Less Wrong used to like Bitcoin before it was cool. Monthly threads popped up around the same time a pricing bubble brought mainstream attention last year. When the bubble popped, and price continued to deflate, discussion on this site stopped entirely. Was there a change of sign in the social status of the topic, is the topic fully explored, or has there simply happened nothing of interest over the last year?
If you are not familiar with Bitcoin, here is one intro I happen to like.
Kaj Sotala lists a number of previous threads on the topic:
There seems to be quite a bit of a Bitcoin interest around here, with several articles about it already: [1 2 3 4 5 6 7]
Less Wrong seems like a good place to discuss recent developments, if one does not want to suffer the inanity of the officially unofficial forum. If you are not longer interested in Bitcoin, perhaps send your remaining balance to the Singularity Institute?
I don't think the merchants really care about that. They care about make themselves rich. If making nerds with video cards also rich is a side effect, so be it. But if nerds with video cards can dilute the value of their currency, they may have a problem. If this dilution occurs on a known schedule and will slow down over time and eventually stop altogether, and competing currencies can be diluted at any time by central bankers, it may not be much of a problem.
A bit of a tangent, but the increase in supply of bitcoin is not the only thing that affects the value of bitcoin. A key determinant is how much people want to hold bitcoin. How much people want to hold a currency is not a very stable thing, meaning that the even with a fixed quantity of bitcoin in circulation, the future value of bitcoin will be highly uncertain. This will also tend to produce gluts and shortages of bitcoin, which have their own negative effects.