Elad Gil has this brilliant post titled “6 Startup Ideas Every Nerd Has” with a poignant explanation of how these are thought out. As someone who works on macine learning I can tell you that idea #2 repeats itself too often. I, too, have dabbled with ranting about ideas I hear too often. There is yet another type of ideas, though – ideas that are essentially interesting and good but that are too deep in geekdom to be relevant. Cryptocurrency is one of them.
If you work in payments you can’t get away from cryptocurrency, and its poster child Bitcoin. Every talk of fraud in payments draws scoffs from random commenters; Bitcoin will solve your fraud problems, they say. Irreversible, anonymous, plain and clear. Objecting responders talk of Bitcoin’s (lack of) merits as legal tender and the probability that governments will accept a legal tender they don’t control, if only for money laundering control. Both miss the point: Bitcoin isn’t a contender in the race to replace money. Claiming that Bitcoin solves fraud is like claiming that abstinence solves STDs; at zero participation from the general public, proliferation of fraud in Bitcoin is as futile and unadvantageous as being a sexually transmitted disease is in a world full of monks.
If everyone used Bitcoin, there would be ways to defraud people out of it; from Man In The Middle to 419/Nigerian Prince scam to simple MLM, scams and fraud in eCash are as old as eGold. The human factor is the weakest link, and no cryptocash will replace that. Furthermore, the barriers to entry into cryptocash usage, even if it could solve the problem of fraud, are too high, and prevent wide acceptance. The crypto-community likes this difficulty so much, cherishes it so, that wide adoption is impossible. If you disagree, have your mom mine me some bitcoins. I’ll pay more than the $42 they’re asking for in Mt Gox. You know what? Just have her read through the documentation and explain them back to someone who isn’t you.
Is the system broken? No doubt. The problem isn’t in the way legal tenders are minted, though, but in two other places: identity brokers and financial infrastructure.
The brokers – the card issuers – own the financial relationship and data to underwrite consumers for credit. That’s one major part of the financial equation that let financial institutions dictate the rules of the game both online and offline. If you undermine that relationship you get access to one of the most significant relationships consumers in the developed world have. That’s why I love short term credit schemes like Klarna and prepaid card services like Card.com; the first creates a financial relationship from thin air by extending credit in real time, and the second encourages consumers to deposit some of their paycheck directly to their prepaid-supporting account. Both have the ability to disintermediate issuers.
The financial infrastructure is where I actually think cryptocurrency can be helpful. No matter what you do you can’t run away from the card networks or clearing houses; they are the backbone of money movement. Every dollar moving around ends up paying tribute to the eternal gods of monetary movement. What if Bitcoin didn’t try to become a replacement for money consumers are using, but rather create the first true cloud based clearing house, where newly created financial institutions trade reserves and foreign currency using the Internet, but securely, rather than using the current broken systems? That for me is a big promise, and one huge problem no one’s tackling. What it would require is large Bitcoin liquidity reserves, backed by real currency, and with a stable enough exchange rate to plan a 12 to 18 months window. If new lenders could borrow in Bitcoin from a central Bitcoin exchange, its way to becoming a de-facto backbone of a new breed of financial transactions will be much more probable. So far, it doesn’t seem remotely as available and stable as required.
The payments and personal finance world is broken, but it enjoys a distorted local maximum that a lot of energy is required to move away from. Simply waving an interesting idea at the public doesn’t work. Like flash players weren’t as popular before the iPod and Napster, while changing the music industry, crashed as a business, cryptocash is a precursor to something, but is still not it. It can go somewhere, but is still not there. We need to recognize that to be able to move ahead.
Bitcoin gets easier to use every passing month.
Next time you have a coffee break, download MultiBit from https://multibit.org/help.html and install it. You’ll be up and running before your coffee is finished. Post your automatically generated Bitcoin receiving address (Click on the ‘Request tab, press the ‘Copy’ icon) and I’ll send you 100 millis.
There you go – you are using cryptocurrency !
I’m probably too harsh on the ease of use. Still, even with how easy Ubuntu is, I don’t see many seniors using it.
Agreed – I never try to explain Bitcoin to seniors. It’s only going to be used by ‘digital natives’.
‘Claiming that Bitcoin solves fraud is like claiming that abstinence solves STDs’ – great sentence, couldn’t agree more: http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/08/hacker-steals-12000-worth-of-bitcoins-in-brazen-dns-based-attack/