"How a coin for carbon could save the planet"
Interesting idea! Such coin price could even be linked, in some way, with the CO2 European Emission Allowances price.
#cryptocurrency #SustainableDevelopment #ClimateEmergency
@mashable@gnusocial.de
https://mashable.com/feature/carbon-coin-climate-change-crypto
This is precisely what ETS (Emissions Trading System) already is - you can buy the permissions, and you can trade them. They already *are* a commodity, so a new coin is not necessary. The problem is what you can actually buy for the coin, because this is where it gets political - for example, Germany "avoids" massive amounts of CO2 emissions by burning wood which of course emits CO2 but in ETS it's declared as zero-emissions.
@gael @kravietz CIVIL did not "save journalism":
https://www.coindesk.com/media-startup-civil-shuts-down-team-absorbed-into-decentralized-id-efforts-at-consensys
ClimateCoin did not stop climate change:
https://www.newsbtc.com/press-releases/climatecoin/
NFTs are not actually helping artists sell digital art:
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/04/nfts-werent-supposed-end-like/618488/
Seriously, cryptocurrency techbros need to just stop. Best thing they can do to fight climate change is to switch to speculating on tulips, instead of BTC and ETH. At least tulips don't emit carbon dioxide.
@rysiek
Heaters are also not providing a valueable service.
Gripes with #NFTs and #climateCoins are fully understandable, but lumping, conflating, associating bitcoin into this argument is disingenuous. It exists for good reason and we encourage all to run a full node (not mine per se).
BitcoinMiners are multitasking #heaters. There's many places where people run heaters when they don't need to. Tell em to rug up for emissions savings.
Bitcoin solves overconsumption.
> encourage all to run a full node
I did, like 5 years ago. Can you remind me how much space does a the BTC blockchain take today and how long does it take to download it?
> many places where people run heaters
In case of BTC it's mostly powered by burning coal
> Sadly most of the world is in transition still, yes
So you invest $5k in a lowest grade ASIC miner whose value depreciates fast with time due to increasing difficulty... and you only run it when there's sun or wind, so <40% of the time?
Sorry, this doesn't make any sense economically and I don't think anyone actually does that.
The idea that people are mining 24/7 on cheap coal electricity is much more plausible.
@kravietz
Understand your position but when govts do ill in terms of things like energy policy, they'll face increasing trade sanctions.
In the case of bitcoin its actually fairly good when you contextualise, but yes, it needs that liquidLayer determined, we hope it wont be based on #ProofOfBrainActivity as MS patented. If that were the case then currency would be re-centralised, with many more ppl becoming addicted and not living outside the constructed digital realm.
@rysiek @gael