[ExI] Fwd: Re: [mta] Re: Bitcion Moore's Law?

Brent Allsop brent.allsop at canonizer.com
Mon Jul 22 00:59:52 UTC 2013


Bill,

No.  You are looking at this in a primitive, entirely wrong way. 
Canonizer.com is clearly a web based tool entirely based on expert 
OPINION.  So there is no law about what people can express and "sign" as 
clearly their current "opinion", nor is there any law for jumping camps, 
and so on.  Canonizer.com simply rigorously builds, measures and tracks 
all this expert consensus opinion, concisely and quantitatively.

If people are in a bad or immorally destructive camp, for two long it is 
their own reputation that will suffer, and such will be easily filtered 
out, as non expert opinion, going forward, when/if we reach the 
$1000/BTC valuation and then move on to the $10,000/BTC valuation 
predictions, then the $100,000/BTC Valuation after that, and so on.  
Whoever has been the most correct the longest, for all that, I, for one, 
will very much want to trust, and consult to make more educated bets on 
the future with.

Canonizer.com is a powerful open survey consensus building system that 
takes differences of opinion, and harnesses it in a way that motivates 
it to focus on the important moral things that most matter, so people 
can push the far lesser disagreeable issues they other wise can't escape 
and tend to focus on infinitely repetitively, into lower camps, and out 
of the way.

Brent Allsop




On 7/21/2013 3:28 PM, BillK wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 21, 2013 at 10:05 PM, Gordon  wrote:
>> 1) Commodity markets do not operate according to anything like a Moore's
>> Law. I gave you an example of how gold languished for a couple of decades
>> due to macroeconomic factors like disinflation. There was not and is not
>> anything like a Moore's Law operating either in the supply or demand for
>> gold. Moore's Law is applicable (or at least was applicable) to the
>> economics of certain kinds of technological progress, but it does not apply
>> to commodity markets in general.
> <snip>
> What Brent needs is the standard statement that by law in the UK all
> investment companies must quote in their offers.
>
> Quote:
> Past performance is not a guide to the future. Market and exchange
> rate movements may cause the capital value of investments, and the
> income from them, to go down as well as up and the investor may not
> get back the amount originally invested.
>
>
> BillK
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