Post-Thanksgiving Events
I missed three days of blog posts due to technical difficulties.
But the holiday is over and now it's time to get back too it. Apparently the world has not stopped turning. Black Friday has come and gone, and today is Cyber Monday. Apparently people are still buying things as I've been seeing reports that Black Friday smashed a record or two with however many billions in online sales.
I was also shocked to find out that Coinbase still controls like 10% of the entire Bitcoin supply. Funny how everyone thinks that Satoshi Nakamoto moving funds would be terrible for the market when a single exchange holds even more tokens than the founder. FTX loses $10B on overleverage while the elephant in the room is that Coinbase controls x3 that amount.
In the wake of all the FTX drama we learned that Coinbase is the custodian of more than 2M BTC, which is absolutely wild. Of course a big chunk of that is reserved for Grayscale's Bitcoin fund and whatnot. Still, doesn't really matter; that many coins in one place is not great, especially when considering that many have exited the exchanges already in the aftermath of all the rolling insolvencies going down. Doesn't seem to matter: people will keep their money on exchanges no matter what happens. Most will not learn until they personally lose BIG.
Speaking of rolling insolvencies...
BlockFi declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy today. Add them to the list of fools who didn't realize not-your-keys-not-your-crypto. This really has been an eye opener in terms of even the biggest players not realizing they can't trust some other institution with their money. It's crazy to think that these people were so greedy that they'd risk it all just to get a 5% return on the deposit. The risk analysis on that front was wildly incompetent.
Speaking of bad risk management...
It's nice to see Chinese citizens protesting against against government lockdowns, but will it really be worth it? Apparently Apple has shut down an app in China that protesters were using to communicate P2P on their iPhones without having to go through the Chinese firewall... so that's fun. Super cool that Apple bends the knee to China (just like every other corporation). Actually that reminds me of this random Pomp podcast I listened to (3 hours long) that I never wrote a post on. Still have the notes on that, maybe I'll get around to it later this week. Essentially all corporations have to do whatever the CCP says in order to operate within their borders, which creates some pretty messed up dynamics in terms of capitalism interacting with a totalitarian nation.
Have you see some of these videos coming out of China? People being locked inside their apartment building with no way to acquire food. Drones spraying god-knows-what into the air and telling citizens to close their windows. Honestly it looks like such a nightmare scenario. I can't even imagine trying to organize a peaceful protest in the face of that. Like asking a lion pretty please don't eat me while we put our necks in their jaws. Clearly this isn't going to end well for anyone (China included).
Metamask announces IP tracking
On a lighter note, the company that provides the main Ethereum Metamask node has stated that they're going to be logging IP addresses and connecting them to wallets. Obviously this pisses off just about everyone in crypto. How dare they log IP addresses and track the data going through their node!
Personally I think this is a totally necessary part of the journey. Why do people think they have a right to privacy when they are using someone else's hardware? If you don't like it, run your own node or find someone that isn't tracking the information. It's important to note here that there are still many nodes out there that don't collect data (as far as you know). When the tech is open source, anyone can theoretically run their own infrastructure, even if in practice this becomes statistically impossible.
This is also another great example of how important DPOS is. Imagine if someone on Hive was logging all the data that came through their node and was giving it to a government agency or selling it to corporations. They'd automatically lose a ton of support and likely be kicked out of the top 20. Hive maintains very healthy incentives when it comes to decentralization and the right to privacy. This is even more true when we consider that it's pretty inexpensive to run our own node, whereas something like Ethereum just keeps getting more bloated by the minute. Trying to do everything is not a smart business model when it comes to extremely inefficient and redundant databases. The main Ethereum Metamask node was a huge centralized attack vector, and it should be no surprise that regulators intend to capture it. In fact, it would be more surprising if they didn't. 2023 will be the year of regulatory overreach.
We must admit that it's a little bit entitled to assume that people who run servers are going to run them the way we want them to run. The entire point of decentralization is for the regulators to move in and force it to happen. Decentralization will NEVER happen if the government doesn't break up the centralized entities that are more convenient and efficient than the alternatives. People get mad because in the short term this puts pressure on the ecosystem. In a bear market that's the last thing anyone wants to see. Well, too bad, get used to the volatility and act around it, or die by it. It's honestly not that hard. People just need to stop being greedy goblins and play it safe instead of increasing their risk in the most risk-on ecosystem imaginable. This is the one thing that CZ does that puts him and Binance ahead of everyone else within the space. Take note.
Conclusion
The economy still looks very bleak, and by extension so does crypto. By all accounts, 2023 will be a pretty brutal year considering all the red flags we continue to see. I would expect the post-Christmas slump in January and February to be a rough time. My only solace at this point is that perhaps we can forge some kind of reversal in the market by summer, even if the economy itself is still on the struggle-bus. After all, markets move faster than the lumbering economy.
If we believe the WEF and their statement of, "You will own nothing and you will be happy," then some truly messed up things need to happen over the next year or two. It's difficult to be optimistic, but we can try. After all, crypto has never existed within a recession. If anything it will be nice to see if we can finally depeg and outperform at some point or another... or if not then at least we'll know for next time.
