Bitcoins are not digital greenbacks

Should you probably donate a bitcoin to your future self?

Bitcoin has been in the news a bit lately. In case anyone hasn't been following recent events, its price hit $266 per coin, toppled to $50, and then climbed back to a rate which has been between $80 and $140.

This goes to show its high volatility at the present time, which means that any individual trade you make will be something of a gamble with a noisy, hard-to-predict outcome. You could be buying in right before a boom or a bust. Buying and then selling at random intervals will probably cost you more money than you make, due to transaction fees. Trying to outsmart the market in the short term with nothing but your own human instincts and powers of induction will probably cost you even more money because Markets are anti-inductive. The most realistic way of making much money with bitcoin -- sans owning your own exchange, having skill and resources for serious technical analysis, a faster-than-usual trading bot, or fantastic luck -- is if you can determine that the current price is very poorly calibrated relative to its future value, and if you buy and hold very long-term.

Market swings constitute a psychological attack, assuming you know and care about them, so employing the buy-and-hold strategy can be more difficult than it looks. However, as it happens, you can render bitcoins almost purely unspendable (i.e. impossible to transfer via the network) for a finite period of time as a technical matter. You could for example create a brainwallet based on a lengthy memorized passphrase with a random value appended to it. The larger that appended value, the (exponentially) greater the amount of processing time needs to be spent to find out what it contains. Having access to the memorized passphrase gives you the overwhelming advantage over a brute force attacker, whereas the appended random value immunizes it against dictionary attacks. (Todo: Find or write a program for this. Prove it works, and move some of my bitcoin holdings to a wallet requiring a day or more to unlock.)

Early adopters with moderate crypto skills could thus have a distinct advantage compared to the average investor and realistically hope to beat the market on that basis if mere human psychology and resistance against short term panic-selling is the fundamental constraint. So that's one consideration that could play to our advantage. Assuming, that is, that bitcoin is worth taking seriously to begin with, and not just a matter of geeky fun.

The question that matters for that consideration (the one that differentiates long term speculation on bitcoin from various speculative bubbles in gold, real estate, tulips, etc.) is this: Of all the possible worlds, where is the probability mass concentrated with respect to the future of bitcoin, in terms of how it will actually be used? Is there an overwhelming tendency for bitcoin to fail and be replaced by other things (e.g. other cryptocurrencies, or fiat dollars) -- or is it actually likely (in at least the minimal sense of "not overwhelmingly unlikely") to turn into a major store of wealth in coming decades?

I rather think it is the latter. But first, let's consider what I believe to be the strongest argument against it, which unpacks to three parts:

  1. Deflation. Bitcoin will never be more than 21 million coins strong due to the production rate going down by half every 4 years. That implies that it will always deflate, i.e. there will be less available to buy as time goes on.
  2. Volatility. This is the natural result of deflation. As scarcity increases, people buy out of the speculative belief that value will rise forever. They fear to spend because really, who wants to have bought a million dollar pizza? Eventually, when enough of the value is due solely to this belief in future growth, people abruptly begin to sell, and the bubble bursts.
  3. Distrust. Currency requires trust. Volatility decreases trust. If bitcoins continue to be volatile, because of deflation, which is built into the system, it cannot be trusted well enough to compete with more stable currencies -- and will therefore eventually die out.

Taken together, this seems like a pretty good knock-down argument. It apparently implies, as a matter of basic economic law, that some other cryptocurrency must win over it in the long term, and/or that fiat money will retain its dominance. But the thing to notice is that it's not so effective against bitcoin as a massive store of wealth per se, so much as a currency that will be directly used, in a manner directly analogous to how government-backed monetary units are used. Non-currency forms of wealth which serve some other purpose can safely handle quite a bit more volatility, because their value is not dependent on being trusted as a currency, but rather as a value storage mechanism.

Here is the general scenario that I think holds more probability mass than bitcoin-as-a-traditional-currency, and yet works as a fairly realistic alternative to bitcoin-as-a-flop:

  • Bitcoin will fall out of circulation as a currency because of its relative volatility.
  • Nonetheless, alternate currencies will be built into the blockchain.
  • These alternate currencies will be designed for stability, instead of deflation.
  • Mechanisms for trading alternate currencies for bitcoins will be part of the protocol.
  • Rather than a currency, bitcoin plays a role as a scarce, fungible, stabilizing commodity.
  • The ease of turning it into these successful alternate currencies gives it the ability to outcompete traditional options like gold.

