Not long ago, America was having a lot of bad hair days in foreign affairs. The war in Iraq ended without stirring speeches or victory parades. The war in Afghanistan is winding down, but won't have a prettier conclusion. America led from behind in Libya and messed up in Benghazi. Then, America led from even farther behind in Syria and, not surprisingly, got an aviary flip from the Assad regime when President Obama objected to the use of poisonous gas. To avoid being totally blown off by a two-bit tin pot dictator, the Obama Administration had to work with Vladimir Putin's autocracy for a face-saving compromise that still isn't near full implementation. America's grand strategy of pivoting toward Asia has floundered as extremism of numerous varieties keeps provoking eruptions in the Middle East and Europe.
Now comes Vladimir Putin--let's call him Vlad the Invader--who puts the shine on the United States. Using the most transparently farcical of pretexts, Putin seized Crimea from Ukraine. Okay, so there was a referendum in Crimea as to whether or not to "validate" the Russian land grab. But with thousands of Russian troops "guarding" the polls to ensure "integrity" to the voting process, we knew how the vote would turn out before the polls opened. There is nothing America can do to prevent Russia's annexation of Crimea, just as there was nothing America could do to stop Putin's 2008 land kleptomania in Georgia.
But America can and will react. The EU will talk a lot--and then talk some more. It will issue a few condemnations and maybe even an excoriation. But sanctions? Well, let's talk some more.
America's sanctions will be primarily economic. And Russia will respond in kind. America's economic interests will suffer. But Russia's economic interests will suffer more. Not necessarily in terms measured by dollars (or rubles), but in terms of relative pain. Russia has a much smaller and weaker economy than America. And Russia's economy is growing slower, with continued prospects for slow growth. Crimea requires significant subsidies, which will further drain Russia's resources, along with the added cost of all the military "exercises" the Russian Army is staging with walking distance of the Ukrainian border. From a strategic standpoint, Russia's nuclear arsenal is a match for America's. But Russia's economic arsenal is far weaker. And Russia's energy customers and trade partners will look elsewhere for supplies and opportunities, not wanting to give leverage to a bully with a powerful military.
The Cold War was primarily an economic struggle. America and the Soviet Union engaged in a 50-year competition to build to the most advanced and powerful military. Arsenals cost money, and America's vastly greater wealth left the Soviet Union moribund, unable to deliver prosperity or even anything approaching a First World standard of living for its citizens.
As America and Russia swap sanctions, it is important to keep in mind that, realistically, the goal isn't to force Russia out of Crimea. That won't happen. The goal is to turn the crisis into an opportunity to make America once again the world's shining beacon of freedom and democracy. America's sanctions, although likely to be ineffectual in terms of sending Russian troops back to the barracks, will contrast sharply with the EU's decrepitude, and the near silence from the Asia. As an ironic consequence, America's influence around the world, and especially in the periphery of Russia's borders with many former members of the Soviet Union and former Soviet satellite states, will likely grow. After all, no one likes a bully. The bottom line is Putin has made America stronger.
The outcome of the looming war of sanctions is difficult to predict with precision. But the advantage lies with America and its great economic strength. Germany and Japan won the early rounds of World War II. The Soviet Union won most of the early rounds of the Cold War. But we know how those stories ended. Even if Putin will be able to feel like a studly fellow for a while, time isn't on his side. Keep the faith.
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Monday, March 3, 2014
Why Regulate Bitcoin?
Okay, so Mt. Gox, once the largest Bitcoin exchange, has belly flopped and lots of people have lost lots of Bitcoins (apparently hundreds of millions of dollars worth). Mt. Gox is in bankruptcy, but unsecured creditors like its erstwhile customers usually get the back of a hand in bankruptcy proceedings. Last year, Bitcoin was celebrated for its independence from any national authority and the anonymity it supposedly provides. This year, the losses from Mt. Gox have many crying for regulation. Is that a good idea?
First, Bitcoin would have to change fundamentally for regulation to work. Anonymity would have to go. Regulators need to safeguard the market from thieves, manipulators, and all variety of fraudsters and other crooks. That necessarily means they need to know who is behind transactions--potentially any transaction. It is axiomatic among financial regulators that, in order to uncover shenanigans in the market, one follows the money. And you have to be able to find out who is behind transactions in order to follow the money. So, if you really want regulation, say goodbye to the anonymity of Bitcoin.
But an even more important question for the nation(s) that might consider regulating Bitcoin is why would regulation serve the public interest? Bitcoin is economically trivial. If all Bitcoins disappeared tomorrow, the world economy and all major national economies wouldn't even hiccup. Setting up an effective regulatory regime would require not just one nation, but the participation of all economically significant nations because Bitcoin can be bought or sold worldwide. The costs of establishing regulatory agencies, hiring personnel, buying equipment, leasing office space, and funding investigative and regulatory processes would, by all appearances, greatly outweigh the societal benefit.
Another risk of regulating Bitcoin is that doing so would legitimize it. Once a government begins to regulate a financial contract, it makes that contract more attractive to mainstream financial markets players. That would mean the major banks, hedge funds and other big players would start trading all manner of Bitcoin contracts. A derivatives market in Bitcoins would pop up, and with it all kinds of headaches about risk management, settlement and clearance, and so on. All for something the world doesn't need.
And sooner or later, some form of governmentally sponsored deposit insurance would probably be sought by Bitcoin enthusiasts. If the big banks and hedge funds add their lobbying power, such insurance might make it through Congress. But deposit insurance could easily, directly or indirectly, end up putting taxpayers on the line to cover Bitcoin losses like those suffered by Mt. Gox customers. Which would be just peachy--another taxpayer funded bailout in the making.
