| Of all the bizarre phenomenons in the world, I think the Bitcoin-as-an-investment takes the cake. People spend a ton of energy (that could otherwise to actual useful things) on shifting around bits that they then claim are very valuable. You could make a similar claim about fiat money except that actually makes commerce easier. Bitcoin is not a good way to transfer value since like you said it's too volatile for a currency. So it's built on nothing, it does nothing and underpins nothing, it wastes huge amounts of otherwise useful energy and that makes it a good investment? Maybe I'm just too dumb to see the genius of it. |
Yet many do use it as a currency, volatility isn't a showstopper. Just look at the use in darknet markets, most serious VPNs and VPS services offer it and you can buy all sorts of stuff on for example Webhallen or Inet (two of the biggest Swedish online computer stores).
> So it's built on nothing, it does nothing and underpins nothing
And this is wrong. It's secured by cryptography and game theory.
The big thing it does is fairly simple: It enables digital payments without a trusted third party. It's relevant for businesses who cannot accept credit cards and there are thousands of stories where startups gets their accounts frozen, for arbitrary reasons, which may tank their business.
I wrote about this and more here: https://whycryptocurrencies.com/
> it wastes huge amounts of otherwise useful energy
Actually most of the energy comes from renewable sources, which would be wasted otherwise. The Bitcoin mining industry is so competitive, it wouldn't be profitable otherwise.
I don't want to wave away the concerns as nothing, because it is a valid concern, but there are tons of other things we waste much more energy on.