The one promising outcome from all of this is that development is not slowing down. In fact, development is speeding up. When devs get crunched by a bear market, they work twice as hard. It will be fun to see what gets built this time around. After it's all over I'm sure will laugh about it and remember it just like 2018: a distant memory and a hard lesson.
Posted Using LeoFinance Beta
I've really come to appreciate your perspectives and commentary. Crypto, and everyone involved in it, is maturing and evolving quickly, and out of necessity, due to these strong negative catalysts. What's occurring now is separating the wheat from the chaff, so to speak, and I think Hive will come out of this far ahead of most. It's fascinating to watch it all unfold, I'll say that! 😁🙏💚✨🤙
He's been at this for a number of years, not right about everything but brings a hell of a perspective to it!
It's quite challenging for one individual to me right about everything, but his perspective has a good deal of merit I'd say. 😁🙏💚✨🤙
IF everything on the blockchain is public, then we are already giving them our data for free.
All they have to do is collect it.
But not everything is on the blockchain. For instance pages that one reads but don’t vote on.
Or comments that they read but don't vote on either. Or accounts, hiveblocks and so much more! Just need to hide it behind a VPN and the nosey nelly's will be unable to cross things.
I doubt fedbook level of scrutiny is possible in the hive, nobody to build the code it would take.
12k people out of 8 billion is not a large target to mine.
security by obscurity
!lol
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When I got my coffee it was marked Clark.
Credit: lobaobh
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Use the !LOL or !LOLZ command to share a joke and an $LOLZ
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Are IP addresses on the blockchain?
Is KYC information on the blockchain?
Are physical addresses on the blockchain?
What exactly are you worried about them collecting?
Blog posts?
And now you transition into an argument like:
Really?
So what about 5 people all using the same account?
What about 1 person using multiple accounts?
What about international corporations like Binance simply refusing to hand over user data?
Extend that to random node runners as well.
There is a lot here to parse.
Not even sure where to start.
The problem isn't what's stored on the blockchain.
The problem is you have a legal name an a social security number and an address and you have to provide that information every single time you want to buy a car or move locations or get medical treatment and whatever else.
Not enough of us to worry about just yet.
As long as people tolerate rule by force freedom really isn't an option.
Absent rule by force most of the conflict in the world goes away.
Crazy stuff in China for sure. They are going to change the airdrop setting to be 10 minutes only and lock it, which is what they recently did in China. Certainly not going to update to that iOS version those criminals!
I think people are confused that vulture capital is making the market go to shit. It’s vulture for a reason! They cause chaos where they go.
I honestly can't believe that Apple complied, that seems so strange to me. Maybe they do need a wake-up call, it might actually be time to embrace more competition. But then again, they run data centers in China, and their distribution network for the Apps in China is probably under CCP censor management anyway.
What can an unarmed citizen protest do against government overreach of this magnitude? I'm getting a very bad feeling about this china situation, it seems way too convenient that the Russia/Ukraine front seems to have stopped moving due to the winter (as expected), and all of a sudden we get flooded with China's protest coverage. This is so 1984 all over again, just switching from one war to another, rewriting the past as we go alone.
So many questions which I can't answer. How long have these protests really been going on that level? Haven't we seen those police patrol drone videos for a full year now? Are all those videos even recent or did the outlets once again stock them until the time was right?
It's so convenient to ignore energy costs in Europe spiking to 250% from last year to this while "helping" Ukraine to defend their land, meanwhile, the EU signed insane contracts for LNG supplies from Canada. Canada of all places on this earth, Canada that crushed protests and froze bank accounts without consulting judges or having any basis for such actions. Super urgent and without public discussion - emergency you know. Who knows whose super yachts have been calculated into these deals this time?
Next up on the menu, we shall ignore the mishandling of the COVID-19 Situation. General amnesty for all mistakes that have been made. Because look over there, in China it's way worse. We are the GOOD ONCE, we are all the same and all super good. The ones who imposed the Lockdowns and arrested people for taking a train without a mask and the people who got crushed by their overlords, we're supposed to admire our common achievements. The great achievement of not having turned into China. God damn, spare me, I don't buy it.
Let's just keep going in the direction of more self-governance for everyone and whatever blocks that way, that is the enemy of the people. All the rest is white noise.
Welcome back! Always enjoy reading your posts. Eventhough the message seems hopeful but grim. Grateful there's lots of beauty wonder and magic in real life moments. Always take time and ground into those. knows what is next. This is a very exciting adventure this #life we live.
Posted Using LeoFinance Beta
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You can bet on that.
The situation in China is fucked up though. These people should start kicking asses instead of filming all the abuses.
Last week is lost pretty amount of BCH on my Bitcoin.com wallet trying to fix something on my phone and if I made a mistake with the keys I don't know but I have my wallet but with zero fund.
Talking about regulations yes I see a lot of that coming from many governments of the world.
The scene of locking up myself as an instruction from an authority could really be terrifying. China with her technology. Hope the people are cool with it perhaps what is been spread is fine for them.
Please note Binance is keeping hundreds of HBD that was sent to the deposit Binance account here on Hive but not crediting the users' account the HBD. He receives Hive with that address, there is no reason not to also credit the users HBD and let them withdraw.