He predicts failure by asserting its algorithmic scarcity results in an ultimately deflationary currency which will result in hoarding and not spending money on goods, and uses it as a proxy for arguing against returning the USD to a gold standard.
I thought the first answer was an interesting repudiation regarding currency divisibility and effects of deflation. I think it's interesting that although prices for computing power are massively deflationary, consumers continue to keep buying faster computers every few years.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 8.0 ms ] threadHe predicts failure by asserting its algorithmic scarcity results in an ultimately deflationary currency which will result in hoarding and not spending money on goods, and uses it as a proxy for arguing against returning the USD to a gold standard.
I thought the first answer was an interesting repudiation regarding currency divisibility and effects of deflation. I think it's interesting that although prices for computing power are massively deflationary, consumers continue to keep buying faster computers every few years.