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by brighton36 4032 days ago
You wouldn't believe how clunky the Internet was when it first started. This stress test is fairly minor compared to the problems bitcoin had in 2011 and 2012. With time, the blockchain will improve. Just like the Internet. You should look into the Lightning Network paper, there's no shortages of solutions in bitcoin. Meanwhile, traditional financial platforms have been stagnant for decades.
2 comments

In 2000, about 5-6 years after the internet was easily available to public, I had a dial up connection, email, IM, a web browser, etc in the middle-of-nowhere town in Pakistan where I was born. Bitcoin has been out for close to 6-7 years and does not even come close to the maturity / adoption of internet.
Except Internet was in development since 1969 by the time it became available to public.

Bitcoin whitepaper was released in 2008. Before that even the concept of cryptocurrency hardly existed.

The technologies used in Bitcoin have also been in development for several decades, and by 1998 the first cryptocurrency was already released, according to a quick search on wikipedia.
Note the difference - "technologies used in Bitcoin were in development for X years" vs. "Internet as a whole concept of network of network was in development for Y years".
No, the internet as we perceive it today, as a global network, didn't exist back in 1969. The technologies we use in internet today were developed back then, though. Just like they were for bitcoin (cryptography, merkle trees, etc)
The technologies used for both bitcoin the internet have been in development for thousands of years.
> Bitcoin whitepaper was released in 2008. Before that even the concept of cryptocurrency hardly existed.

Digital currency was, as I understand, the application usually highlighted for secure (cryptography-based) distributed capability-based computing, as typified by the E programming language in 1997. Not sure if there are precedents going back further or not.

While that's a reasonably valid assertion of the state of Bitcoin's protocol development compared against the state of the collection of protocols and services we call the "Internet", I believe that they are similar but not completely relatable.

For the vast majority of people in the World the advent of the Internet was a completely ground-breaking, and completely original, idea. The predecessor technologies that provided similar utility for people (such as phone, fax, radio, television, libraries, social clubs, lunch meetings, etc.) were functions that didn't have a cohesive string that tied them all together and put them in one place. The Internet served that need by providing lots of perceived benefits to people; wide-spread adoption rapidly followed.

On the other hand, Bitcoin has a very specific utility right now -- it facilitates the transfer of value quickly and at (relative) low cost in a (reasonably) anonymous fashion without oversight.

While a significant number of people all around the World use the banking system, I'd wager that if you asked if their banks and investment accounts "worked well enough" that you'd hear a majority say that they do (and then you'd hear all of the caveats of what doesn't work and what they hate about it -- but not enough to seek out alternatives yet).

Bitcoin is still looking for it's toe-hold to convert that mostly satisfied majority. I believe it (or another blockchain-based technology) will find it, and sooner than later, but I am not blinded to the fact that it could end up being viewed in history as simply an interesting experiment that ultimately was ahead of its time.

I'm not the one who said bitcoin was like the internet. Someone else did, I was responding to them.
The internet got better as time went by. The blockchain is getting worse.