V wrote:Badonkadonk wrote:deck wrote:The difference is that Telsa has income, assets, and the potential to earn future revenue. Bitcoin has none of these things, only the perception of some future value. And an increase in that future value is predicated on someone else buying in at more than you bought in at, which is why by definition, Bitcoin is mathematically a greater fool scheme.
This is not true.
You are correct that money doesn't come out of thin air, it comes from people expending effort to mine raw materials, manufacture those raw materials into products that can be exchanged for goods, or by providing services that people need. Generally speaking, the economy on a whole is not negative sum, because there is an abundance of materials available, and plenty of services that people can provide that others are willing to pay for. The only utility provided by Bitcoin is the act of mining Bitcoin itself, and the transactions that can be performed as a result. If miners choose to convert that value to a fiat currency so they can... you know... buy stuff, or pay their obscene electricity bills, then Bitcoin becomes a negative sum currency. Because PoW cryptos effectively waste large amounts of electricity to produce something that is not nearly as valuable in real terms (a transaction on chain), PoW cryptos are generally negative sum.
Great post.
No its not a good post.
ROI on most PoW asics is about 6 months, and they are not negative sum. You sure say a lot about crypto without really knowing anything about crypto. The idea behind PoW is to find efficiencies in balancing fixed costs in ops. Renewable energy is where this is heading. but but crypto scam scam.
Also bitcoin is accepted all over the world to pay for things that normally you can buy with fiat. but but no one accepts scam coin.
I am not getting into crypto discussion with any of you since its not worth my time. I will leave you with this.. FTX acted as a bank/exchange that lent out depositors funds to Alameda (investment branch) and funded its own investing/sponsorships based on the value of its on FTT token. When the token did not have 1:1 backing with usd (or usdt/busd) that is when things went down hill. Imagine after a bank run your TD bank saying, "we can't provide you with your money because we do not have enough deposits in our vaults". That was what happened with FTX. It went under because it acted in bad faith with its depositors and a bank run occurred.
I know nothing about crypto at all but this description immediately reminds me of the It's Always Sunny episode where the gang issues Paddy's dollars in their attempt at a self-sustaining economy.
That reason alone reinforces my decision to stay away lol





























