But there's also the opposite tack which is by listing whatever they're endorsing it.
He's in a bit of a tricky position as purveying a glossy and reassuring image while being a portal to a screeching mess.
Bch has been 51% attacked. Coinbase have been tweeting about eos's functionality failing.
Look at what happened to iota with their total chain shutdown.
I get that they need the shitcoin masses but that also brings the potential for disaster.
Yep. And that's sadly something that's just innate to crypto. It's all a bit experimental. Any number of blockchains could conceivably come crashing down and ruin everyone involved.
and not just altcoins. 51% attacks, consensus failures, fatal bugs---all were possible with bitcoin in coinbase's earlier days, or even today. just think about the 2010 overflow bug and associated 53 block chain reorg, or the 2018 duplicate input vulnerability which (thank god) wasn't exploited in a 0-day attack.
bitcoin may have the most prolific developers and most hardened/secure software in cryptocurrency, but it's still experimental beta release "use at your own risk" software. if these are the standards, then coinbase isn't being
that inconsistent by listing a bunch of experimental shitcoins years later.
i cared a lot more about this shit back in 2016 or so, back when ethereum was starting to blow up. the 2017 altcoin run was a kick in the pants for me. the market simply doesn't care about a lot of the shit we care about---decentralization, scalability, privacy etc etc. ETH isn't scalable? nobody cares, it bubbled anyway. the same applies to every other hype coin of the day, past, present, or future.
all we can do is hope and plan for overhyped shitcoins to fall to the wayside, and try to nudge people in the right direction. i'm not gonna fight the market or get upset about any of it though. it's just the market playing out. i used to hate brian armstrong, like seriously bitter hatred. i ain't even mad at the dude anymore.