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Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

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  • Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

    The below is a post on reddit.com by an anonymous person (soon to supposedly disclose himself) claiming he did in depth research for the US Federal Reserve in May 2014 regarding Bitcoin.

    Source: http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comm...t_the_federal/

    Game Changer: Bitcoin research at the Federal Reserve and how I've lost my job

    UPDATE: I'm traveling and hence haven't answered any more questions. I've gotten many more inquiries and as I said in one of the posts am currently vetting various outlets. I decided against giving proof to a community member and will instead opt for disclosure with a reliable business/economics news source. Stay tuned.
    The Background: I'm a trained economist with a B.S. in Computer Science, a M.S. in Operations Research, and a PhD in Econometrics. I interned at the NY Fed during my degree, worked at a macro trading hedge fund, and now work at the major S.E. Fed branch doing econometrics and related modeling. I've had a long running interest in bitcoin and was one of the first people to publish a working paper on FPGA based bitcoin miners at a Georgia university focused on technology. I know bitcoin, technology, and economics on a theoretical and applied level. I'm not motivated by money (see my move from hedge fund to fed); I'm an applied academic with an incessant drive for research.
    The Job: I function as a briefing researcher at the Federal Reserve. My primary research interests are the statistical modeling of developing currencies and the integration of those models into our massively parallel simulations for policy projections and forecasts. In layman's terms, I do the lower level mathematical/statistical research and then brief senior management (fed governors) at our regular meetings.
    At the beginning of May, my team and I were assigned to an exploratory project. Typically summer is the off-season and most of the projects are time fillers that result in a few papers/presentations and are then archived and never heard of again. This project was different. We were given a direct research assignment from the Board of Governors a few hours after the conclusion of their May 29th closed meeting.
    The Assignment: We and as far as I know several other research teams across the Fed system were tasked with creating a bitcoin report. I assigned my team to run the typical econometrics simulations and forecasts we do for developing currencies. Thinking this was summer doldrum busy work, we were diligent on calculations and modeling but definitely did not go out of our way to provide extra insight. At the end of June, I presented the report to my Fed governor and was met with strong disapproval and a sense of upmost urgency. Long story short, I almost lost my job for not taking this project as seriously as I should have and the Board of Governors renewed the projct and gave us explicit research directions along with weekly addendums.
    The Dirty: We were directed to upgrade our modeling of bitcoin from developing currency to a major currency. In addition to all of the common modeling and forecasting that task entails, we were instructed to do full simulations of money flows, interest rates, multi currency derivative baskets, risk metrics, and their effects on global macro monetary policy and trade agreements. What we found was shocking. Even with a mediocre adoption rate and variable growth rate, bitcoin severly disrupts how we model, forecast, and ultimately understand currency interactions to make monetary policy decisions. This is a huge technological, monetary, and policy disruptionwhich leaves the Fed, the US govt, and other entities with much less control. Our best case scenarios are modeled upon current bitcoin adoption rates which have simulated a tipping point for the year 2026 (worst case 2021); this time frame projects the Fed (via the dollar) to lose its dominant global monetary policy maker status - instead everything will superceded by bitcoin.
    I presented this updated report along with all of our modeling work and simulation outputs which were statistically and independently verified to the Board of Governors. The Board was highly alarmed and interrogated me and my fellow researchers in a 3 day session trying to understand every point of our research. It must be remembered that unlike politicians, the Board of Governors is a very well educated and empirical group with an ability to conceptually grasp complicated research.
    The Outcome: Three weeks after the report, my research team was disbanded, I was moved to a tiny regional federal reserve branch and given virtually no research resources. Similar fates came to my team members and most of us are actively trying to pursue opportunities outside of the system. While the classified information nondisclosure agreements bind us in many ways, I personally will try to go back into the trading industry with a keen eye on bitcoin as my primary research interest.
    It is clear to me that Bitcoin has fundamentally changed the spectrum of how we view and model economics. The central banks are afraid, the governments are afraid, and they would rather bury the truth by firing their own dedicated researchers and archiving the reports than embrace change and building a sustainable economic future.
    If you have any questions feel free to AMA, I will try my best to answer.




