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  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2494.

Thanks for the criticism. New argument: Utility (besides usefulness as money) is not strictly necessary, although it may be nice to have. The value of a currency is set by supply and demand.

Supply: A limited supply (scarcity) may increase the value.

Demand: Demand is set determined by how well people percieve the currency's features as a store of value, medium of exchange and unit of account. Important factors include: Durability, Portability, Divisibility, Fungibility, and Stability. Gold has had most of these features (importantly scarcity, only 2% inflation from mining). However, it severely lacks in portability due to being a metal, compared to hard digital assets.

So the value of a currency is mostly determined by its perceived usefulness as money, not its utility for other things.

#2494·Erik OrrjeOP, 2 days ago

Supply: A limited supply (scarcity) may increase the value.

The scarcity of a useless thing doesn’t make it less useless.

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2494.

Thanks for the criticism. New argument: Utility (besides usefulness as money) is not strictly necessary, although it may be nice to have. The value of a currency is set by supply and demand.

Supply: A limited supply (scarcity) may increase the value.

Demand: Demand is set determined by how well people percieve the currency's features as a store of value, medium of exchange and unit of account. Important factors include: Durability, Portability, Divisibility, Fungibility, and Stability. Gold has had most of these features (importantly scarcity, only 2% inflation from mining). However, it severely lacks in portability due to being a metal, compared to hard digital assets.

So the value of a currency is mostly determined by its perceived usefulness as money, not its utility for other things.

#2494·Erik OrrjeOP, 2 days ago

Durability, Portability, Divisibility, Fungibility, and Stability

These are all secondary values.
The durability of something is irrelevant if the thing itself is useless.
The portability of something is irrelevant if the thing itself is useless.
The divisibility of something is irrelevant if the thing itself is useless.
Etcetera, etcetera.

The only demand for something like this comes from either a mistaken understanding of what ‘value’ is/means (e.g. believing that the ‘durability’ of something otherwise useless makes it valuable), or from the Keynesian Beauty Contest linked above.

This dynamic makes cryptos wonderful as instruments of speculation, but they will never be money unless they are backed by some independently useful commodity (which IIRC some actually are), or are made legal tender by some government (which defeats the point).

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2495.

Is "it contains bitcoin's solutions to fiat, and also solves bitcoin's lack of privacy" easy to vary? Could be made harder to vary by explaining the technicals of zero-knowledge proofs as well (though I'm not konwledgeable enough to do that here).

#2495·Erik OrrjeOP, 2 days ago

The part that is easy to vary is that an arbitrary amount of different cryptos can be made with the same features.

The features themselves can be as specific as you like but the overall argument is still extremely easy to vary, because it is an argument for a specific cryptocurrency.

It is the same as arguing for a specific god because the god you like has specific features. The god itself is still easy to vary.

  Erik Orrje addressed criticism #2427.

Why not some other cryptocurrency that also has those features?
For example, why not an existing or future fork of Zcash?

“[Insert favoured cryptocurrency] will become the next money” is an extremely easy to vary statement.

#2427·Benjamin Davies, 4 days ago

Is "it contains bitcoin's solutions to fiat, and also solves bitcoin's lack of privacy" easy to vary? Could be made harder to vary by explaining the technicals of zero-knowledge proofs as well (though I'm not konwledgeable enough to do that here).

  Erik Orrje addressed criticism #2425.

Utility is not a necessary aspect of money.

Money without other use cases only holds value to the degree it can continuously win a Keynesian Beauty Contest in the market.

In other words, it has no underlying value.

#2425·Benjamin Davies, 4 days ago

Thanks for the criticism. New argument: Utility (besides usefulness as money) is not strictly necessary, although it may be nice to have. The value of a currency is set by supply and demand.

Supply: A limited supply (scarcity) may increase the value.

Demand: Demand is set determined by how well people percieve the currency's features as a store of value, medium of exchange and unit of account. Important factors include: Durability, Portability, Divisibility, Fungibility, and Stability. Gold has had most of these features (importantly scarcity, only 2% inflation from mining). However, it severely lacks in portability due to being a metal, compared to hard digital assets.

So the value of a currency is mostly determined by its perceived usefulness as money, not its utility for other things.

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2478.

I suppose that would make it a bit harder for bad actors because they’d need to monitor multiple deadlines, but they could still submit arbitrary counter-criticisms just in time to avoid paying. Or is there something I’m missing?

#2478·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

The counter-criticism moves the deadline forward again the same fixed amount.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2476.

The timeframe to address the criticism should start counting down from the moment the criticism is made, rather than the original post. So it would be a continuous thing rather than a single deadline for everyone.

The OP could end the bounty if there are no outstanding criticisms and he no longer seeks a solution.

#2476·Benjamin Davies, 2 days ago

I suppose that would make it a bit harder for bad actors because they’d need to monitor multiple deadlines, but they could still submit arbitrary counter-criticisms just in time to avoid paying. Or is there something I’m missing?

  Benjamin Davies commented on idea #2473.

As much as I dislike LLMs, I’m thinking of using them to show summaries of discussions at the top of the page. Summaries would reflect ideas without pending criticisms.

#2473·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

I think definitely worth trying, sounds like fun

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2472.

But then bad actors could always submit arbitrary counter-criticisms just before the deadline to avoid paying.

#2472·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

The timeframe to address the criticism should start counting down from the moment the criticism is made, rather than the original post. So it would be a continuous thing rather than a single deadline for everyone.

