Guidance : There Is No Such Thing As Bitcoin Taint.

Friday, 21 February, Year 6 d.Tr. | Author: Mircea Popescu


Theory



First off, I do understand why you would think there is. Honestly. You're used to a certain system, you grew up in a certain system, you expect the trappings of that system anywhere you go.

Ever gone camping, fishing, hiking, and turned your eyes looking for the faucet or power outlet or wifi modem lights or whatever ? Sure, rationally you know and understand that you're in the bellybutton of fucking nowhere, and there never was and never existed such a thing as you're looking for within a hundred miles. Nevertheless, at some level, your brain expects that faucet. What do you mean nobody has ever laid a hundred miles of pipe/cable/bacon trails all the way to right over here ?! Impossibru!

You're in Alaska, they never had tornadoes there, they never could have tornadoes there. Nevertheless, you grew up in Nebraska, and even today your eye sort-of expects that cloud over there to turn into a sucker any moment now. You're in a one man capsule flying through space on a one man mission that will end with your life, as no landing or returning to Earth was ever planned ? That's fine, but if you were violently and unpleasantly raped in your youth you're still thinking you perceive someone coming at you right past that corner. What corner, in a one man capsule ? That one!!!

It's just how the human mind works.

Second off, fungibilityi is the most important property of any medium of exchange. As a working medium of exchange is the most important guarantee against stupidityii, and as socialism is nothing but stupidity, obviously it then follows that the chief business of socialism would be to attack fungibility.

Which is exactly what happens in the world today. The AML bullshit is quite plainly, and quite tiredly, an attempt to render the currency unfungible. Sure you have five units of account, and sure Iran also does, but you may and Iran may not use its five units of account to buy a cup of coffee. Pecunia non olet ? No such thing in socialism. The ability to render the currency useless is chief on the list of what socialism needs to acquire in order to maintain itself, because otherwise it will presently get discounted out of existence. Once this is ensured, the bezzle becomes possible, and it no longer really matters what numbers you print on the website that you've substituted for actual reality.

Thirdly, the chief value of Bitcoin, and the reason it is so disruptive, and the reason why it will render socialism impracticable in the world, is strictly that it is absolutely and indomitably fungible. Any satoshi is exactly equal, exactly interchangeable and exactly identical to any other satoshi, and nobody can do one damned thing to "fix" this.

Sure, Bitcoin is important as a store of value. Sure, Bitcoin is important because you really like holograms and hollowed out base metal rounds. Sure, Bitcoin is important because you've put up a donation address on your POV nudies blog. The most importat quality of Bitcoin however is none of these. The most important quality of Bitcoin is its absolute, indomitable fungibility. This is why it's a better tool than gold, and this is why it did what gold did not and eventually could not : gold is, indeed, very fungible. But it is not absolutely fungible, and the difference between an efficient engine and an absolutely efficient engine will become apparent to you just as soon as you try and build the latter.

Fourthly, I obviously understand why agents of the US Government would try to convince the general public of the contraryiii. Really, I do. Nevertheless, it won't stick. Retarded pieces like what Matonis is retweeting of late (shame on you man, seriously) are powerless in this matter, just as Max Keiser was powerless in the matter of exchange rates last Spring. Why is this, you may ask ?

Because I say so, that's why.



Practice



Firstly, as discussed here two years ago, nobody holds any title to any Bitcoin. This means that nobody can claim superiority of title, and as such nobody can legitimately "confiscate" any Bitcoin. This doesn't mean that people can't take others' Bitcoins, nor does it mean that people can't claim such behaviour is "legitimate". Scammers do all the time, for all sorts of entertaining reasons and considerations. Nevertheless, a claim does not a title make.

Secondly, any relationship, of any kind, between any two distinct Bitcoin addresses is logically unsound.

