Avatar
statusquont
988f12f72c4819b5d011ee70d881356a5ad16c9a1ca22a66530ac72eb1d501ea
Freedom first and foremost.
Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Here's an example of why monetary verification is important (and can be expensive).

The gold price is currently $2075/oz.

If you buy a sovereign 1-oz gold coin, or a globally-recognizable privately-issued 1-oz gold bar, you'll generally pay something like a 3-5% markup to spot. This is basically the verification and distribution premium. Even if you buy a bunch of 1-oz items, you generally won't get the spread down too much. If there's a shortage, the premiums over spot go way up.

If you buy smaller sizes, that premium will be a bigger percentage. For example if you buy 1-gram gold coins, you'll be paying a >50% markup to the spot price, which is silly.

If you buy bigger sizes, like 1-kilo bars (which cost more than a typical car), you could get it down to a 1-2% premium to spot.

The bigger size you go, the less verification you have that the core of the item is indeed gold rather than tungsten. You have to trust the brand and supply chain, basically. The smaller size you go, the less possible and economic it is to insert tungsten into the item. And so on some level, it makes sense that the verification premium is bigger for smaller items- you're more assured that it is indeed gold to its core. The surface area to mass ratio is harder to forge, basically. Somewhere around 1-oz is probably the sweet spot.

Now, if you're buying gold in most U.S. states, including on a lot of popular online stores, you'll also pay sales tax, and you'll often have to pay the difference in terms of your payment method. So if your credit card costs the merchant 3%, then that would eat up the merchant's margin since it is razor thin, and so instead the customer often has to pay it. They could instead do a wire transfer for a sizable purchase to save some money, but many banks charge like $30 for a 1-day wire transfer.

And if you're buying online, there's a shipping fee. That's usually pretty low but then goes up a bit if you add insurance because you don't want to risk your expensive coins or bars getting lost in the delivery chain or stolen from your doorstep. From the time of order to the time of delivery, it'll generally take several days. This includes time for the merchant to process the payment (gold merchants are usually a bit more careful about chargebacks and other reversed payments than the average merchant) and ship you the items.

All together, including the verification premium, taxes, payment fees, and shipping, one generally pays 8-15% over the spot price to get 1-oz gold coins or bars. That means gold has to go up a pretty significant amount just to break even. And then you have collectible capital gains taxes on that price gain (which in the US is higher than the actual capital gains tax rate). If you take time (and time is money) to shop around and find ways to legally avoid sales tax and so forth, and figure out the cheapest/slowest payment methods, then you can push the premium down as close as possible to the verification premium and shipping costs.

And if you want to securely ship large amounts of gold long distances, especially internationally? Like imagine HNW investors, businesses, banks, or sovereign entities? You're going to pay a sizable amount. One does not simply ship millions of dollars worth of gold without robust security.

If you want someone to custody your gold, you're going to pay a fee. If you are fine with unallocated/mixed gold with multiple layers of counterparty risk, you could buy among the cheapest ETFs with annual fees below 0.2%. If you want to hold your gold in an allocated way by Brinks or something with fewer layers of counterparty risk, it'll generally cost over 0.5% per year. This goes toward the vault costs, salaries for people with guns, real estate costs, etc.

Basically, there's a pretty big inefficiency in the form of 1) routine verification, 2) secure transfer of ownership, and 3) secure custody, that all comes out in the form of high costs and slow speeds.

Bitcoin has fees, but they are very low in comparison. Nodes can verify bitcoin basically for free. Miners timestamp transactions to transfer ownership for a fee, and you can currently send ten million dollars worth of bitcoin globally for like $10 and have it confirmed within the hour. And you can custody bitcoin yourself, and bring it around with you globally, through ports of entry, across borders, in ways you can't realistically do with gold above a certain value threshold.

When thinking about periods of above-average bitcoin fees, it's useful to keep some of the alternatives in mind. Verifying and transferring ownership of other store-of-value assets like gold and real estate is slower and a lot more expensive, requires a lot more abstraction and permission, and comes with much less portability.

