| Wow you are uninformed. >The value of the tokens is completely and totally dependent on a consensus of crypto miners doing their job within the parameters of the system, assuming you want them to maintain a price and trading volume that's favorable to the token holders. Number of miners has absolutely nothing to do with trading volumes, not sure where you got that from. Miners don't maintain a price any more than a whale maintains a price. >If the majority of miners suddenly go bust due to outside circumstances The rest of the miners would step in and start making more money, actually. >they decide to conspire together and attack the system, or conspire with some whales to perform a rug pull Not much of a rug pull to sell the tokens you've legitimately acquired through mining or fiat buying. That's just selling. High volatility selling, yes, but still just selling. >it's extremely likely that your tokens aren't going to be worth anything anymore. This applies to every token, including bitcoin. Oh yes, Bitcoin has died thousands of times. Maybe you'll be right one day, but I doubt it. |
Avoid this style of comment, please.
>Miners don't maintain a price any more than a whale maintains a price.
Yes, my point is both of them have a means and incentive to manipulate the price in ways that may not be favorable to the trader.
>The rest of the miners would step in and start making more money, actually.
Yes, at the cost of removing some of the security of the system. They can only maintain security if they have immediate access to more hash power which they probably don't. In that moment because of the sudden drop in hash power, the network is vulnerable to an attack by other malicious miners coming in and taking over. Alternately, if the rest of the miners notice what's going on they could see this as increased opportunity for them to conspire and become malicious.
>Not much of a rug pull to sell the tokens you've legitimately acquired through mining or fiat buying. That's just selling. High volatility selling, yes, but still just selling.
This right here is the conversation I most dread having with crypto people. It's fraud. You can call it fraud. Manipulating the market so the price is artificially high and then dumping it off onto unsuspecting buyers is a fraud. It doesn't matter how you initially got the coins. Yes, we can group different types of selling into different categories, like ones that are fraudulent and ones that aren't.
>Oh yes, Bitcoin has died thousands of times.
The exception that proves the rule, huh? There are definitely thousands of shitcoins that have crashed and burned and won't ever recover because they were plain old ponzis. Bitcoin crashed a lot of times, not thousands, but enough to wipe lots of people out every time it happens, relative to the number of people using bitcoin at the time. It's still not clear that any of the money moving around in bitcoin is actually real money or assets. I'm certain it's a ponzi too.
>Maybe you'll be right one day, but I doubt it.
So you're saying bitcoin is too big to fail, is that right?