| > Forgive me, but you haven’t been very convincing. I don't need to convince anyone; it is a self-evident truth that cryptocurrency is wholly impractical for displacing centralized institutions. It's self-evident because it hasn't happened and there isn't even a whiff of a possibility that it could. Cryptocurrencies are a strange and interesting technical novelty, but they are closer to a video game than anything resembling a challenge to currently centralized institutions. > centralized institutions have broken many peoples’ trust in the past You keep repeating that but its irrelevant. Whether or not centralized institutions are breaking people's trust, cryptocurrency is obviously not a solution to the problem. > not that I’m racing to close my accounts Of course you're not because cryptocurrency is obviously not an alternative to a bank account in the same way that a drone is not an alternative to a car. > Just the same, I’m not ready to write off an early tech that is still being developed and experimented on. I'm not telling you to "write off" anything, what does that even mean? If you want to close all your bank accounts and meet up with people in the streets to trade cryptocurrency tokens in order to manage typical financial obligations then that is your prerogative; it doesn't mean that such a lifestyle has any appreciable impact on the existence of centralized institutions. |
It seems to stem from one strain of thought surrounding the tech, implied by your use of "cryptocurrency" as the new descriptor and not focusing on the concept of smart contracts.
For the record, I never suggested trading cryptocurrencies as a medium for barter and exchange was a practical or desirable idea.
One viable use, currently implemented and being tested, is the use of smart contracts as an immutable record for tracking grants and other funding provided to organizations by the National Research Council of Canada:
Prototype: https://nrc-cnrc.explorecatena.com/en
It's not as self-evident to me as it might be to you—that's not really an explanation. You're quite aggressive in your disdain for this specific technology—I'm kind of baffled.