The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking
Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this Amazon book.
Books Business & Money Economics
When a pseudonymous programmer introduced “a new electronic cash system that’s fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party” to a small online mailing list in 2008, very few paid attention. Ten years later, and against all odds, this upstart autonomous decentralized software offers an unstoppable and globally-accessible hard money alternative to modern central banks. The Bitcoin Standard analyzes the historical context to the rise of Bitcoin, the economic properties that have allowed it to grow quickly, and its likely economic, political, and social implications. While Bitcoin is a new invention of the digital age, the problem it purports to solve is as old as human society itself: transferring value across time and space. Ammous takes the reader on an engaging journey through the history of technologies performing the functions of money, from primitive systems of trading limestones and seashells, to metals, coins, the gold standard, and modern government debt. Exploring what gave these technologies their monetary role, and how most lost it, provides the reader with a good idea of what makes for sound money, and sets the stage for an economic discussion of its consequences for individual and societal future-orientation, capital accumulation, trade, peace, culture, and art. Compellingly, Ammous shows that it is no coincidence that the loftiest achievements of humanity have come in societies enjoying the benefits of sound monetary regimes, nor is it coincidental that monetary collapse has usually accompanied civilizational collapse. With this background in place, the book moves on to explain the operation of Bitcoin in a functional and intuitive way. Bitcoin is a decentralized, distributed piece of software that converts electricity and processing power into indisputably accurate records, thus allowing its users to utilize the Internet to perform the traditional functions of money without having to rely on, or trust, any authorities or infrastructure in the physical world. Bitcoin is thus best understood as the first successfully implemented form of digital cash and digital hard money. With an automated and perfectly predictable monetary policy, and the ability to perform final settlement of large sums across the world in a matter of minutes, Bitcoin’s real competitive edge might just be as a store of value and network for final settlement of large payments―a digital form of gold with a built-in settlement infrastructure. Ammous’ firm grasp of the technological possibilities as well as the historical realities of monetary evolution provides for a fascinating exploration of the ramifications of voluntary free market money. As it challenges the most sacred of government monopolies, Bitcoin shifts the pendulum of sovereignty away from governments in favor of individuals, offering us the tantalizing possibility of a world where money is fully extricated from politics and unrestrained by borders. The final chapter of the book explores some of the most common questions surrounding Bitcoin: Is Bitcoin mining a waste of energy? Is Bitcoin for criminals? Who controls Bitcoin, and can they change it if they please? How can Bitcoin be killed? And what to make of all the thousands of Bitcoin knock-offs, and the many supposed applications of Bitcoin’s ‘block chain technology’? The Bitcoin Standard is the essential resource for a clear understanding of the rise of the Internet’s decentralized, apolitical, free-market alternative to national central banks.
Reddazon may receive an affiliate commission if you make purchases on Amazon.com through this site. Thank you for using these links to support Reddazon.
Saifedean Ammous
Reddit Posts and Comments
0 posts • 129 mentions • top 31 shown below
8 points • gizram84
For those that don't know, this model was originally defined in Saifedean Ammous's The Bitcoin Standard. PlanB did a great job of implementing the model, and creating lots of easy to understand content to explain it all.
When someone says "gold is valuable because it's scarce", they actually mean that it has a high stock to flow ratio.
For instance, platinum is much more rare than gold, but gold is worth much more than platinum. Absolute scarcity is not actually the most important factor. The stock to flow ratio is the ratio of how much exists compared to how much is created each year.
Gold has the highest stock to flow ratio of all precious metals, which is why it's worth the most. Platinum is much more rare than gold, but has a much lower stock to flow ratio.
43 points • TurongaFry3000
You never need to sell Bitcoin because Bitcoin is money.
It's different than stock. You can't spend stocks. You can spend Bitcoin.
Learn more about Bitcoin.
Quick Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/3wQVZOjxa5w
https://medium.com/@vijayboyapati/the-bullish-case-for-bitcoin-6ecc8bdecc1
In depth Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/l1si5ZWLgy0
The Bitcoin Standard: https://youtu.be/Zbm772vF-5M
https://www.Bitcoin.org
r/BitcoinBeginners r/Bitcoin
Bitcoin is the next Bitcoin: https://youtu.be/p0ftZgCEZos
TO GET STARTED, you need to buy some bitcoin from a Bitcoin exchange. I recommend the cash app for its 2% purchase fees and free withdrawals. Then withdraw your Bitcoin to your own non custodial Bitcoin wallet. This is a wallet where you control the private keys that control your money and not where someone else is holding your money, like the cash app where you bought it from.
Not your keys, not your coins. Bitcoin is the freedom from needing banks and governments to transfer digital money. Do not use a custodial Bitcoin wallet. Don't put your Bitcoin into someone else's hands. Hold it yourself in a non custodial wallet. Always withdraw your Bitcoin from the exchange where you bought it from.
