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#1 |
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Administrator
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 3,987
MercBucks: 965,024
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Social Gaming vs. the Nation State
Been meaning to post this for a while, but I keep forgetting. Until now.
China has begun to seriously crack down on virtual currencies, due to fear of what this means for "real world" economies. The New York Times covered this in an article from July 1, 2009. Here's an excerpt: The buying and selling of the make-believe currencies used in online gaming has become so widespread that Chinese authorities fear it will affect the real economy.So here we see government protecting the monopoly on currency issuance that is currently granted to the world's privately owned central banks. Readers of this blog are well aware of my stance on this issue, which is that virtual currencies represent the solution to the global economic crisis. As money supply is largely a political issue, this is also how online communities disrupt the nation-state. See my previous writings on this topic: beyond the nation state, virtual currencies. So where do we go from here? Well of course most gaming/virtual currency companies will bow to government, regardless of how corrupt and immoral government will be. In that case, we can expect the political/economic woes to worsen -- or at least we can disregard the idea that virtual currencies will be a solution. Alternatively, we can look for ways to challenge legislation. This would be through the election of a different kind of government officials. Ron Paul is, of course, the role model here. Paul has already encouraged competing currencies to the US dollar. Folks who have tried to launch competing currencies have gone so far as to put his face on the currency. Of course, most people simply are not educated enough, the mainstream media can get by with ignoring Paul, and Paul lacks the rock star charisma that enables an empty candidate like Barack Obama to win. Coupled with the corruption inherent in the electoral process -- see our archive on election fraud as just one example -- reform through the legislative process seems a long shot. (Although I do encourage people to get active and support it, as we should try a variety of tactics to get our liberty and economic freedom back). Alternatively, a peaceful, albeit controversial, solution can be found when we think of how communities compete online -- something Umair Haque refers to as anti-defense. The basic idea is to attack by creating a decentralized approach which lacks a single point of failure. Haque explains: You can't defend a centralized structure against a network attack in the traditional sense (just ask Twitter). But you can anti-defend against a network attack, by decentralizing your own resources to the edges — something that, in physical warfare, is a big no-no. When resources are spread and replicated across as broad, diverse network of your own as possible, if one node goes down, the others stay up.When we think about this in terms of how virtual currencies can survive when attacked by real world economies, we should look for a solution that creates multiple virtual currencies, so that there is no single point of failure. At the same time we should look for ways in which these virtual currencies can be exchanged for one another, so that the markets can be small and very fragmented but still liquid and easily turned into another currency when necessary. This is, of course, the business model I've been working on for the past few years. So I am obviously biased. Beacause this blog post is about finding peaceful solutions to the economic and political crises that plague our world, the song for the post is "Peaceful Solution" by Willie Nelson. |
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#3 |
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Administrator
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 3,987
MercBucks: 965,024
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hey unregistered,
thanks for your comment. yes, i wanted to link to the category pages so that people can check out various writings on the topic. as the topic is unconventional i want to try communicating the idea in a variety of ways as well as including other perspectives from news sources around the web. |
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| beyond nation state, network defense, virtual currencies |
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