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But his point that Bitcoin is also essentially controlled by a central authority, i.e. the Bitcoin community, has merit. (Even if the control isn't formal, owning a large percentage of a finite "thing" still counts as control, if the "thing" is the unit of exchange for people's work, property, etc. A BTC economy would depend on what the large holders decide to do with their portion). With Bitcoin, the community that controls the money supply is not at all democratic; it is the early adopters with large holdings that carry all the weight. From the perspective of a non-early adopter, the Bitcoin world would be even worse then the central bank and government world. Banks can be regulated and governments can be thrown out. Bitcoin would create a tyranny of "hodlers" protected by intractable mathematics. |
I dont think currency should be democratic, it should be impersonal and outside the whims of any group of people. Gold is like that. Cryptocuyrrencies may reach that stage after they solve all their bugs and their source code becomes fossilized.