I recommend using Mycelium Bitcoin wallet for Android. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mycelium.wallet
Make sure to write down your 12 word restore phrase. It can restore your Bitcoin on any device. So keep it safe and secure. No pictures. No typing into a file. Pen and paper only. This phrase essentially IS your Bitcoin because control of your money is unlocked with it.
Never sell your Bitcoin. Just spend it when you want to take profit. Selling Bitcoin on exchanges lowers the price per Bitcoin. So just spend it directly like how it's supposed to work. Don't day trade Bitcoin. Just buy and hold forever. There's so many people ~8 billion and only 21 million BTC. Bitcoin to infinity.
Bitcoin is the first truly scarce digital asset. Bitcoin is digital gold. https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
Spend Bitcoin here: https://Purse.io - buy anything from Amazon using Bitcoin and name your own discount. I usually do a 20-25% discount.
Here's repository of stores that accept Bitcoin: https://www.acceptedhere.io/
When spending your Bitcoin, there's a transaction fee. (It goes to the Bitcoin miner who mines the block that contains that transaction).
Check https://mempool.space/ to see how low to set your payment. You'll set the transaction fee when sending a payment from your Bitcoin wallet. (Hopefully Mycelium)
If you want to learn everything else about Bitcoin: https://www.lopp.net/bitcoin-information/getting-started.html
And read The Bitcoin Standard: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861
Plus there's a second layer called the Bitcoin lightning network. Free and instant transfers based on Bitcoin. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Network#:~:text=The%20Lightning%20Network%20is%20a,to%20the%20bitcoin%20scalability%20problem.
2 points • picoder_
I read Saifedean Ammous's book (https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861) and it's a fantastic history of world economics and how Bitcoin solves and meets the criteria of a sound fiat alternative. I'd recommend anyone read this book, regardless if he's a dolt when it comes to lumping all alts together as "scams."
2 points • BitcoinFan7
Give him the bitcoin standard to read. I bet we are over $30k before he finishes it.
3 points • Raverrevolution
I think you're looking for this. It's basically the economic side of Bitcoin;
1 points • rocketeer8015
Currently reading https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861. I like it, it goes into the whole difference between hard money and soft money(reading it in German so not sure if those are the terms used in English version) and why and how the latter has failed historically.
It’s fairly entertaining too imho.
1 points • Foureyedguy
All your questions are answered in the book "The Bitcoin Standard" by Saifedean Ammous.
Here's a link https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861
Happy learning :)
1 points • coinCram
The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_fabc_DhkTFb272FM0Y
1 points • caferr14
Read “the bitcoin standard” by safideen ammous
Will educate you not only on bitcoin but the history of money in general and how we got to the point where the world needs bitcoin. One of the best books on the subject.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_IpAjEb7B6W1X7
1 points • beowulfpt
Read this. Shouldn't skip it, especially at your age and if you say you don't know what you're doing. Probably nothing has the potential to give you more spectacular returns in the next 5 years. But there's risk involved still, of course. But at your age, well, risk isn't that much of a big deal unless you go really wild.
1 points • Dan03USMC
The Bitcoin Standard: The Decentralized Alternative to Central Banking https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_QliQEbFH2Z1NZ
1 points • dudedustin
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861/ref=nodl_
2 points • stobabuinov
Look up "The Bitcoin Standard" by Saifedean Ammous, a young Austrian economist (PhD and all).
There is a strong Austrian argument in favour of Bitcoin, and the Austrian school seems to be the only methodology that can make sense of it (as per Bob Murphy). Bitcoin is engineered money, distilled to money's most abstract properties and divorced from its traditional but incidental properties.
Curiously, Bitcoin also seems to contradict classic Austrian theory in that its price so far has been following a simple analytical model (the stock-to-flow model), which is deemed naive by the old Austrians. It's uncharted territory.
16 points • BlandTomato
Yes. Check out the stock to flow theory. https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
Bitcoin just had its third reward halving, which means that the amount of new Bitcoin created has just been cut in half for the third time. The first two times caused a massive price increase.
Learn more about Bitcoin.
Quick Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/3wQVZOjxa5w
https://medium.com/@vijayboyapati/the-bullish-case-for-bitcoin-6ecc8bdecc1
In depth Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/l1si5ZWLgy0
The Bitcoin Standard: https://youtu.be/Zbm772vF-5M
https://www.Bitcoin.org
r/BitcoinBeginners r/Bitcoin
Bitcoin is the next Bitcoin: https://youtu.be/p0ftZgCEZos
TO GET STARTED, you need to buy some bitcoin from a Bitcoin exchange. I recommend the cash app for its 2% purchase fees and free withdrawals. Then withdraw your Bitcoin to your own non custodial Bitcoin wallet. This is a wallet where you control the private keys that control your money and not where someone else is holding your money, like the cash app where you bought it from.