Can this be done? Consider the following more specific scenario as an example:

  1. Alice puts 100 bitcoins in a currency wallet denoted "dollars".
  2. Alice withdraws 10,000 of a currency called "dollars" from an associated address.
  3. The network knows that there are 100 times as many dollars as bitcoin, and makes a note of this.
  4. The network will not allow Alice to withdraw bitcoins from the currency wallet until she replaces the dollars.
  5. Bob puts 99 bitcoins in a currency wallet also denoted "dollars"
  6. Bob withdraws 10000 dollars from it.
  7. In the event that Alice replaced her dollars and withdrew her bitcoins quickly, the network recognizes this as valid. But in the event that she did not, the dollar is recognized as having more value and the network will not permit Bob to withdraw that amount unless he has 101 bitcoins in the wallet.

This is just one example I've come up with, and may not be the best. Various other schemes are possible. (For example, it could be possible for any dollar-owner to convert them back to bitcoin, as opposed to the person who originally minted them.) What the various possible models for doing this have in common is that they allow you to set up currencies which dynamically increase and decrease in supply, depending on how much bitcoin people are willing to invest into them, and how badly people want bitcoins back later on.

A competing scenario to the above would be one in which a better-optimized cryptocurrency protocol implements this, or some other stability-prone algorithm and thus outcompetes the volatile, easily manipulated, "primitive" bitcoin protocol in use today. I used to think I could just jump on the bandwagon when this comes around, maybe strategically sell someone a pizza and end up a millionaire.

However, I've somewhat lost faith in that possibility of late because I realized that bitcoin is much more powerful than it seems, and is capable of substantial self-modification if needed for compatibility with a newer and better system. The only thing locking us to the current protocol is the degree to which bitcoin-owning miners find it in their best interests to continue to use it as it is. A competing algorithm that makes bitcoins more valuable without violating existing expectations would probably not be hard to get people to update to.

Another thing that makes me think bitcoin will tend to self-improve to the point of winning against competitors is that at least some people with substantial assets in bitcoin form are likely to be very proactive in defense thereof. Assuming they remain committed to the long game, and are able to acquire sufficient short-term wealth to pursue their goals, they can do a number of things to defend it against the various plausible attacks: Hiring programmers to improve the client software and render it less hackable, hiring lobbyists to protect it against regulatory interference, employing botnets to attack competitor currencies, slowing down or preventing transactions that appear to be going through anonymizing laundries that could be associated with tax-dodging and illegal drugs, and so forth.

So it seems to me like owning at least one bitcoin and holding onto it for long-term purposes is probably a good idea.

Comments

sorted by
magical algorithm
Highlighting new comments since Today at 9:41 AM
Select new highlight date
Rendering 50/162 comments  show more

I've been wondering how much evidential value the rise of Bitcoin offers for the success of a basement-style FAI project. Unfortunately I don't have a lot of time to participate on LW recently but has anyone else thought in this direction? (Sorry, this isn't directly related to the OP but I figure more interested people will see it here than in open thread.)

My understanding is that Bitcoin involves one major innovation (approximate solution to the Byzantine Generals problem) and the rest is existing tech. Granted, one probably should consider the precise balancing of incentives in the more arbitrary characteristics of BTC to be an innovation, but I'm not sure to what degree that required active management and changes (I have not examined the first version of the source code).

Presumably FAI still has many innovations to go, and as they are publicly solved the chances of a basement project solving the remainder increases.

On an unrelated note: Do you have an opinion on the fact that BTC does not include a proof of stake system in figuring out who to trust WRT to forks in the blockchain? It seems like the only major flaw in the protocol. The lead dev Andresen has discussed potentially instituting a proof of stake system for weighting votes in case of another emergency like the fork caused by the client update recently. I was surprised such things were not included in the original protocol given how well thought out the rest was. If someone is smart enough to think about proof-of-work systems it seems unlikely they wouldn't have been aware of proof-of-stake as a means of establishing trust.

