@AmericanScream I don’t think that’s right.
An enormous function of Bitcoin is that since you control your wallet you can spend without relying on anyone else disappearing.
@volkris Let's not pretend bitcoin is "money." It's not. Whatever you have in your digital wallet still needs to be converted into actual money to be "spent" anywhere meaningful.
@AmericanScream you say that and yet I spend Bitcoin on meaningful things often enough.
Maybe you don’t, maybe your experiences are kind of narrow, but if you’re interested in this topic, then I think you probably need to know that people do spend Bitcoin meaningfully without converting it to something else.
I’ve bought everything from food to landscaping services paying in Bitcoin without any conversion, just off the top of my head.
@AmericanScream sure it made economic sense. How do I know? Because it resulted in economic activity that left all parties better off.
Just like any other monetary transaction.
@volkris Another vague, ambiguous response that's incapable of being qualified as true/false.
This is why "The Ultimate Crypto Question" remains un-answered after 15 years: Name one, specific, non-criminal thing blockchain is better at than existing non-blockchain tech."
Nobody can answer that. All you can do is make vague references to "use cases" where two self-interested parties imply they found it useful. That's not innovation. That's marketing propaganda.