| "if you gain it will be at someone else's loss" With a perfectly deflationary currency, this is false. And the yearly average Bitcoin exchange rate has shown to be perfectly deflationary, so far. And this can go on forever as long as the gross product of the Bitcoin economy grows (even slightly) year after year. In other words: if everyone who bought bitcoins averaged their buys over one year, and held them for at least one year, they would have made money: - the average price of a Bitcoin in 2010 was $0.05 (order of magnitude) - the average price of a bitcoin in 2011 was $5 (order of magnitude) - the average price of a bitcoin in 2012 was $10 (order of magnitude) - the average price of a bitcoin in 2013 was $100 (order of magnitude) |
yet this is bitcoin, so people believe because... well because they've wasted so much damn time and money setting up server rigs to solve contrived hash equations. real currencies don't have to incentivize/trick their user-base in order to grow