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Author Topic: Adoption in terms of users  (Read 1846 times)
coinableS
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March 18, 2015, 07:41:20 PM
 #21

In January 2015 Coinbase said they passed 2 million users, NOT UNIQUE.

"The question though is whether or not the accounts represent human beings or if there are a lot of duplicate or dormant accounts."

How many of those accounts were created, used once, and then abandoned? The number of actual bitcoin users I expect to be much lower.

2 million users and 2.6 million wallets is what they cite. so 600k are not unique wallets.


There are only 1.8 million addresses with a balance over 0.001 (26 cents).  I think this number is a better representation of users vs how many accounts coinbase has opened.

Where are you getting this number from?

You are aware that many wallets with bitcoin exist off the chain right? I have personally given 40+ of my friends and family members 40 dollars or more in bitcoin with services like coinbase which are held off the chain  and only a few of these have bothered to get a unique public address. Additionally, all changetip users are holding off the chain accounts as well.

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitcoin-exchange-coinbase-just-passed-2-million-users/

bitcoinrichlist.com

I don't think you count those people you sent money to on changetip unless they actually still use bitcoin. You have to think about those who opened a coinbase account just so they can cash out their changetip they received and have it deposited into their fiat bank account.

What about those that jumped on the train in late 2013 and created an account, and then stopped using once they didn't get rich over night?

If we're going for total historic number of people that have ever tried bitcoin, then maybe we'd be at the 4 million number. But total number of active users has to be 1 mill or less in my opinion.


Once a transaction has 6 confirmations, it is extremely unlikely that an attacker without at least 50% of the network's computation power would be able to reverse it.
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March 18, 2015, 08:01:38 PM
 #22

As for bitcoin adoption I always like to quote Satoshi, as he once said:

"Feb. 14, 2010: I’m sure that in 20 years there will either be very large (bitcoin) transaction volume or no volume."

And that will be exactly as he said. There is no point of arguing over numbers of bitcoin users now and in the future.


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March 18, 2015, 10:47:10 PM
 #23

adoption is more likely to occur in africa, russia, developing nations where there is a need for bitcoin .. in the usa and developed nations, people just use credit card and paypal
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March 19, 2015, 04:31:19 AM
 #24

I have to agree with the binary option. Either it will work or it won't. I don't see it dong half measures, going underground etc. There are many factors at play, one of them being the network effect as well. If it just does not take off, then we get into the situation that email was in say the late 1980s. Cool tech but, whom are you going to send email to?

With regards to the cellphone story - in 1973, that is a little bit concerning. So it means for 20 years there was very little going on until anything really happened with the technology. I somehow doubt this will be the case with Bitcoin as times have changed - many many people know about Bitcoin, so I really think it will have its time to shine, or take a dump. This is a good thing, as we will have some kind of clarity, likely in the next few years. The way it is looking now (barring yesterday's scam news etc, another side effect of centralisation) it does look like things are on the up. A lot of big names and VC investing decent amounts of money (small but still significant in terms of where the technology is now).

I run, in conjunction with a friend of mine the first Bitcoin ATM in Africa, in Johannesburg South Africa. The ATM is in a shopping centre with about 30 shops and we have about 5 shops so far, accepting Bitcoin.

The "problem" we are experiencing is that we are struggling to find a good value proposition for the average Joe out there. Sure, it is fun, cute nad nifty to go to an ATM, put in cash, get your Bitcoin and buy coffee with it. But once the honeymoon phase is over - what then? Strangely, all of the shops are aware that they do not need to pay fees to accept Bitcoin - indeed, most of them pay 40 USD a month just to "rent" the machine/connection, and then 2.5% on top of that. Negotiable from there, but it still hurts them significantly. So our next step, once we have a few merchants on board, will be to try and convince the shops to have a "Bitcoin Monday" or something like that, where they lower their prices by 5-10% and try and get more people on board. I cannot help feeling though that this is an artificial ploy (possibly necessary in the beginning) to get more user adoption.

So the real question which everyone is asking - how can we make this useful, sexy, efficient and "have to have" for the Average Joe and Average Shop out there?






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March 19, 2015, 04:34:06 AM
 #25

Oh yeah, the only other thing is - to a significant degree you may find that banks/governments do slow down the growth of user adoption.

As for 5M users according to Juniper - I find that to be neither here nor there. If there are only 5M users by 2019 it would be looking rather negative, and like a toy in my opinion. I would also like to know based on what kind of data, statistics and logic these numbers were derived from - I do not recall seeing any of that in the article at all.


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March 19, 2015, 04:35:07 AM
 #26

The cellphone thing simply isn't a good analogy, because the start point is different. I'd compare bitcoin to the invention of the iPhone.

After all, there's another thread here about how someone came up with a similar system to bitcoin in 2002. And there have been many people working on cryptography and currencies before that.

So if you want to look at it that way, bitcoin has been here for decades as well.
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March 19, 2015, 03:42:00 PM
 #27

You are aware that many wallets with bitcoin exist off the chain right? I have personally given 40+ of my friends and family members 40 dollars or more in bitcoin with services like coinbase which are held off the chain  and only a few of these have bothered to get a unique public address. Additionally, all changetip users are holding off the chain accounts as well.

