Just once, how many refusals are you up to now?
Just once? Leo, how many of my questions do you think you've ignored or left unanswered?....because I can tell you, there's plenty of them. I just haven't been mr. pedantic about trying to nail you to the cross in that regard.
That said - taking this particular instance into account, why should there be any exception? My point was that there was ill-intent in your approach. If you have something to share with everyone, then share it. That's not what you were doing.
I don't think I've banned any crypto-deniers as a result of their posting on this forum. For that matter, I haven't banned any of the pro-bitcoin cultists either. I have never banned anyone simply because I don't agree with them.
Re-read those sentences and the big reveal is your own bias. I'm aware of quite a lot of folks that were veering towards a positive view of bitcoin who have been banned from here over the course of three years - or had posts removed - yet I can't recall one instance in the opposite direction. Go figure.
Bitcoin however is just too hampered by its limitations.
Bitcoin has its drawbacks and difficulties - some of them locked in, some with potential to be overcome in one way or another. For which use case as there's more than one in play?
That would be like thinking the first generation analogue cellular service brought us mobile phones, let's not bother with 2G, 3G, 4G, 5G....
Again, for which use case?
What gets dismissed here is the proposition of a
decentralised cryptocurrency and that's wayward. I too believe that there will be a number of digital currencies and assets for different purposes. That doesn't mean that bitcoin doesn't have a place in the world going forward.
I agree, and it's too cumbersome for the average person to use.
I agree that its too cumbersome for regular joe's to use. The difference is that you don't seem to think that this can evolve. That's not guaranteed but I think that it's a definite possibility.
Isn't Paypal's rollout an example of this? Do you think that it will be difficult for an ordinary joe to use bitcoin through the Paypal interface they're familiar with once they facilitate bitcoin payments to 26 million US merchants in Q1, 2021?
Sure it may claim to protect against inflation, but only in extreme cases does inflation cause too much bother for people.
I mean, If I lifted your wallet, took out x% and replaced it, what's the harm? It's theft by stealth and it goes well beyond the inaccurate CPI figures.
Also, I think Bitcoin's price fluctuates too much to be used by the general public.
For the store of value use case, it doesn't matter so much. For a means of exchange use case, it's not ideal. However, again I'd put it to you that this is something that's likely to dissipate as bitcoin's market cap expands (today helps with bitcoin reaching a new record in terms of overall market cap).
But surely the analogue phones had first mover advantage?
First mover advantage matters, yes. Some guard against that, rolling out the 'MySpace' example. Only difference is that at its height, MySpace had a market cap. of $12 billion. As it stands today, bitcoin has a market cap of $335 billion.
Again, like Firefly you're not open to the consideration that usability can be improved upon. Other than that, if you or
@Leo believes that there's a better alternative to bitcoin in terms of crypto's, which one is it? I've been waiting to hear you both tell us this over the course of three years. Not a dickiebird out of either of you.
And they were in limited supply, like gold, so their value had to go up.
You can poke fun at the notion of scarcity as it relates to stores of value all you like but at the end of the day, it reflects poorly on your own judgement. It's one of the key characteristics of what makes for a decent store of value - as acknowledged by Central Bankers and others. Bitcoin goes well beyond the scarcity of gold as in bitcoin's case, that scarcity is absolute.
And people in developing countries, and Iran, love them.
Ireland is but a few million people. You can ignore vast swathes of the planet all you like but it makes for a wayward assessment.
It would seem to need some trust in a central entity that guaranteed the peg. Secondly one of their main motivations is that they think conventional currencies are corruptible.
As Wolfie pointed out to you, they've been proven to be corruptible. So - others have gone with digital currencies as
@Firefly proposes. The thing is - they will work quite nicely for certain purposes - but they're not competition for bitcoin in the role that it is fulfilling and that it will fulfill.