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?
Inflation talk like this always makes me antsy. I pretty much agree with what you say above, but a monetary interpretation of inflation, specifically as regards the money supply relative to total economic activity, strikes me as the most sensible way to talk about why we'd experience de facto deflation with an exhausted commodity-backed currency in a growing economy, which was the salient point as far as bitcoin and the Gold Standard are concerned.
I don't think the desire-to-hold interpretation of currency value is incorrect (in a sense it's almost tautologically true), but in this case I think it makes sense to view that as a repercussion (an increase in demand for finance with no corresponding increase in real loanable funds, for example), rather than as a driving factor. The money supply is opaque to most agents in an economy, and their desire to hold onto it is based on how much they can get away with sitting on at any given time. If the money supply is small in relation to the number of transactions they have to make, that number must, by necessity, decrease.
Edit: Wait a minute. That last bit doesn't make any sense at all. If I'm an agent in an economy, my only evidence for the true value of the money supply is how much I can buy with it relative to what I could buy with it in the past. After a period of growth I should be able to purchase a relatively larger amount with the same quantity of currency, so in that sense I guess my desire to retain currency is a direct effect of growth with a fixed money supply without even having to think about the size of the money supply in relation to transactions. They are implicit in whatever background activity is responsible for the growth, however.
Hm. OK. I could be convinced that either angle is useful for addressing the issue. I guess it depends on where you think the action is. The example of number of borrowers in relation to loanable funds is definitely one for the money-supply-to-economic-activity ratio. It's also possibly best dealt with in terms of interest rates, but it suggests a category of coarse, high-capital exchanges which are susceptible to policy intervention. On the level of individual economic agents, currency-retention is probably the easier idea to work with, but it's dealing with very fine-grained aggregate processes that are less tractable in terms of interventionist policy.
I don't understand what you mean. Are you just saying "the way I explained it is a quick way to communicate the sort of problem I have in mind"? Your mention of inflation confuses me because neither of us had mentioned it before.
I didn't mean to say "the value of money = desire to hold it", which I think would probably be wrong or ill specified. A price is the rate at which you can trade one good for another good. Money has lots of different prices (2$ per lb apples, $300 per oz gold etc., $50 per hour of massage etc.) since it particip... (read more)