    PS. Got Bitcoin? ;-)
    Last edited by Adeptus; August 05, 2014, 04:54 PM.
    Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

  • #2
    Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

    The realistic problem with bitcoin is its volatility. Now with the usd, (according to Mr. Bart) I am fairly guaranteed to lose 4% purchasing power per year.
    Compare that with bitcoin, In the course of a year it could be 1200 could be 200. It is too voliatile to be used as a savings vehicle. Makes a good speculating vehicle though :-). I assume if bitcoin were to wage a serious war with the USD, it would be declared illegal. Exchanges would be shut down, Merchants prohibited from using it, individual users doing a perp walk in an orange jump suit.
    Last edited by charliebrown; August 05, 2014, 05:44 PM.

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    • #3
      Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

      Originally posted by charliebrown View Post
      The realistic problem with bitcoin is its volatility. Now with the usd, (according to Mr. Bart) I am fairly guaranteed to lose 4% purchasing power per year.
      Compare that with bitcoin, Could be 1800 could be 200. It is too voliatile to be used as a savings vehicle. Makes a good speculating vehicle though :-).
      I assume if bitcoin were to wage a serious war with the USD, it would be declared illegal. Exchanges would be shut down, Merchants prohibited from using it,
      individual users doing a perp walk in an orange jump suit.
      I mostly agree... (USA is only 1 country with this global currency)...but until then (!!!) ;-)
      Last edited by Adeptus; August 05, 2014, 05:34 PM.
      Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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      • #4
        Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

        whew! It's from reedit. I was worried it was on rense.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

          Originally posted by goadam1 View Post
          whew! It's from reedit. I was worried it was on rense.com
          funny

          What we found was shocking. Even with a mediocre adoption rate and variable growth rate, bitcoin severly disrupts how we model, forecast, and ultimately understand currency interactions to make monetary policy decisions.
          Why is shocking about this? I think this person has a future as an author of mediocre sci-fi books.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

            Originally posted by goadam1 View Post
            whew! It's from reedit. I was worried it was on rense.com
            i lol'd.

            Seriously...bitcoin was a nice quick trade, but by no means could it ever surpass any legitimate currency in terms of use, nor is it a reasonable long term store of value. It's a bunch of 1's and 0's created in the cloud, which is no more legitimate than world of warcraft gold. At least fiat is backed by the countries that issue them. Bitcoin is backed by hype


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            • #7
              Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

              Bitcoin was a nice quick trade... at least through 5 bubbles.... Why not 6 or 7 or 10? Price is still at $580 and user and retail adoption is still growing at over 400% per year to say nothing of VC funding. It has already surpassed several 3rd world currencies. Fiat is backed by central banks, who can wield the currency's value in any direction they please, but nearly always aiming towards debasement through inflation. Bitcoin is backed by immutable math formulas that can only altered via a majority consensus... you know, kind of like how democracies should function.

              Lastly, the whole 0's and 1's remark? Some ~90% of the world's wealth is already stored digitally but centrally via Stock exchanges that are gamed by HFTs and quants, bond markets skewed heavily to favour primary dealer banks, treasury markets manipulated by central banks via hidden offshore buying sprees whilst claiming tapering in public, currency that already exists 80%+ in digital format thanks to fractional reserve bank accounts and credit card companies that can shut down your account or reduce your credit at their whim, then there's commodity derivative markets rigged by BRIC warehouse rehypothication and over 1 quadrillion USD in interest rate opaque OTC derivatives nobody has insight into.... And pension funds invested in all this nonsense that will impoverish future generations via the need for higher contributions due to all the unfunded liabilities... NO THANKS, I think it's time for plan ฿, or some variant of it.
              Last edited by Adeptus; August 05, 2014, 10:06 PM.
              Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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              • #8
                Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                Adeptus, can you give the TL;DR explanation of how bitcoin works again? How do I keep my own bitcoins securely and if that can be done, why did people lose a bunch of coins when an exchange went south?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                  1. this isn't really news. per the News forum title "Link to a news story by a credible source plus member commentary"
                  ....an anonymous post on reddit about a supposed Fed study on bitcoin that concludes btc will overtake USD in 8-10yrs is more appropriate either for Rumors or the conspiracy theory mumbo jumbo section

