Daniel Larimer is a nobody.
He does not know what he is talking about.
Big "conglomerates" doing the bitcoin mining does NOT effect the security of the block chain.
Lets pretend only ONE person in the world is mining bitcoins.
Big deal.
Who cares?
There is nothing that one person can do to hurt bitcoin.
Everyone else using bitcoin has the block chain.
Easily over 1000 people have the block chain downloaded. No I didn't bother to look that up, it is a safe guess.
This one remaining miner cannot change the record, or the records of future transactions.
Perhaps I am missing something, but why does anyone care if everyone STOPS mining bitcoin?
The Bitcoin QT software will still behave as a wallet and peer to peer transaction data will still be shared among everyone elses wallet, correct?
Or are miners acting as a control node, in addition to mining?
Why would anyone want to go through all of that effort and spend all of that money to destroy bitcoin. Hypothetically the reason to do a 51% attack is to steal some btc, but after such an attack btc would be worthless, so why would anyone bother?
No, Bitcoin completely depends on mining to operate. A miner in control could completely destroy Bitcoin if they wanted to. if they had a chain that took more work they could release it any time and wipe out all the transactions and miner rewards during the period they mining in secret.
Please consider that the only miners who could generate a longer chain than the rest of the network would themselves need to invest nearly 3 quarters of 1 billion dollars just to have enough hardware to 'overstep consensus' that is provided from the current pools (currently - this figure will grow larger as more entrants turn on their mining hardware for the first time in efforts to mine for bitcoin). Saying that miners could destroy it if they had a longer chain is not true - they would simply have their own blocks confirmed and would receive a larger portion of block rewards (rightfully so I might add - for they too are contributing mining power to the network) If an ill-willed miner with a half billion dollars and a chip on his shoulder thinks its better to hijack and effectively freeze Bitcoin transactions - he'll be noticed quick and blacklisted by the legitimate mining traffic even quicker.