TIL: " collectible capital gains taxes" is a thing and that "it's higher than the actual capital gains tax rate"

nostr:nevent1qqsym8hq3nhyn8tju7pzxjjhknxjq0s3n8eax8we92hce2sjxdk24zspzfmhxue69uhk7enxvd5xz6tw9ec82cszyr4tpe6k6v4cp0x5vneas39cqspsxp66z04tcdve5a3vntr6hy057qcyqqqqqqg6twaxf

#nostr getting a mention by Matt Mullenweg (of WordPress & Automattic) on the latest Tim Ferriss podcast episode, about 30 minutes in:

https://tim.blog/2023/12/29/matt-mullenweg-2/

Kicking the tires on @npub12vkcxr0luzwp8e673v29eqjhrr7p9vqq8asav85swaepclllj09sylpugg again, after listening to @npub16c0nh3dnadzqpm76uctf5hqhe2lny344zsmpm6feee9p5rdxaa9q586nvr and @npub1s5yq6wadwrxde4lhfs56gn64hwzuhnfa6r9mj476r5s4hkunzgzqrs6q7z remind us all about the importance of free speach and permissionless tech.

note: tagging accounts on Primal (android) doesn't provide any positive feedback that it's working -- text doesn't change color similar to how we have been trained to expect on other platforms

second attempt to tag accounts.

Kicking the tires on @Primal again, after listening to @milan and @preston remind us all about the importance of free speach and permissionless tech.

note: tagging accounts on Primal (android) doesn't provide any positive feedback that it's working -- text doesn't change color similar to how we have been trained to expect on other platforms

Heads up: This link is pointing to the previous grant of Camelus

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=720x1354&blurhash=%5D5SigQ4o%7Eq-%3A%3FbE3NHt6s.WB%5E%2BWAIot7jEwH%250xuRkn%24-TxWkCf%2Bo0aJt6o%23NGV%404.WXxaNHbwIoR%2BkCR*R-b_R*i%5Ej%3FWr&x=17dcd291e1e18d9f5e4f82e0a972cd69314305ac47464e91672bd64d7037de87

Heads up: This link is pointing to the previous grant of Camelus

#m=image%2Fjpeg&dim=720x1354&blurhash=%5D5SigQ4o%7Eq-%3A%3FbE3NHt6s.WB%5E%2BWAIot7jEwH%250xuRkn%24-TxWkCf%2Bo0aJt6o%23NGV%404.WXxaNHbwIoR%2BkCR*R-b_R*i%5Ej%3FWr&x=17dcd291e1e18d9f5e4f82e0a972cd69314305ac47464e91672bd64d7037de87

Note: the "Fed" is white with a white border, so it may not show up right away. You can open the .svg in a text editor and modify styles .s6 and .s7 (lines 32 & 33) to change the colors from #ffffff to whatever you want.

Replying to Avatar statusquont

Here's the FedNow logo in .svg format.

"Information wants to be free." -- nostr:npub1dergggklka99wwrs92yz8wdjs952h2ux2ha2ed598ngwu9w7a6fsh9xzpc

http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 631 255" width="631" height="255">

fednow-logo-svg

Here's the FedNow logo in .svg format.

"Information wants to be free." -- nostr:npub1dergggklka99wwrs92yz8wdjs952h2ux2ha2ed598ngwu9w7a6fsh9xzpc

http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 631 255" width="631" height="255">

fednow-logo-svg

The biggest thing that's holding back Nostr clients from being "sticky" and becoming more habbit forming is: stale data. Seeing posts I've already seen makes the client apps feel stale. If the content slot machine isn't paying out often enough, eyeballs go to other casinos. For better or worse.

But definitely don't do that horrible thing where a feed will spontaneous refresh and make you lose your place, and frustrate you cuz you're unable to find the post you were on the middle of reading. That's worse.

⚖️

Replying to Avatar mutatrum

Made a small new thing based on an old small thing:

https://hodl.camp/halvings/

Y'all probably have seen the image version, which I created almost two years ago:

https://twitter.com/mutatrum/status/1486717740882620429

I've seen this image pop up on my feed from time to time. It's extremely cool to see a small thing you made find it's way in the world and occasionally comes around and says hi.

Now I made it into a web page, something which I wanted to do for a long time. The dates update automatically, including the halving date estimation, which is based on another script I made, an even longer time ago:

https://twitter.com/mutatrum/status/1409828323467923456

Hope you enjoy.

Could see a "fun" variation on this where you enter your birth year and it computes what the block reward will be at the time of your expected passing. I hope to make it to Epoch 12! 😅

WhatsApp allows you to have a catalog of products & prices associated with your account.

Seems like this should exist for #nostr too. I believe all the pieces already exist and just need to be bolted together.