Just wondering how many people are ready to admit that it isn't gonna have main stream adoption?
I want to talk about why and what can be changed to fix bitcoin, but first we have to admit there is a problem.
Who cares about mainstream adoption?
Do you think the world's governments are doing a good job? Yet, the people get the government they deserve.
Think about that for a while and then realize why mainstream adoption of Bitcoin isn't going to happen until people are ready for a change in the way things work around here (Earth).
The average debt slave has no need for Bitcoin nor do they even comprehend how it could benefit their lives.
I know the free market terrifies you sublime5447. You've warned me before and I'm still perfectly fine with it.
There is nothing free about the bitcoin market and if people wanted a change from the status quo bitcoin cant offer that. Bitcoin is the status quo and its model has been the status quo for thousands of years.. There is no difference between bitcoin and the USD. They dont change because it has nothing to offer, just another controlled money regime. It doesnt even have a market price! It violates the regression theorem! it's not currency!
Two Kinds of Money
1.The Scarcity Model: A single uniform quantity in limited supply made valuable by its own scarcity.
In other words, the value of this type of money depends on the supply of, and demand for, the money commodity itself. Conventional definitions of money define money only in terms of this model, a "medium of exchange". Examples are: cowries, gold and silver, fiat cash and coins, bank credit, and now, in the model's purest and most spectacularly speculative form, Bitcoin.
2. The Abundance Model. A promise of something specific from someone specific made valuable by its redemption in real production. The value of this type of money is defined by the promised redemption in goods and/or services. As such, this type of money is promises of an indefinite number of non-uniform commodities in indefinite supply and, unlike the limited quantity "coin" concept of money, the total quantity of these credits in circulation does not affect their value, because the value of a credit is defined by what its issuer will redeem it for in real goods and/or services. Examples are: business-to-business barter credits, customer rewards, travel points, discount coupons, mutual credit systems.