                  2. @davidstvz - bitcoin can be stored anywhere, on your hard drive, offline on a thumb drive, at the exchange, in a virtual online wallet, etc. people lost their bitcoins when Mt Gox went bust in the same way that investors lost their dollars when Lehman went bust. keeping bitcoins at the exchange is analogous to keeping money in the bank. keeping bitcoin on a thumb drive is rougly equivalent to keeping dollars under your mattress (assuming the thumb drive is disconnected from any computer)

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                  • #10
                    Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                    Originally posted by davidstvz View Post
                    Adeptus, can you give the TL;DR explanation of how bitcoin works again? How do I keep my own bitcoins securely and if that can be done, why did people lose a bunch of coins when an exchange went south?
                    Bitcoin is the first digital currency whose digital units of value (bitcoins) can be copied (i.e. make a backup of your digital bitcoins), but that cannot be double spent (i.e. spend the same bitcoin with 2 different vendors simultaneously)- this is superior to even fiat currencies that are subject to counterfeiting. There will only ever be 21 million bitcoins but each is divisible to 100 Million units, thus in reality there can be quadrillions of bitcoin fractional units - kind of like dollars & cents. With a hard limit on the number of bitcoins ever in existence the currency is deflationary; very likely to go up in value/buying power over time as compared to fiat based currencies that are regularly debased through inflation. The Bitcoin system cannot easily be shut down because it is decentralized and operated by millions of computers in over 100 countries around the world (called "bitcoin miners"); as opposed to central authorities like central banks or governments. Changes to how bitcoin functions, its strengths and limitations can be recommended by software developers, but it is a consensus system requiring greater than 50% of all bitcoin miners to agree to implement the changes. Bitcoin is also a payment protocol roughly like SWIFT (wire transfers) or paypal, except payments are executed in seconds globally and transaction fees are fractions of a penny most of the time. There are no limits as to how many bitcoins you can send. I've seen transactions in excess of 50 Million dollars worth, that cost less than $2 to transact, and executed in mere minutes from one side of the planet to the other with no 3rd parties involved (i.e no banks/financial institutions of any kind). Some other unique concepts about bitcoin is that it can (illegally, but technically easily possible) bypass many government restrictions (i.e. $10,000 limit between boarders, sanctions, taxes and if you store them properly, even confiscation). Lastly bitcoins are 'pseudonymous', meaning at a glance it is nearly impossible to identify who has how many bitcoins or how they are being spent; as people's real names are not associated with bitcoins (except on an exchange where you have to provide ID to create an account), just a bunch of complex computer codes. That said, via forensic IT methods it is some times (but not always) possible to trace who exactly has how many bitcoins or when/where they were spent. It is also possible for those that know what they are doing to actually own and transact bitcoins fully anonymously, but this currently requires extra effort and especially technical know-how, though by the end of this year this may be easier with [3min video:] DARKWALLET (anonymous storage and transaction wallet) and OPENBAZAAR (think decentralized SilkRoad, but likely to be more like a decentralized amazon.com in 10 years time).

                    Storing bitcoins safely is not yet a trivial matter. You can store them on just about any computer system you own, and by that I mean just about anything that has storage memory: Your smartphone, tablet, computer, laptop, USB or camera memory stick/card, MP3 player, google glasses and now even your smartwatch. You can also store them in the 'cloud' such as in your email, google drive, or 3rd party host. You can also store them on a bitcoin exchange; however, every single one of these storage locations are subject to data loss, theft, hacking, and data corruption that could result in you losing all your bitcoins - and thus one of a few reasons why bitcoin is not yet mainstream. Lastly, you can also print your bitcoin "private keys" to a piece of paper and store it in a physical vault, or cut the paper in half and store it in 2 vaults, or in case 1 vault catches on fire, make an extra copy and store each half in 4 vaults. Lastly you can also just memorize a long password that can be hashed at any time into your private keys that correspond to your bitcoins - this is called a 'brainwallet'. Only just last week, the first "hardware wallet" has been publicly available called 'trezor' which is the first type of computer wallet considered both easy to use and safe for storing bitcoins. What you've read in the news about bitcoins getting stolen was probably related to bitcoin exchange websites getting hacked, namely Mt.Gox (the biggest bitcoin exchange for several years) but there there have been many others. These are prime targets because thousands of people send their bitcoins there to exchange for US dollars, or simply let them sit there as if they were a wallet. Specifically, an exchange can hold hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bitcoin at any time and thus is a prime target for hackers. The reason people lost their money/bitcoins is because they are purely a digital commodity, and thus once the private keys are taken, the bitcoins can be immediately transfered to a different wallet owned by the thief, keeping in mind such a wallet is not a bank account or stored at a 3rd party that can reverse the transaction, in simple terms it's kind of like somebody breaking into your home vault at night and stealing your physical cash - once it's gone, it's gone, there is no way to get it back. There are now however several exchanges considered relatively mature, having passed frequent security audits, providing proof that bitcoins are actually there (as opposed to lying about it or faking people's account balances) and with more IT-level security than even your regular bank, and implementing 'cold storage' controls such that even if somebody hacks in 98% of your bitcoins are not available to be stolen. There are now many guides on how to store your bitcoins safely. You simply need to google it, but here's a few:

