• Null User Object@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        How much electricity does the world banking system use? (Answer: a whole lot more)

        How much of that electricity could be used to simultaneously run the banking system AND turn incredibly ambitious renewable energy project ideas from absurd pipe dreams into economic no brainers? (Answer: none)

        • Opafi@feddit.de
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          8 months ago

          a whole lot more

          You have a source on that? Proof of work is notoriously energy hungry… That’s the “work” part.

            • Opafi@feddit.de
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              8 months ago

              A crypto mining company is your source for claims that crypto mining companies operate ethically?

              • Null User Object@programming.dev
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                8 months ago

                Can you refute their math? You asked for a source. That’s the most comprehensive data I could find. I’m happy to look at any better if you’ve got it.

                • Opafi@feddit.de
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                  8 months ago

                  Their math is nonsense because that document compares total energy consumption instead of consumption per transaction. That’s like saying Lamborghinis are the most efficient cars on the road because their summed up fuel consumption is lower than that of all VWs or all Toyotas (or probably even all bicycles).

                  There.

                  /edit I just needed to come back to this comment because that document really makes me irrationally angry. It’s not just that it doesn’t compare energy consumption per transaction, it’s also that especially btc is pretty much the worst offender when it comes to energy per transaction. It’s not just that it consumes more energy if more transactions are scheduled… Once the blocks are full, the users spend horrendous fees to get their transactions through in time, meaning that suddenly it becomes economically viable to spend a lot more on mining to be the one to find the next block with all those precious transaction fees. Btc’s energy footprint literally explodes once the blocks are at capacity - and at that point btc is still orders of magnitude away from visa or banks and their transaction volume. That problem is so bad that other cryptos have written their protocols to automatically increase block size once the volume increases or simply forked away from btc to allow bigger blocks (which was necessary because the miners have absolutely no incentive to increase the block size as it’s obviously in their best interest to earn money with transaction fees). Proof of work crypto is literally the worst offender when it comes to energy efficiency, with high performance computing centres spending incomprehensible amounts of energy to solve the mathematical equivalent of Sudokus, just to be eligible to retrieve the next prize as the first solver of that puzzle with no gain for humanity from all that spent energy whatsoever. It’s as if banks insisted on all transfers being brought to the next bank using a pick up truck that is only allowed to drive in first gear and at max rpm, just because.

                  And for what? Power to the people? Instead of a handful of banks, the important cryptos are now in the hands of a handful of miners, but without the consumer protection laws that banks have to follow. Great job.

                  • Null User Object@programming.dev
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                    8 months ago

                    Re: your on chain transactions argument, you’re completely over looking (intentionally?) the fact that day to day transactions don’t need to be on chain. In fact many would argue that they shouldn’t be on chain. Layer 2 protocols can handle all of that.

                    Just one example scenario could be…

                    Step 1. Your employer opens a Lightning Network channel to your node (self hosted, or not, your call). This requires one on chain transaction (actually, there are enhancements that allow opening multiple channels in a single transaction, but that’s beyond the scope of this conversation.) Step 2. Every month, your employer pays you over this channel. No new on chain transactions happen for this. Step 3. You use the channel to pay your rent/mortage, utility bill, etc. Still, no new on chain transactions. Step 4. You continue to use the channel to buy groceries, lunch, drinks for friends, a massage, etc. No on chain transactions. Step 5. Oops, you’ve got a bill that needs to be paid in fiat. What now?!? Use the channel to transfer some Bitcoin to your bank account, where it’s automatically converted into fiat. Pay your bill from there. Still no on chain transactions. Step 6. Return to step 2. Still no on chain transactions. … Step 3,658,423. 6 years later, you leave your job, Your employer closes the channel. Any Bitcoin left on your side of the channel (if any) is sent to an on chain address that you provided in step 1. This requires one more on chain transaction.

                    Total number of on chain transactions in 6 years and countless payments: 2

                    In reality, that’s probably not exactly how it would work. For instance, I would quickly just send my entire paycheck back out on the channel to a different LN channel I had open with a reliable node operator so that I wasn’t dependent on my employer keeping their node running over the weekend so I could pick up the tab at the bar. Etc

                    Regardless, that’s how it could work. There are countless other ways it could work, limited only by the desires and imagination of those setting up their channels, and all allowing for countless transactions over months, years, even decades, to be represented by two small on chain transactions.

        • Dr. Bluefall@toast.ooo
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          8 months ago

          It’s also the world banking system for several billion people, and not a few hundred thousand gamblers.

            • capital@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              That is the opposite of apples to apples.

              Per capita measurements exist for a reason.

              • Null User Object@programming.dev
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                8 months ago

                Per what capita? There’s only one global banking system on Earth. That’s what makes it global. There’s only one Bitcoin blockchain, and it’s globally accessible. Trying to subdivide either into arbitrary regions based on geographic or geopolitical borders is meaningless.

                • capital@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  How about per ‘people who are actually going to use this shit for day-to-day spending’?

                  I just got my mom using a password manager and still have to remote in to help her from time to time. And you wanna get her to move to digital cash that, once stolen, is unrecoverable?

                  Get real.

                  • Null User Object@programming.dev
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                    8 months ago

                    That’s a strong argument against password managers. We probably shouldn’t allow them, since some people are going to find them difficult to use.

                    ETA: Doubling the number of people using Bitcoin (especially on layer 2 protocols), is not going to remotely double it’s energy usage.

            • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              So does that mean that it won’t use appreciably more electricity if it quintuples in size and volume unlike the world banking system?

              • Null User Object@programming.dev
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                8 months ago

                You don’t think that the world banking system would use more energy if it quintupled in size? The world banking system uses more energy every time your local credit union installs an ATM at another grocery store.

                • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  Despite having millions of ATMs and banking offices, it uses less energy.

                  There’s probably more ATMs than Bitcoin users.

                  The Bitcoin network is absolutely tiny in userbase for the amount of energy they waste.