1996-04-04 - Re: What backs up digital money?

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From: Hal <hfinney@shell.portal.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: b8b9f26379ecc1960a963c3d5cd70031cd40885c950962fae7374e4a6db4e4b0
Message ID: <199604032050.MAA02754@jobe.shell.portal.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-04-04 08:55:08 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 4 Apr 1996 16:55:08 +0800

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From: Hal <hfinney@shell.portal.com>
Date: Thu, 4 Apr 1996 16:55:08 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: What backs up digital money?
Message-ID: <199604032050.MAA02754@jobe.shell.portal.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


From: rah@shipwright.com (Robert Hettinga)
> When money finally goes onto the net, and never comes back, the digital
> bearer certificates we call ecash will be a currency. Until then, it's just
> a script.
> 
> Or is it an interestless bond? ;-).

I'm not sure exactly what you mean by money "going onto the net and never
coming back".  Is this just a matter of there being a wider variety of
useful things to buy on the net?  Or do you mean that people who receive
ecash will not want to deposit in their bank accounts, but just turn
around and spend it?

I will point out that with regular currency, most merchants who receive
it just deposit it at the bank, save for a bit passed out as change.
Supermarkets don't actually take the cash their customers give them and
hand it to their suppliers.  They deposit it and pay with checks.  So
the "life cycle" of a $20 bill is pretty much from the bank, to the
customer, to the merchant, and back to the bank, only to repeat the
cycle.  Ecash, it seems to me, is already able to circulate to this
extent, although of course it is not yet widely used.

Hal





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