The bottom line: don't regulate Bitcoin. There's nothing in it for national governments or taxpayers. We don't need more financial risk for regulators, central banks and taxpayers to worry about. If Bitcoin is truly worth anything, it will survive in the market. And if it doesn't, good riddance.
First, Bitcoin would have to change fundamentally for regulation to work. Anonymity would have to go. Regulators need to safeguard the market from thieves, manipulators, and all variety of fraudsters and other crooks. That necessarily means they need to know who is behind transactions--potentially any transaction. It is axiomatic among financial regulators that, in order to uncover shenanigans in the market, one follows the money. And you have to be able to find out who is behind transactions in order to follow the money. So, if you really want regulation, say goodbye to the anonymity of Bitcoin.
But an even more important question for the nation(s) that might consider regulating Bitcoin is why would regulation serve the public interest? Bitcoin is economically trivial. If all Bitcoins disappeared tomorrow, the world economy and all major national economies wouldn't even hiccup. Setting up an effective regulatory regime would require not just one nation, but the participation of all economically significant nations because Bitcoin can be bought or sold worldwide. The costs of establishing regulatory agencies, hiring personnel, buying equipment, leasing office space, and funding investigative and regulatory processes would, by all appearances, greatly outweigh the societal benefit.
Another risk of regulating Bitcoin is that doing so would legitimize it. Once a government begins to regulate a financial contract, it makes that contract more attractive to mainstream financial markets players. That would mean the major banks, hedge funds and other big players would start trading all manner of Bitcoin contracts. A derivatives market in Bitcoins would pop up, and with it all kinds of headaches about risk management, settlement and clearance, and so on. All for something the world doesn't need.
And sooner or later, some form of governmentally sponsored deposit insurance would probably be sought by Bitcoin enthusiasts. If the big banks and hedge funds add their lobbying power, such insurance might make it through Congress. But deposit insurance could easily, directly or indirectly, end up putting taxpayers on the line to cover Bitcoin losses like those suffered by Mt. Gox customers. Which would be just peachy--another taxpayer funded bailout in the making.
The bottom line: don't regulate Bitcoin. There's nothing in it for national governments or taxpayers. We don't need more financial risk for regulators, central banks and taxpayers to worry about. If Bitcoin is truly worth anything, it will survive in the market. And if it doesn't, good riddance.
Sunday, February 23, 2014
The WhatsApp Deal: Did Zuckerberg Just Blink?
WhatsApp is the antithesis of Facebook. It doesn't collect personal information. Messages aren't stored in WhatsApp's servers. There are no ads on WhatsApp. As a messaging service, there's nothing on WhatsApp for strangers (or parents) to find via search engines. It offers the one thing that's almost impossible to obtain on the Internet: privacy. No wonder it's growing by a million users a day, many of them in the young adult cohort coveted by commercial websites.
It's unclear what Mark Zuckerberg hopes to achieve by having Facebook buy WhatsApp. If he engrafts WhatsApp onto Facebook, or makes it semi-clone of Facebook (i.e., has it run ads), it will surely lose much of the privacy it offers. Facebook's business model, after all, is to vacuum up as much personal information as possible in order to cram advertising into users' faces. But that could drain away much of WhatsApp's attractiveness to its current user base, and they could easily flee to any of a number of competitors offering private communications.
If Zuckerberg keeps WhatsApp independent, he'll have to find some way of generating revenue--a shipload of it, since Facebook is paying $19 billion for WhatsApp and the only justification for such a Brobdingnagian price would be freight cars full of revenue. But you can't charge users much for instant messaging services (the phone companies tried that with text messaging and users are moving away from them). So there is a big question about what kind of rabbit Zuckerberg will pull out of the hat as a business strategy for WhatsApp.
One thing that seems apparent is that he's blinked. Zuckerberg evidently has come to realize that Facebook isn't going to be the platform for all users all the time. He's jumping onto one of the new, hot things on the Internet. Diversifying Facebook's corporate profile may be a prudent move. But the company now has two conflicting business models under its corporate roof, and it will have to sort out how to handle these conflicts. History does not suggest success is assured by any means. Microsoft entered various lines of business that were potential threats to its basic MS-DOS/Windows business--search engines, portals, mobile software, etc. It didn't managed them very well, because boosting a newer technology could mean undermining its cash cow. Newer, nimbler competitors, unburdened by these conflicts, ran circles around Microsoft. Facebook is one of them. But now it has taken in-house a conflict between the old (yes, Facebook is getting old) and the new on the Internet. How Facebook handles that conflict could dictate the future arc of its growth.
It's unclear what Mark Zuckerberg hopes to achieve by having Facebook buy WhatsApp. If he engrafts WhatsApp onto Facebook, or makes it semi-clone of Facebook (i.e., has it run ads), it will surely lose much of the privacy it offers. Facebook's business model, after all, is to vacuum up as much personal information as possible in order to cram advertising into users' faces. But that could drain away much of WhatsApp's attractiveness to its current user base, and they could easily flee to any of a number of competitors offering private communications.
If Zuckerberg keeps WhatsApp independent, he'll have to find some way of generating revenue--a shipload of it, since Facebook is paying $19 billion for WhatsApp and the only justification for such a Brobdingnagian price would be freight cars full of revenue. But you can't charge users much for instant messaging services (the phone companies tried that with text messaging and users are moving away from them). So there is a big question about what kind of rabbit Zuckerberg will pull out of the hat as a business strategy for WhatsApp.
