this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2025
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math
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Does this make allowances for quantum computing? Because IIRC it's still based on prime factoring, and if the prime factoring problem is broken, there are few options for scaling difficulty.
For example (hypothetically, because I haven't looked into the code), you can scale factoring by increasing the order of magnitude of the primes. If a device Congress along that can factor primes of arbitrary size, your scaling function won't do anything except put everyone who doesn't have a quantum computer out of the business of mining.
Ok, so no offense, but let's make the distinction between cryptocoins and blockchains, and that we're talking about coins. Blockchains - whether public ledger or not - are a component of cryptocoins, but exist outside of cryptocoins. The two terms are very much not synonymous in important ways, and whenever they're used synonymously, even casually by people who understand the difference and are just speaking in shortcuts, it just muddies the water for people whose grasp on the fundamentals are already weak.
I don't want any cryptocoin that's based on proof-of-work; that's just a waste of energy, and it's a large reason why environmentalists get riled up and cryptocurrency - even when the philosophy of cryptocurrencies align with their values and the haven't realized it. And it's a valid point: we are not yet near post-scarcity energy-wise, and using it for something as abstract as cryptocurrency, when a large number of them are little more than scams, is absurd. Especially when there are other, better basis for cryptocurrency that don't burn tons of coal for a few dollars of conceptual value.