                    https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Securing_your_wallet
                    https://bitcoin.org/en/secure-your-wallet
                    https://blockchain.info/wallet/paper-tutorial



                    Good Luck!
                    Last edited by Adeptus; August 07, 2014, 12:50 PM.
                    Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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                    • #11
                      Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                      Originally posted by pescamaaan View Post
                      people lost their bitcoins when Mt Gox went bust in the same way that investors lost their dollars when Lehman went bust. keeping bitcoins at the exchange is analogous to keeping money in the bank. keeping bitcoin on a thumb drive is rougly equivalent to keeping dollars under your mattress (assuming the thumb drive is disconnected from any computer)
                      Which is exactly why i consider bitcoin no better than world of warcraft gold. WoW servers shut down, and there goes all your digital "wealth." Again, i wont poopoo on bitcoin completely, as i know a good trade when i see one. If you were one of the lucky ones to get in very early, and you held out all this time in bitcoin, you did well and i commend you. I'd say the same thing to people who got in and out of the tulip bulb bubble in time as well. Both bitcoin and the tulip bulb bubble got most of their value from over-hype vs. any real substance behind it. If anything, bitcoin is a fad-backed currency. It's trendy, and some libertarians see it as a way of raising a middle finger to government. That's about it really. The difference between the 1's and 0's in your bank account, and the 1's and 0's of bitcoin is that there is actually a strong institution (love them or hate them) that will back you when bullcrap like Mt. Gox closing happens. People who had bank accounts in some of the troubled banks back in 2008 didn't loose their whole life savings because they were backed by the full faith of the U.S. government (again, love them or hate them) i mean, if you are really comparing the stability of the 1's and 0's of that make up say, a US 10 year treasury (which is a part of that ~90% of world wealth you described) and those of bitcoin and considering them on the same level in any way, then I'll know that me speaking here at all is pretty much futile...

                      People can do what they want with their own money though, so don't think im trying to tell you what to do. I'm only offering an alternate/opposing voice to those people on the fence about putting their hard earned cash into bitcoin. I know for myself, there is nothing in heaven, hell, or on earth that would make me put any sizable amount of my net worth into bitcoin over the long or even short term. Even after everything we as itulipers know about where the dollar will be by the end of the decade, I would rather have my money in U.S. dollars (even during that time period) than in bitcoin...and that is not out of love for the dollar.
                      Last edited by verdo; August 07, 2014, 01:26 PM.


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                      • #12
                        Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                        Which is exactly why i consider bitcoin no better than world of warcraft gold. WoW servers shut down

                        WoW gold is centralized, bitcoin is decentralized. It cannot be shut down. If you store it in a single location, it can be stolen, lost, so learn to store it properly... yes it is not easy yet, but will be soon enough.

                        If you were one of the lucky ones to get in very early, and you held out all this time in bitcoin, you did well and i commend you.

                        Heh, with less than 30 million addresses (estimated to be used only by an active ~300,000 users), it is still very early.

                        . The difference between the 1's and 0's in your bank account, and the 1's and 0's of bitcoin is that there is actually a strong institution (love them or hate them) that will back you when bullcrap like Mt. Gox closing happens.


                        The whole point of bitcoin is to NOT rely on 3rd party intermediaries, I even warned here on itulip several times not to use Mt.Gox before it went belly up. It was obvious to many that something was seriously wrong with that exchange.