Not your keys, not your coins. Bitcoin is the freedom from needing banks and governments to transfer digital money. Do not use a custodial Bitcoin wallet. Don't put your Bitcoin into someone else's hands. Hold it yourself in a non custodial wallet. Always withdraw your Bitcoin from the exchange where you bought it from.
I recommend using Mycelium Bitcoin wallet for Android. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mycelium.wallet
Make sure to write down your 12 word restore phrase. It can restore your Bitcoin on any device. So keep it safe and secure. No pictures. No typing into a file. Pen and paper only. This phrase essentially IS your Bitcoin because control of your money is unlocked with it.
Never sell your Bitcoin. Just spend it when you want to take profit. Selling Bitcoin on exchanges lowers the price per Bitcoin. So just spend it directly like how it's supposed to work. Don't day trade Bitcoin. Just buy and hold forever. There's so many people ~8 billion and only 21 million BTC. Bitcoin to infinity.
Bitcoin is the first truly scarce digital asset. Bitcoin is digital gold. https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
Spend Bitcoin here: https://Purse.io - buy anything from Amazon using Bitcoin and name your own discount. I usually do a 20-25% discount.
Here's repository of stores that accept Bitcoin: https://www.acceptedhere.io/
When spending your Bitcoin, there's a transaction fee. (It goes to the Bitcoin miner who mines the block that contains that transaction).
Check https://mempool.space/ to see how low to set your payment. You'll set the transaction fee when sending a payment from your Bitcoin wallet. (Hopefully Mycelium)
If you want to learn everything else about Bitcoin: https://www.lopp.net/bitcoin-information/getting-started.html
And read The Bitcoin Standard: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861
Plus there's a second layer called the Bitcoin lightning network. Free and instant transfers based on Bitcoin. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Network#:~:text=The%20Lightning%20Network%20is%20a,to%20the%20bitcoin%20scalability%20problem.
Phoenix wallet is the best Bitcoin lightning network wallet. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fr.acinq.phoenix.mainnet
1 points • ChuckShores
Whenever that hangover wears off, buy and read this book if you want to get serious about Bitcoin.
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861
1 points • gilfjord
+1 for Bitcoin.org, it's good for learning how to safely make your first moves and gain a basic understanding of Bitcoin.
The Bitcoin Standard is a good, short read about money and its role in history and society, a good thing to do to learn more once you've already started making those first moves because you will want to understand more.
1 points • MattiaProserpio00
I bought my first sum of Bitcoin March this year. My advice is to study how money and bitcoin work:
The bitcoin standard
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=The+bitcoin+standard&qid=1599656822&sr=8-1
Mastering Bitcoin
https://www.amazon.com/Mastering-Bitcoin-Programming-Open-Blockchain-ebook/dp/B071K7FCD4
The first one is a must.
1 points • Tasmarques
A minha primeira recomendação era o vídeo do Ray Dalio já sugerido, a segunda é leres o livro The Bitcoin Standard, do Saifedean Ammous. ( https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861)
O primeiro capítulo faz uma excelente contextualização sobre a origem do dinheiro como meio de troca, reserva de valor e unidade de contagem. Os capítulos seguintes falam sobre os diversos tipos de políticas monetárias e o seu impacto na inflação e no poder de compra da população. Finalmente, apenas nos últimos capítulos, apresenta Bitcoin como a solução disruptiva que resolve os principais problemas do sistema atual. Recomendo.
1 points • art_of_bug
If you are technical - Mastering Bitcoin
If you want economic perspective - The Bitcoin Standard
If you don't have much time and want something quick - The Little Bitcoin Book
2 points • ProfPlum_
You keep repeating that the only benefit you see is anonymity. That is actually not the case at all, in regards to Bitcoin. Cash is far more anonymous than a BTC transaction. Every single BTC transaction is stored within a block, which is the public ledger of ALL BTC transactions. While it only displays wallet codes, it is possible for government agencies to crack down on illegal activity. This makes cash far more preferable for criminal use.
One benefit of Bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies, is the lack of government control. Since it is out of governments reach, the free market assigns it's value and usefulness. Government control of money has been problematic in MANY civilizations before us.
>"...Central bank tinkering with the money supply has induced recessions, exacerbated unemployment, and given rise to a global banking system based on profiteering and corruption.
>
>We need look only as far as the mortgage-market shenanigans underpinning the financial crisis of 2009 for insight into why disaffected consumers everywhere would support the efforts of anonymous programmers in subverting a system that has done them no favors. These ideas are not new. The Austrian School, a school of economic thought founded in 1871, holds among its core tenets the idea that economic manipulation by central banks is not beneficial." Source
Bitcoin is decentralized through thousands of nodes across the world. The equipment needed to "mine" Bitcoin uses a LOT of electricity, making it very expensive to run. Mining is an integral part of the system, because that is the process of combining computing power across the world to continuously update and verify transactions on the public blockchain. Miners are rewarded (in BTC) for the computing power they add to the blockchain, through fees and block rewards.
