Monero is an also-ran cryptocurrency, in the same proof-of-work family as Bitcoin and Etherium.
Monero.town is a Lemmy instance whose main communities are: Monero, privacy, Monero Memes, Meta, and Monero Mining.
Enough has been written on the negative ecological effects of proof-of-work based cryptocurrency that I think it’s not controversial to say it is incompatible with the Solarpunk vision.
Pictured inciting incident is a person advertising the crypto-capitalist Lemmy competitor “Nostr” in the anarchism community.
I don’t personally mind a debate about Nostr, but like most of the content from Monero.town, it doesn’t belong here. More sales pitches from a crypto-currency hype instance are going to be tedious, and crowd out the kind of progressive politics and human interactions we’re looking to nurture here. Reddit’s /r/anarchism had to constantly repel assholes trying to pass off their edgy capitalism as anarchist, Lemmy gives us the unique opportunity to send a strong message and nip this in the bud.
Fediverse sites that have already blocked Monero.town –
reject (10): solarpunk.moe, polyglot.city, freethought.online, icosahedron.website, sunbeam.city, vtuber.house, fruef.social, cutie.city, fuckcars.social, karas.social
followers_only (3): toot.cat, orbsafe.masto.host, partyparrot.social
Image Description
[Image description: Screenshot of an exchange between user Jack@Monero.Town and Five containing the following text
Jack@Monero.Town
Yea, that’s just not how Nostr works. Take a look here: https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips These are implementation possibilities that the protocol enables. Every client must implement NIP-01. All of the other NIPs are optional so every client that you use (an app for example) has decided to implement different NIPs. You decide which client you use and how Nostr should feel like. Almost no client prioritizes content that received bitcoin.
Your “login mechanism” (private cryptographic key) has nothing to do with cryptocurrency. If you want to send btc to people you have to set that up yourself, manually linking a wallet to your key.
Five
I’m confused why you’re downplaying Nostr’s primary selling point - its close integration with Bitcoin. It’s clearly a cryptocurrency capitalist con job.
Almost no client prioritizes content that received bitcoin.
That’s not what I was saying, but I’m fascinated that you’re implying it’s much worse than I anticipated. Which clients have their priority linked to received bitcoin? ]
More Bitcoin Means less Punk
Less investment should be a good thing when it comes to oil development, but when money is not re-invested in a capitalist society, the result is increased scarcity. In the absence of bitcoin, a middle-class person might chose to spend their surplus money on a bicycle, building a chicken coup, or learning a new skill. Bitcoin hucksters would prefer they spend it on Bitcoin, with the promise that it might make them more money for less effort by sitting in the blockchain doing nothing.
Society advances through infrastructure, and while the Solarpunk project requires different infrastructure than what is currently planned, it still requires resources. If we are going to create a society of abundance, building it on a currency that thrives on scarcity is a non-starter.
Popularity -> Energy -> Scarcity
If the Bitcoin system survives until 2040, it will reach a maximum of 21 million coins. Once minting new blocks is no longer rewarded with new coins, continued minting is expected to be funded by transaction fees. That does not mean the energy usage will stop, or even plateau. The energy use of bitcoin is related to the demand for Bitcoin. The more demand, the higher the value in dollars. The higher the dollar value, the greater dollar value return for mining it. The more value for mining, the more mining rigs will come online. The more rigs, the more energy is used.
Currently bitcoin is used for niche markets, and is not widely adopted. If the crypto-bro dreams of mass adoption were realized, like the primary currency of a world-wide solarpunk society, demand would skyrocket and energy use would spiral out of control. Using 1% of the world’s energy is a huge number, but is minuscule when compared to the amount needed in that scenario.