                        if you are really comparing the stability of the 1's and 0's of that make up say, a US 10 year treasury (which is a part of that ~90% of world wealth you described) and those of bitcoin and considering them on the same level in any way, then I'll know that me speaking here at all is pretty much futile...
                        What will be futile is the value of US treasury notes in less than 15 years. Bitcoin is in its infancy, it is by design (though not yet practically) already superior in many ways to all the variants of the US 0's and 1's stores of value - and I'm not just talking here about bitcoin the currency, but bitcoin the decentralized platform, which has many dozens of yet unrealized use-cases! But this will take time, years in fact, to reach that potential. If it didn't have that potential, the authorities (gov/central banks) wouldn't be worried about it, and they are - relatively - they also recognize bitcoin *at present* is at a mere $7Billion market cap representing a fraction of drop in a huge bucket of global assets.

                        Off the top of my head here's a list of KILLER apps that the bitcoin protocol (or systems like it) have the potential to unleash:

                        * Decentralized Reputation systems (think global anonymous trustful ID)
                        * Decentralized Social Networks (think facebook without a company haording and selling all your private info)
                        * Decentralized Anonymous/Encrypted Instant messaging
                        * Decentralized Twitter (cannot be shut down or sensored and communications can be encrypted)
                        * Decentralized DropBox (Neither Google nor Microsoft can access your data, close your account or charge you huge fees for storage)
                        * Decentralized web (aka. web 3.0). Your website doesn't exist on 1 server, it exists on 3, 5 or 50 and it cannot be shut down
                        * Global Micro-Payments
                        * Decentralized Open Ledger Derivatives
                        * Decentralized Law
                        * Anonymous P2P gambling (screw country gambling laws)
                        * On-Chain stock Markets
                        * On-Chain global free-trade markets (i.e. openbazaar)
                        * Global Escrow services without any 3rd party involvement
                        * Trustless Global Insurance Contracts

                        ^^ and this is a very small list. I'll post a website with a huge list if I can find it again. If you think bitcoin is 'merely' an internet currency, you would be very wrong, there's huge amounts of disruptive innovation coming that will displace: banks, insurance companies, real estate companies, lawyers, notaries, the Internet itself, global finance, stock markets, regulatory government departments, governance and democracy itself. Pandora's box has been opened my friends, there is no turning back.

                        It's trendy, and some libertarians see it as a way of raising a middle finger to government. That's about it really.

                        Trendy? We're closing in on year #6 of bitcoin. It's way past a fad or a trend or an unproven system. Yes that's how it started, in fact it started in the Cypherpunk realm, spread to libertarian extremist realm, and now bitcoin businesses are is being funded by Silicon Valley VCs in the 10's of millions per month, and a few regulations away from WallStreet going gang-busters on it. I don't expect it to go mainstream for another 2-4 years at least.

                        Allow me to paraphrase
                        Chamath Palihapitiya (an Ex-Facebook Sr. Executive).... Let me put this in a way that we can both (perhaps) agree: if Bitcoin is to be popular nationwide,[VIDEO of Chamath] it will likely be popular first in 3rd world countries where governments are excessively corrupt and fiat currencies are unstable to the downside (i.e. Argentina, Zimbabwe) etc... it will be easily 5-10 years before your grandma is using bitcoins to buy groceries and pay her bills in North America/Europe.


                        Lastly, I will concede the following - which I've done a few times before:
                        1) Bitcoin's deflationary design, if allowed to exist for many more years will (as per the fed research paper in my opening post), cause a global financial meltdown as everyone dumps inflationary fiat to speculate on an ever rising bitcoin price. Obviously this will never happen/be allowed to happen, so I expect nothing less than an all-out war against bitcoin by central banks/governments way before then. In the mean time, it is being sold to governments as financial innovation that should not be made illegal/over regulated because it is going to create many new jobs.

