"Only a species that had gone entirely insane, and consciously intended to wipe 
out life on Earth would ever consider such a process. But any species that 
could actively celebrate and expand it — must be understood as both 
emphatically suicidal and openly omnicidal." 
Deep Green Resistance News Service

 Bitcoin = Death Processors

December 18, 2017
 by Darin Stevenson / Medium

bitcoin Is Makeworky Unmoney

bitcoin is not exactly money. It’s a potentially valuable abstraction of 
computational ‘work’ that ‘earns’ bitcoin value. But what is bitcoin value and 
what is the nature of the work? The answers are bizarre because they are 
nonsensical.

bitcoin value is an abstraction of participation in the history of the network 
and its transactions. ‘Work’ is a (largely) nonuseful recomputation of, first, 
the transaction history of the network — which has to be reprocessed each time 
there is a bitcoin transaction. Then, continual banging away at some useless 
math with added ‘weight factor’ that makes it arbitrarily difficult for 
computers to accomplish the generation of a new record-set over time.

The bitcoin algorithms adjust this factor in order to require enough ersatz 
work so that the heartbeat of the system pulses (produces a block) 
approximately every ten minutes… and they scale the computational complexity 
accordingly via input from bitcoin’s own daily developmental activity.

By crossing an invented computational abyss, millions of computers and other 
machines, many of which have been secretly compromised by hacks, are working 
full tilt, around the clock… to simply generate a deeper abyss requiring 
ever-more powerful and numerous computers to cross. And this generates ‘blocks’ 
in an economy of numbers in machines. These numbers are not exactly money, and 
their actual value is more complex than cash. And the machines must be 
serviced, cooled, attended and backed-up, as must the results of their nearly 
useless hyperactivity.

Most participants are using machines specially designed to resolve these 
invented computational targets, and as we make faster computers to do this, the 
network amplifies the difficulty to throttle the pulse.

What is all this about? Well, it’s not a simple question.

Let’s start with money.

What Is Money?

To understand money, one must begin to understand its sources. Perhaps the most 
fundamental of such introductions is the direct and fascinated observation of 
animals in nature. The origins of money (and memory) are in nature; exploring 
them has profound implications for own developing creativity and intelligence.

Beavers, squirrels and other small creatures, including the incredibly 
inventive corvids, store food (and sometimes treasures) in hiding places we 
call caches. Some predators may also cache food briefly (meat tends to go bad 
or get eaten by other creatures who can sense its presence). So, too, ants, 
wasps, bees and other social insects. This is actually a mode of living memory.

Notice the homonomy here? Cache and cash are the same sound, and this isn’t 
accidental. Direct relation with nature as and through living places is the 
original source of our concepts of value. Our relationships with 
environmentally accessible resources and caching are not merely the beginning 
of our monetary systems, they are the probable origin point of the peculiar 
forms of memory and cognition that are the hallmark of our species.

We carefully cache and value our dead. And money is an abstraction of dead 
people, places, and moments.

Our kind of mind was born in forests and places fraught with elaborate 
relational constellations of biodiversity and symbiotic intelligence. Alas, the 
nominal treasure we acquired there went haywire, and now we have nearly wiped 
those places off the map and erased them from our experience. What was their 
replacement?

Money (and machines). A representation of cached value, extensible to nearly 
any common domain of exchange.

There are no living places anymore. We do not encounter or create value… we get 
cash. Most of the time… that means that someone, or some ecology somewhere, is 
being wiped out. The results are representational forms of wealth and power.

We don’t have ancient forests any more, and the futures they portended are 
gone. What there are, are sheets of paper, ingots of gold, diamonds, and little 
banks of numbers… in machines. On balance sheets.

***

Numeric Supremacy

Numbers. We keep track of them. Too often they become lethal fictions with 
which ‘we’ (ostensibly: our societies and their systems) determine who lives 
and who dies. Who is wealthy and who bereft. Everyone is identified by and for 
the sake of numbers. We imagine these numbers to be true, just, inviolable. But 
we do not really understand the valuations or applications we celebrate and 
avow as real; there are always many aspects of value with crucial bearing on 
any analysis that we leave out of our accounting. Living beings, for example. 
Minds.

Many of our bizarre celebrations of monetary value or obedience to statistical 
analyses are simply flawed. It’s hard to get reasonable statistics for any 
real-world situation. Sometimes we are using stats that are cripplingly 
outdated or merely wrong. Assays attempting to discover the (astronomical) 
number of birds killed by electricity transmission only counted those found 
near wires. What’s the actual number, or a very close guess? We don’t know, 
because statistics are not entirely reliable beyond their well-behaved 
purposive contexts. Statistics, it turns out, are very often both manipulable 
and conveniently monodimensional.

So, too, the cash that stands sovereign behind them.

