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by tata71 1617 days ago
Taking problem with this ignores the other 6500 coins that ETH has helped turn from worthless into ETH-comparable money.
1 comments

>helped turn from worthless into ETH-comparable money

So still worthless.

How do you explain all the money floating around in an industry supposedly worth $0?
You're conflating two things: the tokens, and the industry. The industry has value precisely because most of the tokens do not.

Getting people to buy worthless things from you is a phenomenal business.

That's why you can get all the tokens for free I guess?
Speculation does not impart value. Price and value are not the same
You could put your house up for sale at $20 million but if people aren't buying it, then that's not what it's worth. Then value and price don't match. This isn't the case for cryptocurrencies that are traded on liquid markets, price discovery is happening all the time. Maybe it's worth $100 tomorrow or $5000, it doesn't really matter. It's still what it's worth at the time.
Maybe you didn't see what I said the first time:

Price and value are not the same. Ponzi schemes require buy in but still have no underlying value.

Also lol at crypto markets being liquid. In stablecoins maybe. Liquidity literally means volume has very limited effects on the price of an underlying. $100 or $5000 tomorrow is definitionally illiquid

I read what you said, please don't assume I didn't read your reply.

Regarding liquidity, that's not really contradictory to the definition. That's only if I meaningfully impact the price by selling, so I would have to personally cause the change to $100 or $5000 for it to be considered illiquid. If Alphabet goes down or up 50% because of a bad report it doesn't make Alphabet illiquid.

> Also lol at crypto markets being liquid

What have you had issues buying or selling on Uni or Sushi?

I think this is the definition of a bubble.