| >> or a company like Bitwage builds some other part of the ecosystem, bitcoin becomes a little more useful. >I suppose this is all great if you want to use bitcoin because of your political persuasion. I expect so. It's also great if you believe that the legacy financial system is inefficient and may improve if it is threatened by external competition. From your comments here, you do believe that, I think? As you've said, casting this as a discussion of politics or monetary policy distracts from the practical issues. So let's avoid that. Your comment, which I cited above, seems to be assuming that my interest in this is political or ideological. It's not. In fact, based on that comment, you appear to be assuming that anyone who 'supports' Bitcoin does so purely for political reasons. Is that really how you feel? I think that is far from the truth, anyway. To be honest, I know very little about Bitwage. I replied to you because I think you've made some very broad assumptions about cryptocurrencies, which differ from reality somewhat. As I have used cryptocurrencies extensively, I've tried to explain how I think reality is more nuanced than these assumptions. |
I think bitcoin-as-exchange-medium is reasonable.
I think bitcoin-as-a-currency or bitcoin-as-money per se is not workable, or at the very least is a solution in search of a problem.
> Is that really how you feel?
If it were, I simply wouldn't read bitcoin stories.
> I think you've made some very broad assumptions about cryptocurrencies, which differ from reality somewhat.
What are the material advantages to using bitcoin for anything other than as an exchange mechanism?
All of the pain points of the modern banking system you and others have proposed are mostly about currency conversion and sending money across international borders, and my original post addresses what I believe the likely outcome for this use case is (although, see the thread with baddox as well).
I didn't claim you cannot use bitcoin in other capacities. I just stated the extra intermediate currency doesn't make any sense because there's no competitive advantage to existing (safer) mechanisms. Maybe I'm missing something?
> I've tried to explain how I think reality is more nuanced than these assumptions.
What would really convince me to let go of this assumption is a compelling reason to use bitcoin as money.