Such ‘numbers’ and our mishandling of them partly determine or suggest to us 
what to believe or think about ourselves, each other… the nature of the real. 
They portend what resources are protected, abstracted from nature, transported 
or obliterated, for what purposes, and whose ‘profit’.

We seem to have a serious vulnerability as regards representations. Our 
peculiar fantasies about the meaning of progress or success have cast life on 
Earth into direct competition with their outcomes—living beings and places now 
compete for terrain, safety and survival directly against not only objects, 
habits and machines… but mere data. And they lose.

So do we.

A photograph can become so popular that hundreds or even thousands of creatures 
must die simply to sustain and transmit it millions or billions of times. As 
unthinkable as this is, it is a fact: people die because numbers in machines 
merit more resources, attention, care, and nurturance than living beings.

Our electronic activity and transactions have absolutely lethal real world 
costs that no one is paying attention to. And as we continue to invest human 
attention and work in an increasingly unreal electronic representation of 
reality, those prices become staggering. They were unsurvivable 20 years ago. 
Today, they are simply an ever-expanding array of new forms of environmental, 
social and psychological rape. For profit. And they can hide in our cultures 
and lives in ways that are as deadly as they are invisible.

***

When Costs Go Explosive — And Invisible

One of the statistics that is modestly important here is the present population 
of our species and its growth over say, the last 100 years or so. These figures 
project their significance on everything we do, and dramatically magnify the 
repercussions of our common choices simply by increasing the power and 
frequency of the activities that produce them. An automobile trip to the 
grocery store has an environmental impact that rises precipitously as 
populations repeating it double or quadruple.

And this is what has been happening with our population for quite a while now. 
Perhaps it is nearly as significant that the number of objects per person… 
particularly machines… has skyrocketed in developed nations. In other words: 
there are at least two population problems. Ours, and that represented by our 
machines. Most are happy to complain about the humans. Nearly no one is 
complaining about the machines.

I find this suspicious.

Here are some ‘interesting numbers’: the statistics of human population growth. 
It took us at least 2 million years to reach our first billion. It took us 
approximately 123 to reach the next.

A mere 33 took us to our third.

 
The population gradient for ambient human bodies on Earth.

Prior to around 1800, the most serious human threats to the living planet were 
deforestation for the sake of construction, war or fuel and maybe wildfires. 
Secondary to those was mass hunting—particularly the vast atrocities that wiped 
out entire populations of animals for sport, base ignorance, commerce, or 
purposes related to human habitation of terrain.

But between the 2nd and 3rd tiers of the human population explosion, new and 
profusely invasive competitors for resources, attention and terrain were 
multiplying madly—at rates no one really bothered to examine. During this 
period, two specific human activity-threats skyrocketed into cultural and 
ecological dominance, and their impact continues to inscribe a deadly and 
indelible mark on both human history and terrestrial ecology. I speak here of 
the machine and the product-for-profit.

Machines are objects against which human beings and living places must directly 
compete—and we are losing this competition. Inert objects merit more care, 
attention, valuation, developmental interest, terrain rights, fuel and ‘freedom 
to reproduce’ than their human originators or the ecologies that are the 
sources of life and planetary homeostasis. Every living being and place has 
been subjected to their intrusion, emissions and domination—especially in war. 
Further, the invention and development of mechanical technology has had 
profound and unexpected impacts on human development.

Over the past 150 years, Homo Sapiens Sapiens has effectively redirected or 
even replaced our evolutionary developmental progress in a number of unexpected 
ways by inhibition, substitution, self-poisoning and, most significantly, by 
wiping out the ecologies which were the original sources of our evolutionary 
ascent; standing nearby as both agency of accomplishment and cause we find ‘the 
machine’.

I would argue that our broad-scale fascination with machines has derailed the 
development of the intellectual and relational assets necessary to direct our 
own cultures, let alone the technologies in question, with any degree of 
insight or wisdom. We have become materialists, and in so doing, we have 
sounded the death knell of the nurseries of life and intelligence on Earth.

Our extended cultures and collectives are not properly equipped to direct the 
forces that value, pursue and accomplish technological and industrial 
development. Our ordinary activities produce results so incredibly 
ill-considered that were we to pause even briefly in contemplation of them we 
would prohibit them absolutely. We do not thus pause. Money and the need for it 
fuel the conversion of the living planet to representations such as cash or 
goods. And so, too, our human potentials and minds.

It’s murder for money.

Numbers in machines that represent value.

Representations like money arise when what is being represented is no longer 
available to common experience or expression. As the forests of oral memory 
were wiped out, we acquired writing. As the experience of the profound value of 
living beings and places disappeared from common experience, we got a new kind 
of greenery: cash.

And as cash begins to disappear, we will achieve the ‘third wave’ of 
re-representation: digital money. Stuff that is not even an object. Nothing 
more than numbers in machines.

