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by Arkhaine_kupo
1546 days ago
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1) would be just as expensive if taxed properly, so not cheaper just illegal 2) immutable is a pretty shitty property for some of those assets, also its a pretty negative turn of society to go and try and make fungible products like music listening into private non fungible ownable assets 3) The middle man is usually there for a number of reasons. Same way exchanges showed up almost immidietly after crypto, you would also have crypto banks to handle loans etc. Add the financial constraints the goverment needs, for lawful contracts to be enforceable and now you just have a more expensive, volatile and environmentally destructive banking system. Like it seems most of the ideas of things "crypto works for" is just what banks used to do before regulation was added. And the regulation is there for a reason, for every extra fee you pay to do cross border money transfer, some money is not being laundered. For every notary you pay to get a deed in a house or doctor to check your health data, some will or some medical anomaly gets corrected. For every fee you pay in a loan someone elses gets secured and has no extortionate shark loan fees. With crypto right now you lose all that protection in exchange for a slow, expensive gas fees, environmentally destructive proofs of work and absolutely no legal protection if you get scammed in the end. Its an extremely silly proposition and I am not surprised it is being peddled by the likes of Jordan Belfort because he seems to like to do old medieval scams on new targets. |
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Because smart contract chains allow for turing complete code, mutability can be programmed in to particular tokens at the smart contract level.
> regulation is there for a reason, for every extra fee you pay to do cross border money transfer, some money is not being laundered.
It shouldn't be my personal financial responsibility to pay for a corporation to double check my own assertion that I am not breaking any law.
> With crypto right now you lose all that protection in exchange for a slow, expensive gas fees, environmentally destructive proofs of work and absolutely no legal protection if you get scammed in the end.
I'm breaking this down.
> slow
Taking Ethereum as an example, payments generally go through within 15 seconds, compared to several hours for a same-day wire transfer or several days for an ACH payment.
> expensive gas fees
Gas fees are expensive because too many people are using it. Ethereum processes over a million transactions daily, not including Layer 2 and side chains which have increased that capacity and lowered gas fees in practice.
> environmentally destructive proofs of work
Proof of Stake reduces energy consumption by over 99%, and most blockchains currently use it.
> absolutely no legal protection if you get scammed in the end
The standard way to send money abroad, international wire transfer, also gives you next to no legal protection if you get scammed.