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by thebean11 1615 days ago
Crypto.com and its customers are willing parties who can transact with each other using this system, I'm not sure what your point is. The problem here is that one party trusted another party to hold on to their funds, and the holding party lost the funds. How is that an indictment of the protocol itself?

Or put another way, how does Crypto.com and other centralized systems prevent me from using Bitcoin the "right" way?

2 comments

Did you read the Marlinspike post? I think he's pretty clear on the issues.

But in brief my point is that as with internet itself, a protocol that allows for decentralization is not sufficient for something to be truly decentralized. Despite the vast amounts of hype about the decentralization of cryptocurrency and "web3", in practice we are seeing that it's tending toward centralization. Which personally I don't care about except the extent to which I still have to listen to the hype that has less and less connection to the practical reality.

It’s not an indictment of the protocol, so much as it is saying that the protocol is too low-level for average users and therefore centralized players (like Coinbase) tend to step in and provide the desired service.
I'm not sure, is the x86 instruction set too low level? Yes if you expect users to interact with it directly, but not for user facing products to be built on top of.

You can point to centralized products built on top of blockchain, but also decentralized ones.

An important difference being that nobody ever expected users to use the x86 instruction set directly. Whereas the very clear initial expectation for Bitcoin was that it was an actual currency used for transactions by end users.
On what part of the stack exactly? Are they crafting RPC requests to a BTC node manually? Using wallet software? Using more advanced wallet software with social recovery features and named addresses?

I think you may be forgetting, earlier users of computers were using punchcards..

Are you... asking me to explain what the Bitcoin folks were thinking when they claimed they were creating a viable peer-to-peer electronic cash system? Sorry, you'll have to ask them that. About 80% of what cryptocurrency advocates claim to believe seems unrealistic to me. But given that they published that paper in 2008, I suspect punch cards were not what they had in mind.
Yet the popular ones are centralized, no?
Uniswap is one of the biggest exchanges and is fully decentralized. Things are trending that way.
Trending? Really?
Yes. A few years ago decentralized exchanges did not exist, now one of the largest exchanges is fully decentralized..Obviously simple payments could always be made in a decentralized way but creating actual applications wasn't possible until recently.