My understanding is that Bitcoin involves one major innovation (approximate solution to the Byzantine Generals problem) and the rest is existing tech.

I guess I was counting the idea of "decentralized pseudonymous money implemented as a distributed ledger" as well as all of the major elements involved in how Satoshi realized this idea to be part of Bitcoin's innovations, since my understanding is that Satoshi was not aware of either b-money or Bit Gold (both of which BTW were also developed outside of academia/government/industry) before he wrote his paper, and had reinvented the idea on his own.

Why might it provide much evidence relative to Craiglist or PayPal, or the broader distribution of tech startups?

Presumably Wei is referring to how the Bitcoin codebase appeared to emerge fully-formed, from out of nowhere, with no obvious precipitating discoveries or breakthroughs; and even now in 2013, perhaps 5 years after the first mentions of Bitcoin, Nakamoto's pseudonymity remains intact: we do not know who Nakamoto is, where he worked or lived, what his training might be, what affiliations he has, what he is doing now, and having spent a bit of time over the last week investigating all of Nakamoto's traces and looking at previous investigations like The New Yorker's, this condition seems likely to persist*. (Unless of course Wei is Nakamoto, for which there's not terrible evidence, in which case he knows all that but the evidential value is still there for us.)

Its subsequent uptake may have vaguely startup-like characteristics, but that is because the Bitcoin codebase is not sapient or intelligent and cannot act on its own...

* I think Nakamoto is probably not Japanese (Austrian libertarianism having zero exponents in Japan, basically, as makes sense given their own deflationary currency and deflationary spiral, and the complete absence of any Japaneseness in his writings) but beyond that he did a great job concealing any real-world aspects of himself, and so the only viable approach is to compile a large corpus from possible suspects such as every poster to the Cryptography ML, do the best stylometrics possible, weight the rankings by known aspects of Nakamoto such as C++ fluency, and then maybe do some active attacks. Even then this might fail since it relies on Nakamoto being present on the ML to a sufficient extent previously under another name.

Bitcoin seems more relevant than Craigslist, PayPal, or other tech startups because it involved major technical and conceptual/philosophical advances on the existing state of the art, and these advances didn't originate from nor was likely funded/supported by academia, government or industry. Also, its social impact seems larger - if Craigslist or PayPal didn't exist, something essentially identical would have been created very soon anyway, but if Bitcoin didn't exist, another Bitcoin may not have been created for another decade, and/or may have been created with very different characteristics, for example it might have been coded with a monetary policy that emphasized price stability instead of a fixed supply of money.

I would consider Bitcoin to have failed with regard to its monetary policy (because the policy causes high price volatility which imposes a heavy cost on its users, who have to either take undesirable risks or engage in costly hedging in order to use the currency). (This may have been partially my fault because when Satoshi wrote to me asking for comments on his draft paper, I never got back to him. Otherwise perhaps I could have dissuaded him (or them) from the "fixed supply of money" idea.) I don't know if it's too late at this point to change the monetary policy that is built into the Bitcoin protocol or for an alternative cryptocurrency to overtake Bitcoin, but if it is, then Bitcoin is similar to self-improving AI in that it may be critical to get the first one right and it offers evidence on how hard it is for an individual or small group working outside the mainstream to do that.

Since I have a personal connection with Bitcoin I'm probably tempted to read more into it than I should relative to other evidence such as other tech startups. I'm curious what your impression is after reading the above, and whether there is other specific evidence that I should be paying more attention to.

I'm curious what your impression is after reading the above, and whether there is other specific evidence that I should be paying more attention to

Sure.

because it involved major technical and conceptual/philosophical advances on the existing state of the art,

I agree Bitcoin is relatively audacious, novel, and technically sophisticated .

and these advances didn't originate from nor was likely funded/supported by academia, government or industry

Couldn't you describe many early-stage self-funded startups that way? Or do you mean you guess that Satoshi was not working in academia, government, or industry before developing Bitcoin?

