Quote:
Originally Posted by MonctonRad
Would you hang your hat on a "currency" which is virtual, has no intrinsic value and without any state backing of any form? A currency which has lost about 70% of it's value in the last two months????
I wouldn't. El Salvador and the Central African Republic might. Hell, maybe they could even convince Vanuatu, Kiribati or Transnistria. Even PP likes bitcoin (which is why my traditional Conservative support is wavering).
No sane individual or self respecting country would ever do this though.
Bitcoin is going to go the way of NFTs, and, the sooner the better.
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Like I said it's not ready in its current form, but a 70% crash is mild and an improvement. Right now the market cap is still comparatively small compared to larger established asset classes, so any large transaction is going to cause massive price swings. Right now a lot of the speculators who bought at the beginning of the pandemic are cashing out, hence the crash. All new technologies go through this in the beginning. This is similar to the internet in 95 when nobody knew how it would transform society and all the legacy formats laughed.
You're wrong about Bitcoin not having intrinsic value. You can also say that about all currencies, and gold. The value in Bitcoin is in the problems that it solves:
1. It's immune to manipulation from central authorities - the only way to change how it works is through consensus of its users
2. It can't be inflated - it's capped at 21M BTC
3. It can't be seized - the only way to access it is to know someone's secret pass key
4. It can be sent to anyone anywhere in the world in a matter of seconds, and it costs almost nothing to do this (via the Lightning network)
5. It is the most secure network in the world (again individuals can be hacked, but the network is almost impossible to hack)
6. It's a completely transparent ledger
You can already use Bitcoin to convert foreign currency for much cheaper and faster than through traditional FOREX markets.
El Salvador and CAR are doing this as experiemnts, partially because they've run out of options. Ultimately I don't think they will be successful right away, but the world is going to learn massively from their experiments and it will result in the technology improving dramatically and help solve many of the remaining problems.
I don't think Bitcoin itself will be the currency we end up using, but I do think that at some point in the next 15 years the entire world will be using currencies that are some derivative of Bitcoin. I wouldn't want Canada to make that jump quite yet with the CDN, the technology isn't ready for that. But it would be completely idiotic for the government to not start buying Bitcoin and keeping it as reserves. It will never be this cheap again. It's volatile as hell, but every time it crashes, the bottom is still higher than the previous bottom. The trend is still logarithmic.