At this point in Bitcoin's life, it is nearly impossible for anybody to assume control over BTC. The only way to do that would be to control 51% of BTC's computing power. In order to do that one would need to spend BILLIONS of dollars on mining equipment, set it all up with adequate air circulation, cooling, and space (more $). And then when they turn it on, and Bitcoin's users see that the system is compromised, VERY quickly the price of BTC will reduce to 0. Which means, you just wasted billions of dollars on equipment that is now useless, real estate to store the equipment, and every other cost of setting up such a large scale endeavor. Moral of the story, it's a fools errand for anybody to attempt to control BTC, because that very action would render BTC useless.
It would be highly counterproductive to their society if a government decided to ban Bitcoin. Since it is a global innovation, a country which bans it will be left behind while the rest of the world moves forward. This is an interesting article about the topic.
At the end of the day, Bitcoin is there for you to use or not use. It makes no difference if you use it or not.
If you are trying to understand the monetary benefits of a decentralized currency, and not trolling, read this book.
1 points • InMyDayTVwasBooks
Best book covering the history: Digital Gold
Best book covering the economics: The Bitcoin Standard
Best technical Book: Mastering Bitcoin
Best social implications book: Sovereignty Through Mathematics
2 points • Thanatos_1
Once you understand what absolute scarcity means economically, paired with being decentralized and uncensorable, this question answers itself.
https://vijayboyapati.medium.com/the-bullish-case-for-bitcoin-6ecc8bdecc1
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861
https://nakamotoinstitute.org/mempool/gradually-then-suddenly/
https://nakamotoinstitute.org/mempool/bitcoin-obsoletes-all-other-money/
https://nakamotoinstitute.org/mempool/speculative-attack/
https://nakamotoinstitute.org/mempool/hyperbitcoinization/
1 points • slepyhed
Here's a great, short book that answers your question, free to download:
https://mises.org/library/what-has-government-done-our-money
I also recommend The Bitcoin Standard:
1 points • bitusher
Bitcoin-Standard is 2/3rds about the foundations of money and banking system.
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861
Here is a videos that explains the modern fiat and banking system
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZ8g_1BmDf8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-09ap6zIB6I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHe0bXAIuk0
One key principle that you must understand is the The Cantillon effect: "the first ones to receive the newly created money see their incomes rise, whereas the last ones to receive the newly created money see their purchasing power decline as consumer price inflation comes about."
https://mises.org/library/how-central-banking-increased-inequality
0 points • CypherPoet
Given Bitcoin's characteristics, what makes you think it can't be used as a store of value, medium of exchange, and unit of account?
(If you're unfamiliar with Bitcoin's characteristics, I'd recommend bookmarking https://bitcoin-only.com and reading The Bitcoin Standard to improve your understanding.)
1 points • CYBORGMEXICAN
Nixon suspended the international convertibility of the Dollar to Gold. This meant that we were no longer using hard money and the disastrous effects of easy money started to take hold.
​
This website is run by sound money advocates, Bitcoiners in particular. If you are interested in learning about sound money and Bitcoin here are some excellent resources.
https://www.amazon.com/Bitcoin-Standard-Decentralized-Alternative-Central/dp/1119473861
https://www.whatbitcoindid.com/the-beginners-guide-to-bitcoin
1 points • lwc-wtang12
Okay... the advice you are getting here so far is NOT good.
1) DON'T TRADE. You may think you know what you are doing but you don't. I'm sorry i'm not trying to be a dick but the odds are just sooooo stacked against you. Your tactic should be to buy and hold. Any competent investor will tell you holding is far smarter.
2) You can't open a bank account 18?? You don't need your parent's consent to open a bank account at 18 in the United States. Where do you live?
3) Exchanges (Where to buy safely): You want to use an exchange that allows you to withdrawal your crypto (Unless you are dead set on trading it). Use a super basic exchange and wallet to start out. I have never heard of the other wallets and exchanges mentioned and I have been in this space for a decent amount of time. GO BASIC as a beginner. You may experience fees but your chances of being screwed through some scam are far lower. Try coinbase pro (lower fees than the standard coinbase platform), Gemini, Kraken, and Binance to get started. These are reputable and well-known exchanges where in the event of a hack, they will likely be able to repay investors. Coinbase, for example, only holds 2% of client funds online and insures their clients for 100% of any loss from a security breach. Here are two paragraphs on Coinbase's site explaining this:
" Coinbase prioritizes the security of our customer's funds, all digital currency that Coinbase holds online is insured. If Coinbase were to suffer a breach of its online storage, the insurance policy would pay out to cover any customer funds lost as a result. Coinbase holds less than 2% of customer funds online. The rest is held in offline storage.
Please note that the insurance policy covers any losses resulting from a breach of Coinbase's physical security, cyber security, or by employee theft. This insurance policy does not cover any losses resulting from the compromise of your individual Coinbase account. It is your responsibility to use a strong password and maintain control of all login credentials you use to access Coinbase."
