitcoin Coffee, also deal in the ...

and more »

OKCupid Now Accepts Bitcoin – Mashable – Mashable

OKCupid Now Accepts Bitcoin – MashableMashableAs a result, the list of companies accepting payments in Bitcoins is growing everyday. OKCupid is just the last on the list, but there will certainly be more. The dating site has partnered with Coinbase, a …


OKCupid Now Accepts Bitcoin - Mashable
Mashable
As a result, the list of companies accepting payments in Bitcoins is growing everyday. OKCupid is just the last on the list, but there will certainly be more. The dating site has partnered with Coinbase, a platform to buy and sell Bitcoins. So now ...
OKCupid To Begin Accepting Bitcoin Payments For Premium FeaturesHuffington Post

all 4 news articles »

In Bitcoin we cannot trust – CBS Moneywatch


Marketplace.org

In Bitcoin we cannot trust
CBS Moneywatch
(MoneyWatch) Until last week, plenty of news stories were talking up the digital currency Bitcoin, created by anonymous engineers. It has been touted as the brave new world of Internet money, a pure “mathematical” medium of exchange with a barely
Cupcakes meet bitcoinsMarketplace.org
Pittsburgh’s bitcoin faithful few, but ferventPittsburgh Post Gazette
Bitcoins may be the libertarian tax solutionMSN Money
The New American –Wall Street Journal –Forbes
all 97 news articles »

Marketplace.org

In Bitcoin we cannot trust
CBS Moneywatch
(MoneyWatch) Until last week, plenty of news stories were talking up the digital currency Bitcoin, created by anonymous engineers. It has been touted as the brave new world of Internet money, a pure "mathematical" medium of exchange with a barely ...
Cupcakes meet bitcoinsMarketplace.org
Pittsburgh's bitcoin faithful few, but ferventPittsburgh Post Gazette
Bitcoins may be the libertarian tax solutionMSN Money
The New American -Wall Street Journal -Forbes
all 97 news articles »

Digital Bitcoin Gains Prominence as Alternative to Fiat Currency – The New American

Digital Bitcoin Gains Prominence as Alternative to Fiat CurrencyThe New AmericanThe non-government-backed digital currency known as bitcoin (BTC) has soared to prominence in recent weeks after a meteoric rise in value from less than $50 to over $250 in…


Digital Bitcoin Gains Prominence as Alternative to Fiat Currency
The New American
The non-government-backed digital currency known as bitcoin (BTC) has soared to prominence in recent weeks after a meteoric rise in value from less than $50 to over $250 in just days followed by a devastating crash back down to about $85 today. Amid ...

Meet The Man Behind Bitcoin: Gavin Andresen – Huffington Post

Meet The Man Behind Bitcoin: Gavin Andresen
Huffington Post
HuffPost Tech spoke with Gavin Andresen, the chief scientist behind bitcoin, the world’s first online, decentralized currency. Hosted by: Marc Lamont Hill. GUESTS INCLUDE: Bianca Bosker,. New York, NY. Huffington Post Executive Tech Editor; HuffPost


Meet The Man Behind Bitcoin: Gavin Andresen
Huffington Post
HuffPost Tech spoke with Gavin Andresen, the chief scientist behind bitcoin, the world's first online, decentralized currency. Hosted by: Marc Lamont Hill. GUESTS INCLUDE: Bianca Bosker,. New York, NY. Huffington Post Executive Tech Editor; HuffPost ...

ASIC Miner Auction: 10 Block Erupter Blades

UPDATE (4/20): The winners have been announced, and paid ฿75-76 each for each of the cards.  This netted shareholders an estimated 0.00188 per share.  Friedcat has announced this is only the first of a series of auctions so ASIC Miner share holders can expect these special dividends more frequently in the coming weeks.   ASIC Miner, the […]

The post ASIC Miner Auction: 10 Block Erupter Blades appeared first on The Genesis Block.

UPDATE (4/20): The winners have been announced, and paid ฿75-76 each for each of the cards.  This netted shareholders an estimated 0.00188 per share.  Friedcat has announced this is only the first of a series of auctions so ASIC Miner share holders can expect these special dividends more frequently in the coming weeks.

 

ASIC Miner, the first public ASIC mining company, has announced they will be auctioning off their first generation 10 GH/s ASIC mining cards.  Friedcat is in the process of updating from an estimated 10 TH/s up to 50 TH/s.  He had alluded to the concept several times in his public statements that he would first auction off old boards, then auction off excess production of new boards that he is not able to host in his mining facility.  Friedcat was kind enough to include a 72-hour countdown to auction expiration in his post (as of posting this article, there are 2 days and 4 hours left).

