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by mathie25 3271 days ago
For now, I believe cryptocurrencies are mostly used for speculation, most people that buy them expect to sell them back with profit, just like stocks. The value of bitcoin is too volatile right now to be effectively used at a currency. I would not want to hoard bitcoin (or other cryptocurrencies) right now.

At the end of day, a currency is based on trust. If I have a 20$ Cad bill, I know all businesses in Canada will accept it, the Bank of Canada is backing this currency, people can be paid in Canadian dollars, and etc. I also know that I can easily exchange my canadian dollars to Euros, US dollars and etc. Most cryptocurrencies don't have that same level of trust right now. If there is no trust, people won't actively use this currency.

In addition, Currencies are also used by a country/central bank to regulate its economy through monetary policy.

But I can see cryptocurrencies to be an addition to "normal" currencies, but I don't think they will ever replace them.

1 comments

Which do you trust more? The decisions of a government, or the laws of mathematics?
It isn't about trust in mathematics; its trust that in the future someone will still be willing to buy your bitcoin (with whatever, be that dollars or loaves of bread).
Is there a law of mathematics that you can't break the cryptography used by Bitcoin?