This article about Bitcoin, while knowledgeable and well-written, is a 
classic example of how even the experts can misunderstand how Bitcoin 
functions:
http://www.economist.com/news/technology-quarterly/21590766-virtual-currency-it-mathematically-elegant-increasingly-popular-and-highly
No, Bitcoin is not unprofitable to mine, it is fairly profitable, if you know what you're doing.
No,
 Bitcoin's open source nature and the software's ability to be easily 
modified democratically does not make it fragile, it makes it remarkably
 strong and resilient, just like any other governing system of such a 
nature.
No, Bitcoin would not have difficulty maintaining nodes 
once the block rewards become negligible, the transaction fees have 
already been implemented, and the plans to scale the transaction fees to
 account for diminishing rewards has already been established.
No,
 decentralization and a lack of reliance on government or bank 
authorities does not make Bitcoin "untrustworthy" or "fictional", it 
makes Bitcoin more democratic, more trustworthy (since it is almost 
purely logical, and does not depend on the highly faulty and plutocratic
 exchange of power imposed by governments and banks), and far more 
resilient than any other existing financial system in place, 
particularly since Bitcoin has no single points of failure, unlike 
traditional financial institutions and currency authorities.
No, 
Bitcoin is not particularly vulnerable to security. Exchanges and 
wallets are hacked, not Bitcoin, and that is the fault of the users and 
the exchanges, not the Bitcoin software. and even if the software was at
 fault, it can be easily (within minutes, often) be patched and secured,
 and is guaranteed to be so due to the active Bitcoin community and the 
open-source nature of the product. So overall, Bitcoin is far more 
secure than any conventional currency could ever be.
No, Bitcoin 
is not suffering from its several gigabyte blockchain of transactions. 
The average hard drive size is growing exponentially, and the current 
Bitcoin blockchain is less than 12 GB. that's not even half a single 
layer Blu-ray of data. to suggest that this is a massive, unmanageable 
amount is just plain asinine!
No, the "arms race" of Bitcoin 
ASICS is not destabilizing the currency or interfering with its 
viability. On the contrary, it vastly increases the network's total 
hashing power, making it exponentially more secure and protected against
 external threats.
No, Bitcoin transaction times and sizes cannot
 tell you who made the transactions, even if you "follow the money". The
 reason Silk Road's CEO and higher level users got caught, wasn't 
because of the transactions being analyzed, it was because they bragged 
at length about their exploits, used real names for registration, and 
made a myriad of other mistakes.
Tell me +The Economist,
 is you can follow the Bitcoin money to discover the originator of 
Bitcoin transactions, then (excuse my french) why the fuck hasn't anyone
 discovered the identity(s) of the single largest Bitcoin owner, and the
 one who mined the first (genesis) block? Satoshi Nakamoto, despite 
numerous high profile attempts, remains unknown after all this time, 
even though he has a bigger Bitcoin footprint than anyone. It's all 
guesswork, plain and simple. This supposed "follow the money", while 
useful for formulating educated guesses, is useless for discovering any 
Bitcoin user's identity, without other, more concrete and transparent 
sources of information. Ultimately, the ledger of transactions serves no
 more than as a collection of "hints", the vast majority of which are 
far too vague to provide any value to investigators.
All and 
all, while the writers of this article obviously did their homework 
enough to be knowledgeable about Bitcoin, they obviously haven't 
analyzed their research enough to really understand Bitcoin, only enough
 to post FUD and misinformation that can convince the less initiated. 
This goes to show that even established and reputable journalism firms 
like the Economist can be very, very wrong!
Saturday, November 30, 2013
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