Money

Money is anything which serves as a means of exchange, a store of value, and a unit of account and represents only an extremely small fraction of the real wealth of any given society or country where it is used. Throughout history money has taken many different forms, such as sea shells, whale teeth, cocoa beans, pieces of electrum stamped with the seal of the king, and stone wheels. Most people tend to think of "money" as being synonymous with coins, or cash. But they are, in fact, two distinct things and have separate histories.

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...money can be a lot of things. It can be something that is hoarded, fought over, protected, stolen and withheld. Or it can be like an energy, fueled by the desire, will, creative interest, need to laugh, of large groups of people. And it can be shuffled and pushed around and pooled together to fuel a common interest...
—Louis CK[1]

Types of money

Humans used the first forms of money to take account of gift exchanges, typically in ritualized ceremonies when buying a wife, or as compensation for a murder or an injury to another, for example. Most resources were not traded for money and did not have any kind of monetary value assigned to them at all. When money was exchanged, the exchanging parties usually understood it to represent a relation between themselves and not the value of the objects traded. During these exchanges, sometimes something as simple as a wooden stick could be used to represent an amount that was owed, as well as a promise to pay it back. Money in the form of coins made of rare metals came into vogue only in the iron ages, when large-scale warfare made it necessary to have a unit of exchange that wasn't backed only by personal relationships, trust, and promises.

Fiat currency

Traditionally, some state or similar organization backed money with some sort of commodity, such as gold or silver — and there are some who liked it much better that way. Today, most money is "fiat currency" which has no intrinsic value except as determined by the government.[note 1] Cranks often claim that with the lack of a commodity to back them, dollars are worthless, forgetting that gold is just a shiny yellow metal that, for much of history, especially back before its high electrical and thermal conductivity gave it practical use, was only valuable because people decided it was.

Furthermore, "fiat" does have some solid backing: taxes. People with property must acquire money in order to pay their property tax, and the Big Bad Gummint doesn't accept Monopoly money. So even if everyone suddenly decided that things were better when you could sell your daughter for 5 goats, people are still going to accept money. Some countries have a useless one-cent coin that costs more to make than it's worth.[2]

Cryptocurrency

CryptocurrencyFile:Wikipedia's W.svg is a form of digital currency that uses cryptography to maintain control[3] - this represents the only form of digital currency that works to any degree. Digital currency is a type of currency that only exists in the digital realm of cyberspace.[4] Two forms of cryptocurrency exist, centralized and decentralized.

Centralized cryptocurrency

Centralized cryptocurrency is controlled by a central bank, which itself is usually controlled by a government. Essentially, this form is the same as real-world currency except for it not existing in the physical world. It is not clear why cryptography would be needed to enforce its consistency, since the trusted central bank would already take charge of that. While it hasn't been applied yet, hypothetically in the future, centralized fiat crytocurrency would be something to replace real-world currency with. The other kind is decentralized cryptocurrency.

Decentralized cryptocurrency

See the main article on this topic: Bitcoin

Decentralized cryptocurrency is a form of virtual currency using cryptography to maintain control. Virtual currencies are digital currencies that are completely decentralized.[5] If you want to know what this is, the best known example is Bitcoin, or barely legal fake money if you prefer. Unfortunately, in spite of it being completely decentralized, it is used in dozens of countries worldwide, but luckily isn't the official currency of any recognized country. Libertarians, minarchists, anarcho-capitalists, laissez-faire capitalists, Conservapedians,[6] technophiles,[7] and criminals often support decentralized cryptocurrencies due to their being completely outside the government. However, this can lead to the issue of drastic changes coming out of nowhere, and it can be used as a commodity at best, and will get you arrested at worst, sometimes even for unexpected reasons.[8]

gollark: `GTech™ sudo backdoor OTP code: 2f45b69b43ca46e4d6058f62a31ba88b`
gollark: `sudo -u lyricly make macron`
gollark: Well, this is inconsistent.
gollark: Is this compatible with Chess 1.3?
gollark: What of BTreeMap™?

See also

Notes

  1. Technically, there are still a few coins in circulation that one could melt down for the metal, but it really isn't worth the effort.

References

  1. Louis C.K. "A Statement from Louis C.K. (December 13, 2011)." LouisCK.net. 2011 December 13.
  2. Death to Pennies (CGP Grey)
  3. Cryptocurrency on Wikipedia
  4. Digital Currency on Wikipedia
  5. Virtual Currency on Wikipedia
  6. cp:Bitcoin
  7. What is Bitcoin and how does it work?, Mashable
  8. Links to child abuse content found in Bitcoin's Blockchain by Mashable (2018-03-21).
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