| I can’t speak to other cryptocurrencies. But at least re: Bitcoin: 1. International settlements of any sum of money (small to large) in 10-20 minutes instead of days 2. Markedly lower money transfer fees compared wire transfer or ACH 3. Ability to be one’s own bank if so desired, avoiding government bank account pillaging (Cyprus, Argentina, many more) 4. Ability to send money anywhere (try paying your staff in Russia with USD these days… we have two; they both get paid in Bitcoin since following Russia’s removal from SWIFT cryptocurrency is now the only way) 5. When comparing Layer 2 transactions, orders of magnitude more transactions processed (global credit card network: 19,000 transactions per second; Bitcoin’s Lightning network: several million transactions per second), for significantly lower fees (very appealing if you are a merchant); payment settlement in hours instead of days 6. Deflationary savings account over medium- and long-term timescales |
5 confuses theoretical maximum throughput with actual throughput. The theoretical maximum throughput of credit card networks is far higher than the actual, and the actual throughput of lightning is far lower than theoretical. Since only three wallets can join the lightning network per second (if all Bitcoin transactions were setting up lightning channels), its utility for actual transactions between arbitrary wallets remains theoretical as well.
6 confuses the value of Bitcoin with its supply. The value quickly approaches 0 when regulation takes away advantages 1-4.