4) Wallets (How to store your coins safely): This can be a semi-complex topic that gets into the types of storing your funds. When you buy crypto on coinbase, for example, the crypto is stored in one of their wallets. While coinbase will refund in a security breach, as mentioned above, you do not have full autonomous control over that coin. This is similar to money in a bank account and sort of defeats the purpose of Bitcoin. That purpose is to take full financial control and be your own bank. You may come across people saying the phrase "not your keys not your coin." When your "coin" (Bitcoin) is on an exchange it is in a wallet that the exchange has the keys to and you depend on them for storage etc.
There are a number of different wallet types but for now we will stick to two simple concepts.
Hot wallet: this is a wallet that is connected to the internet. While you can take measures to ensure that it is secure, it is still connected to the internet making it susceptible to hacking. There are tons of these that are relatively safe. The one I remember using when I started was the exodus wallet. This thing is beyond simple to use and it even lets you convert from one coin to another. Super helpful in my start.
Cold wallet: This is the type of wallet that you want to graduate to when you can or are ready. A "cold wallet" lets you store your coins off of the internet and allows them to exist only on the blockchain. This is one of the safest ways to store your bitcoin or other coins. There are a number of these. The most used and trusted currently are the ledger nano s and the trezor wallets.
5) You have the opportunity to seriously learn about Bitcoin and blockchain in general right now at the age of 18. At that age I wish I would have cared at all about understanding the financial world and how it works. If this stuff is truly some thing you could have growing interest in I have some pretty easy reads that you might want to consider:
The Bitcoin Standard: this book highlights the history of money and is INSANELY informative on how governments went wrong with their monetary policies.
The Internet of Money: Super short book on how blockchain and its potential applications can seriously affect our world today.
Both os these are pretty easy to read books that will teach you A LOT about how all this works. Honestly, when I started down this rabbit hole I wish I had just read these two damn books immediately rather than just looking at Reddit for a year.
And finally, do your own research. I wish luck to and I hope that instead of attempting to trade to build money you invest instead.
3 points • testiclespectacles2
Bitcoin Recommended Reading/Viewing:
Historical Bitcoin price video
You Don't Need to Buy a Whole Bitcoin
Billionaire CEO buys $425 million in BTC
Bitcoin subreddits r/BitcoinBeginners r/Bitcoin
Bitcoin is the Internet of Money
Debunking "Blockchain not Bitcoin"
TO GET STARTED, you need to buy some bitcoin from a Bitcoin exchange. For beginners, I recommend the Cash App for its 2% purchase fees and free withdrawals. Once you buy Bitcoin, withdraw it to a non custodial Bitcoin wallet. This is a wallet where you control the private keys that control your Bitcoin. don't leave your Bitcoin on an exchange.
Not your keys, not your coins. Bitcoin is the freedom from needing banks and governments to transfer digital money. Do not use a custodial Bitcoin wallet. Don't put your Bitcoin into someone else's hands. Hold it yourself in a non custodial wallet. Always withdraw your Bitcoin from the exchange where you bought it from.
I recommend using Mycelium Bitcoin wallet for Android.
Make sure to write down your 12 word restore phrase. It can restore your Bitcoin on any device. So keep it safe and secure. No pictures. No typing into a file. Pen and paper only. This phrase essentially IS your Bitcoin because control of your money is unlocked with it.
Never sell your Bitcoin. Just spend it when you want to take profit. Selling Bitcoin on exchanges lowers the price per Bitcoin. So just spend it directly like how it's supposed to work.
Spend Bitcoin here - Buy anything from Amazon using Bitcoin and name your own discount from 5-30%
List of stores that accept Bitcoin
When spending or transferring your Bitcoin, there's a transaction fee. (The fee goes to the Bitcoin miner who mines the block that contains that transaction).
Check https://mempool.space/ to see how low to set your transaction fee. You'll set the transaction fee when sending a payment from your Bitcoin wallet. Some wallets don't offer this option. Don't use those wallets.
[Bitcoin deep dive] (https://www.lopp.net/bitcoin-information/getting-started.html)
Plus there's a second layer called the Bitcoin Lightning Network. Nearly free and instant transfers based on Bitcoin.
Phoenix wallet is the best Bitcoin Lightning Network wallet
And finally, a warning from Jameson Lopp. "Every bitcoin that is held by an institution is a bitcoin that has had its security weakened by being subjected to bureaucratic and political decision-making. “Not your keys, not your bitcoin” rings true because when you have to ask someone for permission to transact, you are no longer in a position to resist censorship. Bitcoin owners must not trust third parties to act in their best interest!"
Hold your own Bitcoin. Don't let anyone trick you into giving them your Bitcoin. All of those schemes are Ponzi schemes. Nobody is going to give you interest on your Bitcoin, and if they do, they're paying you in a worthless, flawed token. Or they are doing accounting shenanigans that Bitcoin already solved. They will all collapse, and people with think they lost their Bitcoin, when in reality the Bitcoin was lost as soon as you deposited it into the Ponzi scheme.
