The trojan horse model never made sense to me.

at what point is Bitcoin SO valuable to central banks that they voluntarily surrender the ability to *print* money?

What am I missing?

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They'll come to the realization that their money is useless. It's outdated.

so in the current system they can automatically extract value from the general population with fairly little overhead

And the thesis is that they will just stop because they decide that model is "outdated?"

I'm glad my article could spark some conversation about this topic.

embarrassingly I didn't read it.

but I will šŸ™

Our thesis has been that

if we assume premature ossification,

institutional adoption leads to regulatory capture of the network.

And now?

šŸ˜€

good article!

same thesis

I don’t think they *voluntarily* surrender anything.

The game theory makes it so they must hold it, for their own survival (relevant searches: Nash equilibrium in a coordination game, prisoner’s dilemma, first mover advantage). They can still print to the extent that fiat currencies keep their entrenched network effects but it loses its benefit over time and hurts whatever legitimacy they have more and more. So if they’re smart they use at least part of the print to buy BTC.

This ultimately makes NGU which empowers early adopter (or any smart opportunist, really) to invest in / build infrastructure that goes completely around them.

Okay so following that scenario

It's in everybody's best advantage to hold

and also everybody's best advantage to prevent others from holding no?

so we see an outright war on P2P exchange and efforts to be the first one to monopolize the network, no?

because of the total transparency they can leverage the threat of IRL violence to prevent free use.

having trouble seeing the inevitability of a Bitcoin standard here.

There’s a missing piece most people don’t talk about, but I personally love: without transaction / block space demand long term, the network actually becomes unstable (as the block reward dwindles). So eventually there’s also this paradoxical incentive to want everyone to have some and transact with it as well or else it sort of collapses in on itself.

Admittedly this is probably a tough landing to stick, but it does hint at the next stage of the game where all the big hodlers are forced to coordinate / incentivize BTC based economic activity or else see their valuable reserve go haywire with volatility.

There’s nothing comparable to this in history… a sound money that rehypothecates itself thru proof of work. So we’re in for a weird ride IMO- and I’m skeptical of anyone who claims to know exactly how it plays out. If it works, we’ll all be forced to adapt in ways our species has never seen before. I hold naive hope it will be beautiful, but this long game transition is definitely not talked about enough and your questions are valid.

yeah nostr:npub1m5s9w4t03znyetxswhgq0ud7fq8ef8y3l4kscn2e8wkvmv42hh3qujgjl3 has been telling me about that.

essentially the design choices Bitcoin has made incentivizes hodling.

but hodlers don't pay for network security.

its kinda a big problem.

and since bad money chases out good money,

its easy to see a scenario where large, powerful players use violence to monopolize the network,

and issue a shitcoin (Backed By Bitcoin ā„¢) for people to actually use for txs,

while they hoard the actual capital.

And nobody actually wants to SPEND their BTC anyway so there's not a lot of incentive to resist.

but like you say

its uncharted territory.

¯⁠\⁠_⁠(ā ćƒ„ā )⁠_⁠/⁠¯

Most ā€œhodlersā€ are also accumulating more are they not? And to accumulate you have to transact on chain. There are also points at which it is advantageous to spend some of the capital to improve one’s life. Or you hear of hodlers consolidating UTXOs which is another transaction. I don’t think there are many that just have old coins and just sit on them without accumulating, sellin to buy things, or consolidating. So I don’t see how the network just stops being used. Because everyone is just hodling seems extreme.

So there's an incentive in bitcoin due to the hard supply cap for people to hodl that is a positive feedback loop. I wrote more about it here nostr:nevent1qqswuw0sxp59ar2x2hs77dq2gx32wmdarjx7dmv2gxxfe94wxyzakuqpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsygxaypt42mug5ex2e5r46qrlr0jgp72fey0ad5xy6kfm4nxm924augpsgqqqqqqs99y3hz

This problem applies to any coin with a hard supply cap, and the rate at which that happens has to do with the transaction fees, which are a function of use and block space.

sure I agree they will always be some activity,

but i don't think acquiring and consolidating amount to much.

maybe capex could be... šŸ¤”

but like I said

if theres a lower friction shitcoin provided by the central bank you can use,

99% of people probably use that instead

You can accumulate quite a lot on Lightning and then pull the whole sum on-chain. Then it's much fewer transactions.

Also have to think about the fact that more people transacting means more transactions, even if the Bitcoin sum remains the same.

There's more monetary velocity, if ten persons buy one pair of shoes, than if one person buys 10 pairs of shoes.

The paradox is if they do the forced shitcoin scenario plus hoarding (which you can obviously see happening already) then they actually hurt the value of their stash long term. Like falling on their own sword. But they don’t see that - yet.

Yes there’s a limited incentive to spend vs hodling, but nostr:npub150q6tnk63wrt0jmy6ht27k8u0pa6gq8jjy4eq7tf6f6507t9ghgqnnen2h made a decent response to that already. I would add / argue there’s also an incentive to be paid in BTC which ā€œpullsā€ spending.

If they succeed on getting a controlling share of the network

and they have a captured market of users

i don't think its true that doing a fractional shitcoin off of Bitcoin hurts the value of their stash.

i guess it depends a lot on the details

and its all pretty theoretical

Anyone getting a controlling share of the network sends it towards zero… the next step of that scenario comes with a fork and a huge sell off of the controlled asset. Mutually assured destruction.

Fractional shitcoins kill transaction demand so reducing the value of the assets they control long term, which includes both utxos and miners.

