#1006
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And now back to our regular scheduled programming- Bitcoin.
Fundamentally, why I think crypto is a scam is the cognitive dissonance associated with the ecosystem. The basic premise of the encryption and the blockchain, is you do not need to trust anyone, and no one actor can control the mining. 1. The rest of the ecosystem is basically running with no guardrails. It is opaque and unaudited. Any financial system is only as strong as it's weakest link, and the lack of audits is an incredibly weak link in the system. This is a system built entirely on 'trust us'/ Today, Mazur's announced they would no longer provide attestations for binance and a couple of other exchanges. In an auditor of a mainstream bank came out and said they would no longer provide audits for the bank, the bank would collapse that day. Even a delayed audit causes serious distress. The point that the crypto-ecosystem poo-poos this, is a tell that this is part of the inside scam. Oh, and to be clear, the attestations are not even audits since they only discuss the 'asset' side of the balance sheet and not the liability side. Without knowing the liabilities, you can never know the health of an organizations. 2. The whole concept of crypto being decentralized. It may work for the mining, but there is definitely collusion happening across the network. This whole signal chatgroup with Binance, FTX and others is pretty damning. The concept of 'the whales' controlling the price in the market is also pretty much 180 degrees opposed to decentralization. 3. Finally, the unknown amount of leverage in the system. The 'market' may be trying to assign a value to crypto, but if you do not know the amount of trading being conducted by fiat funding purchases, and stablecoin funding purchases, it is impossible to know how much leverage is in the market determining value. and back to 2, without knowing if the stablecoins are even backed, (FTT wasn't, and the old finance adage , where there is one cockroach'). You cannot have any idea about the amount of leverage in the system. I 'd expect the next shoe to drop is versus Deltec and their corresponding banks providing dollars and other hard currencies. Last edited by verticaldoug; 12-16-2022 at 12:25 PM. |
#1007
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Anyone using bitcoin to pay for goods and services in the real world needs to "trust" both that the digital wallet they're sending the bitcoin to is correctly associated with the entity they want to buy the goods or services from, and that the entity will actually provide those goods and services. Even in the world with no intermediaries, trustless only goes as far as exchanging one thing on the blockchain for something else on the blockchain. Any linkages to real world goods, services, or assets inherently requires some trust. The weak point of trust in our current payments system isn't that the money will accurately be transferred from account to account. For merchants, the biggest challenge of trust is whether or not the person using the credit card is actually the authorized user of that credit card. Or once they receive the goods, they will not fraudulently return or contest the payment. For the customer, it's whether or not the merchants actually provide the goods or services that they're being paid for. Or for an investor, whether the company they invest in (e.g., a large crypto exchange) is a legitimate business, and not just an giant embezzlement operation with a ham sandwich in place of an accountant. Cryptocurrencies make "trustless" the part of the financial system that was already the most trustworthy, while doing nothing for the area where trust is the biggest challenge, and making another part of the system (custodial intermediaries) significantly less trustworthy.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#1008
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#1009
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Anyone can audit the blockchain and companies like Certify do. Many of the DEX's are not audited and that is obviously a problem. There are a lot of crypto projects that do get audited though and if you see one that is Certik KYC gold then it's a pretty tight project.
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#1010
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No.
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#1011
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If you think about it, where the rubber meets the road is I/O between fiat and crypto. Also, from regular economics, if an currency is paying a very high rate for lending, then usually the pressures on the currency mean it is about to devalue. We see this all the time in sovereigns. With the crazy high APRs in Cryptoland, the economics don't make sense. Last edited by verticaldoug; 12-16-2022 at 02:31 PM. |
#1012
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exactly, FTX just proves the suspicions about this, no issue with blockchain it's the conversion out that is worrisome. This may be the perceived upside to regulation
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#1013
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#1014
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#1015
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I’m not sure what’s so controversial.
Crypto brokerages should be regulated, they are holding other peoples capital. They’re acting as a bank, holding currency. When banks are under-regulated, they do shady stuff. We only have to wind back 15 years and you’ve got an example of what goes wrong with the GFC. |
#1016
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I 'guess' the poster is referring to NATO, not sure but if anybody needed a reason to see the value of NATO, putin's invasion of Ukraine is a pretty good reason. BUT, blaming the US for putin's invasion is a common conspiracist talking point. Quote:
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There is NO doubt that the US 'won' the war in the pacific..Almost single handedly defeated Japan. BUT, back to bitcoin..which is something I am happy to say, I know zero about...
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo Last edited by oldpotatoe; 12-18-2022 at 06:37 AM. |
#1017
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There must be a reason why someone puts their crypto into unregulated exchanges. |
#1018
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To hide it, yes.
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#1019
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Generally, the U.S. government would get involved when things start to involve dollars. The U.S. government has a strong interest in keeping dollars safe and functional. This is why most of the talk of regulation has focused on stablecoins, because those make specific claims about dollar-values. But if I mine a bunch of dogecoin and deposit it in FTX, does it really make sense for U.S. regulators to make rules mandating the amount of FTT FTX must hold as collateral when it loans out my dogecoin? What even are these things? Does it matter that FTT is now worthless? Does it matter that Luna is now worthless? I'm not sure the U.S. government has an interest in protecting the stability of these assets. Again, it's still a crime to say "I will take your dollars, convert them to bitcoin for you, and hold those bitcoin until you tell me to sell or trade them" and then steal all the bitcoin for yourself. That's illegal, and that's why SBF has already been arrested (most, presumably) customers of FTX weren't using it for simple custody. They wanted yield, they wanted to trade derivatives, they wanted leverage, they wanted to do things that they couldn't do at more conventional brokerages.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#1020
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https://direct.mit.edu/asep/article/...tal-Currencies
February 20 2022 Stablecoins and Central Bank Digital Currencies: Policy and Regulatory Challenges |
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