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    I’m hoping to hell this will gain more widespread usage… I wish I could mine some but I don’t have a powerfull gpu in my pc so I’d assume it’s pretty pointless.
    Just my 0.005BTC :bounce_fl

    You don’t wanna buy drugs offline do you! 😛

    LoL no my whole post has got nothing to do with that! Bitcoin is definitely gaining traction though – there was an article about it on bbc.
    I bet you a bitcoin that it’s gonna get big soon enough 😀

    I think ‘XAU’ is the currency to go by.

    @p0ly 498422 wrote:

    I think ‘XAU’ is the currency to go by.

    If I understand what that is correctly then, bitcoin is on par with the added benefit of being digital.

    Digital hashes can be just as hard to mine as gold is… :bounce:

    @dubstep_joe 498431 wrote:

    If I understand what that is correctly then, bitcoin is on par with the added benefit of being digital.

    Digital hashes can be just as hard to mine as gold is… :bounce:

    A piece of paper with £20 on it isn’t gonna stand the test of time IMO.. It’s paper..

    Where does bitcoins value come from, i do not know… is it just numbers on a screen to do with other made up currencies.

    Debt = Money, Money = Debt

    @p0ly 498436 wrote:

    A piece of paper with £20 on it isn’t gonna stand the test of time IMO.. It’s paper..

    Where does bitcoins value come from, i do not know… is it just numbers on a screen to do with other made up currencies.

    Debt = Money, Money = Debt

    It gets its value because enough other people are now willing to accept bitcoins in exchange for a good or service they provide. That’s the ultimate source of value of a currency – even gold only has value because enough other people on the planet would be willing to give you something in exchange for it.

    What’s interesting is that it’s aquired this status without being backed by any government (or possibly, entirely because it isn’t controlled by any government). It’s a truly open-movement currency, a store of wealth that has arrived out of a common consensus that it’s safe and useful enough to take as a form of payment, and operates outside the remit of the authorities, and entirely anonymously. I kinda like it!

    ALL currency systems depend on trust and confidance in them. Indeed, all business transactions are based around trust.

    Once you understand that, you can understand what the limitations of currency are – and how currencies are devalued by rumour, scandal, and similar propaganda techniques.

    Now, I don’t know about Bitcoin. I suspect it has its uses and limitations, like all currency systems.

    Currency systems have limitations? Sure they do. Plutonium does not have a spot market price. Yet it is, weight for weight, a better energy source than any other currently available.

    Snag with it as a commodity – it’s very handy for detonating thermonuclear weapons. Which is why trading in it is frowned upon.

    Now, if you can alter the amount of energy available, and make lots of it, anytime, for no cost… cost of energy comes down. Which makes manufacturing a lot easier.

    Fact about energy – used to be the main user was industry (in the West). With a lot of industry shipped out to the Far East, guess who is paying the energy companies for lost revenue? That’s right, the domestic customers – me and you.

    Getting indepdendent from outside suppliers is an important goal for any sort of ongoing concern, whether industrial or domestic.

    @sungazer 498454 wrote:

    It gets its value because enough other people are now willing to accept bitcoins in exchange for a good or service they provide. That’s the ultimate source of value of a currency – even gold only has value because enough other people on the planet would be willing to give you something in exchange for it.

    Gold isn’t fictional though, it’s real. It’s a rare substance and very beautiful IMO..

    Why do you think every time you go to a supermarket in the UK (and everywhere else) you see a few ‘Cash 4 Gold’ stalls… Gold will be around a long time…

    I just find it amazing how a piece of paper is worth more than metal coins. it’s a complete scam.

    @p0ly 498465 wrote:

    Gold isn’t fictional though, it’s real. It’s a rare substance and very beautiful IMO..

    Why do you think every time you go to a supermarket in the UK (and everywhere else) you see a few ‘Cash 4 Gold’ stalls… Gold will be around a long time…

    I just find it amazing how a piece of paper is worth more than metal coins. it’s a complete scam.

    Gold is only worth something because pretty much everyone in the world agrees that it’s worth something. It has no inherent worth, only that which we ascribe to it because of it’s useful properties as a store of wealth (rare, not being made any more, stable, tradable, fungible, easy to verify it’s not a forgery)

    @sungazer 498494 wrote:

    Gold is only worth something because pretty much everyone in the world agrees that it’s worth something. It has no inherent worth, only that which we ascribe to it because of it’s useful properties as a store of wealth (rare, not being made any more, stable, tradable, fungible, easy to verify it’s not a forgery)

    Uhuh I know this, but like I said Gold isn’t fictional… Money is… 97% of it is numbers on a computer screen. if you can’t see the difference between Gold being real and money fiction then i give up trying 😛

    If you have a piece of every printed version of money and years etc then i think it could become a collectors item in the future but other than that it’s gonna be a load of poo. I don’t know if we’ll see economic collapse in our life spans but I wouldn’t be surprised if we did one bit.

    When I said Gold I meant silver and copper and the likes too but can’t remember their XA_ off by heart so left it.

    silver and copper have many many uses unlike bonded paper with some blue blooded germans face on the front.

    [QUOTE=p0ly;498465
    I just find it amazing how a piece of paper is worth more than metal coins. it’s a complete scam. – lol

    For poly it’s gold. For me it’s bitcoin. For some it’s cows.

    They aren’t really just made up numbers. They come from calculated hashes. Real work went in (electrical/computing processing) to ‘mine’ them.

    For poly it’s gold. For me it’s bitcoin. For some it’s cows.

    They aren’t really just made up numbers. They come from calculated hashes. Real work went in (electrical/computing processing) to ‘mine’ them.

    But they are fictional though. a cow isn’t fictional it’s real, silver isn’t fictional it’s real.. obviously if the currencies collapsed you wouldn’t be able to use bitcoins or pounds to buy silver anymore you’d use something else.

    what i’m trying to say is money is fictional…. it does nothing itself it’s just we’ve put a value to it, but silver is real, it’s uses are real and it’s traded in the same way as money.

    what would you rather have if money lost all value. 2 billion dollar notes or 2 billion dollars worth of silver…

    btw pm me, where in the world currently are you, we haven’t spoken for awhile. i miss you

    We have become lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of the Economy! There
    are those who will say that the Economy has forsaken us! Nay! You have
    forsaken the Economy!! And now you know the Economy’s wrath! O thoust can
    shop at a sporting goods store, but knowest thou that the Economy will take
    away thy Broncos’ cap from thine head! Mock
    the Economy without fear! Thine own stockbrokers… now lie dead by their own
    hand and thou knowest that thy stockbrokers did not fear the Economy! Well
    here we are, my friends! You have brought the Economy’s vengeance upon
    yourselves!

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