The ASIC Block Eruptor Blades were described in detail in the post:

Each of them outputs at least 10G hashes per second. They work well separately, yet are extensible to larger scale. Our entire farm is built up from them. The blades in our mining farm have been running during the last two months. From our experience, they are stable and robust. We list the key features of this product here:

ASIC-Powered Efficiency Each blade consists of 32 hashing chips. It has the baseline speed of 10GHash/s, the rated speed of 10.752GHash/s, and the maximum speed of 12.829GHash/s with overclocking and proper cooling. The power consumption is 83Watts per blade in room temperature on rated clock and voltage.

Modularity Each blades consists of a hasher, a power module, and an Ethernet controller. Each of them is easily replacable.

Independence The blades can be directly plugged to the internet and mine after configuration, with no host PCs needed.

Quick Installation The setup is almost self-explained. After assembly and powering up, access 192.168.1.254:8000 from your PC for configuration.

He was careful to mention that housing for the blades would not be included, however Also included was an album of the blades being auctioned:

ASICBlade

 

Current bidding is at ฿61 and rising quickly -at current network difficulty this would mean a 150 days to break even per card.  Friedcat will however be shipping immediately from his facility in China, so a knowledgeable miner should be able to get hashing shortly after winning the auction.

ASICMiner shares rose sharply from ฿0.8 to ฿1.3 in early trading.  It is expected that revenues raised from selling these cards will be returned as dividends to investors. At ฿60 per card for 10 cards, this will return an estimated ฿0.0015 in additional dividends per share when the weekly dividend is distributed next Thursday.

+60% increase in value over night - not bad for shareholders

+60% increase in value over night – not bad for shareholders

For more information on publicly traded bitcoin mining companies, checkout our focus article Bitcoin mining – public companies

 

The post ASIC Miner Auction: 10 Block Erupter Blades appeared first on The Genesis Block.

Bitcoin ATM coming to Cypress (Video) – L.A. Biz

Bitcoin ATM coming to Cypress (Video)
L.A. Biz
Instead, in the “submitted without comment” category, check out the above video from Bloomberg, which features Jeffrey Berwick, chief editor of “Dollar Vigilante” and developer of a Bitcoin ATM. If you’re in the Cypress area, you’re in luck. Along with


Bitcoin ATM coming to Cypress (Video)
L.A. Biz
Instead, in the "submitted without comment" category, check out the above video from Bloomberg, which features Jeffrey Berwick, chief editor of "Dollar Vigilante" and developer of a Bitcoin ATM. If you're in the Cypress area, you're in luck. Along with ...

Bitcoins may be the libertarian tax solution – MSN Money

Bitcoins may be the libertarian tax solutionMSN MoneyBack in March, the Treasury Department issued a series of guidelines for bitcoin brokers. That guidance was more about registration requirements for brokers and money-laundering laws than it was abou…


Bitcoins may be the libertarian tax solution
MSN Money
Back in March, the Treasury Department issued a series of guidelines for bitcoin brokers. That guidance was more about registration requirements for brokers and money-laundering laws than it was about the tax implications of holding online currency.

Governments Must Co-Opt Bitcoin to Avert Disaster – American Banker

Governments Must Co-Opt Bitcoin to Avert DisasterAmerican BankerThe Sarajevo-like spark of Bitcoin is noteworthy because for the first time it occurred to a large number of people that bit-money (Bitcoin or otherwise) can be kept, stored, and safeguard…


Governments Must Co-Opt Bitcoin to Avert Disaster
American Banker
The Sarajevo-like spark of Bitcoin is noteworthy because for the first time it occurred to a large number of people that bit-money (Bitcoin or otherwise) can be kept, stored, and safeguarded without handing it over to the banks. Unlike bricks of gold ...

and more »

Bitcoin Doesn’t Scare Discover – Wall Street Journal (blog)


Wall Street Journal (blog)

Bitcoin Doesn’t Scare Discover
Wall Street Journal (blog)
Bitcoin is both the name of the peer-to-peer system that allows users to send the money directly to each other online and on mobile devices, as well as the name of the digital currency itself. People can “mine” new bitcoins by using computers to solve


Wall Street Journal (blog)

Bitcoin Doesn't Scare Discover
Wall Street Journal (blog)
Bitcoin is both the name of the peer-to-peer system that allows users to send the money directly to each other online and on mobile devices, as well as the name of the digital currency itself. People can “mine” new bitcoins by using computers to solve ...

