this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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How much goes to the dollar?
There's a powered device or 5 in every store connected to a credit server.
You need the same infrastructure for any electronic payment system.
What you don't need for anything is crypto "mining", which is almost pure overhead. That's what the article is about.
It's not pure overhead. It's the means of initial distribution and also mining is the backend for handling transactions. Not that I think it's efficient by any means. It's just that it was necessary for Bitcoin to ever become something that mattered.
Mining is barely transactional in nature. Pretty much all of it is calculating hashes, which, on one hand, is super important as part of Proof-of-Work consensus, the most decentralized one we have, but on the other we have other reasonably secure options that waste two orders of magnitude less power.