Murtaza Hussain pfp
Murtaza Hussain
@mazmhussain
I support the existence of Bitcoin as a limited opt-out from the existing financial system but one thing I do not understand is the idea that it could serve as some kind of post-apocalyptic currency amid a general social collapse. The Proof-of-Work is famously energy intensive and requires gigantic industrial infrastructure to operate, not to mention the significant physical infrastructure of the internet itself to keep the system operating. So if our current mode of government and business somehow implodes who is going to provide and maintain all that? Especially for younger people the idea that Bitcoin is real and going to stick around is already culturally ingrained so as I've said before its unlikely to go anywhere soon. But I actually see it as thoroughly part of our current system rather than a forerunner of some kind of revolution. If this system collapses, indulgently expensive manifestations of it like Bitcoin will go with it too.
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CkAaxSw pfp
CkAaxSw
@pahlqihq
The most interesting possibility of crypto for me is if humanity can come up with a neutral global currency not run by governments or anybody else in particular. I don't think it's Bitcoin for the same reason you talk about here. I don't think it's Ethereum either or anything else invented yet that I know of. Could be wrong but I feel like today's cryptocurrency is a trial run for what we will build in the future out of necessity.
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