One thing that seems apparent is that he's blinked. Zuckerberg evidently has come to realize that Facebook isn't going to be the platform for all users all the time. He's jumping onto one of the new, hot things on the Internet. Diversifying Facebook's corporate profile may be a prudent move. But the company now has two conflicting business models under its corporate roof, and it will have to sort out how to handle these conflicts. History does not suggest success is assured by any means. Microsoft entered various lines of business that were potential threats to its basic MS-DOS/Windows business--search engines, portals, mobile software, etc. It didn't managed them very well, because boosting a newer technology could mean undermining its cash cow. Newer, nimbler competitors, unburdened by these conflicts, ran circles around Microsoft. Facebook is one of them. But now it has taken in-house a conflict between the old (yes, Facebook is getting old) and the new on the Internet. How Facebook handles that conflict could dictate the future arc of its growth.
Labels:
Facebook,
internet,
online privacy,
Personal Privacy,
Privacy,
WhatsApp
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
More Badness in the Bigness of Banks
The problems presented by gargantuan banks aren't limited to just too big to fail. In recent months, we have seen government investigations and enforcement actions dealing with price fixing by big banks in interest rates (LIBOR), foreign currencies, oil and other commodities. Cartels and oligopolies are antithetical to free enterprise. To make things worse, the things that were the subject of the conspiracies--benchmark interest rates, petroleum, and the value of the medium of payment in various countries--affect the prices of numerous contracts, investments, products and other things. Thus, the impact of the price rigging ripples through national and international economies, with the result that a lot of things aren't accurately priced.
The size of the mega banks allows them to dominate these markets. The small number of players involved makes collusion easy. It's hard to rig markets with dozens or hundreds of competitors. But a few big dogs readily find it more profitable to stack the deck in their favor and reap monopolistic returns than compete with lower prices.
Collusion deprives consumers, investors and others of the benefits of competition and efficient markets. The oligopolists are richer by their financial hooliganism. The rest of us are poorer. When banks are too big to fail, governments--and ultimately taxpayers--prop them up. It would appear that the big banks return the favor by rigging prices. It's getting harder and harder to see the societal benefits of really big banks.
The size of the mega banks allows them to dominate these markets. The small number of players involved makes collusion easy. It's hard to rig markets with dozens or hundreds of competitors. But a few big dogs readily find it more profitable to stack the deck in their favor and reap monopolistic returns than compete with lower prices.
Collusion deprives consumers, investors and others of the benefits of competition and efficient markets. The oligopolists are richer by their financial hooliganism. The rest of us are poorer. When banks are too big to fail, governments--and ultimately taxpayers--prop them up. It would appear that the big banks return the favor by rigging prices. It's getting harder and harder to see the societal benefits of really big banks.
Labels:
banks,
foreign currencies,
Libor,
oil,
price fixing,
Too Big to Fail
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Is Financial Inequality Constraining Economic Growth?
Businesses are having trouble raising prices. (See http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303743604579354693061491748.) Consumers resist price increases and look for cheaper alternatives. The stagnation of middle class incomes surely plays a large role in keeping downward pressure on prices. With people becoming wary of debt, the decline in the real incomes of the middle class leaves folks with no choice except not to spend money they don't have.
It's become an article of faith among central bankers that a little inflation--in the 2.0 to 2.5% range--promotes economic growth. And they strive for such a Goldilocks level of inflation. Whether or not this actually will work isn't clear. Inflation isn't like the flow of water from a faucet, which can be kept at a desired level while economic growth blossoms. A slithering rattlesnake, sometimes moving slowly and sometimes moving quickly but always potentially dangerous, is a better analogy for inflation.
Nevertheless, let's posit for the sake of discussion that Goldilocks inflation can be maintained continuously for long periods of time and that it does indeed give the economy a lively fillip. The ongoing hollowing out of the middle class stands as a major impediment to the central banks' use of inflation as a stimulus for economic growth. As income and wealth inequality increases, the middle class--and indeed much of the 99%--will obstinately resist price increases. Inflation will remain muted and not contribute to growth.
There are plenty of reasons to be concerned about increasing financial inequality--reduced social mobility, decreased social cohesiveness, rising extremism (especially noticeable in Europe), and so on. We can add to the list that an increasingly plutocratic society may constrain the economy's ability to grow. And that's not good for anyone.
It's become an article of faith among central bankers that a little inflation--in the 2.0 to 2.5% range--promotes economic growth. And they strive for such a Goldilocks level of inflation. Whether or not this actually will work isn't clear. Inflation isn't like the flow of water from a faucet, which can be kept at a desired level while economic growth blossoms. A slithering rattlesnake, sometimes moving slowly and sometimes moving quickly but always potentially dangerous, is a better analogy for inflation.
Nevertheless, let's posit for the sake of discussion that Goldilocks inflation can be maintained continuously for long periods of time and that it does indeed give the economy a lively fillip. The ongoing hollowing out of the middle class stands as a major impediment to the central banks' use of inflation as a stimulus for economic growth. As income and wealth inequality increases, the middle class--and indeed much of the 99%--will obstinately resist price increases. Inflation will remain muted and not contribute to growth.
There are plenty of reasons to be concerned about increasing financial inequality--reduced social mobility, decreased social cohesiveness, rising extremism (especially noticeable in Europe), and so on. We can add to the list that an increasingly plutocratic society may constrain the economy's ability to grow. And that's not good for anyone.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Emerging Markets: Another Asset Bubble Popping
The emerging markets asset bubble is popping. Financial markets in China, Brazil, Turkey, Russia, and India have been falling, with no end in sight. Commodities prices have declined. And the major stock markets--in Japan, Europe and the U.S.--have been dragged down in consequence. All because the Fed began to reduce its quantitative easing program.
