The use of CPU 'effort' as 'earning' bitcoins (or other electronic currency) 
was a good idea.  Problem is, there's plenty of electricity being wasted in the 
process.  It seems to me that it should be possible to develop some sort of use 
for this dedicated CPU effort.  What's a major use of CPU power?  One is 
weather forecasting, another is simulations of various kinds.  These use huge 
amounts of computer-time, and if they are made to be sufficiently divisible 
people could earn digital-coin by doing things that are actually valuable in 
and of themselves.

    Jim Bell



________________________________
 From: David Vorick <[email protected]>
To: Javier Liendo <[email protected]> 
Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2013 5:43 PM
Subject: Re: bitcoin as a global medium of exchange (was Re: Interesting take 
on Sanjuro's Assassination Market)
 


Bitcoin has a lot of problems.

Andy, the problem isn't the denomination, the problem is that Satioshi has 5% 
of all the currency, and the Winklevoss twins have another 0.5%. If bitcoin 
becomes worth 100 trillion dollars, they've got a solid 500 billion for being 
nobody and doing nothing. That's a problem to me.

Another problem with bitcoin is that the blockchain won't scale. Another 
problem is that nobody knows how to price transaction fees. And then there's 
the selfish mining problem.

I think though that we'll see other cryptocurrencies that solve these problems. 
Bitcoin is overinflated, and while the current alt coins aren't offering much 
in the way of competition.

I'm working on one right now. It's not built but the idea is to use 
proof-of-contribution instead of proof-of-work, where contribution is disk 
storage contributed to a distributed network. The disk storage is used to house 
the blockchain, but it can also be sold on a market for people to use. 
Theoretically, this gives people a way to price the currency (using the value 
of cloud storage vs. the price of storage on the network using the network 
currency).

The tricky part is preventing cheating, but I think I have a decent solution.

I don't however know a good way to distribute currency to the network, for the 
problems I was explaining to Jim Bell. Storage is currently getting cheaper at 
an exponential rate, and I have no idea how to predict the volume of users over 
time, nor a good way to measure the volume of users as immune to sybil attacks. 
How do you prevent the early adopters from becoming stupid wealthy if the 
currency takes off?

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