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Author Topic: If Bitcoin fails, all cryptos fail?  (Read 2246 times)
devphp (OP)
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November 19, 2014, 06:04:56 PM
Last edit: November 19, 2014, 06:45:33 PM by devphp
 #1

Let's seriously discuss if this argument has any validity, because it sounds more like a biased idea with only a grain of truth to it. My personal opinion is if Bitcoin fails, this can have short-term effects for the adoption of cryptos, but the concept will survive. As well it's not quite clear what proponents of that idea mean exactly. What is failure? As long as someone mines and uses a crypto, it's not failed. Suppose, no encryption is broken, as then obviously I wouldn't ask this question.

Can we define failure of Bitcoin as "market cap below 50% of total market cap of the crypto industry"? It still wouldn't be a failure though, but we need a starting point of sorts to be able to tell that it's started to decline. Anyway, let me know what you think on these two points: what "Bitcoin failed" means for you and why if that technically happens would it be fatal for other cryptos if indeed you think it would be fatal for other cryptos?

Please refrain from pumping your favorite altcoin in this thread. Thank you.
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Every time a block is mined, a certain amount of BTC (called the subsidy) is created out of thin air and given to the miner. The subsidy halves every four years and will reach 0 in about 130 years.
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November 19, 2014, 06:11:09 PM
 #2

My opinion isn't popular.  I think a crypto has a bright future.  But it's not going to be bitcoin or any others that have a limited number of coins with inevitable extremely high transaction fees.

Not many (ethereum as far as I know is the only ... maybe doge?) That have this economic philosophy.  Making a currency a pyramid scheme is as bad as the way things work in fiat.  Rich get richer off the backs of new blood.

Just my 02
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November 19, 2014, 06:15:03 PM
 #3

what "Bitcoin failed" means for you and why
Means nobody "buying to the moon", no more mining at homes (which is the mass market out there. 1 monster collocation located somewhere in china ain't be the same), nor any useage at let's say "Silkroad" which is quite true right now.

if indeed you think it would be fatal for other cryptos?
Naturally not. Take a look at the huuge amount of Doge traded at Bter. Or LTC at BTC-E. Those are inflationary (due to insane mining amounts each day) currencies that nobody in a right state of mind would HODL. But they are traded in the millions, so why?

Because they cross the political barriers. I think there will always be a use like that, for even the shittiest crapcoin. It just means you cannot "invest" into that very shittiest crapcoin, without breaking your neck.

edit: but you could still mine that coin
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November 19, 2014, 06:25:06 PM
 #4

I dont think at current stage Bitcoin [1] can not fail anymore, so I won't discuss your question.

[1] = We have end 2014: Just look at this strong support of influential people of Silicon Valley and Wall Street that are committed now to Bitcoin. Or look at this: just about any technology expert, futurologist or innovation researcher has made VERY positive statements about Bitcoin, they cant be all wrong out of the sudden.

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November 19, 2014, 06:26:11 PM
 #5

Naturally (here) people would see Bitcoin fail if the price dropped to $1 for example.
Realistically speaking, Bitcoin can't fail. It's not like all the services and all merchants adopting it would stop doing so in a second. Bitcoin has gone too far to fail now.

In a case (I don't think that it is possible, unless a major flaw destroys it) where Bitcoin would fall, it is most likely that all cryptos would be proclaimed as unsafe and fall. The whole system would collapse.

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devphp (OP)
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November 19, 2014, 06:29:35 PM
 #6

In a case (I don't think that it is possible, unless a major flaw destroys it) where Bitcoin would fall, it is most likely that all cryptos would be proclaimed as unsafe and fall. The whole system would collapse.

Why? That was my question. Suppose it's not an encryption/algorithm failure.
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November 19, 2014, 06:30:42 PM
 #7

[1] = We have end 2014: Just look at this strong support of influential people of Silicon Valley and Wall Street that are committed now to Bitcoin. Or look at this: just about any technology expert, futurologist or innovation researcher has made VERY positive statements about Bitcoin, they cant be all wrong out of the sudden.

Once they start "buying to the moon" I'm interested again. Until that we should settle upon averaging down, down into oblivion.
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November 19, 2014, 06:33:06 PM
 #8

Realistically speaking, Bitcoin can't fail. It's not like all the services and all merchants adopting it would stop doing so in a second. Bitcoin has gone too far to fail now.
yeah, i share this

a major flaw seems also impossible to me [1], because its software, it will be fixed and it will be fixed very fast (because of the vetted intrests)

[1] = even when quantum cryptography is finally broken, we have Post-quantum cryptography ready, PQ crypto is already 20 years old
devphp (OP)
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November 19, 2014, 06:35:43 PM
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We're not talking about major flaws of encryption algos, etc. I have updated the OP to clarify that.
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November 19, 2014, 06:40:45 PM
 #10

100% yes

$ADK ~ watch & learn...
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November 19, 2014, 06:42:35 PM
 #11

If When Bitcoin fails, Ripple wins.

http://www.ripplecharts.com/ Going up right now.  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
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November 19, 2014, 06:48:40 PM
 #12

If When Bitcoin fails, Ripple wins.

http://www.ripplecharts.com/ Going up right now.  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
Market noise.
If Bitcoin crashed, there would be a big ass panic sell on all things crypto, no doubt. Of course it doesn't mean eventually some other coin would take the spot or Bitcoin would rise again. As a concept crypto is not going away, but a legitimate crash of Bitcoin means a crash in all things crypto.
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November 19, 2014, 06:49:54 PM
 #13

There is too many XRP to sustain such prices... it has 7100x more supply than bitcoin so at bitcoin $300 its worth less than $0.04/xrp... with bitcoin volume.. so I'd say its too high, maybe $0.0004 I would buy.
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November 19, 2014, 06:56:02 PM
 #14

There is too many XRP to sustain such prices... it has 7100x more supply than bitcoin so at bitcoin $300 its worth less than $0.04/xrp... with bitcoin volume.. so I'd say its too high, maybe $0.0004 I would buy.

