
Can see Apple and other major companies following Elon's lead.
Is the intrinsic value not any of these things - it is virtually tamper proof / it can be transacted instantly / it is both a means of exchange and a store of value / it has a limited supply ?Zenyatta wrote: ↑Sat Feb 13, 2021 1:43 pmThere's no intrinsic value, real currency is backed by the government...you can exchange it for goods and services, but Bitcoin only has value in so far as it's able to be converted back to ordinary fiat currency first. No one is using it to pay for anything, why would they when the value could double or half in the blink of an eye.
Won't the system will become more power efficient as time goes on? The amount of coins are limited, in contrast to computing power which doubles every year, therefore maintenance costs drop off over time?Zenyatta wrote: ↑Sat Feb 13, 2021 1:43 pmThe 'proof of work' system is using the electricity of a small country, incredibly silly and completely unnecessary (for instance 'proof of stake' doesn't need to use all that electricity to achieve security) the so-called 'decentralization' is a myth (the mining is mostly controlled by a few big collectives in China), and Elon Musk is just a rich playboy having fun (his endorsement of Dogecoin shows he's not being serious, he's just got money to burn and likes to play around).
95% of BTC is owned by 2% of wallets, similarly I think I read recently about 50% of Dogecoin is owned by about 15 people with the biggest owning $1.5B
Observe Nigeria. They broke their economy with hyperinflation. Guess which alternative currency is booming there now...johnsheppard wrote: ↑Mon Feb 15, 2021 11:10 pmPresumably, the government having control over money, is actually a helpful thing for an economy if it is well managed.
I guess you gotta asked, which countries don't have well managed economies...and observe what happens there...
Yup. And outlawing Bitcoin.superfrank wrote: ↑Tue Feb 16, 2021 12:10 amIt is no coincidence that the value of BTC has exploded along with the balance sheets of central banks.
Money printing isn't going to stop, not a chance.
Stagflation is coming and the next desperate step will be debt forgiveness.
Bitcoin can be marketed as whatever you want it to be. The fact is there are indeed "little guys" making very good use of it. E.g. Nigeria and the way it is opening up all sorts of new trade opportunities there. I doubt they care what Elon Musk is doing.
The amount of young people especially 'investing' loads into Crypto is very concerning, I have a friend who just put $1k into dogecoin and I reckon that is well below average.Euler wrote: ↑Wed Feb 17, 2021 11:27 amI have no idea how high Bitcoin will go, but I'd imagine it will go higher as it's closer to a mania now than a new paradigm.
You can't predict reliably what will happen and where it will end. But if people are feeling that Bitcoin is the new order it almost certainly wont be. It's got worse problems than traditional currency.
The Eco lobbying haven't really got their teeth stuck into the immense costs of mining. It's curious situation. I've played it by proxy, rather than directly. But I'd say this is one of few major tech trends that I wasn't in early on. Such is life.
No idea what happens next!