                        2) Bitcoin's lack of price stability does not make for a practical / everyday currency. Some argue that the more liquidity goes into bitcoin, the more price stability we'll see, but I only see bigger and bigger bubbles, between temporary periods of relative (+/- 20%) price stability. Price instability is a relatively simple problem to fix in software, so it is only a question of time before a new bitcoin-like system fixes (i.e. Ethereum Inflation rate targets 0-1% long term)

                        3) Bitcoin has many flaws (though not the ones you listed), and an improved system(s) are likely to eventually replace it, though right now it seems like it has one hell of a network effect, but so did AOL's Webcrawler search engine once upon a time.
                        Last edited by Adeptus; August 07, 2014, 03:00 PM.
                        Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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                        • #13
                          Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                          Found it! "Bitcoin" is currently primarily known as a currency and a currency payment system; however, this is ONLY the beggining, the underlying technology has very far reaching global disruptive impact potential:

                          This is why "bitcoin" is not just a trend or a fad... it is web 3.0 and democracy 2.0

                          Here's a list of some of the other things that will likely eventually be disrupted/improved by blockchain technology:


                          Here's an even more complete list of the areas blockchain technology can disrupt and improve upon ... from: http://ledracapital.com/blog/2014/3/...lockchain-list
                          I. Financial Instruments, Records and Models
                          1. Currency
                          2. Private equities
                          3. Public equities
                          4. Bonds
                          5. Derivatives (futures, forwards, swaps, options and more complex variations)
                          6. Voting rights associated with any of the above
                          7. Commodities
                          8. Spending records
                          9. Trading records
                          10. Mortgage / loan records
                          11. Servicing records
                          12. Crowd-funding
                          13. Micro-finance
                          14. Micro-charity

                            II. Public Records
                          15. Land titles
                          16. Vehicle registries
                          17. Business license
                          18. Business incorporation / dissolution records
                          19. Business ownership records
                          20. Regulatory records
                          21. Criminal records
                          22. Passports
                          23. Birth certificates
                          24. Death certificates
                          25. Voter IDs
                          26. Voting
                          27. Health / Safety Inspections
                          28. Building permits
                          29. Gun permits
                          30. Forensic evidence
                          31. Court records
                          32. Voting records
                          33. Non-profit records
                          34. Government/non-profit accounting/transparency

                            III. Private Records
                          35. Contracts
                          36. Signatures
                          37. Wills
                          38. Trusts
                          39. Escrows
                          40. GPS trails (personal)

                            IV. Other Semi-Public Records
                          41. Degree
                          42. Certifications
                          43. Learning Outcomes
                          44. Grades
                          45. HR records (salary, performance reviews, accomplishment)
                          46. Medical records
                          47. Accounting records
                          48. Business transaction records
                          49. Genome data
                          50. GPS trails (institutional)
                          51. Delivery records
                          52. Arbitration

                            V. Physical Asset Keys
                          53. Home / apartment keys
                          54. Vacation home / timeshare keys
                          55. Hotel room keys
                          56. Car keys
                          57. Rental car keys
                          58. Leased cars keys
                          59. Locker keys
                          60. Safety deposit box keys
                          61. Package delivery (split key between delivery firm and receiver)
                          62. Betting records
                          63. Fantasy sports records (!)

                            VI. Intangibles (?)
                          64. Coupons
                          65. Vouchers
                          66. Reservations (restaurants, hotels, queues, etc)
                          67. Movie tickets
                          68. Patents
                          69. Copyrights
                          70. Trademarks
                          71. Software licenses
                          72. Videogame licenses
                          73. Music/movie/book licenses (DRM)
                          74. Domain names
                          75. Online identities
                          76. Proof of authorship / Proof of prior art

                            VI. Other
                          77. Documentary records (photos, audio, video)
                          78. Data records (sports scores, temperature, etc)
                          79. Sim Cards
                          80. GPS network identity
                          81. Gun unlock codes
                          82. Weapons unlock codes
                          83. Nuclear launch codes (!)
                          84. Spam control (micro-payments for posting)
                          ^^ Now you understand why Chamath says this is a "Trillion dollar market... up for grabs".
                          Last edited by Adeptus; August 07, 2014, 03:45 PM.
                          Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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                          • #14
                            Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                            Originally posted by goadam1 View Post
                            whew! It's from reedit. I was worried it was on rense.com
                            Hey look, we've been upgraded from reddit to infowars.com (!!) ... ... bloomberg by the weekend? :P
                            http://www.infowars.com/whistleblowe...dollar-system/
                            Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Fed research shows Bitcoin usurping the USD by 2021-2026

                              one other thing, that bothers me about bit-coin. What is the barrier to entry? Will we have some day byte-coin, nibble-coin, word-coin etc?
                              bit coin is leading the charge now, but I am old enough to remember the beta-max, lotus 123, and myspace.com. Who will be the winner?
                              I guess this is analagous to competing currencies???

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