Gold, Bitcoins, and the Social Basis for Brand Value – Forbes

Gold, Bitcoins, and the Social Basis for Brand Value
Forbes
Bitcoin is the world’s first online currency, created by an anonymous programmer and used in peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions in which the participating parties choose to recognize its value. Gold is perhaps the world’s oldest currency, and it has
What the Gold Crash and Bitcoin Crash Have in CommonCountingPips (blog)

all 2 news articles »


Gold, Bitcoins, and the Social Basis for Brand Value
Forbes
Bitcoin is the world's first online currency, created by an anonymous programmer and used in peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions in which the participating parties choose to recognize its value. Gold is perhaps the world's oldest currency, and it has ...
What the Gold Crash and Bitcoin Crash Have in CommonCountingPips (blog)

all 2 news articles »

Krugman Missed Bitcoin’s Value – Seeking Alpha

Krugman Missed Bitcoin’s Value
Seeking Alpha
Paul Krugman has blogged not once, but twice, on the subject of Bitcoin, in the last week. The most definite thing that can be ascertained from his writing is that he is not a cryptologist and may not appreciate the specific way Bitcoin differs from


Krugman Missed Bitcoin's Value
Seeking Alpha
Paul Krugman has blogged not once, but twice, on the subject of Bitcoin, in the last week. The most definite thing that can be ascertained from his writing is that he is not a cryptologist and may not appreciate the specific way Bitcoin differs from ...

Why BitCoin is Here to Stay: Q&A with Jerry Brito – Reason

Why BitCoin is Here to Stay: Q&A with Jerry Brito
Reason
Don’t bet on the decentralized currency Bitcoin as a retirement investment, says Mercatus Center policy analyst Jerry Brito, but go long on it as the payment system of the future. Reason’s Nick Gillespie talks with Brito, the editor of the new

and more »


Why BitCoin is Here to Stay: Q&A with Jerry Brito
Reason
Don't bet on the decentralized currency Bitcoin as a retirement investment, says Mercatus Center policy analyst Jerry Brito, but go long on it as the payment system of the future. Reason's Nick Gillespie talks with Brito, the editor of the new ...

and more »

The Mises Institute is clueless about Bitcoin

The Ludwig von Mises Institute (the one behind mises.org, located in Auburn, Alabama) posted several articles over the last week or so about Bitcoin:http://mises.org/daily/6399/The-Moneyness-of-Bitcoins (Nikolay Gertchev)http://mises.org/daily/640…

The Ludwig von Mises Institute (the one behind mises.org, located in Auburn, Alabama) posted several articles over the last week or so about Bitcoin:

Prior to that, they posted about it during June 2011, by Justin Ptak:

And one in October 2011, by Jeffrey Tucker:

In the meantime, Jeffrey Tucker became a Bitcoin enthusiast (disclaimer: I’ve been interviewed by Jeffrey and Laissez-Faire Books is publishing my book about Bitcoin, so I might be biased). Justin Ptak appears now to be friends (on Facebook) with Bitcoin fans. This may or may not imply his change of opinion, but it doesn’t look like he published anything more about Bitcoin at least.

Now, there is nothing wrong with criticism. And Bitcoin can be criticised, there are many legitimate objections to it. But to criticise something merely because someone feels a pressure to criticise, and then rushes to hastily print something quickly is not scholarly work. It is symptomatic that the institute didn’t publish anything in between. They are under pressure to publish something when there is a media interest in Bitcoin, and hence hastily rush to assemble something. But actual academic research appears to be absent.

The main issue appears to be the conflation of money, unit of account and a medium of exchange. Unit of account is not a necessary function of either money or a medium of exchange. It is merely a possible byproduct of it.

A further issue is the “self-reinforcing monetary spiral” (i.e. which mainstream economists call the network effect), in which one medium of exchange emerges victorious and beats all other media of exchange and that we call money. But this is merely a hypothetical model that is furthermore prone to misinterpretation. First of all, transaction costs can prevent this spiral to escalate to its final stage. Currently, we have hundred something currencies all over the world. Legal restrictions prevent this spiral from playing out. But this is merely an empirical factor, rather than a rule that gives legal restrictions magical powers. Even without legal restrictions, we can’t be entirely sure that the transaction costs won’t hinder a full monetisation.

The second issue is the neglect of other media of exchange, those that are not money. Mises calls them “secondary media of exchange”, and Rothbard calls them “quasi-monies”. These goods are liquid, and a part of their demand is due to their liquidity. They are not liquid enough to be money, but nevertheless they serve, not only through their other uses, but also through their liquidity, a valuable purpose. This is what Bitcoin is. This is what gold is too. And this is also the pool for potential candidates for money. Before something can be money, it must be a medium of exchange.

