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Author Topic: Why it all went wrong in 2014 - but why 2015 can be better.  (Read 3507 times)
jabo38
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mining is so 2012-2013


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December 31, 2014, 05:44:37 AM
 #41

The pump and dump era is now over – and I hope it never reappears.

Over?   Ohh young grashopper.  Its not over.  Just look at Paycoin.

Pump and dumps haven't gone anywhere.   They've just had to adapt.  Its all about who can lie better and better.  Who can deceive more convincingly.

First it was the Government of Iceland on board with Auroracoin.  That had lots of people believing.

Now its Amazon, Walmart, and whoever - supposedly on board with Paycoin.

-B-

So true.  Scam coins have run out of funny names, countries, animals, algorithms, anon features, drugs, and fertilizers to pump themselves around.  Now they are trying to be great payment methods, messengers, or some other digital commercial service.  The scam coins have upped the game, up the development costs, but they are still scamming and leaving bag holders. 

It is a shame because occasionally one service does come along and they are really trying to do something awesome and innovative but they are drowned out and copied by scammers to the extent that they don't get the support that they deserve. 

--------------

2014 was all around a good year for Bitcoin.  Yes, it saw lots of scandals, top of which was Mt. Gox, and numerous of which were in alt coins and/or people using Bitcoins illegally, but lots of development was made in the Bitcoin world with legitimate companies, start-ups, apps, services, hardware, infrastructure, users and merchants. 

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johnyj
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December 31, 2014, 09:34:53 AM
 #42

2014 is similar to 2011 late crash, nothing new, when mining cost getting close to market price, the difficulty will be stabilized

Another aspect is the appreciation of USD. Since there was an anticipation of FED stopping QE, many countries' currency have dropped sharply against USD, so the liquidity of USD definitely affect the bitcoin capital inflow. Acutally the exchange rate of BTC/RUB or BTC/JPN are not affected that much, which means bitcoin acts more like a foreign currency

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December 31, 2014, 02:52:12 PM
 #43



Every time bitcoin adds a new big merchant like Microsoft or Time, it gets another gremlin-auto-dumper selling bitcoins on the market.

The only way to counter-balance this effect will be to integrate BTC on the payroll side. This will balance the scales by allowing merchants to funnel the BTC from POS to payroll rather than auto-selling at market price via Bitpay and others.

Overstock would be a great candidate for this type of integration. It could even possibly put them in the role of Bitcoin buyer if the payroll volume exceeded sales volume. Additionally, any business without a retail side (such as a manufacturer) would become a BTC buyer to meet payroll needs.
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