Also, its social impact seems larger - if Craigslist or PayPal didn't exist, something essentially identical would have been created very soon anyway, but if Bitcoin didn't exist, another Bitcoin may not have been created for another decade, and/or may have been created with very different characteristics

What kind of impact? So far the volume of Bitcoin transactions is still relatively small, and presumably a large portion of the transactions conducted using Bitcoin would otherwise be undertaken using other payment systems. So getting a version of PayPal or Craigslist working somewhat earlier or better could easily affect more transactions and generate more consumer surplus if Bitcoin does not grow to larger scales.

ETA:

PayPal’s net Total Payment Volume for 2012, the total value of transactions, was $145 billion, up 22% year over year.

Cf Bitcoin transaction volumes.

Couldn't you describe many early-stage self-funded startups that way?

Self-funded startups that also involve major technical and conceptual advances that weren't first developed in academia, government, or industry (and then spun off) seem rare. Can you give some examples that are similar to Bitcoin in this regard?

Or do you mean you guess that Satoshi was not working in academia, government, or industry before developing Bitcoin?

If Satoshi was working in academia, government, or industry, it seems very likely that he didn't develop the ideas behind Bitcoin as part of his day job, otherwise he probably wouldn't have been allowed to publish the ideas and software under a pseudonym.

So getting a version of PayPal or Craigslist working somewhat earlier or better could easily affect more transactions and generate more consumer surplus if Bitcoin does not grow to larger scales.

It's hard to even say whether Bitcoin ultimately has a positive or negative impact at this point. For example one possible impact of Bitcoin might be that due to its deficient monetary policy and associated price volatility it can't grow to very large scales, and by taking over the cryptocurrency niche, it has precluded a future where a cryptocurrency does grow to very large scales. If we take the expectation of the absolute value of its impact, it seems higher to me than the impact of a somewhat earlier or better PayPal or Craigslist.

due to its deficient monetary policy and associated price volatility it can't grow to very large scales, and by taking over the cryptocurrency niche

I'm also quite worried about this, but on the other hand Bitcoin creates an obvious entry gateway into more advanced cryptographic currencies (i.e. once Bitcoin infrastructure is set up, other currencies can use Bitcoin infrastructure if there's a way to exchange them with Bitcoins, lowering the bar to entry).

I've had all sorts of ideas along these lines, in fact. The main reason I haven't published them is that I'm not sure that more advanced cryptocurrency advances FAI over AGI. In fact, you'd think it would be the reverse - the Great Stagnation may be all that's keeping us alive right now.

In fact, you'd think it would be the reverse - the Great Stagnation may be all that's keeping us alive right now.

I don't see why we should obviously expect funding for AGI to benefit from economic growth in a way that funding for FAI doesn't. If Silicon Valley is booming, I'd expect MIRI to receive more donations and Google to put more money in to self-driving cars. If Silicon Valley is contracting, I'd expect MIRI to receive fewer donations and Google to put less money in to self-driving cars. Am I missing something here?

I'm surprised that you are so interested in this area (i.e., monetary policy for cryptocurrency), given that the subject matter and required backgrounds to study it are not closely related to FAI. I don't even have any strong opinions on what is the right policy, except that the one currently built into Bitcoin is pretty suboptimal (ETA: at least in the long run, in the short run it seems close to optimal for getting Bitcoin some initial scale).

The main reason I haven't published them is that I'm not sure that more advanced cryptocurrency advances FAI over AGI.

Yeah, me either, or more generally whether cypherpunk-related technologies help or hinder a positive Singularity, which is part of the reason why I stopped pushing very hard on my cypherpunk ideas.

(i.e. once Bitcoin infrastructure is set up, other currencies can use Bitcoin infrastructure if there's a way to exchange them with Bitcoins, lowering the bar to entry)

Yes; it's been pointed out that you can, and people have, set up competing currencies using the codebase but without the builtin caps. More interestingly, you apparently can build currencies directly on the existing Bitcoin codebase & main blockchain using colored coins (which wedrifid seems very interested in).

No, what I mean is that if anyone else sets up a cryptocurrency right now, they don't have to worry about making it exchangeable with dollars, they just need a good way to make it exchangeable with Bitcoins, and that could easily be done using pure programming. Bitcoins is a horrible store of value and an even worse medium of account, but some of the underlying ideas have great potential as a medium of exchange, and Bitcoin can sneeze any previous development of real-world interfaces directly into a new, competing cryptocurrency.

