Yes, u/pkvi_eid, real crypto is mathematically provable labor, which is why it's a real asset. Since BTC proved that, there have been Ponzis and Madoffs everywhere scamming the people who can't tell NFT fake-blockchain from real assets. But BTC keeps rising, overall, because nobody can argue with actual math. Basically the same math as RSA, which is worth trillions.
I agree. If everyone knew how easy and cheap it is to create their own ERC-20 token or a Solana token (which is what most scam coins are), they would think crypto is worthless too.
My favorite current example is Hawk Tuah coin.
1 billion tokens minted out of thin air in a single Solana contract with a peak market cap of 3.17 million dollars. After a 95% decline, a current market cap of 98.8k.
No wonder people think crypto is has no value.
Anyway, major proof of work and proof of stake crypto currencies do have intrinsic value. You just have to know the difference.
Its not. You have the burden of proof of proof and yet you can only show processing not actually application or static functionality other than human negotiated b/s
The white paper proves proof. The math is open. Desirable labor processing is a good. It may be "busywork" in one sense, but its value is that it is proven by blockchain to have contributed to objectively awarded holdings, and more have come to realize that this busywork is a lot more valued than that of the federal government deskworkers.
I could certainly publish here my unique further proof that Bitcoin itself involves some deception and frontloading for early adopters, and I have evidence I haven't seen anyone else publish. But this is knowably without my publication, and the distribution system itself is resilient and scalable enough to overcome its flaws. And that's a totally different argument from saying you don't value the proven labor that a bunch of other people value. It works whether you join it or not, and even whether people bail on it ("run" or "crash" it) or not.
Yes, u/pkvi_eid, real crypto is mathematically provable labor, which is why it's a real asset. Since BTC proved that, there have been Ponzis and Madoffs everywhere scamming the people who can't tell NFT fake-blockchain from real assets. But BTC keeps rising, overall, because nobody can argue with actual math. Basically the same math as RSA, which is worth trillions.
I agree. If everyone knew how easy and cheap it is to create their own ERC-20 token or a Solana token (which is what most scam coins are), they would think crypto is worthless too.
https://docs.alchemy.com/docs/how-to-create-an-erc-20-token-4-steps
https://solana.com/developers/guides/getstarted/how-to-create-a-token
https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/hawktuuuah/
My favorite current example is Hawk Tuah coin. 1 billion tokens minted out of thin air in a single Solana contract with a peak market cap of 3.17 million dollars. After a 95% decline, a current market cap of 98.8k.
No wonder people think crypto is has no value.
Anyway, major proof of work and proof of stake crypto currencies do have intrinsic value. You just have to know the difference.
Thanks for the hard details on Hawk Tuah. Only Trump can make money in NFTs, and that's because of numismatics and not "nonfungibility".
Its not. You have the burden of proof of proof and yet you can only show processing not actually application or static functionality other than human negotiated b/s
The white paper proves proof. The math is open. Desirable labor processing is a good. It may be "busywork" in one sense, but its value is that it is proven by blockchain to have contributed to objectively awarded holdings, and more have come to realize that this busywork is a lot more valued than that of the federal government deskworkers.
I could certainly publish here my unique further proof that Bitcoin itself involves some deception and frontloading for early adopters, and I have evidence I haven't seen anyone else publish. But this is knowably without my publication, and the distribution system itself is resilient and scalable enough to overcome its flaws. And that's a totally different argument from saying you don't value the proven labor that a bunch of other people value. It works whether you join it or not, and even whether people bail on it ("run" or "crash" it) or not.