Re-read that once or twice so it may sink in. By observing Bitcoin moving from address A to address B you can not make any sort of statement whatsoever about the owner of A in relation to the owner of B. Specifically :

  • A and B may be addresses owned by the same person, in the same wallet. If their RNG is any good, you will never know. If their RNG is utter shit you may at most suspect it, but then again you may suspect anything you wish at any time whatsoever. Some people suspect Obama is a Nigerian scammer who used a fake passport to "verify his identity" right into the most valuable account in the US. Some other people suspect reptilians are secretly running the world in the shape of dressing up like goutish old Jews and hanging around boring 1970s parties in Florida. More power to them.
  • A and B may be part of different wallets, owned by the same person. You'll never know. Sure, you may suspect. Suspect away, there are five million botnets all over the Internet and they are sort-of looking for more stuff to do on a regular basis.
  • Either A or B may be undisclosed addresses of a merchant. Such as BitBet, or MPEx, or anyone else. Sure, you may ask them, and if you ask nicely maybe they'll tell youiv. But maybe you can't or won't ask nicely, or maybe you don't even know what nicely even means in their culture. The Internet is global after all.
  • Either A or B may be the addresses of an unrelated third party. Like you know, back when I was being DDoS'd by "someone" and then I pointed the DNS to the White House ? Yeah, exactly like that. If "we know where you live", what's a Bitcoin address ?

There are no technical means to circumvent these problems.

Sure, you may maybe convince a kangaroo court to do what your Politburo wants done, and maybe that's all you want. But derp, if you need technical measures to convince kangaroo courts to do what they exist to do in the first place you're uniquely inefficient.

Uniquely inefficient systems do not prevail in nature.

———
  1. Fungibility is the property of that set whose equal subdivisions are also identical, and being fungible is being replaceable by such an identical substitute. So, the serial datist is he for whom women are fungible, the colorblind is he for whom green and red are fungible, net neutrality ensures the fungibility of bandwidth and so on and so forth. []
  2. Because it discounts stupidity in relation to reason, and through this process it makes stupidity unsustainable as an economic activity. []
  3. Just as USG agents would try to convince the general public that "tor is safe" and that stuff like bitcoinfog.com actually works for the stated purpose. Try and think for a minute, I'm sure you can figure out on your own exactly what the problem is with a freestanding tumbler service.

    Like you know, why do you suppose druglords launder their not-so-fungible cash through HSBC, a banking institution with oodlebunches of legitimate cash inputs and outputs rather than through a specially made, Dollar Laundromat with no other business ? It must be because HSBC has much better forum pr than MPOE-PR, right ? []

  4. Dear USG agents : I am reserving this spot for a link towards a future article. Send the word upstream that I figure that about two weeks should be enough for everyone. []
Category: Bitcoin
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11 Responses

  1. This article is still current and brilliant.

  2. Mircea Popescu`s avatar
    2
    Mircea Popescu 
    Thursday, 14 November 2019

    Trilema does that!

  1. [...] Except there’s no bitcoin taint. This dude needs to buy himself some fucking Trilema credits. Colored coins, black-listing, red-listing and other proposals all want to add memory to our coins – often for arguably good or innovative reasons. Most of the proposals can be implemented without any changes to the Bitcoin network as a whole, they could be added as a layer on top of Bitcoin. Some require protocol changes. [...]

  2. [...] it’s the opinion of the esteemed that “there’s no such thing as bitcoin taint,” for as long as the Bitcoin code is too fucktarded not to merge inputs, creating new [...]

  3. [...] ___ Our wealth being entirely a function of our time, that is, our Bitcoin. [↩]MP published Guidance: There’s No Such Thing As Bitcoin Taint on February 21, 2014. That’s four full months ago. Or four fucking years in Bitcoin time. [...]

  4. [...] implicit clients of TMSR OS are the implementation tools of economy, i.e. medium of exchange 1, punishment gazette 2 and public forum 3, along with "the masterclass in economy masquerading as [...]

  5. [...] the SEC has trouble following in integrum the morass of USG regulation. [↩]The reference is here. [↩] Category: Activism Comments feed : RSS 2.0. Leave your own comment below, or send [...]

  6. [...] the argument can be brought that even in this case, "tracking" is pure nonsense, as there's no such thing as Bitcoin taint in the first place, and for very good reasons. Services such as BitBet manage to preserve users anonimity quite [...]

  7. [...] clearly shown both that "a 100% secure site" is possible, and - much more importantly - that users do not have to forfeit any of their privacy to participate in networked activity. To satisfy these requirements however the sites in question have to be well designed, by people [...]

  8. [...] find my private keys to go with my public key, go follow "Bitcoin taint" and so on and so forth. Privacy is a thing, much like meat that's not "rusty scissors & 1000 [...]

  9. [...] that ~ before the grams, i.e. an approximation, is a reason Bitcoin is superior to gold ? That is, Bitcoin's fungibility is perfect, while precious metals can be clipped or the scales can be tipped in a much cheaper manner when [...]

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