Bitcoin is somewhat liquid, and it has a very important advantage against extant money: it reduces transaction costs. It reduces transaction costs even further than existing payment mechanisms, so that even a fluctuating price is not enough to offset this reduction. We can therefore expect Bitcoin to be used as a payment mechanism in those areas where it can substitute for other payment mechanisms. This is also a type of network effect. Once they use it as a payment mechanism, people may decide that they do not actually need to fully convert it to/from fiat, and use Bitcoin as a store of value as well. Indeed, Tony Gallippi from BitPay reported (can’t find the link now) that their customers are increasingly opting to keep a larger proportion of the payment in Bitcoin, whereas at the beginning they just converted the whole sum to fiat money.

Yet again I have to quote White in his brilliant insight, which has not yet been processed by other Austrians:

“Coinage reduces transaction costs compared to simple exchange, because of authentication and weighing. Bank liabilities also reduce transaction costs. But these are empirical factors, and not something inherent in all possible monetary systems.”

Rather, other Austrians make empirical (!!!) statements like this (Salerno):

“With the use of clearing systems, money substitutes are virtually costless to transfer.”

An adoption as a payment mechanism, and expansion into a store of value are the early stages of monetisation. This is the same mechanism as the Austrians hypothesised occurred during pre-monetary times, only we now already have a different money. But already existing money is not a showstopper for this mechanism to work. Liquidity is just not the only factor influencing the choice of media of exchange. The argument of Hoppe that

“Driven by no more than narrow self-interest, man will always prefer a more general, and if possible, a universal medium of exchange to a less general or non-universal one.”

is therefore false. It is only apodictically true in a world without transaction costs. It still may happen in a world with transaction costs, we merely can’t be sure about it. And Bitcoin is a hint that empirical factors can’t be dismissed entirely. EDIT: If the statement of Hoppe was true, once money exists, it could never have been replaced by a new money, and we clearly know from history that that’s not the case.

Will Bitcoin ever become money? That’s an empirical issue and we can’t know this in advance. But equally we cannot dismiss it, unless we find a competitor to Bitcoin based on fiat money (or precious metals like gold) that is able to mitigate the transaction cost advantage of Bitcoin. And that would be very difficult to pull off. One of the reasons is the transaction costs associated with the boundary between money in the narrower sense and money substitutes (such as redemption, settlement, and so on), which Bitcoin does not need. Bitcoin is form-invariant and can exist in practically any imaginable (and unimaginable) form. The second one is regulation (management of money and money substitutes is strictly regulated and burdened by many restrictions which have nothing to do with monetary policy, such as anti-money-laundering, capital controls, war on drugs and so on). Even if regulation affects Bitcoin, unless there is an alternative that isn’t affected by regulation, there is still no reason for Bitcoin users to switch to something else.

But Bitcoin can do much more than become money. With algorithmic contracts, it can make large parts of the financial sector obsolete. With its ultra low transaction costs, it can make money substitutes redundant (and, obviously, without money substitutes there is no credit expansion and without credit expansion there is no business cycle). Again with its transaction costs and abstract base, anyone can make a payment to anyone, anytime, anyplace. Nothing that has existed so far in the history can do that. And even if we disregard it as a hypothetical, we just need to remember that gold already failed, because it was reduced from money to a secondary medium of exchange. This was only possible because money substitutes emerged. If nothing else, Bitcoin shows that money substitutes are merely an empirical quirk and not an inherent feature of monetary systems, and for that alone is it should change the landscape of the Austrian literature forever, and open a wide spectrum of possibilities for research and our understanding of money.

For more in depth analysis, I recommend my master’s thesis, or if you wait a while you can get an updated version in a book format.

Booting Up: Silk Road Founder Unruffled by Bitcoin Ups and Downs – Betabeat


Betabeat

Booting Up: Silk Road Founder Unruffled by Bitcoin Ups and Downs
Betabeat
The founder of the Silk Road–who goes by the name “Dread Pirate Roberts”–isn’t too worried about Bitcoin booms and busts. “Bitcoin’s foundation, its algorithms and network, don’t change with the exchange rate.” [Forbes]. The New York Times won a
LIVE: Will Drug Users’ Addiction to Bitcoin Help or Hurt It?SiliconANGLE (blog)

all 2 news articles »


Betabeat

Booting Up: Silk Road Founder Unruffled by Bitcoin Ups and Downs
Betabeat
The founder of the Silk Road–who goes by the name “Dread Pirate Roberts”–isn't too worried about Bitcoin booms and busts. “Bitcoin's foundation, its algorithms and network, don't change with the exchange rate.” [Forbes]. The New York Times won a ...
LIVE: Will Drug Users' Addiction to Bitcoin Help or Hurt It?SiliconANGLE (blog)

all 2 news articles »