We've been here before. Fed easy money policies contributed to the tech stock craze of the late 1990s and the real estate and mortgage bubbles of the 2000s. Those earlier bubbles popped when the Fed began to withdraw accommodation. You have to wonder whether the Fed will ever learn: long periods of accommodative policies inevitably create asset bubbles somewhere, and when the accommodation is reduced, the bubble will pop. Painfully, since there is no other way for an asset bubble to pop.
When tech stocks, and then real estate and mortgage markets, crashed, recession and unemployment followed. The results included, among other things, higher and higher levels of unemployment and greater inequality of income and wealth over the past 15 years. When the Fed repeatedly uses its very blunt monetary weaponry to combat economic slowdowns, the rich get richer and everyone else stagnates or declines.
What will the Fed do in response to the emerging markets downturn? Initially, nothing. It will hope that the positive momentum that has emerged in the U.S. and to a limited degree, in Europe, will be enough to maintain overall global economic equanimity. But if the decline extends for several more months (particularly in major stock markets), expect the Fed to rethink its stance and get the monetary printing presses revved up again. As we have discussed before (see http://blogger.uncleleosden.com/2014/01/expect-nothing-from-government-in-2014.html), fiscal policy will be darn near nonexistent this year. Fed easy money policy is the only way for the federal government to combat economic distress. And even if more money printing means yet another asset bubble a few years down the line, and more income and wealth inequality, the only choices nevertheless remain easy money or easy money. The Fed's policies are the only game in town.
One might lament that the Fed never seems to learn that too much accommodation leads to yet another asset bubble that pops, causing distress and dislocation that leads to more accommodation, which only continues the cycle. But the problem is the Fed has little choice. Congress and the White House mostly stare at mirrors and ask who is the fairest of all. The business community waits for the federal government to stimulate the economy, reduce its risks and heighten the potential for profits. The Fed personifies moral hazard: the rest of the world has learned that, when push comes to shove, the Fed will act. So there's no need for anyone else to step out front and center and take the lead.
How do we break this vicious cycle? Well . . . uh . . . there was once a time--long, long ago--when the private sector would lead the way out of recessions. Businesses would start to expand, banks would start to lend, investors would start to take risks. But how likely is that to happen now?
We've been here before. Fed easy money policies contributed to the tech stock craze of the late 1990s and the real estate and mortgage bubbles of the 2000s. Those earlier bubbles popped when the Fed began to withdraw accommodation. You have to wonder whether the Fed will ever learn: long periods of accommodative policies inevitably create asset bubbles somewhere, and when the accommodation is reduced, the bubble will pop. Painfully, since there is no other way for an asset bubble to pop.
When tech stocks, and then real estate and mortgage markets, crashed, recession and unemployment followed. The results included, among other things, higher and higher levels of unemployment and greater inequality of income and wealth over the past 15 years. When the Fed repeatedly uses its very blunt monetary weaponry to combat economic slowdowns, the rich get richer and everyone else stagnates or declines.
What will the Fed do in response to the emerging markets downturn? Initially, nothing. It will hope that the positive momentum that has emerged in the U.S. and to a limited degree, in Europe, will be enough to maintain overall global economic equanimity. But if the decline extends for several more months (particularly in major stock markets), expect the Fed to rethink its stance and get the monetary printing presses revved up again. As we have discussed before (see http://blogger.uncleleosden.com/2014/01/expect-nothing-from-government-in-2014.html), fiscal policy will be darn near nonexistent this year. Fed easy money policy is the only way for the federal government to combat economic distress. And even if more money printing means yet another asset bubble a few years down the line, and more income and wealth inequality, the only choices nevertheless remain easy money or easy money. The Fed's policies are the only game in town.
One might lament that the Fed never seems to learn that too much accommodation leads to yet another asset bubble that pops, causing distress and dislocation that leads to more accommodation, which only continues the cycle. But the problem is the Fed has little choice. Congress and the White House mostly stare at mirrors and ask who is the fairest of all. The business community waits for the federal government to stimulate the economy, reduce its risks and heighten the potential for profits. The Fed personifies moral hazard: the rest of the world has learned that, when push comes to shove, the Fed will act. So there's no need for anyone else to step out front and center and take the lead.
How do we break this vicious cycle? Well . . . uh . . . there was once a time--long, long ago--when the private sector would lead the way out of recessions. Businesses would start to expand, banks would start to lend, investors would start to take risks. But how likely is that to happen now?
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Questions About Bitcoin
The hype about Bitcoins is reminiscent of some of the early hype about the Internet. Long, long ago, in the Paleolithic times of 20 years ago, the Internet was seen as an idyllic world where all would be equal and a person could accomplish anything with a computer and just a little effort. The wide open nature of the Net allowed anyone, however anonymous and humble, to speak out and be heard, create and be seen, reach out and touch untold millions, all with just a few keystrokes. Wondrous things would happen; lead would be turned into gold; a veritable digital Eden would arise and everyone who entered would attain nirvana.
Well, it didn't quite work out that way. Gigantic corporations now dominate the Internet, and powerful government agencies lurk in the background, spying high and low, leaving no server unmolested. Bad people from around the world seek to victimize, defraud and destroy; and the wide open nature of the Net allows them to do so with just a few keystrokes. The free-standing individual who was supposed to have been the pillar of the digital community has shrunk into an online sheep, waiting helplessly to be fleeced of all personal information, browsing habits, bank funds, and credit lines.
