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gwern comments on Making money with Bitcoin? - Less Wrong Discussion

18 Post author: Clippy 16 February 2011 07:17PM

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Comment author: gwern 22 April 2011 01:57:05AM 0 points [-]

By definition, if there is no hard cap and people are generating, then a peg can't be maintained to another currency with a hard cap - basic Pigeonhole Principle. Can't uniquely match n+m items to just n slots. I'm not really seeing what you're asking after.

Comment author: Cyan 22 April 2011 04:45:22AM 0 points [-]

Ah yes, I see. I didn't think carefully about how a peg would actually be maintained.

Suppose the new currency does have a hard cap -- suppose I copy the Bitcoin scheme and create Cyan-coin, of which there will eventually be 21 million. Even if I don't personally maintain reserves of the two currencies to keep the exchange rate pegged, didn't I just double the supply of e-money, thereby halving the purchasing power of an e-coin?

Comment author: gwern 22 April 2011 01:35:48PM 1 point [-]

Only if people use it and make plans on it. You could make a trillion different Cyan-coin currencies, and if they never left your computer, would they affect anything at all? Of course not.

The purchasing power of a random bitcoin only halves if people run out and start using Cyan-coin in exactly the same quantities as Bitcoin. Otherwise, the actual purchasing power is much less, set by the exchange rate - obviously Cyan-coin is not equal to a Bitcoin in PPP if the exchange rate is 100:1.

Comment author: Cyan 22 April 2011 02:22:52PM 0 points [-]

I imagine that early uptake of a Bitcoin clone would be facilitated if people thought that the hard cap on Bitcoins proper would cause the scheme to have undesirable properties as a currency.

Comment author: gwern 23 April 2011 06:48:29PM 1 point [-]

Surely. But that's not the case, as people think the presence of a hard cap is one of the valuable traits of Bitcoin.