Can I buy a pizza with it or pay my bills with it? Can my employer pay me in it? Or is it just an “emperor’s new clothes” thing? I just don’t see the tangible value in it. Rhetorical questions, BTW, I know you can’t buy a pizza with it, at least outside of some edge cases that I’m not aware of.

I thought what made money money was everyone agreed it was valuable and was willing to exchange it for goods and services directly. I don’t see that with crypto.

  • scarabic@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    It’s a technology that allows you to verifiably possess a definite quantity of “a thing.” That thing is just virtual.

    Think of it this way: shares in companies are also virtual things. You can’t build a bridge out of em.

    But a stock exchange is there to sell them to you and they will keep track that yes, you do actually own X shares of company Y.

    Instead of issuing shares on a stock exchange to raise money, a new company could just sell shares of itself by creating a new crypto. There would be a finite number of “coins” representing ownership shares. The company could control whether more can be created. And it would be verifiable who owns what.

    So that verifying and quantity-control are both features of the software itself. You could say it’s good for those things. As I illustrated above, this could be used to virtualize ownership of something, including the buying and selling of shares of it.