The Norman Rockwellian narrative of Bitcoins would have us believe that they are a pure form of value, unmarred by the pock marks of central bank policy. "Mined" by solving mathematical problems, transacted anonymously on a peer-to-peer basis, Bitcoins would be finite in amount and invulnerable to inflation since no one, supposedly, would control them. Those who held Bitcoins would be liberated from the oppression of governments and the highway robbery of fee-charging financial institutions that handle transactions in fiat currencies. A brave new monetary system would supersede the corrupt, degenerative fiat currencies of yore, the clouds would part and the sun would shine forever.
But reality is turning out to be blemished. It seems that the use of Bitcoins for payment made an online market for illegal drugs called Silk Road attractive to denizens of dark corners of the Net. The anonymity of Bitcoin transactions is a godsend for scoundrels and knaves of every variety, with government crime fighters largely unable to figure out who to put on the Ten Most Wanted List. It's now clear that Bitcoins will attract criminals, organized criminals, terrorists, tax evaders, and other miscreants with something to hide.
But, are there bigger monsters lurking in the shadows? Rogue nations, which may be facing sanctions in financial systems denominated in fiat currencies, might find Bitcoins a convenient way to get back in business. And business could be nefarious indeed, with weapons, equipment for processing radioactive materials, drugs, and other suspect cargo changing hands. Intelligence services--foreign and domestic--would have many reasons to use Bitcoins. Undercover operatives need to be funded. Bribes need to be paid. Deniability would be enhanced. Detectability--and accountability--would be reduced.
Then, there's the market for Bitcoins. Unregulated and opaque, it's ideal for manipulators and fraudsters. The mining process is getting harder and harder, as the mathematical problems that need to be solved become increasingly difficult. More and more computing power is needed to solve them. That means bigger, more complex and more expensive computers must be used. The advantage goes to those that are well-capitalized. Yet the price of Bitcoins is notoriously volatile. Who can afford to invest in the massive computing power that it now takes to operate a successful mining operation while withstanding the wild price swings in Bitcoin prices? Wealthy speculators, rogue nations, organized crime, and financiers operating from secrecy jurisdictions might all see an opportunity to make a fast Bitcoin or two--or maybe a lot more--off of the naive true believers who buy and transact at the retail level. Trading anonymously, these big boys could bid prices up using multiple accounts they control to trade back and forth with themselves. They could pay for online ads hyping Bitcoins as they walk the price up, provoking an investment frenzy among the sheep. Then, as the price reaches meteoric levels, they dump the coins that they've mined, and then walk away, leaving the price to move whichever way it will (which is likely to be down).
The biggest potential problem for Bitcoins may well be that the big players will move in. And, as with the Internet, the little people will suffer. Invest at your peril.
Well, it didn't quite work out that way. Gigantic corporations now dominate the Internet, and powerful government agencies lurk in the background, spying high and low, leaving no server unmolested. Bad people from around the world seek to victimize, defraud and destroy; and the wide open nature of the Net allows them to do so with just a few keystrokes. The free-standing individual who was supposed to have been the pillar of the digital community has shrunk into an online sheep, waiting helplessly to be fleeced of all personal information, browsing habits, bank funds, and credit lines.
The Norman Rockwellian narrative of Bitcoins would have us believe that they are a pure form of value, unmarred by the pock marks of central bank policy. "Mined" by solving mathematical problems, transacted anonymously on a peer-to-peer basis, Bitcoins would be finite in amount and invulnerable to inflation since no one, supposedly, would control them. Those who held Bitcoins would be liberated from the oppression of governments and the highway robbery of fee-charging financial institutions that handle transactions in fiat currencies. A brave new monetary system would supersede the corrupt, degenerative fiat currencies of yore, the clouds would part and the sun would shine forever.
But reality is turning out to be blemished. It seems that the use of Bitcoins for payment made an online market for illegal drugs called Silk Road attractive to denizens of dark corners of the Net. The anonymity of Bitcoin transactions is a godsend for scoundrels and knaves of every variety, with government crime fighters largely unable to figure out who to put on the Ten Most Wanted List. It's now clear that Bitcoins will attract criminals, organized criminals, terrorists, tax evaders, and other miscreants with something to hide.
But, are there bigger monsters lurking in the shadows? Rogue nations, which may be facing sanctions in financial systems denominated in fiat currencies, might find Bitcoins a convenient way to get back in business. And business could be nefarious indeed, with weapons, equipment for processing radioactive materials, drugs, and other suspect cargo changing hands. Intelligence services--foreign and domestic--would have many reasons to use Bitcoins. Undercover operatives need to be funded. Bribes need to be paid. Deniability would be enhanced. Detectability--and accountability--would be reduced.
Then, there's the market for Bitcoins. Unregulated and opaque, it's ideal for manipulators and fraudsters. The mining process is getting harder and harder, as the mathematical problems that need to be solved become increasingly difficult. More and more computing power is needed to solve them. That means bigger, more complex and more expensive computers must be used. The advantage goes to those that are well-capitalized. Yet the price of Bitcoins is notoriously volatile. Who can afford to invest in the massive computing power that it now takes to operate a successful mining operation while withstanding the wild price swings in Bitcoin prices? Wealthy speculators, rogue nations, organized crime, and financiers operating from secrecy jurisdictions might all see an opportunity to make a fast Bitcoin or two--or maybe a lot more--off of the naive true believers who buy and transact at the retail level. Trading anonymously, these big boys could bid prices up using multiple accounts they control to trade back and forth with themselves. They could pay for online ads hyping Bitcoins as they walk the price up, provoking an investment frenzy among the sheep. Then, as the price reaches meteoric levels, they dump the coins that they've mined, and then walk away, leaving the price to move whichever way it will (which is likely to be down).
The biggest potential problem for Bitcoins may well be that the big players will move in. And, as with the Internet, the little people will suffer. Invest at your peril.
