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Author Topic: What do you think would happen if bitcoin replaced a countries currency?  (Read 1510 times)
n691309
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October 29, 2013, 10:31:11 AM
 #21

No, bitcoin in current implementation can not process so many transactions daily that would be necessary. Current limit is about 7 transactions per second

What is the reason for the 7 transactions per second limitation?  Does it have to do with the maximum block size, which will on average cover only 10 minutes of time (which during that time is a maximum of 4200 transactions)?


Yes typical transaction size is about 250 bytes, so about 4000 transactions can be used in 1 MB block every 10 minutes
RichardForsyth
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October 29, 2013, 08:17:39 PM
 #22

it wouldn't. no sovereign government will give up their right to print money. no way.

No sovereign government would do this?  Well, the members of the European Union ceded their right to print their own sovereign currency in favor of the currency issued by a multi-government centralized authority.  They bought in to the idea of not printing their own currency en masse, in fact.  At the time it looked like it made sense.  Presently, bad monetary policy and other political bunglings have nearly ruined the idea of the Euro. 

I think it is very plausible that a nation--a small struggling nation to be sure--might give it a real shot.  But not until after the bitcoin community solves some infrastructural problems. Bitcoin acts more like a commodity than a currency right now.  It isn't really *monetized* yet.  Too much friction, too much inefficiency.  It's still too early.  But some day, I think this will definitely happen.
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