In the case of bitcoin, we are talking about machines that compete against 
living places and human lives for energy, space, resources, and … attention.

***

Hashing For Cash: Machines Get busy

So, let’s get down to business. What is bitcoin, really? You can think of it as 
a machine contagion—a network of devices amped to their performance 
tolerances—machines that do nothing but reprocess every transaction that ever 
occurred on their network (thus achieving ‘consensus’) while, at the same time, 
‘mining’ new blocks of coins (currently worth about 25 btc) by solving a 
purposefully cumbersome mathematical formula which doesn’t actually accomplish 
anything other than enforcing computational difficulty. That is: making 
millions of machines grind away madly at nothing.

This mining process is both the reprocessing of transactions (to join the 
network), and a ‘weight’ factor that is incremented to insure that the average 
time for the entire network to ‘solve’ a block (that is, to produce an accurate 
guess close enough to a mathematically supplied target) is ‘about 10 minutes’.

When you initiate a new machine into the network, you download the current 
transaction record (a 6-gigabyte file) of the entire history of bitcoin and 
reprocess it (this takes around 24 hours). You then either ‘mine’ alone (an 
almost useless endeavor which would take ~98 years to solve a block) or you 
join a pool of machines. By joining a pool, you get statistically better 
performance in terms of satoshi (currently: USD $0.0000046543 each) earned as 
you are ‘rewarded’ for work done by your machine’s participation in the pool.

The more processing power (raw computational force over time) you can bring to 
bear on ‘the problem’ … the better a chance you have to earn incremental 
additions to your ‘wallet’ or account. Of course, most of the problem is 
invented… to be this kind of problem—one that requires more and more 
computational activity to qualify as complete. And we have now invented 
specialized machines and chips just to solve this problem.

Machines involved in mining are pressed to the limits of their power 
consumption and performance profiles; they are ‘pinned’ at 100%+ of their 
computing power, ceaselessly, and thus generate heat (as well as consuming 
copious quantities of electrical power).

Because they remain hot, they have to be electronically ventilated. This 
process of power-heating something we must in turn power-cool, for the phony 
‘sake’ of mathematical processes intended to make more work each time they are 
implemented is deranged. We’re essentially turning computers into heaters that 
we have to cool to recompute previous computations with. On purpose. A single 
day of the environmental costs of this process are so catastrophic that if we 
ever did the accounting — if anyone did — we would immediately understand that 
this entire idea is a mode of ‘fracking the whole environment’ whose costs rise 
explosively with every moment we continue the process.

These traditionalists worry that a larger block size will raise the minimum 
amount of computing power required to fully participate in the Bitcoin 
network’s peer-to-peer process for clearing transactions. To fully participate 
in this process, a computer needs to receive a copy of every transaction that 
has ever been made on the network, which can add up to gigabytes of data every 
month. If the block limit is raised, then running a Bitcoin node will become 
even more resource-intensive, potentially pricing out smaller players.

Only a species that had gone entirely insane, and consciously intended to wipe 
out life on Earth would ever consider such a process. But any species that 
could actively celebrate and expand it — must be understood as both 
emphatically suicidal and openly omnicidal. 
In short: they intend to kill everything, anything, and themselves — and are 
hell-bent on the continuous and unlimited expansion of this agenda.

The activity of the bitcoin process and some similar networks are not only 
burning down the future; they are also obliterating the history of humanity and 
life on Earth, faster and more aggressively every moment, by destroying the 
living results and opportunities established by this history, and insuring that 
the benefits that might otherwise blossom into astonishing ‘interest on 
investment’, are killed off by the necessity of breeding, operating, heating 
and cooling millions of machines that do makework for a resource that only 
exists as numbers in machines.

No one with anything resembling a mind would ever allow, let alone celebrate 
this, and the fact that our modern cultures are doing both is a symptom more 
serious than our obsessions with war, ecological atrocity, rape-for-profit, and 
the generation of other lethal processes such as the automobile, the atomic 
bomb, nuclear reactors and prisons.

bitcoin is an invisible, self-expanding prison/war that, like fracking ‘hides 
the damage’ in every place and life on Earth. It is a way of violently 
undermining the very bases of life on Earth, and the fact that no one is doing 
the accounting is a sign that the social and environmental intelligences of our 
species have become actively self-compromising.

Imagine if your immune system started producing new forms of HIV instead of 
macrophages and antibodies… and you begin to get the picture.

Thankfully, there is a limit to the process, but it’s taking a while to get 
there. The limit is 21 million bitcoins, at least in the present 
implementation. What does this mean? Well, it means that, according to some 
sources, 80% of mineable bitcoins will have been acquired within about a year. 
It also means that the miner margin will shrink, making the process less 
attractive. It’s not clear what will take place, or if the tail end of this 
process can be completely accomplished. It’s also not impossible that the 
present implementation will begin to transform, or reiterate itself once all 
bitcoins have been mined.

bitcoin forks into two processes 08.01.17.