The price ATM is only $ 0.0056 not $0.04/xrp. The price is somewhere in between what you regard as too high and $0.0004 where you would buy.
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November 19, 2014, 06:58:09 PM
 #15

There is too many XRP to sustain such prices... it has 7100x more supply than bitcoin so at bitcoin $300 its worth less than $0.04/xrp... with bitcoin volume.. so I'd say its too high, maybe $0.0004 I would buy.

The price ATM is only $ 0.0056 not $0.04/xrp. The price is somewhere in between what you regard as too high and $0.0004 where you would buy.

Oops true.. but id wait for one more drop in decimal place to be safe Smiley It's like bitcoin @ $30. But XRP userbase is nowhere near BTC.
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November 19, 2014, 07:51:59 PM
 #16

Anyway, let me know what you think on these two points: what "Bitcoin failed" means for you and why if that technically happens would it be fatal for other cryptos if indeed you think it would be fatal for other cryptos?

Please refrain from pumping your favorite altcoin in this thread. Thank you.

bitcoin failed to me means;

everyone stops using it


even if bitcoin is worth one cent i can still use it to pay for goods and services without having to deal with banks and all the fees that go with that,
 and it is so easy with bitpay and current wallet apps e.g. circle

of course it would be fatal for other crypto's no other crypto has the services and the network like bitcoin


I am confused to why this question gets asked it is the same as saying what if fiat fails, there will always be a need for fiat where people do not have access to technology. There will always be a need for bitcoin even if to pay for something that is off the radar.

my speculation


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November 19, 2014, 08:22:30 PM
Last edit: November 19, 2014, 08:32:59 PM by dewdeded
 #17

Can we define failure of Bitcoin as "market cap below 50% of total market cap of the crypto industry"? It still wouldn't be a failure though, but we need a starting point of sorts to be able to tell that it's started to decline. Anyway, let me know what you think on these two points: what "Bitcoin failed" means for you and why if that technically happens would it be fatal for other cryptos if indeed you think it would be fatal for other cryptos?
Worst case
Bitcoin really failed, if the falls under 50% market share of crypto industry and the new leader is a Crypto-Coin owned/controlled by goverment or inter-goverments like EU, UN, OSCE, USA or NATO.

Pretty bad case
A fuck corporate controlled and manipulated coin like Stellar or Ripple or whatever takes over.

Stupid/bad case
A whatever-based legitimate but unfair-distributed crypto-coin takes over
(like an NXT or any other coin with unfair or manipulated ICO or distribution)

Neutral/good case
I) A non bitcoin-based legitimate coin takes over. Like an fair-distributed CryptoNote-based, fair-distributed NXT-based, ...
or
II) A fair-distributed legitimate bitcoin-based coin like Darkcoin or Litecoin (unlikely) takes over
var53
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November 19, 2014, 09:59:29 PM
 #18



bitcoin failed to me means;

everyone stops using it


even if bitcoin is worth one cent i can still use it to pay for goods and services without having to deal with banks and all the fees that go with that



Yes, to me bitcoin failed means nobody will swap it for anything, not a pizza, and not even 0.00000000001 of a cent. If nobody wants it then it's failed as a store of value.
devphp (OP)
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November 20, 2014, 06:33:24 AM
 #19



bitcoin failed to me means;

everyone stops using it


even if bitcoin is worth one cent i can still use it to pay for goods and services without having to deal with banks and all the fees that go with that



Yes, to me bitcoin failed means nobody will swap it for anything, not a pizza, and not even 0.00000000001 of a cent. If nobody wants it then it's failed as a store of value.

That's a very loose definition though. Somebody will always want it, I guess, but this doesn't necessarily mean it's a good store of value, just ask Zimbabweans.
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November 20, 2014, 06:41:14 AM
Last edit: November 20, 2014, 07:28:29 AM by TaunSew
 #20

If When Bitcoin fails, Ripple wins.

http://www.ripplecharts.com/ Going up right now.  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
Market noise.
If Bitcoin crashed, there would be a big ass panic sell on all things crypto, no doubt. Of course it doesn't mean eventually some other coin would take the spot or Bitcoin would rise again. As a concept crypto is not going away, but a legitimate crash of Bitcoin means a crash in all things crypto.


Ripple dates all the way back to 2004.  Ripple has had twice the amount of time as Bitcoin to go somewhere and it never did.  So keep entertaining these delusions.   Cheesy    If Coinbase or BitPay had a stockmarket IPO, although they are not coins, I bet they would be worth more than that centralized scam Ripple.




There ain't no Revolution like a NEMolution.  The only solution is Bitcoin's dissolution! NEM!
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