• silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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    7 months ago

    That’s the big environmental issue with Bitcoin — other major cryptocurrencies have moved to proof-of-stake instead of proof-of-work, so they don’t need vast quantities of energy, and when you stop using all that energy, the generators with the highest marginal cost shut down, which generally means coal or gas.

    • stoy
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      7 months ago

      A few months ago I read up on how much energy is used in a bitcoin transaction compared to a VISA transaction, it was something like 10000 times more energy for a bitcoin transaction

    • Tramort@programming.dev
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      7 months ago

      Proof of stake is just the Fed all over again.

      Proof of work isn’t perfect, but there’s a reason Bitcoin uses it.

      • PseudorandomNoise@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What’s the reason? Using more electricity than whole nations just to move some money around hardly seems worth the cost.

        • Tramort@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          Because the stakeholders become the new central bank, with all the same motivations and conflicts of interest. You end up with a “staked class” and an “unstaked class”.

          This is a contributing factor to why ethereum can be rolled back: because the stakeholders didn’t like it.

          • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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            7 months ago

            Bitcoin essentially has the same thing though — it’s just that the “staked class” is those who have built power-devouring ASIC facilities to compute lots of hashes. Get enough of them together, and you can roll back transactions via a Sybil attack, just as you can with organized action by stakeholders in a proof-of-stake cryptocurrency.

      • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        …because it was too early to know any better and the creators are stubborn, lazy, and passively malicious?