Not your keys, not your coins.
1 points • B3JM0
Long response but bear with me. I wanted to fully address your points:
> "[gold] cannot be de-authorized" gold was de-authorized...
Many of the issues you've noted are correct and do apply to gold. I don't think gold is the hard money we need. Like you've suggested, it already failed once as a money and was usurped by fiat paper.
This video only hinted at it, but the creator isn't proposing a return to gold - they hint at Bitcoin being the solution. Bitcoin has better monetary properties than gold in every way except established history.
Bitcoin can't be de-authorized. Ownership is defined by knowledge of a private key to access the wealth. A government can attempt to ban it, but it would be an ineffective solution and couldn't kill the protocol for a variety of reasons (see "Bitcoin Cannot be Banned" by Parker Lewis).
> I don't understand how gold isn't susceptible to inflation. If their argument is that you need to have human effort as an input to monetary creation in order to have any value associated with that money and for it to be "stable" it doesn't make sense to use gold. Gold extraction efficiency increases with time thus you can extract 1 unit of gold in year 1 and 5 years later you might be able to extract 3 units of gold. If gold per capita is entering the market faster than people are born isn't that inflation too?
A true hard money must be difficult to create and relatively scarce. Gold did a fairly good job of this because it requires effort and capital to find it, mine it from the ground, and refine it. Gold's supply increases over time but relatively slowly. Someone couldn't easily just double the circulating supply on a whim, so holders of the money have reasonable certainty that the supply will be close to the same a week from now (and their saving won't be quickly debased).
Alternatively, the Federal Reserve could simply choose to print tens of trillions of dollars tomorrow if they wanted to (like the ~$3 trillion they've printed in the last few months). With fiat money, you can't be certain your savings won't be debased into nothing in a short period of time. Even with gold, you still can't be confident that the supply will increase slowly at a relatively predictable rate because we could find an asteroid full of gold some day and drastically increase the circulating supply.
Again, Bitcoin improves on gold's scarcity too. Bitcoin has a fixed supply (the first provably and definitively hard-capped asset that has ever existed), and it will never exceed 21 million units unless the vast majority of the network agreed to it (which they wouldn't, since they would be debasing their own savings). Miners expend electricity to "play the lottery" and try to mine new Bitcoin. However, Bitcoin's mining difficulty adjusts up or down proportionally to the network hashrate approximately every two weeks, which means the issuance rate is relatively constant regardless of the amount of "effort" expended to try to create more. So if tons of new miners booted up tomorrow, the network would adjust. More hashrate doesn't mean more Bitcoin - only that the security of the network increases. And the new Bitcoin mined with each block is cut in half every four years, until no new coins are created in the year 2140.
Parker Lewis's Bitcoin is Not Backed by Nothing discusses concepts related to this.
> (paraphrasing because I can't rewind on mobile) "In a hard money society the only way for someone to make money is to work for it"...that certainly wasn't the case on the gold standard. Wealth begot wealth.
In a hard money society, you have to produce something or provide a service that people are willing to pay for in order to accumulate wealth. In contrast with fiat, the central banks can "create wealth" by simply pressing a button and re-arranging some numbers in a bank account.
So it's true that having capital may make it easier to earn more capital, but you still have to do something productive to get that money. You can't just be close to the money spigot and leech off the wealth of other citizens through centralized inflation.
> "people don't save anymore [since 1970]" ... To me, this seems because society has chosen to provide for the wealthy instead of the masses.
Fiat money has incentivized high time preference behavior, even if people don't realize it. When your savings lose value over time through monetary debasement, you tend to spend it sooner, rather than hold it for the long term because it'll be worth less a year from now.
Similarly, when money is debased, it disproportionately affects those people holding the actual currency, which tend to be poorer people who live paycheck to paycheck. In contrast, rich people hold most of their wealth in assets, which means they don't lose much purchasing power due to inflation. So people who are forced to hold dollars to make ends meet have to work harder over time while their purchasing power is continuously siphoned away, and the rich people holding assets just see their assets increase in valuation (because the dollars those assets are denominated in are becoming worth less).
Additionally, the Cantillon Effect means that people closer to newly printed money get to spend it before the rest of the economy realizes the money supply has increased and raises prices.
So it's not that society has chosen to provide for the wealthy - the central bankers have, and the rest of us are forced to contribute (unless you opt out and store your wealth in Bitcoin).
> "the nice buildings [in old cities] were the ones built in the 19th century [and earlier]" this is so myopic. What a weak analogy. Of course the well built buildings survived. All the poorly built buildings fell apart eventually. And, I guess, if you're a fan of the architectural style of that time then they still look good today.
I don't have a concise response to this. I'd agree it's a weaker point, but it makes sense if you go along with the idea that easy money incentivizes high time preference behavior, which leads to less-developed skills like architecture, painting, etc. The Bitcoin Standard by Saifedean Ammous is a great book that touches on this concept in much more detail among other things.
