The Bitcoin2014 conference kicked off in exuberant style with Patrick Byrneâs crash course in Western philosophy. From there the day went on to address bitcoin-backed securities, Circleâs long-awaited emergence from âstealthâ mode and the âState of Bitcoinâ as judged by Gavin Andresen, chief scientist for the Bitcoin Foundation.
Here are todayâs highlights:
Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne is no stranger to making big statements. In February, he told Wired the world was headed toward financial apocalypse, warning that âsomeday, either zombies walk the Earth or something close to that ⦠bitcoin is the solutionâ.
Todayâs speech at Bitcoin2014 was light on zombies, but full of brainfood for the audience. After delighting the conference with his knowledge of political philosophy, Byrne revealed his ambition for Overstock.com to list on a block chain-backed stock exchange:
âWe could either issue securities in bitcoin and translate those and collect funds in dollars. I am less interested in that than just taking it and listing it, and maybe even creating a new security and issuing it through such an exchange.
Or, we could take our security, which is already publicly registered and publicly traded and just get it dual listed on somebodyâs technology.â
Will it happen? Who knows. But after delivering on what he claimed to be off-hand comments about Overstock.com accepting bitcoin, thereâs every chance that Byrne could again push the limits of whatâs considered possible with bitcoin.
Unveiling at last Circleâs business plans, CEO Jeremy Allaire made a wry jab at competitor Coinbase, noting that all new customers with Circle will get $10 worth of bitcoin free, not just those with .edu email addresses.
The announcement today ends months of speculation about Circleâs product offering â the company is offering a wallet and payment service for consumers that deliberately eschew the speculative language of bitcoin to-date.
Thereâs no âbuyingâ or âsellingâ on the service, just âdepositingâ and âwithdrawingâ. Circle customers will also receive insurance against theft on their deposits.
Itâs the most explicitly pro-mainstream offering from a bitcoin business to-date, but weâll have a while to wait before we can properly judge its success.
Circle still isnât fully open to the general public â you have to request an invite.
âI still donât care about mining,â teased the Bitcoin Foundationâs chief scientist in his State of Bitcoin speech today, except when it affects the experience of ordinary bitcoin uses. He headed into more serious territory and warned that transaction fees could ârise and rise to the point where only rich people can transactâ if block sizes arenât increased.
His speech covered the breadth of issues facing bitcoin today, including questions about privacy â Dark Wallet is âfantasticâ, he said â and regulation, which he called âinevitableâ.
Perhaps more importantly, though, he subtly criticized those in the community who consider certain ideas off-limits.
âItâs hard to find a constructive place to talk about changes without people attacking people [just] for talking,â he said.
For bitcoin, as for the rest of the Internet, trolls can be impediments to progress, it seems.