Bitcoin is a ponzischeme
Bitcoin a ponzischeme or is it?
The other day my buddy questions if he should put
all his money in bitcoin. And the truth is that if he’d bought bitcoin, say, a
year ago he’d be feeling pretty good right now. On the other hand, Dutch
speculators who bought tulip bulbs in 1635 also felt pretty good for a while,
until tulip prices collapsed in early 1637.
So is bitcoin a giant bubble that will end in grief?
Yes. But it’s a bubble wrapped in techno-mysticism inside a cocoon of
libertarian ideology. And there’s something to be learned about the times we
live in by peeling away that wrapping.
If you’ve been living in a cave and haven’t heard of bitcoin, it’s the biggest,
best-known example of a “cryptocurrency”: an asset that has no physical
existence, consisting of nothing but a digital record stored on computers. What
makes cryptocurrencies different from ordinary bank accounts, which are also
nothing but digital records, is that they don’t reside in the servers of any
particular financial institution. Instead, a bitcoin’s existence is documented
by records distributed in many places.
And your ownership isn’t verified by proving (and
hence revealing) your identity. Instead, ownership of a bitcoin is verified by
possession of a secret password, which — using techniques derived from
cryptography, the art of writing or solving codes — lets you access that
virtual coin without revealing any information you don’t choose to.
read more: http://bitcoinallbout.blogspot.ca/2018/02/bitcoin-is-falling-off-radar-and-no-one.html
read more: http://bitcoinallbout.blogspot.ca/2018/02/bitcoin-is-falling-off-radar-and-no-one.html
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