Second, we're all friends here, right?
Yeah, hopefully! I'm not interested in arguing just for the sake of arguing. I'm genuinely puzzled why people still have so much faith in Bitcoin. Even now when it's clear for everybody that Bitcoin has serious scaling issues. That can't be denied anymore.
Why that would happen? There is huge demand for a real currency for the world. It doesn't go away when Bitcoin fails. Choosing a better currency will take the revolution to the next step.
You sure about that? There are multiple competitors to Bitcoin now, yet none offer a larger market cap or even greater momentum and attention than bitcoin. I like the idea that there are fall backs, but if every bitcoiner loses their wealth when bitcoin fails it doesn't bode well for any crypto-currency.
Yeah, I don't deny that there will be problems when bitcoin price eventually drops. Hopefully by then the most enthusiast cryptocurrency activists have realized what is going to happen and have sold when bitcoin still has a high price. And yes, times will not be good for cryptocurrency revolution, but it's only temporarily. There is still so much demand for a real uncensorable currency that some of the alternatives will substitute what is lost with Bitcoin.
Bitcoin has still some momentum because people haven't realized how technically inferior it is. But it's really hard to see any scenario where this momentum can go on if only a handful users can actually make bitcoin transactions. When people realize that bitcoin can't be used in everyday situations, the bubble will burst.
If Bitcoin will become an "asset class" it means it has failed. It was meant to be "A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System". It's right in the title of the whitepaper. I share that vision and that's why I want a better blockchain that can be used for currency.
I agree that was Satoshi's intent. But we need to face the facts. According to Blockchain.info the current market cap for bitcoin is about $18.7b and the daily transaction volume straddles $100m. That transaction volume represents the amount or share of the bitcoin market being used as currency on any given day. That's about .5% (half of a percent) of the market cap that's used for currency. Bitcoin is already a store of value, i.e., an asset class. (source:
https://blockchain.info/charts/trade-volume)
Given that bitcoin price is very volatile, I call it high risk speculative investment. People don't own it because they think it's safe way to store value – they own it because they believe that the value can multiply several times and they make a lot of money. That is and will be the nature of blockchain economies for a long time.
Why would people adopt something they can't use because it's so slow and expensive?
"Larger plumbing" is not a trivial point. It's one of the most important requirements and Bitcoin can't do it. This problem has been very well known for ages but because Bitcoin lacks a formal governance system, it hasn't been able to actually implement anything. I think it's time for everybody to admit this because the irrational belief for success of Bitcoin is hurting us.
I meant merely in the sense that the problem is known and specific and simple to understand. I realize it may not be simple to solve, but I'm not well educated in how it should or could be solved. Want to educate me?
Higher level problem is the lack of governance system. Bitcoin is a traditional open source project where nobody has any official authority. That means the decision making process is very easily stagnated. People have lots of ideas, but none of them can be implemented because the system can't make a decision which one to choose. That's why Bitcoin is still lacking any meaningful decisions over how to actually handle the scaling. The problem has been known for years but they can't decide anything even now when everybody is finally suffering because of it. I don't think this can be solved in an easy way. Probably the best way is to just choose alternative blockchain or create a new one.
Middle level problem is bad economic incentives for proof of work. Bitcoin spends an awful lot of money for mining. If the value goes really high, that will cause serious problems because suddenly Bitcoin will use really big proportion of all electricity in some areas (where the electricity is cheap). Governments might want to shut down the mining operations, environmental organizations might attack against bitcoin users globally, etc.
Lower level problem is the acute scaling issue. If Bitcoin doesn't scale, it can be used only by a very small group of people (who are willing to pay the most). It means that all other people who want to use a cryptocurrency will choose some other alternative. After they have been using something else for a while, they start to think "why go back to Bitcoin?" The alternative is much more user-friendly, cheaper and faster. Then the big money investors realize that nobody is using Bitcoin anymore and everybody is using something else, and that's where the investment money will follow.
I don't think there exists a perfect blockchain currently. Dash and Bitshares have good governance systems. But Dash is a POW and Bitshares has toxic community (even with a good governance system they can't cooperate). Steem has probably
the most ambitious plans for scaling so that's why it's my current favourite, even without a perfect governance system.