| > And you still haven't explained how you would pay for ransomware over the internet via cash you're not seeing the forest behind the trees. bitcoin like cash is permissionless, private and fungible (to some extent). these properties enable illegal activities both in cash and in bitcoin. with cash it happens in face to face exchanges, with bitcoin it happens over the network. > we have strict limits on cash to provide a stop of a complete abuse of it for criminal activities yeah, that's why there's definitely no illegal activities going on involving cash. /s > Bitcoins don't seem to have a large practical values beyond the illegal actions uninflatable, scarce commodity/currency and transaction platform that is impossible to censor. you sure have a high bar for something having "practical value"... the largest practical value of bitcoin is that i have full ownership of my money, not some ephemeral record in some bank's database which can be destroyed/modified by bank's employees or devalued by monetary policy. > I am not aware of a large econommy based on Bitcoin transactions. that you're not aware of it could simply mean that you never looked for it. |
Well, and that was the difference I was pointing out to. Bitcoin allows unchecked transactions about the network, this is not possible with cash and international cash transfer is strictly regulated - and when done electronically, carefully watched. That is the significant difference.
yeah, that's why there's definitely no illegal activities going on involving cash. /s
no need for that snotty remark, I have written myself that there are criminal transactions with cash, but they are limited by physical proximity.
uninflatable, scarce commodity/currency and transaction platform that is impossible to censor. you sure have a high bar for something having "practical value"...
it is actually deflatory, which is a bad thing for a currency. This basically bans all commercial use.
the largest practical value of bitcoin is that i have full ownership of my money, not some ephemeral record in some bank's database which can be destroyed/modified by bank's employees or devalued by monetary policy.
Not only do Bitcoin exchanges have a horrible track record about keeping your coins secure, it is grotesque that you fear the monetary policy for your "moneys value", when Bitcoin can collapse to 0 any time enough people lose interest in it for speculation.