> That makes sense. I think the need to correct mistakes, and mistakes I concede will definitely happen, is debatable. There are benefits to some for correcting mistakes and costs to some for it as well. Figuring out whether the benefit exceeds the cost is way out of my scope.
> This reminds me of another problem that I've I haven't seen mentioned yet. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/12/13/half-a-billion... In a fixed supply cryptocurrency like bitcoin these kind of losses will inevitably lead to deflation.
This to me is the big question: you could solve a lot of these by introducing trusted third parties but once you've done that it really raises the question of whether you need the full blockchain level of processing overhead or some kind of distributed ledger. Lots of people have been in situations where they were mugged, an elderly and/or impaired family member made a mistake or was taken advantage of, etc. and they were able to recover by proving this to a bank or similar institution. It can be painful but it's an important option to have for most people and I think that's going to be a key impediment to people trusting a system. I do this professionally and I'm not sure I'd want to commit to something where someone who gets my private key with a zero-day can do whatever they want.
> This reminds me of another problem that I've I haven't seen mentioned yet. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/12/13/half-a-billion... In a fixed supply cryptocurrency like bitcoin these kind of losses will inevitably lead to deflation.
This to me is the big question: you could solve a lot of these by introducing trusted third parties but once you've done that it really raises the question of whether you need the full blockchain level of processing overhead or some kind of distributed ledger. Lots of people have been in situations where they were mugged, an elderly and/or impaired family member made a mistake or was taken advantage of, etc. and they were able to recover by proving this to a bank or similar institution. It can be painful but it's an important option to have for most people and I think that's going to be a key impediment to people trusting a system. I do this professionally and I'm not sure I'd want to commit to something where someone who gets my private key with a zero-day can do whatever they want.