Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Show HN: TimetoHerd – Days left until 70% of your country is Covid-19 vaccinated
Rallerbabs's comments
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Far-right pages that publish misinformation get the most interaction on Facebook
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Far-right pages that publish misinformation get the most interaction on Facebook
https://medium.com/cybersecurity-for-democracy/far-right-new...
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Janet Yellen: BTC is extremely inefficient and energy it consumes is staggering
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
Except for whether we're in a bear or bull market. It's definitely a bull currently.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
Bitcoin is fantastic. But even fantastic assets can become overvalued. And indeed, this will happen again. There will be another bear market.
I keep myself up to date on the market sentiment every day. I have been doing this for years now. The current sentiment is that we are in the middle of the bull market. Both billionaires as well as retail buyers have only just arrived.
Everything is going much, much higher for at least the rest of the year.
If the market cycle repeats like last time, the bull market will last at least the larger part of this year.
If the cycle is lengthening, as you'd expect when market cap grows larger, then the current bull rally will last longer still: say... to the end of 2022.
The question is: are we currently at the knee of a larger S-curve?
If so, then we are truly witnessing a rare event, in which asset appreciations will truly blow us off our socks.
In such an event, bitcoin would become too scarce for it to do another 85% retrace, which is what it's done in previous market cycles.
(Any by the way... the 30-40% figure are considered normal retraces, of which we usually have multiple during a larger bitcoin bull run.)
Billionaire Michael Saylor from Microstrategies is saying that he's not selling. Billionaires are, in this regard, different from retail, who do sell.
The only way to estimate bottoms and tops successfully, is to be right on top of it every day of every week.
You snooze, you lose.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
Real estate existed (and still exists) in a world of inflationary government IOUs (read: fiat). People were taking out too many & too large loans. Ofcourse it was going to go bust. People were talking about it. The author of the book he linked, was being a contrarian.
Bitcoin has created its own reality, which has only just started to gain traction. It's the early days of the dot com boom. It's the early days of SEO.
Every informed individual sees the writing on the wall. Something doesn't grow for 12 years straight, unless it's got something interesting going on.
To state that bitcoin is going away, is the equivalent of stating that the Internet is just a fad that will soon die out. It's an inherently contrarian view.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
The crypto market is now just gettings its first billionaires to invest in it (Michael Saylor, Elon Musk, GrayScale, etc.), and the market cap is still small. This is just getting started.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
The energy 'argument' is easily debunked. But that's not what this comment is about, so I won't rehash it here.
Trying to change people's minds on here doesn't work. But you know what? That's okay!
It signals us bitcoin holders how incredibly early we are in this life changing monetary revolution, that we are seeing unfold before our very eyes.
Bitcoin was meant to be attacked from all angles, non stop. It's what makes it so resilient.
If it can fail, it must fail.
But it's not failing, is it?
Quite the opposite...
Every bitcoin newcomer who reads this FUD, is going to remember it years from now, when bitcoin is still around and at higher prices than ever.
And they'll think to themselves... "Well, if after all these years, bitcoin is still around, despite supposedly being a bad thing, then it might not be such a bad thing after all!".
So I say:
Let they naysayers attempt to take bitcoin down. It will only result in new all time highs for my portfolio. And for that, I am grateful.
The early bird gets the worm. The late ones convince themselves the worms are poisonous, leaving more worms for the early birds.
Nature takes its course.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin and other PoW coins are an ESG nightmare
There are very few bagholders.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Bitcoin Could Smash Socialism in Venezuela
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
The reason why it is capable of increasing, is because the number is fixed. Inflation would outstrip its value, if it weren't.
Bitcoin is useful. It has organic support. When it comes to storing value, other coins do not matter (nearly as much). Just ask PayPal, Mastercard, Microstrategies, Tesla, JP Morgan, GrayScale, etc.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
2. Like with every solution suggested in the bitcoin ecosystem, LN attracts a lot of FUD. The weakness you observe in LN seems to me like arguing in 1995 we'll never be able to stream movies via the Internet. "X Doesn't exist now, so it never will.". Present this argument to one of LN's creators, and they'd likely wipe it off the table.
The fact of the matter remains that any scaling solution has 2 minimum requirements:
A. It needs to be done off-chain. B. All transactions need to be verifiable from the genesis block.
LN satisfies these 2 conditions. If you'd design LN from the ground up, you'd probably end up with LN again. Just like you'd end up with bitcoin again, if you'd design that from the ground up. So these solutions will have to do.
3. Just because PayPal doesn't support this now, it doesn't mean they won't support it in the future. Matter of fact, it's fairly likely they will. Once again... "X Doesn't exist now, so it never will" is an inadequate argument.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
Ignore Lightning Network's development at your own peril.
Increased and decreased interest are part of the normal market cycle, the chart of which I'm betting you don't know by heart.
You have to be extremely & wilfully ignorant to claim 'medium of exchange' is off the table, just now that PayPal & Mastercard are embracing cryptocurrencies.
But whatever, man. You don't wanna belong to the future's 1%, that's fine with me.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
I sit on it while it appreciates.
Number go up.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
Bitcoin can. And then it can move on to unit of account.
Rallerbabs | 5 years ago | on: Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index
Far too pessimistic. It's likely not taking into account any acceleration.