> "cities were destroyed by central planning" ... cities can either be destroyed by agenda-riddled, poor-intentioned central planners (building freeways through thriving neighbourhoods) or no city planning (American suburbs). But central planning for something as large as a city cannot happen as raw organic growth. If they want people to think about the long term that's a central planners job. They should be faithful to the public and have non-biased intentions but they are necessary. The Free market of city development creates a mishmash that benefits the fewest number of people for the shortest amount of time.
I'd push back on this a bit. Full free market governance would probably be difficult to coordinate things at scale, but I think the less central planning, the better. Markets could coordinate incredibly well through price signals if they weren't being interfered with constantly by central planners, regulations, monetary manipulation, etc.
If anything, I think local governments and communities should be the ones coordinating this kind of infrastructure. People directly involved with the infrastructure will know what's best for their own communities - not some planning committees several cities over or in another state.
Charles Marohn has written a lot of great stuff on the benefits of forming strong local communities over large, centrally controlled groups of people (e.g., entire states or nations). Check out his appearance on the Tales from the Crypt podcast (#141).
> "they can't steal from people. They're limited in how much wealth they can take from the average person" ...if the complaint is about taxation this is obviously not true and gold doesn't sole anything. If the government wanted to they could take 100% of your gold and give you a cheerio in return. There is no difference between a bag of gold and the digital numbers in my bank account in that sense.
Again, gold suffers from this problem, but Bitcoin does not. Gold's physicality contributed greatly to its downfall as a good money. To confiscate Bitcoin, the government would have to go door-to-door and force each individual to hand over all his/her private keys. Since Bitcoin is just digital information, this is a lot more challenging to do, especially since you can't easily prove ownership of Bitcoin, and it can be easily distributed and hidden.
If you want to learn more or ask questions, feel free to reach out. I love teaching people about Bitcoin. It really is a world-changing technology disguised as a get-rich-quick scheme.
Some other great resources:
- 21 Lessons by Dergigi (can buy the book or read/listen on the website)
- Bitcoin, A Declaration of Monetary Independence by Jimmy Song (narrated by Guy Swann)
- Masters and Slaves of Money by Robert Breedlove
- A mega-thread on my Twitter - tons of extra content I've curated
- Swan Bitcoin - if you want a super easy way to start accumulating Bitcoin
1 points • hamspamblamtram
You know pretty much nothing about Bitcoin.
Learn more about Bitcoin.
Quick Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/3wQVZOjxa5w
https://medium.com/@vijayboyapati/the-bullish-case-for-bitcoin-6ecc8bdecc1
In depth Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/l1si5ZWLgy0
The Bitcoin Standard: https://youtu.be/Zbm772vF-5M
https://www.Bitcoin.org
r/BitcoinBeginners r/Bitcoin
Bitcoin is the next Bitcoin: https://youtu.be/p0ftZgCEZos
TO GET STARTED, you need to buy some bitcoin from a Bitcoin exchange. I recommend the cash app for its 2% purchase fees and free withdrawals. Then withdraw your Bitcoin to your own non custodial Bitcoin wallet. This is a wallet where you control the private keys that control your money and not where someone else is holding your money, like the cash app where you bought it from.
Not your keys, not your coins. Bitcoin is the freedom from needing banks and governments to transfer digital money. Do not use a custodial Bitcoin wallet. Don't put your Bitcoin into someone else's hands. Hold it yourself in a non custodial wallet. Always withdraw your Bitcoin from the exchange where you bought it from.
I recommend using Mycelium Bitcoin wallet for Android. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mycelium.wallet
Make sure to write down your 12 word restore phrase. It can restore your Bitcoin on any device. So keep it safe and secure. No pictures. No typing into a file. Pen and paper only. This phrase essentially IS your Bitcoin because control of your money is unlocked with it.
Never sell your Bitcoin. Just spend it when you want to take profit. Selling Bitcoin on exchanges lowers the price per Bitcoin. So just spend it directly like how it's supposed to work. Don't day trade Bitcoin. Just buy and hold forever. There's so many people ~8 billion and only 21 million BTC. Bitcoin to infinity.
Bitcoin is the first truly scarce digital asset. Bitcoin is digital gold. https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
Spend Bitcoin here: https://Purse.io - buy anything from Amazon using Bitcoin and name your own discount. I usually do a 20-25% discount.
Here's repository of stores that accept Bitcoin: https://www.acceptedhere.io/
When spending your Bitcoin, there's a transaction fee. (It goes to the Bitcoin miner who mines the block that contains that transaction).
Check https://mempool.space/ to see how low to set your payment. You'll set the transaction fee when sending a payment from your Bitcoin wallet. (Hopefully Mycelium)
If you want to learn everything else about Bitcoin: https://www.lopp.net/bitcoin-information/getting-started.html
And read The Bitcoin Standard: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861
Plus there's a second layer called the Bitcoin lightning network. Free and instant transfers based on Bitcoin. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Network#:~:text=The%20Lightning%20Network%20is%20a,to%20the%20bitcoin%20scalability%20problem.
