| This articule just seems to revolve around some pretty skewed data. > Recently the founder of something called Ripple briefly became richer than Mark Zuckerberg. Became paper richer, which is really quite different. The "market cap" calculations just don't represent reality; he couldn't realistically dump all of his Ripple and expect price to not crash (not even taking into account the huge natural correction in price after the peak of the bull run) > The cryptocurrency community is centered around a tightknit group of friends This statement implies that there are few people in the community at all, which is just not true. > some estimate that 95 percent of the wealth is held by 4 percent of the owners. This links to an article that says that 95% of the wealth is held by 4% of the wallets, which makes an absolutely huge difference. This is because: - Some of these wallets are held by exchanges, who hold all of their users' crypto - Some of these wallets are lost early adopter wallets, from when a large number wasn't something impressive (e.g. Satoshi's lost Bitcoin, accounting for 4 million (!) Bitcoin) - Many of the wallets created are never used or have already been used just for moving funds and thus have 0 balance (in fact, the article's graph states that 41.93% of wallets hold just 0.01% of bitcoin) |
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