Duke of Marmalade
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Professor Stolfi said:Crypto promoters also make dozens of claims about the virtues of the currency and/or the payment system, such as that it will "one day" replace credit cards, replace national currencies, protect people's savings from inflation or confiscation by government, make banks obsolete, starve governments to death by depriving them of taxes or "money printing", enable support of dissidents in oppressive regimes, "bank the unbanked", allow free internet trade of drugs and other illegal items, end corruption, poverty, and inequality, etc. etc. etc. Ripple Inc., for instance, has boasted for many years that their XRP currency will be used by banks for international transfers. Ethereum promoters claimed that its "smart contracts" will remove the need for lawyers and courts in business deals. Creators of several cryptocurrencies, such as IOTA and Tron (TRX), falsely claimed to have partnerships with entities such as Microsoft [PYM1] and the Liverpool Football Club [TRW]. Bitcoin (BTC) promoters falsely claim that the Lightning Network will "soon" turn their crippled payment system into a "Visa killer". And so on. When one tries to debunk any of these claims, the promoters simply switch to another one.
Even if these rosy claims were to materialize, none of them would result in a source of revenue for people holding bitcoins. The value of those payment services would go partly to the users who use coins for payments, and partly to the miners in the form of transaction fees. But most crypto investors do not understand this point. They, almost "by definition", do not understand what a good investment is -- e. g. why gold, stocks, and real estate have value, and why investing in a game that is guaranteed to be negative-sum is a bad idea. And bitcoin promoters make no attempt to educate them on those points -- quite the opposite.
A good definition of a Ponzi scheme is where the only possible source of a return to investors is from other investors. In this definition we do not necessarily have crooks and manipulators though crypto space certainly has its share of these.Stolfi said:When one tries to debunk any of these claims, the promoters simply switch to another one.
You provided a direct quote from your academic friend - with no other commentary. I commented on what you posted - inclusive of a wayward claim re. LN. If you don't want me to comment on something, then don't post it.@tecate let's stick to the Ponzi aspect of OP. Just as Stolfi remarks you chose to strike out in another direction in an ad hominem attack on the professor's credentials and motivation - you are becoming tiresome.
My view is simple.........the last wave of crypto, this last mass adoption spike, pulled in the last remaining suckers into the mania.......to put it another way in previous crytpo bull runs & pull backs it was still a niche, lets call it hobby, there were lots of people still left to indoctrinate......this last wave has exhausted almost everyone susceptible to the siren song of BTC.......pyramid schemes collapse when you run out of suckers, manias collapse when all the chips have been pushed into the centre of the table & the next fellow who comes along is just a little less optimistic about the future than the last .......and super bowl in the United States was like peak crypto with all the ads at half-time......it looked to me exactly like the crest of a wave that was about to break.
Nobody is left to 'suck in', the last cycle mopped up the last group of people and nobody, moving forward, will be interested in 'getting involved" in a trading sardine that has fallen 90% peak to trough.....and where 95% of the population of holders are underwater. See the great scheme with BTC was it turned its 'owners' into unbeknownst to the individuals, unpaid sales people like @tecate ....exactly like a multi-level marketing scam. Problem now is the total addressable population for 'the hustle' has been burned up and the evidence of BTC losses are dispersed wide enough for people to be wary enough to say no thanks.
that comes behind us are digital natives. They're different in that respect than the couple of generations before them.
This past year has seen a whole host of new people being drawn in via NFTs. These are people that otherwise had no touch point with crypto. That whole thing is still only being scoped out - it has not drawn in its total addressable market.
I'm on record as saying that I expected a major slump and reset.
You think this thing goes down never to recover. I think this thing can very easily go down - but ultimately, it will rise again. It's not impossible that we could have a multi-year crypto-winter. Great - athough can you provide an undertaking that you'll stick around upon recovery and not do a dishonourable runner as you did last time?
I know you don't think its a scheme and I don't doubt your sincerity/believe in the 'project' of BTC. I've always enjoyed chatting to you even though we have very different views.@letitroll : I don't believe bitcoin to be a 'get rich quick' scheme albeit I'm sure there may have been some who did or who do. Anyway, 2030 is fine. Coingecko puts market top at $67,617 on 9th Nov.
Yup, that will work.No problemo on using Coingecko top tick figure of $67,617 in my world if I'm right, I'm going to be right by ALOT, not a couple K.....you will be first on my visit list Jan 1st, 2030 but were in agreement then that the BTC dream has clearly failed if it can't reach or exceed that high water mark of $67,617 it set in 2021 by the year 2030 right??
Bitcoin has reached a new all-time-high (ATH) price against a plethora of world currencies in recent days. Only the USD dollar ATH remains to be breached. At the time of this post, BTC = $66,777.
Looks like it may be time to get out before the Ponzi collapses
Couldn't agree more with Brendan. Bitcoin is a lightly cloaked ponzi scheme. Just because my nasal hair is of limited supply and can be mined if I'm lucky enough to live until 2040 doesn't mean it has inherent value. Also Bitcoin fails as a currency due to extreme volatility. Who accepts payment in BTC when by the time it hits your account it could have dropped 30% in value?
Who can tell what happens. I do expect much more volatility still. Brighter minds than me suggest that this bull market is still in its very early stages. I'm sure there will be a cycle crash. I'm sure that will be dramatic - but I'd be thinking that $8,000 would be optimistic. I added at $16,500 in Nov. 2022, thinking I'd get another stab at it further down. Further down never happened although I'm grateful to have gotten a buy order over the line at what turned out to be market bottom.I think ill lob quid in at the next dip in about a yr. When its 8000 or so. And then flog it when it hits next ATH in about 2 yrs. Rinse and repeat . For fun.
I wouldn't go anywhere near such a thing right nowCare to predict what might be the next bottom price? Maybe 24kish?
Care to predict what might be the next bottom price? Maybe 24kish?
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