While the distinction may seem academic, wallets that exist offchain do not hold Bitcoin. They hold Bitcoin-IOUs. Those that have not bothered to secure their funds with a unique public address are not Bitcoin users.

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March 19, 2015, 04:19:50 PM
 #28

The cellphone thing simply isn't a good analogy, because the start point is different. I'd compare bitcoin to the invention of the iPhone.

After all, there's another thread here about how someone came up with a similar system to bitcoin in 2002. And there have been many people working on cryptography and currencies before that.

So if you want to look at it that way, bitcoin has been here for decades as well.
Things start counting once they work. All the other cryptocurrency attemps didn't solve the byzantine generals problems to me knowledge, wereas btc does.
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March 19, 2015, 11:28:01 PM
 #29

I guess you need to compare to the number of people who have a bank account and a credit card. Since BTC is easier to get than those 2, it has a huge future?

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March 20, 2015, 01:38:30 AM
 #30

I guess you need to compare to the number of people who have a bank account and a credit card. Since BTC is easier to get than those 2, it has a huge future?
Bitcoin is different than a bank account because you need ID to get a bank account and at the moment you dont to get btc although that may change with regulations.
Credit card is easy to get with a good credit rating, they throw them at you but they also throw the charges to use it at you.

IMO bitcoin is waiting for that 'killer ap' to just explod in usage.
There was a good article in Times magazine talking about how many of the chinese public use Alibaba, if they started accepting it they may help a bit, depending on how they handle the income of btc.

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March 20, 2015, 01:51:09 AM
 #31

I guess you need to compare to the number of people who have a bank account and a credit card. Since BTC is easier to get than those 2, it has a huge future?
Bitcoin is different than a bank account because you need ID to get a bank account and at the moment you dont to get btc although that may change with regulations.
Credit card is easy to get with a good credit rating, they throw them at you but they also throw the charges to use it at you.

IMO bitcoin is waiting for that 'killer ap' to just explod in usage.
There was a good article in Times magazine talking about how many of the chinese public use Alibaba, if they started accepting it they may help a bit, depending on how they handle the income of btc.
This 'killer app' idea is not that bad! I thought about it a little and I hate to say it could be done and definitely can happen. But I am worried about
something. This killer app have to be some kind of ultimate bitcoin wallet. The one and only program you need to pay for everything, receive and send
bitcoins, it should be integrated with some of the leading bitcoin services like bitpay for example. But integrating it with services means that it also can be
compromised as well... And that is my fear.


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March 20, 2015, 07:42:05 AM
 #32

I guess you need to compare to the number of people who have a bank account and a credit card. Since BTC is easier to get than those 2, it has a huge future?
Bitcoin is different than a bank account because you need ID to get a bank account and at the moment you dont to get btc although that may change with regulations.
Credit card is easy to get with a good credit rating, they throw them at you but they also throw the charges to use it at you.

IMO bitcoin is waiting for that 'killer ap' to just explod in usage.
There was a good article in Times magazine talking about how many of the chinese public use Alibaba, if they started accepting it they may help a bit, depending on how they handle the income of btc.
This 'killer app' idea is not that bad! I thought about it a little and I hate to say it could be done and definitely can happen. But I am worried about
something. This killer app have to be some kind of ultimate bitcoin wallet. The one and only program you need to pay for everything, receive and send
bitcoins, it should be integrated with some of the leading bitcoin services like bitpay for example. But integrating it with services means that it also can be
compromised as well... And that is my fear.

Bitcoin doesn't need one and only one wallet, it is a decentralized ideology so more wallet, app , etc are needed (that's normal).  I think the killer app will be the smart contracts (not with ethereum) but with the bitcoin blockchain.
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March 20, 2015, 02:51:46 PM
 #33

I guess you need to compare to the number of people who have a bank account and a credit card. Since BTC is easier to get than those 2, it has a huge future?
Bitcoin is different than a bank account because you need ID to get a bank account and at the moment you dont to get btc although that may change with regulations.
Credit card is easy to get with a good credit rating, they throw them at you but they also throw the charges to use it at you.

IMO bitcoin is waiting for that 'killer ap' to just explod in usage.
There was a good article in Times magazine talking about how many of the chinese public use Alibaba, if they started accepting it they may help a bit, depending on how they handle the income of btc.
The problem is you need an ID to convert your fiat to BTC in most cases, which defeats the purpose. I see this as one of the main reasons I never bought BTC from the main exchanges.
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March 20, 2015, 03:12:57 PM
 #34

We see articles guestimating the number of Bitcoin users. A general average seems to be about 1.5M currently.

We have also seen an article from Juniper describing about 5M users by 2019.

What are your general thoughts on user adoption per year, over the next 10 years, and why?

What will the curve look like?



Would be interesting to know the true amount of bitcoin users. This forum alone has nearly half a million registered members, problem being that there's no quick way to count how many sockpuppet / throwaway accounts have been made.


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