Volatility. This is the natural result of deflation. As scarcity increases, people buy out of the speculative belief that value will rise forever. They fear to spend because really, who wants to have bought a million dollar pizza? Eventually, when enough of the value is due solely to this belief in future growth, people abruptly begin to sell, and the bubble bursts.

Consider the Great Deflation. US prices sagged from 1870-1890 due to a slow increase in the supply of money (gold) and a rapid increase in total economic production due to the 2nd Industrial Revolution. Prices weren't volatile, they just steadily dropped... by about 2% per year.

This may well parallel the situation Bitcoin will face as it matures, as the supply of new bitcoins slowly increases and the Bitcoin economy grows. Before that can happen, the markets will have to go through a process of discovering things like how widely it will be used for transactions, how governments will respond, etc.

It certainly isn't inevitable that deflation causes volatility. The cause of Bitcoin volatility is not deflation, it's caused by speculation under conditions of extreme uncertainty.The uncertainty will be resolved eventually, one way or another.

Here is the general scenario that I think holds more probability mass than bitcoin-as-a-traditional-currency, and yet works as a fairly realistic alternative to bitcoin-as-a-flop:

  • Bitcoin will fall out of circulation as a currency because of its relative volatility.
  • Nonetheless, alternate currencies will be built into the blockchain.
  • These alternate currencies will be designed for stability, instead of deflation.
  • Mechanisms for trading alternate currencies for bitcoins will be part of the protocol.
  • Rather than a currency, bitcoin plays a role as a scarce, fungible, stabilizing commodity. *The ease of turning it into these successful alternate currencies gives it the ability to outcompete traditional options like gold.

Can this be done?

The good news: Yes, it can be done.

The better news: It can be done right now without any changing to the bitchain or mining protocols.

The even better news: It's being worked on right now. Not least of which by myself.

The caveat: It cannot work quite like your specific proposal. This is due to limitations in the other currencies, not due to limitations in bitcoin. Due to the very nature of the alternate currencies there must be trust in a third party. Someone must have the alternate currencies stored and they must be trusted to deliver it on request (even if in practice this is seldom required).

Consider whether the below modification of your example would satisfy the stable alternate currency need:

Can this be done? Consider the following more specific scenario as an example:

  • Alice sends 100 bitcoins to TrustworthyBank, with a request for USDCoins.
  • TrustworthyBank calculates the value of the bitcoins received in USD at current exchange rates and finds that it is worth USD$10,000.
  • TrustworthyBank sells or stores 99 bitcoins and signs the remaining coin as a colored coin which it then sends to Alice. These coins are identifiable to everyone as USDCoins and are redeemable by TrustworthyBank for USD$10,000 each according to the publicly accessible contract cryptographically signed by the same key used to 'color' the coin.
  • Alice gives 0.8 USDCoins to Bob in exchange for $8k worth of cocain.
  • Bob places bets summing to the entire 0.8 USDCoins on the (still hypothetical) BitKnow.com Prediction Market, all on the proposition "Arnold Schwarzenegger Elected President of Australia in 2013".
  • Craig, one of the people having bet against Bob, receives 0.2 USDCoins on January 1st 2014.
  • Craig sends 0.2 USDcoins to TrustworthyBank.
  • TrustworthyBank sends $2,000 to Craig (or equivalent value in bitcoin). It does not know or care what has been done with the coins since they were created. It simply looks at the bitchain, confirms that the coins can be followed back to a signing transaction.

