(the project is distributing 98% of coins for free as mass market adoption is the aim).
Correction: it's 99%:
One last thing. The remaining 1% will be given away to the first 100m users who install Byteball wallet, 100 Kbytes to each user. This will start 6 months from now or later, after we get ready for that scale.
It seems like a small difference, but it takes 50% off of Tonych's share: he only keeps 1%.
I believe $18.8 million for a privacy coin on a scaleable technology (DAG) is a crazy low market cap.
You have a very good argument here. I too believe Byteball itself is already highly undervalued, and Blackbytes could be the holy grail of privacy. In a thread like
Best Private Coin?, I'm the only one who mentions it, while Monero is mentioned many times (by people only posting for Activity).
In a way, Blackbytes are so private that most people don't even know about it. That makes the potential for growth enormous.
I´m going to spend the next two years living living in my parents house, not drinking alcohol and probably without any female company so I will have time to reply:)
So you put all your eggs in one basket! It's a very risky strategy, but at least you follow what you believe in.
Also, blackbytes cold storage doesn't exist. Not saying blackbytes aren't a good investment, but you have to be online to receive them. You could connect computer to internet for a few seconds to receive them I guess.
Blackbytes can be stored on multi signature wallets which are extremely secure. Far more secure than how most people store their cryptos
Using multisig makes it much harder to steal your Blackbytes, you could make it as big as you want and require a Linux PC, an Android phone and an iOS device to sign transactions, while you keep some other devices with the same wallet as backup (say 3 out of 6 multisig).
May I ask how far you've gone to secure your Blackbytes?
Thats really, really, really bad... how do they expect anyone to feel secure holding millions in this?
Please read up on Byteball and Blackbytes, it's intended to be used by as many people as possible, holding millions in it was never the intention. That being said, it's a steep learning process but the multisig makes it very secure. It's not even that hard, actually.
From the title, I expected you'd put all your money in an untraceable anonymous coin before the divorce, so she wouldn't find back any money