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Privacy Rights: Obama's Last Big Moment
Throughout his Presidency, Barack Obama seems to have been on a quest for greatness, something that would mark him as an exceptional President. He apparently isn't satisfied with being the first African American President, which is understandable. We all want to be judged as individuals, not as an ethnicity or a race. He tried to construct a program for federal stimulus for economic recovery, but got tangled up in the politics of government borrowing. He failed to achieve a grand bargain on the federal budget (which was a misguided tilt with a windmill from the get go). He managed, after almost failing, to get national health insurance legislation passed. But then he and his administration thoroughly botched the launch. His foreign policy accomplishments--getting us out of Iraq, and moving forward with withdrawal from Afghanistan--have been under-appreciated. Ending a war without a clear victory isn't seen as a mark of greatness, even if it is the right thing to do. And the prospects for anything really positive to happen with Iran, North Korea, Israel and the Palestinians, and the war on terror are problematic, at best.
But Obama now has a really big opportunity to achieve greatness. Edward Snowden's revelations about the NSA have blown wide open the increasingly pressing issue of privacy. With the Internet now ubiquitous, privacy is the most important civil liberties issue in the world. In a democratic nation, the relationship of citizens to their government is the essential dynamic. The process of electing the government, the notion of a government of limited powers defined in a national charter, the rights of individuals to speak out, worship, assemble, petition the government for redress of grievances, and publish, the protection of individual rights by an independent judiciary, the limitation of the government's authority to investigate (allowing search and seizure, wiretaps and other intrusions into the lives of citizens only with the approval of a court), and, at least in America, the right to keep and bear arms, all work to establish the individual citizen as the foundational component of society. The government is supposed to be of the people, by the people and for the people. The people aren't supposed to be subservient to the government.
With the recent disclosures of the NSA's seemingly insatiable appetite for, it would seem, every piece of information about everyone, citizens are threatened with a reversal of their relationship to their government. The government's interests seem to take precedent over the individual's historic right to be left alone in the absence of clear and demonstrable need for government intrusion. We won't have a government of limited power if the government knows everything there is to know about you. Democracy as we have historically understood the term would cease to exist.
Obama today made a speech, promising to rein in the NSA, and more strongly safeguard the privacy of Americans (and also some foreigners). His proposals are rather general, and, when it comes to privacy, the devil is decidedly in the details. When the details come out, we'll find out how much of a change he is really proposing. The privacy issue may well be Barack Obama's last chance to achieve greatness as a President. If he succeeds in upholding primacy of the individual citizen, he will be remembered well for decades and even centuries to come.
And while he's at it, he might as well tackle the problem of individual's rights against the Internet giants. The relationship of individuals, as consumers and workers, to giant corporations has been one of the great commercial and employment law problems of the industrialized world. Without strong protections for those buying the products and services of the titans of the economies, and those working for them, the raw economic power of these gargantuan organizations would leave individuals helpless to be victimized early and often. The Internet giants threaten to abscond with the privacy of all Internet users, and attain vast informational power over them. Just as GM, Ford, Chrysler and the other automotive manufacturers weren't allowed to sell dangerous products to consumers without legal liability for product defects, the Internet giants shouldn't be allowed to treat Internet users as sheep to be fleeced in order to boost ad revenues and executive bonuses. A Presidential initiative to significantly protect online privacy would bolster Obama's chances for greatness.
But Obama now has a really big opportunity to achieve greatness. Edward Snowden's revelations about the NSA have blown wide open the increasingly pressing issue of privacy. With the Internet now ubiquitous, privacy is the most important civil liberties issue in the world. In a democratic nation, the relationship of citizens to their government is the essential dynamic. The process of electing the government, the notion of a government of limited powers defined in a national charter, the rights of individuals to speak out, worship, assemble, petition the government for redress of grievances, and publish, the protection of individual rights by an independent judiciary, the limitation of the government's authority to investigate (allowing search and seizure, wiretaps and other intrusions into the lives of citizens only with the approval of a court), and, at least in America, the right to keep and bear arms, all work to establish the individual citizen as the foundational component of society. The government is supposed to be of the people, by the people and for the people. The people aren't supposed to be subservient to the government.
With the recent disclosures of the NSA's seemingly insatiable appetite for, it would seem, every piece of information about everyone, citizens are threatened with a reversal of their relationship to their government. The government's interests seem to take precedent over the individual's historic right to be left alone in the absence of clear and demonstrable need for government intrusion. We won't have a government of limited power if the government knows everything there is to know about you. Democracy as we have historically understood the term would cease to exist.
Obama today made a speech, promising to rein in the NSA, and more strongly safeguard the privacy of Americans (and also some foreigners). His proposals are rather general, and, when it comes to privacy, the devil is decidedly in the details. When the details come out, we'll find out how much of a change he is really proposing. The privacy issue may well be Barack Obama's last chance to achieve greatness as a President. If he succeeds in upholding primacy of the individual citizen, he will be remembered well for decades and even centuries to come.
And while he's at it, he might as well tackle the problem of individual's rights against the Internet giants. The relationship of individuals, as consumers and workers, to giant corporations has been one of the great commercial and employment law problems of the industrialized world. Without strong protections for those buying the products and services of the titans of the economies, and those working for them, the raw economic power of these gargantuan organizations would leave individuals helpless to be victimized early and often. The Internet giants threaten to abscond with the privacy of all Internet users, and attain vast informational power over them. Just as GM, Ford, Chrysler and the other automotive manufacturers weren't allowed to sell dangerous products to consumers without legal liability for product defects, the Internet giants shouldn't be allowed to treat Internet users as sheep to be fleeced in order to boost ad revenues and executive bonuses. A Presidential initiative to significantly protect online privacy would bolster Obama's chances for greatness.
