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June 13, 2011, 04:13:02 AM |
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Sadly, its a question of when some entity tries to make it illegal, tax the crap out of it, or pursues methods of attacking its liquidity. Hopefully the international scope of the BTC market will stall those attempts... but really, its a case of the EU and US attacking those who allow trades from/to established currencies and BTC. Otherwise, its quite difficult to stop it, or hurt it to any great extent. However the lack of liquidity with what most outsiders will see as 'real currency' is the largest danger to the BTC-verse. It then becomes an issue of coincidence of need based on vendors that can pay suppliers, or obtain enough other items of interest with BTC to continue accepting them.
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