Phoenix wallet is the best Bitcoin lightning network wallet. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fr.acinq.phoenix.mainnet
1 points • SpicyNuts42
Here's the full Bitcoin course I compiled.
Learn more about Bitcoin.
Quick Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/3wQVZOjxa5w
https://medium.com/@vijayboyapati/the-bullish-case-for-bitcoin-6ecc8bdecc1
https://medium.com/in-bitcoin-we-trust/you-dont-need-to-buy-1-full-btc-directly-consider-bitcoin-as-the-best-savings-plan-in-history-e1375aa02ba9
CEO buys $425 million in BTC to hold permanently as a reserve asset. Goal to establish the Bitcoin standard. https://www.coindesk.com/microstrategy-ceo-michael-saylor-bitcoin
The Bitcoin Standard: https://youtu.be/1WBrdLQhUrg
Stock to flow theory: https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
In depth Bitcoin intro: https://youtu.be/l1si5ZWLgy0
https://www.Bitcoin.org
r/BitcoinBeginners r/Bitcoin
Bitcoin is the next Bitcoin: https://youtu.be/p0ftZgCEZos
https://www.lynalden.com/misconceptions-about-bitcoin/
Every altcoin chart looks like same when priced in Bitcoin: https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/jl4mx2/every_altcoin_chart_looks_the_same_when_priced_in
TO GET STARTED, you need to buy some bitcoin from a Bitcoin exchange. I recommend the cash app for its 2% purchase fees and free withdrawals. Then withdraw your Bitcoin to your own non custodial Bitcoin wallet. This is a wallet where you control the private keys that control your money and not where someone else is holding your money, like the cash app where you bought it from.
Not your keys, not your coins. Bitcoin is the freedom from needing banks and governments to transfer digital money. Do not use a custodial Bitcoin wallet. Don't put your Bitcoin into someone else's hands. Hold it yourself in a non custodial wallet. Always withdraw your Bitcoin from the exchange where you bought it from.
I recommend using Mycelium Bitcoin wallet for Android. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mycelium.wallet
Make sure to write down your 12 word restore phrase. It can restore your Bitcoin on any device. So keep it safe and secure. No pictures. No typing into a file. Pen and paper only. This phrase essentially IS your Bitcoin because control of your money is unlocked with it.
Never sell your Bitcoin. Just spend it when you want to take profit. Selling Bitcoin on exchanges lowers the price per Bitcoin. So just spend it directly like how it's supposed to work. Don't day trade Bitcoin. Just buy and hold forever. There's so many people ~8 billion and only 21 million BTC. Bitcoin to infinity.
Bitcoin is the first truly scarce digital asset. Bitcoin is digital gold. https://digitalik.net/btc/sf_model/
Spend Bitcoin here: https://Purse.io - buy anything from Amazon using Bitcoin and name your own discount. I usually do a 20-25% discount.
Here's repository of stores that accept Bitcoin: https://www.acceptedhere.io/
When spending your Bitcoin, there's a transaction fee. (It goes to the Bitcoin miner who mines the block that contains that transaction).
Check https://mempool.space/ to see how low to set your payment. You'll set the transaction fee when sending a payment from your Bitcoin wallet. (Hopefully Mycelium)
If you want to learn everything else about Bitcoin: https://www.lopp.net/bitcoin-information/getting-started.html
And read The Bitcoin Standard: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1119473861
Plus there's a second layer called the Bitcoin lightning network. Free and instant transfers based on Bitcoin. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Network#:~:text=The%20Lightning%20Network%20is%20a,to%20the%20bitcoin%20scalability%20problem.
Phoenix wallet is the best Bitcoin lightning network wallet. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fr.acinq.phoenix.mainnet
And finally, a warning from Jameson Lopp. "Every bitcoin that is held by an institution is a bitcoin that has had its security weakened by being subjected to bureaucratic and political decision-making. “Not your keys, not your bitcoin” rings true because when you have to ask someone for permission to transact, you are no longer in a position to resist censorship. Bitcoin owners must not trust third parties to act in their best interest!"
Hold your own Bitcoin. Don't let anyone trick you into giving them your Bitcoin. All of those schemes are Ponzi schemes. Nobody is going to give you interest on your Bitcoin, and if they do, they're paying you in a worthless, flawed token. Or they are doing accounting fuckery that Bitcoin already solved. They will all collapse, and people with think they lost their Bitcoin, when in reality the Bitcoin was lost as soon as you deposited it into the Ponzi scheme.
If everyone who deposited their Bitcoin asked for it back all at once, these crypto banks would collapse. It's the same as regular banking. The reason you buy Bitcoin is to avoid all that bullshit.
Not your keys, not your coins.