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Learning From the Data Scandals
It's obvious that there is too much data being stored, and the biggest problem is that even more data is being accumulated. The NSA scandal reveals what happens when a very large, secretive government agency with a big, but probably unverifiable budget decides it wants to know everything there is to know about everyone--it accumulates the Brobdingnagian pile of data that would allow it to do just that. And Edward Snowden's revelations prove that whoever you might be, even if you're the NSA, your data isn't secure.
The Target data hack shows what happens when a private sector organization accumulates massive amounts of valuable data--someone figures out how to get it. And much of the fallout falls on the most innocent of all--Target's customers.
These examples are only the beginning. By all indications, Google and Facebook want to gather and store all the data on the Internet about you for ever and ever, so they can sell it to the highest bidding advertiser closest to your GPS coordinates. But in accumulating these massive amounts of data, they make themselves tempting targets for hackers--and perhaps the NSA. Remember what Willie Sutton supposedly said when asked why he robbed banks: "Because that's where the money is." Wherever there is a big pile of data, someone will go after it. No person or organization has completely secure systems; not Google, not Facebook; not anyone. The value inhering in these huge databases will motivate somebody somewhere to put in the effort it takes to find the flaw.
How can we get this data based nightmare under control? By doing what banks do to limit the impact of robberies--keep less around. Banks generally keep only limited amounts of cash on hand. If they are robbed, the bad guys don't get that much. The damage is limited by the fact that there simply isn't a lot of cash to steal.
The same thing can be done with data. The big accumulators should be forced to stop hoarding. Private organizations like Google and Facebook should be allowed to hold most types of data for only short periods of time. For example, perhaps they could be allowed to keep location data for a few seconds. That would be long enough to sell an ad to the restaurant you're walking or driving by. But the data should not be added to a profile of you or other long term records that they could keep forever and forever so that it would be available for hackers to steal. Your web browsing activities could be similarly retained for just seconds, to accommodate the sale of advertising, but not to be incorporated into your profile or other long term records. Of course, information that you voluntarily post on your Facebook page or your blog could be retained for as long as you choose to keep it there (although you should be allowed to delete whatever you post and thereby prevent Facebook, Google or whoever from retaining it thereafter).
Even for data accumulated from sources other than the Internet--possibly much of Target's data was accumulated from activity of customers at bricks and mortars stores--could be subject to time limits on retention. Why does it matter who was buying what brand of diapers two years ago? Kids grow older and stop needing diapers, and the customer isn't going to buy any brand of diapers no matter how badly bombarded with advertising. And if a person stops by at a Target store a few times a year, would the store's extremely limited information about that person's buying habits really justify keeping information about the person? Why put that person at risk of being victimized by hackers when the store's knowledge of the person has little commercial value? The bottom line is much less information should be accumulated, and the justifications for keeping whatever is kept should be much stronger than they now are.
Some of the proposals for reform of the NSA reportedly take a similar approach. Data accumulation may be taken out of the hands of the NSA and placed with service providers or other third parties. While such non-NSA accumulations would present tempting targets for the bad guys, they could be spread out among more places (and therefore be more difficult to attack). In addition, time limits should be set on the retention of such data. Yes, any such time limits might make detection of terrorists and other bad guys harder. But there isn't much evidence that NSA's Big Gulp of data has detected a lot of terrorists anyway, so what we lose from time limits could be pretty theoretical.
Time limits on data retention would mean potentially big changes for the business models of some major companies. So be it. Our personal data and personal lives don't exist to serve the needs of soulless corporations. The surging appeal of SnapChat, with its limited half-life for posted photographs, shows that people want time limits on data about themselves. One of the most appealing aspects of American life is that you can re-invent yourself. No need to be weighed down by what you were years ago. And you shouldn't have to be weighed down by data stored by Internet or retailing giants years ago. Live free. Power to the Delete key. Death to personal data.
The Target data hack shows what happens when a private sector organization accumulates massive amounts of valuable data--someone figures out how to get it. And much of the fallout falls on the most innocent of all--Target's customers.
These examples are only the beginning. By all indications, Google and Facebook want to gather and store all the data on the Internet about you for ever and ever, so they can sell it to the highest bidding advertiser closest to your GPS coordinates. But in accumulating these massive amounts of data, they make themselves tempting targets for hackers--and perhaps the NSA. Remember what Willie Sutton supposedly said when asked why he robbed banks: "Because that's where the money is." Wherever there is a big pile of data, someone will go after it. No person or organization has completely secure systems; not Google, not Facebook; not anyone. The value inhering in these huge databases will motivate somebody somewhere to put in the effort it takes to find the flaw.
How can we get this data based nightmare under control? By doing what banks do to limit the impact of robberies--keep less around. Banks generally keep only limited amounts of cash on hand. If they are robbed, the bad guys don't get that much. The damage is limited by the fact that there simply isn't a lot of cash to steal.
The same thing can be done with data. The big accumulators should be forced to stop hoarding. Private organizations like Google and Facebook should be allowed to hold most types of data for only short periods of time. For example, perhaps they could be allowed to keep location data for a few seconds. That would be long enough to sell an ad to the restaurant you're walking or driving by. But the data should not be added to a profile of you or other long term records that they could keep forever and forever so that it would be available for hackers to steal. Your web browsing activities could be similarly retained for just seconds, to accommodate the sale of advertising, but not to be incorporated into your profile or other long term records. Of course, information that you voluntarily post on your Facebook page or your blog could be retained for as long as you choose to keep it there (although you should be allowed to delete whatever you post and thereby prevent Facebook, Google or whoever from retaining it thereafter).