The OP could end the bounty if there are no outstanding criticisms and he no longer seeks a solution.

  Benjamin Davies commented on criticism #2471.

I’m not sure yet, but I’m playing with the idea that the criticism can’t have any pending counter-criticisms by some deadline.

#2471·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

Yes, that was what I was thinking. Presumably the OP could set their own deadline timeframe too.

  Benjamin Davies commented on idea #2470.

Some people – and I don’t know if this includes you or not – are overly worried about getting embarrassed or making silly mistakes.

There are some exceptions where reputation needs to be taken very seriously, but I think the general view to take in this matter is that no one cares. Think of the deepest embarrassment you’ve ever felt – and then try to replace that feeling with how others felt about your situation.

Like, if you’re on stage playing the guitar in front of hundreds of people, and you hit the wrong note, you may feel embarrassed. But many people didn’t even notice. And those who did probably didn’t care nearly as much about the mistake as you did.

#2470·Dennis Hackethal, 2 days ago

I think it is more that it is a permanent record of things I have written that may one day be used as an attack vector. It means I need to really mean what I write, so that I can stand behind it (even as potentially an honest mistake) if someone tries to use it against me.

  Dennis Hackethal commented on criticism #2313.

Me, too. I think Veritula’s design allows for this pretty naturally since the topic of a discussion can be general enough for various competing ideas to be posted in the discussion.

Veritula emphasises making one point at a time for ease of criticism and discussion, which is useful in a forum but makes absorbing the totality of an idea a little more tedious compared to a quick glance at an encyclopedia article. (It is possible I have misunderstood some aspect of Veritula here.)

#2313·Benjamin Davies, 10 days ago

As much as I dislike LLMs, I’m thinking of using them to show summaries of discussions at the top of the page. Summaries would reflect ideas without pending criticisms.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2471.

I’m not sure yet, but I’m playing with the idea that the criticism can’t have any pending counter-criticisms by some deadline.

#2471·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

But then bad actors could always submit arbitrary counter-criticisms just before the deadline to avoid paying.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2467.

How do you ensure the criticism is worthy of the bounty?

#2467·Benjamin Davies, 2 days ago

I’m not sure yet, but I’m playing with the idea that the criticism can’t have any pending counter-criticisms by some deadline.

  Dennis Hackethal commented on idea #2318.

Using my true name here causes me to take more care in what I write. I’m not hiding behind an identity I can discard.

#2318·Benjamin DaviesOP, 10 days ago

Some people – and I don’t know if this includes you or not – are overly worried about getting embarrassed or making silly mistakes.

There are some exceptions where reputation needs to be taken very seriously, but I think the general view to take in this matter is that no one cares. Think of the deepest embarrassment you’ve ever felt – and then try to replace that feeling with how others felt about your situation.

Like, if you’re on stage playing the guitar in front of hundreds of people, and you hit the wrong note, you may feel embarrassed. But many people didn’t even notice. And those who did probably didn’t care nearly as much about the mistake as you did.

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2468.

Why should reacts persist through revisions?

#2468·Benjamin Davies, 2 days ago

Nevermind, this was addressed by #2462

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2461.

It isn’t clear what would happen during a revision. A paragraph might be changed or deleted. Too complicated.

#2461·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

Why should reacts persist through revisions?

  Benjamin Davies addressed criticism #2459.

Feature idea: pay people to criticize your idea.

You submit an idea with a ‘criticism bounty’ of ten bucks per criticism received, say.

The amount should be arbitrarily customizable.

#2459·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

How do you ensure the criticism is worthy of the bounty?

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2242.

Those run the risk of turning Veritula into yet another social network like Reddit or messenger like Telegram.

#2242·Dennis HackethalOP, 15 days ago

Not if I do reactions on a per-paragraph basis. I think that’s a new feature none of those sites have.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2464.

Then what does somebody do who wants to react to an idea as a whole? Do they react to the last paragraph?

#2464·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

The way I picture it, as you hover over different paragraphs, a reaction button appears and moves between paragraphs. So it would always be clear that reactions are on specific paragraphs. The user would pick whatever paragraph they most wish to react to.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2458.

I could implement reactions on a per-paragraph basis.

#2458·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

Then what does somebody do who wants to react to an idea as a whole? Do they react to the last paragraph?

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2461.

It isn’t clear what would happen during a revision. A paragraph might be changed or deleted. Too complicated.

#2461·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

For reactions to paragraphs, at least you could tell if the content someone reacted to has changed, and only then remove the reaction.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2461.

It isn’t clear what would happen during a revision. A paragraph might be changed or deleted. Too complicated.

#2461·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

But presumably, the same is true for reactions to ideas as a whole. Reactions would have to be removed for revisions.

  Dennis Hackethal addressed criticism #2458.

I could implement reactions on a per-paragraph basis.

#2458·Dennis HackethalOP, 2 days ago

It isn’t clear what would happen during a revision. A paragraph might be changed or deleted. Too complicated.

  Dennis Hackethal revised criticism #2442.

Feature idea: pay people to criticize your idea.

You submit an idea with a ‘criticism bounty’ of ten bucks per criticism received, say.

Feature idea: pay people to criticize your idea.

You submit an idea with a ‘criticism bounty’ of ten bucks per criticism received, say.

The amount should be arbitrarily customizable.