The above example demonstrates the use of bitcoin as a way to make exchanges any other currency. It has the features:

  • Only a small amount of trust required.
  • Pseudonymity (with the same mechanisms for increasing that to anonymity if necessary).
  • Transparency. All the (bitcoin based) transactions made by TrustworthyBank are public. If TrustworthyBank breaches the contract it isn't possible to hide it. Then people start using ActuallyTrustworthyBank instead. TrustworthyBankOwner goes to jail. (Because naturally the bank that people actually use should be one in whichever country has the most suitable laws.)
  • Distribution. It requires no interaction with the banking institution except when adding or removing currency from the overall micro-economy. Transactions of the currency are between peers and do not involve TrustworthyBank at all.
  • All services that already use bitcoin either just work with USDcoins or can be adapted to with little effort. For example an escrow service or Prediction Market that works on bitcoin using 2-of-3 multisignature transactions can be used with USDcoins without the escrow service even needing to have heard of USDCoins.
  • It is potentially vulnerable to government intervention. If the government that rules the country where TrusworthyBank is incorporated they could choose to come in obliterate it if they want.

It is potentially vulnerable to government intervention. If the government that rules the country where TrusworthyBank is incorporated they could choose to come in obliterate it if they want.

Note: The above weakness is a feature. Moreover it is an optional feature.

Buying USDCoins backed by TrustworthyBank who is established in the real world and subject to government sanctions is a way to establish trust. If they rip people off the usual mechanisms of punishment for that can be counted on. However this relies on having a country that has suitable laws and practices. But what if we don't find this to be the case?

A (hopefully not too plausible) scenario: The US government decides that if encryption is a munition then bitcoin is a Weapon of Mass Destruction. It starts sending nuclear ICBMs at any country that harbors bitcoin banks. That ensures that bitcoin is a black market currency rather than becoming mainstream. Do these alternate real-world-backed currencies still work?

Yes, they do. Consider MorpheusBank. Morpheus is completely anonymous and untracable. He never interacts with anyone directly and instead monitors the bitchain and responds to stimulus. If a transaction sends bitcoin to the 1morpheusETC address Morpheus sends MorpheusCoin to whichever address the bitcoins were sent from. If the bitchain shows him MorpheusCoin being sent to the 1morpheusETC address then sends bitcoins back. The exchange rate is determined by a publicly accessible algorithm referring to established real world exchange rate sources.

Where TrustworthyBank is trusted based in part on trusting laws, and governments to prevent fruad, MorpheusBank is trusted via observation of past transactions (all publicly verifiable) and estimation that the Morpheus reputation and expected value of all future business exceeds the value he gets if he defects immediately. That is, users trust that Morpheus will not kill the golden goose because he doesn't want to lose an indefinite supply of golden eggs. This relies on the service returning a sufficient premium to Morpheus to incentivise him.

The title of the OP suggests to me this should be a good thread in which to get to the heart of bitcoin. Please skip the rest of this comment and any subthread it produces if you disagree.

As a child of the 1970s in the US, I don't put much store in any currencies. My conclusions, living through the high inflation, were to own stuff. Inflation after all is a statement about the exchange rate between stuff and money. The point of money is that you can trade it for stuff. It has seemed to me that I don't need to be particularly long or short money, I need relatively small amounts of money for relatively short periods of time in order to facilitate trading one kind of stuff for another kind of stuff.

In fact, I generally have tried to go slightly short on money compared to stuff. I have usually carried mortgages (short position in money) larger than any cash balances I have carried. I haven't analyzed my results from this carefully, but given the more-or-less steady 3%-ish inflation of US dollars, and the wierd US and California tax codes which combine to cut my cost of carrying a mortgage in half, this has probably been a little better than break even.

Of course, "owning" stuff is a matter of placing trust in governments. My shares in Berkshire Hathaway are only as good as a complex legal system backed up by courts, regulatory agencies, and a mix of officially jackbooted thugs to prevent other humans from walking off with the stuff which I think I own through my having signed various documents many years in the past to trade dollars (which I owned as tenuously as I own my BRK.B shares) for BRK.B shares.

So for my life, I am stuck, if I want to have wealth, relying on governments, in my case primarily US and to a lesser extent California and other US state governments. At least as I organize my wealth, the trust I place in order to use dollars is transient and insignificant compared to the trust I place in having wealth.

I can't imagine there will ever be a cryptologic solution to owning stuff that renders trust in governments with their sanctioned jackbooted thugs irrelevant. Is this a defect of my imagination?

For someone like me, do bitcoins matter at all?

Are there big holes in my thinking of the purpose of money or currency that render bitcoins, compared to US dollars, an important thing to me and people like me?