Even for data accumulated from sources other than the Internet--possibly much of Target's data was accumulated from activity of customers at bricks and mortars stores--could be subject to time limits on retention. Why does it matter who was buying what brand of diapers two years ago? Kids grow older and stop needing diapers, and the customer isn't going to buy any brand of diapers no matter how badly bombarded with advertising. And if a person stops by at a Target store a few times a year, would the store's extremely limited information about that person's buying habits really justify keeping information about the person? Why put that person at risk of being victimized by hackers when the store's knowledge of the person has little commercial value? The bottom line is much less information should be accumulated, and the justifications for keeping whatever is kept should be much stronger than they now are.
Some of the proposals for reform of the NSA reportedly take a similar approach. Data accumulation may be taken out of the hands of the NSA and placed with service providers or other third parties. While such non-NSA accumulations would present tempting targets for the bad guys, they could be spread out among more places (and therefore be more difficult to attack). In addition, time limits should be set on the retention of such data. Yes, any such time limits might make detection of terrorists and other bad guys harder. But there isn't much evidence that NSA's Big Gulp of data has detected a lot of terrorists anyway, so what we lose from time limits could be pretty theoretical.
Time limits on data retention would mean potentially big changes for the business models of some major companies. So be it. Our personal data and personal lives don't exist to serve the needs of soulless corporations. The surging appeal of SnapChat, with its limited half-life for posted photographs, shows that people want time limits on data about themselves. One of the most appealing aspects of American life is that you can re-invent yourself. No need to be weighed down by what you were years ago. And you shouldn't have to be weighed down by data stored by Internet or retailing giants years ago. Live free. Power to the Delete key. Death to personal data.
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Expect Nothing From the Government in 2014
Chances are the federal government won't do much of anything in 2014. Neither party has control of the government, and neither has a coherent program in any event. Republicans are at war with each other, with the mainstream and Tea Partiers wrestling for dominance. Right now, the Republicans couldn't put together a coherent set of policies if they wanted to.
The President is playing defense, trying to get the federal health insurance exchange out of the ICU, contain the NSA surveillance scandal, deal with the Iranian nuclear program without another major American military commitment in the Middle East, pivot toward Asia, and bring the troops back from Afghanistan, all while avoiding a government shutdown from yet another lousy rerun of the debt ceiling crisis in early February. The Democrats on the Hill are angling to keep their majority in the Senate and perhaps gain some seats in the House, but the administrative debacle with the sign-up process for the federal health insurance exchange has left Democrats facing re-election scrambling for cover. That means distancing themselves from the President. And that makes the formulation of a coherent set of Democratic policies pretty unlikely.
The mid-term elections this fall will drive doings in Washington. That will mostly mean doing nothing. In today's politics, everyone wants to be a critic, and no one wants to be a doer. Critics get a lot of press coverage. Doers are targeted by critics. When you do something in Washington, you may benefit some people. But you'll also damage the interests of others. And they will dispense political contributions with a view to getting even. It's safer to be a critic, verbally heave donkey dung at one's adversaries, and avoid actually doing anything. You may not help anyone, but you also won't make a lot of enemies. Voters gravitate toward those who tell them what they want to hear. With today's grossly gerrymandered districts, critics have an easier time getting elected and staying that way.
So expect little from the government this year. Far right-wingers and hard-core libertarians may think this is a good thing. But everyone who realizes that essentially the entire country--from the top 1% to those below the poverty line, from the big banks to the small businesses scrambling for an SBA loan, from parents who want safe toys for their kids to those who prefer not to eat tainted food to home buyers looking for a mortgage loan to anyone who is potentially exposed to communicable disease (and that excludes very few of us)--needs a functioning government must hope against hope for something more.
The President is playing defense, trying to get the federal health insurance exchange out of the ICU, contain the NSA surveillance scandal, deal with the Iranian nuclear program without another major American military commitment in the Middle East, pivot toward Asia, and bring the troops back from Afghanistan, all while avoiding a government shutdown from yet another lousy rerun of the debt ceiling crisis in early February. The Democrats on the Hill are angling to keep their majority in the Senate and perhaps gain some seats in the House, but the administrative debacle with the sign-up process for the federal health insurance exchange has left Democrats facing re-election scrambling for cover. That means distancing themselves from the President. And that makes the formulation of a coherent set of Democratic policies pretty unlikely.
The mid-term elections this fall will drive doings in Washington. That will mostly mean doing nothing. In today's politics, everyone wants to be a critic, and no one wants to be a doer. Critics get a lot of press coverage. Doers are targeted by critics. When you do something in Washington, you may benefit some people. But you'll also damage the interests of others. And they will dispense political contributions with a view to getting even. It's safer to be a critic, verbally heave donkey dung at one's adversaries, and avoid actually doing anything. You may not help anyone, but you also won't make a lot of enemies. Voters gravitate toward those who tell them what they want to hear. With today's grossly gerrymandered districts, critics have an easier time getting elected and staying that way.
So expect little from the government this year. Far right-wingers and hard-core libertarians may think this is a good thing. But everyone who realizes that essentially the entire country--from the top 1% to those below the poverty line, from the big banks to the small businesses scrambling for an SBA loan, from parents who want safe toys for their kids to those who prefer not to eat tainted food to home buyers looking for a mortgage loan to anyone who is potentially exposed to communicable disease (and that excludes very few of us)--needs a functioning government must hope against hope for something more.
Labels:
Democratic Party,
Obama,
Obamacare,
political gridlock,
Republican Party
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