Money is cached torture, murder, atrocity, and domination. It represents 
possible transactions in future time by obliterating living beings and 
opportunities in present time.

The only ‘value’ of the computation thus accomplished is that it leverages 
statistical complexity against computational power in order to mathematically 
throttle block (and thus bitcoin) production. So, we are inventing increasing 
quantities of work for increasing quantities of computers to do and the easier 
it becomes, the more we throttle it to make it harder… faster.

Purportedly, all of this bother results in profit, at least in theory. I say in 
theory because the putative returns require investments… of time, space, 
electricity, temperature, attention… and… computation. What one invests in one 
way is lost twice, both in the investment and in what more profitable or noble 
work might have been done with the same effort or resources.

There are a wide variety of other problems here, from the fact that malware 
that infects vast numbers of machines has been found mining bitcoin (resource 
diversion), to the embarrassing ‘sudden disappearance’ of thousands (or 
occasionally millions) of dollars worth of bitcoins in thefts from ‘exchanges’ 
or technical bungles (wallet loss).

Why are we purchasing banks of highly specialized computers and heating them up 
with computational burdens that tax their performance spec and then paying to 
cool them back down—in order to accomplish nothing useful?

The answer is that we have invented a ‘false problem’ that tens of thousands of 
machines now work to achieve the result for relatively uninterrupted, and these 
machines are themselves resources which require resources to build, run, track, 
back up, and otherwise maintain. How much varies widely by installation, but as 
you can see in the image that begins this essay, many people are building banks 
of machines that do nothing but process bitcoin blocks. Nothing else. Just 
that. And these have to be housed, stored, powered, repaired, attended, 
backed-up, protected, and cooled.

Bitcoin Energy Usage Analysis.

bitcoin is an essentially mechano-vampiric paradigm where massive amounts of 
actually usless computation are done with increasing ferocity while producing 
nothing of any value whatsoever except a kind of pure abstraction of computing 
having been done, and the glorious ‘record of transactions’ which becomes a 
veritable church of common computational record—and remains just as meaningless 
in that guise.

Those who are involved in this racket have chosen to dedicate cash, space, 
power and other resources to the process. But what is the process? It is to 
process a meaningless series of processes, ever-more ineffectively, on purpose.

That’s the wrong thing to dedicate resources to, and it produces direct 
mechanical competition against our own minds, cultures, needs and development. 
The idea of a homegrown electronic cryptocurrency is not entirely misguided. 
Personally, I think it would be powerful to develop something that produces 
value based on merit of actual work, discovery or contribution… accomplished by 
individuals or collectives. This is something I hope we may see relatively 
soon. But what bitcoin is and is doing is stridently malformed.

What exactly is profit? A crucial part of the answer is that it is the 
abstracted remains of obliterated lives, pricelessly irreplaceable ecosystems 
and precious relationships we never noticed or acknowledged, let alone 
understood. It is the remains of what might have been revolutionary 
intelligence, discovery, mutual uplift, evolution, wonder and actual human 
progress. It is the bodies and remains of animals, human beings and families, 
dreams of access to new developmental and creative opportunities, and living 
worlds of possibility that were burnt down and turned into little sheets of 
paper.

***

In all too many cases, the ‘next big thing’ is actually the next endlessly 
self-amplifying graveyard.

It is well-known that a ‘materially successful’ male or female represents an 
attractive mating partner for a variety of reasons, both profound and 
superficial in nature. In effect, the ‘standing cache’ of a given person or 
group is a signal about how effective various aspects of their skills and/or 
intelligence are in the specific domains that these representations are derived 
from.

The problem is this: the message is mixed, because their cache is social power… 
but its sources and functions often begin with atrocities,, some of which reach 
far back into the history of our people and the land.

“The Kwakiutl called their money objects yaklelwas, which means “bad things,” a 
word that has the same root as ‘dead bodies” and “intestines.” When they had 
their potlatch money-destruction ceremonies they said they were “wiping off the 
shame” from their body, like one wipes off shit, by giving money away or 
destroying it.(11)”

Bitcoin Block Reward Halving Countdown (many interesting up-to-the-moment 
statistics about the current state of the process).

Note : There are now a large number of cryptocurrencies, each with unique 
features, benefits and costs of operation. While some of these may utilize 
similar processes that require vast amounts of computational activity to 
generate, others do not. I am presently doing some research to understand more 
about the other systems, some of which are mentioned in the comments.

Photos: Life inside of China’s massive and remote bitcoin mines

Editor’s note: This article originally appeared on Medium.  Republished with 
permission of the author.


https://dgrnewsservice.org/resistance/strategy/bitcoin-death-processors/

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