This is sort of the reason BTC is so interesting. Throughout all of human history everything has ultimately relied on jackbooted thugs or the implication thereof to secure title. A reliable distributed ledger is fundamentally new. Sure, you can be threatened physically, but how do they actually link you to your holdings if you're smart about it? And if your locality is threatening people who use it, you go somewhere where they aren't and retrieve your encrypted wallet from cloud storage. BTC's biggest use case is capital flight IMO.

I am only an interested amateur, and my doubt is related to potential legal and regulatory actions rather than to volatility. As ThrustVectoring said, if a government decides to legislate BTC out of existence, or severely limit its usefulness, the game may be over quickly. It does not matter whether the security is crackable or what tricks the exchanges want to use, if the US govt prohibits them from transacting bitcoins anonymously and convinces other governments to follow suit. Then all you will have left is an illegal underground economy. At best this would be like betting on cocaine appreciation, at worst BTC will be supplanted by something more controlled and eventually disappear into some niche underground thing. So, in my mind the main question is the odds of a sweeping regulatory action and its potential severity, balanced against the potential appreciation due to the factors you mentioned, should it survive unmolested. I have no idea how to estimate these odds.

Even if bitcoin goes entirely underground that doesn't mean it will necessarily be insignificant or "niche." Internet piracy is black market but not remotely niche--P2P is 98% illegal copyright infringement but it takes up about a quarter of internet bandwidth.

I could see bitcoin thriving in an entirely illegal capacity, being as widely used among some groups as P2P filesharing. Once upon a time people thought filesharing would become insignificant and restricted to a small community of tech-savvy individuals if they just took down Napster and Limewire. But as far as I can tell, illegal filesharing is as pervasive as ever.

One thing that bugs me about deflationary criticism is that it seems very asymmetric. People and institutions are able to adjust their future expectations for inflationary conditions but not deflationary ones. "People don't want to spend in a deflationary environment" also flies in the face of talking about the price crashing, usually just a paragraph later. Clearly people have price levels at which they do wish to consume. That this level is different in an inflationary environment from a deflationary one is not a death knell.

That seems right to me. In addition it seems that people who harp on Bitcoin's deflationary quality are failing to make a distinction between expected and unexpected inflation/deflation. In particular, I've noticed a number of people making the "deflation hurts borrowers" claim. This is only true if deflation is surprising and unexpected. Otherwise real interest rates adjust to take deflation/inflation into account.

The slow increase in Bitcoin supply is not going to surprise anyone, it's planned and well-known. Demand for Bitcoin should also become more predictable over time as the uncertainty is resolved and the currency matures, becoming less like a highly volatile penny stock and more like a stable blue-chip.

Thanks for writing this! I'd like to hear some second and third opinions. What are economists and other domain experts saying about Bitcoin?

a) When I can earn Bitcoins I will be more likely to spend them. Dollars as inflationary but I'm not likely to spend the last dollar in my pocket on something I don't actually need. Bitcoins are inflationary but I'm not likely to spend my last Bitcoin on something I don't really need. It's currently very hard to earn a significant amount of Bitcoins so no one is ready to spend them and at the same time there aren't many places to spend them either. So while the deflation is good we need to be able to replace every Bitcoin we spent to make it spendable like a currency. When I can spend X amount a week based on an income of Y amount a week then why not spend Bitcoins in that scenario? I don't lose any Bitcoins so there is no reason not to spend my profits. I'm not however going to spend my savings and who exactly would?

b) Volatility isn't a problem. Bitspend and Bitpay can handle it. Better designed payment processors can handle it. Better designed exchanges can handle it. But for now volatility means increased profits for speculators and right now speculation is one of the only ways to turn 1 BTC into 2 BTC. So if that is the best source of income in the Bitcoin economy it's going to create a natural incentive to pump and dump which drives volatility up.

c) Bitcoin does not have to replace the dollar to be a success it merely has to coexist. Alternative cryptocurrencies don't have to replace Bitcoin but merely compete. Bitcoin is like the first web browser when no one knows how the web works but experts from other fields expect it to work like something else. Bitcoin is unique and we cannot base how it works around fiat currency, gold or anything else.