This is the most comprehensive analysis yet of Bitcoin’s impact on the environment and energy system in the US!
"The Real-World Costs of the Digital Race for Bitcoin"
#bitcoin #btc
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/09/business/bitcoin-mining-electricity-pollution.html
An ax I grind:
We need to be clear that this isn't about Bitcoin but rather what people are willing to pay in order to acquire Bitcoin.
The Bitcoin system itself can run on a car battery.
People decide to compete with each other to get more of it, buying extra electricity to trade for a chance to acquire it.
The real takeaway is that Bitcoin is highly valued, enough that people are willing to bid up the price like this. We shouldn't be so much yelling about the price but rather thinking about what's happening with the world so that #Bitcoin is so valuable in the first place.
People trading money for electricity for Bitcoin really says we should be rethinking the apparently less valuable money.
@volkris at the end of the day this is about greed. Yeah, that's for sure
But that's just the greed of wanting security and being willing to trade other things to get it :)
Greed here is just the term for wanting to be better off, and that's just plain natural, reasonable, rational.
It's just a way of describing that rational want using a word with some judgmental baggage attached, which isn't particularly helpful.
So, many people trade currency for electricity for Bitcoin because they value the security of the cryptocurrency. That's perfectly rational.
My point: don't blame the crypto for the electricity. Blame the currency for failing to provide security such that a person would trade it for BTC.
Granted, some black swan event could destroy BTC. Yes, that is possible. It could also do the same to any currency. Nothing is certain.
@volkris @pallenberg
Well put. If the USD was going UP in value, if it were getting STRONGER, I would hodl IT. But it's not. It's losing value while BTC is increasing in value against the USD.
Just look at the sequence of LOWS on BTC, not the highs. Those peaks are misleading. Look at how low it goes after peaking. Those lows continue to gain. It's not greed to want to maintain as much wealth that you've worked for as possible.