Meta shareholders overwhelmingly rejected a proposal to explore adding Bitcoin to the company's treasury, with less than 1% voting in favor of the measure
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They're the same with AI. Had these people been interested years ago, they would be sitting pretty. But they kept telling everyone it's garbage. Now it's just sunk costs for them
I'm sure that if they found a set of keys for a Bitcoin wallet, they would just throw it away.
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What’s the GDP of Bitcoinistan?
Can't be any worse than the GDP of the 2025 fascist USA
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Why would they in the first place? It would be like a newspaper buying gold. If investors want to buy bitcoin they can just do that.
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Fundamentally, no. That's just what it's become.
What any unregulated market becomes.
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I had an acquaintance ask me about my opinion on crypto a few years ago and I explained it only has the perceived value and is highly volatile as a result, and that all but a few coins were basically rug pulls waiting to happen. He was satisfied with that and moved on. About a year later crypto had roughly doubled in value and he gave me shit about bad advice (it was an opinion not investment advice) and proceeded to move $10k into some coin I'd never heard of. About a month later a mutual friend said the other guy had lost like $8k of his $10k investment. Next time I saw the acquaintance there was no mention of crypto.
(it was an opinion not investment advice)
If you did give them advice, would it be different?
some coin I'd never heard of
The problem is this person was looking at the market as a whole and then investing in some niche coin. At this point any coin that's not well-established is mostly likely pure grift.
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Yeah, it's like those people who fall for ads where people get rich going to the casino.
LOL they love to parade around the 1/10,000 winners and make them spokespeople for the casino for a week.
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It's not, but there are plenty of crypto scams. It's not an investment and it's also not a particularly good store of value, but it is decent for P2P transactions, with some coins also providing privacy.
If that's not your use case, don't buy cryptocurrencues. Most people shouldn't buy them until more places accept them for payment.
Most people shouldn't buy them until more places accept them for payment.
It's not going to happen. You can't price things when the value of the currency changes every 10 minutes.
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Can't be any worse than the GDP of the 2025 fascist USA
I mean, it is worse
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I'm sure that if they found a set of keys for a Bitcoin wallet, they would just throw it away.
I certainly wouldn't keep anything in cryptocurrency. I would transfer it to something stable.
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With how volitile the USD is under ahem this administration, Bitcoin is probably the slightly less shittier option.
If only there were some other major currency, maybe controlled by some larger union of countries so that one country's poor decisions can't tank it
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What any unregulated market becomes.
A lot of scams are dependent on the presence of regulations.
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A lot of scams are dependent on the presence of regulations.
Regulations aren’t perfect, but the banking industry has gotten vastly more full of scams since congress repealed Glass Steagall. Regulations offer a structure to punish fraud and scamming. We need clear defined rules to at least attempt to control markets from their worst possible outcomes.
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Most people shouldn't buy them until more places accept them for payment.
It's not going to happen. You can't price things when the value of the currency changes every 10 minutes.
Never gonna happen is a bit of a stretch. It used to be a thing. Steam accepted bitcoin. They stopped accepting it due to volatility and high transaction fees at the time. You still price things in your local currency but convert at checkout. There are "plug and play" payment processors who can handle it now.. Spar in Switzerland accepts it.
But imo, its not something regular people should be using anyway.
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Most people shouldn't buy them until more places accept them for payment.
It's not going to happen. You can't price things when the value of the currency changes every 10 minutes.
That happens to every currency, BTC is more volatile than many, but things can be priced.
Also until twiddling is made illegal, prices can be set by some other currency or some function, and be calculated in BTC from that, and displayed on electronic price tags for example.
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Why would they in the first place? It would be like a newspaper buying gold. If investors want to buy bitcoin they can just do that.
Apparently GameStop are considering it too.
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It's not, but there are plenty of crypto scams. It's not an investment and it's also not a particularly good store of value, but it is decent for P2P transactions, with some coins also providing privacy.
If that's not your use case, don't buy cryptocurrencues. Most people shouldn't buy them until more places accept them for payment.
I like GNU Taler, and I would like there to exist not just such a payment system, but also an electronic currency system without blockchains (global synchronization is a pain), unfortunately currencies are not like most applications.
I also wrote two smartass paragraphs completely wrong after this, and now thinking about it - Taler is as good a solution as possible. It's basically what can be done. You can't decentralize an issuer or a bank, except for the BTC way. If you can, then you can't plug it in seamlessly , you need some synchronization (would be a shame if a failed transaction made it into Taler as passed).
If I understand that correctly.
Gosh. It's year 2025, I've achieved nothing. I was blabbering on these subjects in year 2011! I'll be 29 in less than a month. But so cool that someone is making the humanity better.
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Regulations aren’t perfect, but the banking industry has gotten vastly more full of scams since congress repealed Glass Steagall. Regulations offer a structure to punish fraud and scamming. We need clear defined rules to at least attempt to control markets from their worst possible outcomes.
Frankly movement is all that matters. Too deregulated looks like cryptocurrencies, too regulated looks like PSTN which every phreaker could own, because it relied upon laws for its defense, not technical robustness.
There's no system that remains working when just kept standing, all that matters is that we can quickly rebuild any part of it. Which is why modern legal systems and modern Web suck so much, they've lost that trait.
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Fundamentally, no. That's just what it's become.
In what way is Bitcoin not fundamentally a scam? There are multiple interpretations of "Bitcoin is a scam" you can take, and honestly with most of them I think it's been true the whole time.
Edit: I think some folks are parsing my sentence incorrectly, and I can't blame them. I didn't do a great job communicating. When I said "in what way is it not a scam" I didn't mean to make it sound like an exclamation like "how can you not think it's a scam!?", I am saying, "which specific way of people referring to it as a scam do you believe is wrong?"
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(it was an opinion not investment advice)
If you did give them advice, would it be different?
some coin I'd never heard of
The problem is this person was looking at the market as a whole and then investing in some niche coin. At this point any coin that's not well-established is mostly likely pure grift.
Right, why invest in a rug pull coin when I can invest in an ETF of all the rug pull coins!
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In what way is Bitcoin not fundamentally a scam? There are multiple interpretations of "Bitcoin is a scam" you can take, and honestly with most of them I think it's been true the whole time.
Edit: I think some folks are parsing my sentence incorrectly, and I can't blame them. I didn't do a great job communicating. When I said "in what way is it not a scam" I didn't mean to make it sound like an exclamation like "how can you not think it's a scam!?", I am saying, "which specific way of people referring to it as a scam do you believe is wrong?"
In what way is it?