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Todayâs installment of The Daily is all about dirty tricks. The sort of tricks designed to convince the world that Bitcoin is bad. Spending bitcoin, mining it, or allowing the Chinese to mine it ahead of the U.S. â all bad, according to American Express, the White House (allegedly) and a handful of other haters. Needless to say, weâll set the record straight on all counts.
Also read:Â How Bitcoin Mining Can Help Nuclear Reactors
American Express Fuels Anti-Bitcoin FUD
American Expressâ decision to promote a tweet emphasizing the energy consumption of Proof-of-Work cryptocurrencies has been met with astonishment, with r/Bitcoin describing the act as âanti-crypto propaganda.â As one Redditor quipped: âAh weâve moved into the âthen they fight youâ with shitty marketing phase.â Mining is the most widely misunderstood component of Bitcoin, and one which the media and corporations consistently get wrong, be it through ignorance or ulterior motives.
As news.Bitcoin.com recently noted, âYouâll often hear from mainstream media and uninformed economists that bitcoin burns more energy than a whole country. And while that accusation is far from the truth, as weâve explained before, youâll be surprised to hear something you are not being told â itâs way better to burn excess energy than waste it.â Readers can reach their own conclusions as to why American Express might be interested in playing up Bitcoinâs energy consumption, but itâs safe to say that environmental concerns have nothing to do with it.
No, the White House Doesnât Care
About Bitcoin Mining
How much thought does the White House give to bitcoin mining? âNot a lot,â would be most peopleâs response, but then most people donât work for Ripple. A clickbait piece in Forbes yesterday (Oct. 16) titled âChinaâs Bitcoin Dominance Is Worrying Trumpâs White House â And Pushing It Toward Rippleâ provoked derision in most quarters of the cryptocurrency space. Few, outside of XRP acolytes, took the article seriously, but there was one notable exception â Nouriel Roubini.
The fervent bitcoin-hater shared the Forbes article, asserting that the White House was âwaking upâ to the risks of Chinese mining pools, and credited his U.S. Senate testimony with highlighting the ânational security risksâ of enabling China to control 80 percent of bitcoin mining. As previously noted by news.Bitcoin.com, the location of cryptocurrency mining has no bearing on the networkâs security, and Bitmainâs dominance is unlikely to feature in President Trumpâs daily briefings. Nor, for that matter, is the mining-free alternative offered by Rippleâs native cryptocurrency, no matter how desperately its marketing team tries to insinuate such. Preston Byrne, predictably, was having none of it:
The Case for Post-Bitcoin Maximalism
Youâve heard of Bitcoin maximalism. Now say hello to post-Bitcoin maximalism, the next level of wokeness. While thought pieces generally arenât the preserve of The Daily, which is more news-oriented, Ferdous Bhaiâs treatise on post-bitcoin maximalism warrants a mention. The widely shared post, published on Oct. 15, takes aim at those who wish to define what Bitcoin is and how it should be used. By way of example, the post includes Giacomo Zuccoâs much-maligned slide that professes to share four universal truths about Bitcoin.
Dismissing these notions, and others expressed by maximalists, Bhai writes: âOne of the major reasons I believe we havenât seen a war on Bitcoin is the existence of altcoins. Altcoins are insurance against state-level attacks on Bitcoin âŠÂ From a game theory perspective, state-wide attacks on Bitcoin is a dumb idea, as long as the threat of one or more altcoins to replace Bitcoinâs role exists ⊠Bitcoin is not the end-goal; itâs a means to our goal of censorship-resistant, permissionless, denationalized money that we can opt in and out voluntarily, not by coercion, social engineering or threats of violence.â
As Bitcoin grows stronger, attacks against it from governments, from legacy payment providers, and from concern trolls will only increase. Itâs a dirty war.
What are your thoughts on todayâs news tidbits as featured in The Daily? Let us know in the comments section below.
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