Where I see Bitcoin as beautiful is it has all these paradoxes where total control ultimately hurts the one who would invest in that goal. It forces coordination and distribution in so many ways.

I dont think the new VC capital and cantillionaire investors that have drivin the price up this cycle know or care one little bit about decentralization.

if a powerful enough entity guarantees Blackrocks investment, they aren't going anywhere.

You’re absolutely right they don’t.

They’ll be forced to realize the reality of the protocol design eventually though.

> .. hodlers don't pay for network security ..

This might mostly be true for now. But life (at least today) is finite and at some age and price, many (especially poorer) hodlers are going to spend BTC for goods/services.

Sure, some hodlers will rather pass their BTC on to some heir than just spend it for something. But will all/most do this? Hardly.

why would it be any different on the future?

if the value proposition is "your Bitcoin will ONLY increase in buying power"

you have huge incentive to spend whatever else you have.

*even more so* at a future higher valuation.

no?

Because you inch closer and closer to where you yourself are simply running out of time to enjoy with your very own senses anything your BTC can buy.

And thus - as I see it - the sensorical value someone gets by spending some of their BTC will at some point in time turn almost every hodler into a net seller.

Some people are lucky enough to have enough cash flow to enable a satisfying lifestyle _as well as_ buy/hodl BTC without _ever_ selling any. But I'm pretty sure these people make up a small fraction of all hodlers. All the others will - IMO - turn from buyers into sellers at some point in time.

sounds like trickle down economics.

maybe...

its one theory anyway.

It's a simplified model that assumes a lot. It assumes people know when they're going to die. This is of course not true. It assumes people won't take their keys with them.

But it assumes higher time preference than some people have. Maybe it's your desire to build a nice life for yourself. That's definitely most people. I personally am building a family, and that family has an open ended lifespan if I do it right. What resources I accrue are for mostly after I'm gone. I don't intend to blow it all after retirement on a sports car and a boat.

i was being generous

trying to turn over a new leaf šŸ˜…

Hmmm, interesting take on how it plays out. My view has been the same problem you describe, but that there's no solution, that network security reduces as it becomes less profitable and with it, value of the network and therefore the price of coins. But, if a consensus can form as that happens to incentivize use of the network for transacting, you're right. I think though that that consensus will be difficult to accomplish, you'd need bigger blocks for that, you'd need an uncapped supply for that and you'd need all the stakeholders betting on second layer solutions to get screwed. Seems like a long shot to me, that's an understatement.

Very difficult to achieve yes. Not likely to succeed in early iterations. Maybe even an impossible balance to strike… nobody knows.

However bigger blocks not necessary. Layer 2s have base layer settlement needs from time to time which ultimately drive transaction value on the base chain up as they are used more.

Uncapped supply wouldn’t help… I think. Firstly I don’t think that it ever gets out of the first part of the game. Then also miners are never totally forced to coordinate economic activity and they are likely the biggest player in the endgame.

It might be an intractable problem. Just some faithful thoughts.

My thoughts on the supply cap are basically that hodlers are free riders and so as long as that remains network security will trend downward after some threshold is reached. Haven't done the math on that threshold, so I couldn't give you an estimate of when.

nostr:nevent1qqswuw0sxp59ar2x2hs77dq2gx32wmdarjx7dmv2gxxfe94wxyzakuqpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhsygxaypt42mug5ex2e5r46qrlr0jgp72fey0ad5xy6kfm4nxm924augpsgqqqqqqs99y3hz

I'm not the only person that thinks this, and in fact this was a well studied problem well before I came to understand it. Usually it's framed as "the miners need to be paid" and as a block size problem but actually it's more a problem with who pays and the incentives that emerge from that.

As far as layer 2s handling settlement, that could suffice, but the problem then is, a miner needs to be paid whether from a thousand small transactions or one big one. If everyone is settling on lightning or something those close transaction fees need to be large, which means channels need to be large, which is a centralizing force in lightning. We already see most users using lightning with large liquidity channel prividers, increased fees to open and close channels will make that problem worse, and would apply to any layer 2 architecture whereas the centralizing trend we see on lightning is specific to it's architecture.

I'm happy to see a die hard Bitcoiner willing to talk about these things, usually but not always I get dismissed when I bring this stuff up. It is a real problem that needs a solution if Bitcoin is to succeed.

Blabbing responses from mobile:

Yeah it’s unfortunate more Bitcoiners won’t talk about it, because debate/discussion around it is really the only way to get to solutions. Better than burying heads in the NGU sand, but maybe less cozy.

My left curve approach to the problem is to build something that increases transaction demand.

Really interesting point around Lightning centralization. That’s a tough one. The write up you attached is also great- I’m going to look more into XMR to educate myself.

Other things I’ve seen brought into the conversation are the many ways the BTC block space might be valuable long term, like for example the concept of an open+immutable time-chain is interesting. Then there’s innovations that might happen thru a soft fork but I’m not counting on that ha ha…

I’ll maintain the naive belief for now that there’s a possible sustainable path to global BTC adoption but it requires a lot of chaos and compromise to get there. Using energy as money brings so many awesome hopeful possibilities into play… maybe this works with other PoW chains too who knows.

The people trying to corner the market are dumb, and will see they’ve shot themselves in the foot eventually.

On the whole these are all chaotic technologies which are going to rip a new one into the current system. All attempts to control it without building something useful for others seem to be stupid- which I love about these protocol designs. Can’t put these genies back.

My base case is at least some chaos before whatever stable era comes next. Maybe I need to hedge more? We’ll see. Thx for the insights.

Yep. I have thought about this too.