darude
Registered User
- Nov 2, 2024
- 32
- 29
Bitcoin's initial value proposition was not to become gold, but to replace PayPal and other inter-bank transfers. It became an investment because the 'value' of coins generally keeps going up as more and more people buy and hold onto them. This has had the reverse effect than was intended. Nobody wants to use a highly volatile currency as a way of exchanging money quickly wherever you want.
A decade or more ago there were pubs you could pay directly in bitcoin, I paid for web hosting for awhile with it, etc. Once it started to swing wildly day to day, then jump 50-60% in a week before going back to swinging wildly day to day, nobody wanted to use it for that anymore. You wouldn't want to say "we'll accept BTC for Y service" then find out that in the time between agreeing to that and actually being able to cash out the BTC it had dropped 40%. Likewise, you wouldn't want to pay a service BTC knowing that a week from now the service will be worth 40% less.
A decade or more ago there were pubs you could pay directly in bitcoin, I paid for web hosting for awhile with it, etc. Once it started to swing wildly day to day, then jump 50-60% in a week before going back to swinging wildly day to day, nobody wanted to use it for that anymore. You wouldn't want to say "we'll accept BTC for Y service" then find out that in the time between agreeing to that and actually being able to cash out the BTC it had dropped 40%. Likewise, you wouldn't want to pay a service BTC knowing that a week from now the service will be worth 40% less.