• melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    Sure! Let’s pass a bill protecting shady people who make up a new money token that only a small percentage of citizens have access to. The American Nightmare. Jeebus Crepes!

  • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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    13 hours ago

    So if I get this right, people will exchange the dollar, a fiat currency, for a stablecoin. The stablecoin, itself, being a fiat currency.

    So basically, if I want to own something that isn’t purely speculative, I’m going to be forced to own real estate or gold?

    What’s the point of all this liquidity?!!?!

    • kautau@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      To quickly move financial assets out from the country in a way that is difficult or impossible to reverse or track

  • pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    See you all in 2 years when the market absolutely crashes and we’re (globally) bailing out the financial system again.

  • MeekerThanBeaker@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Money, in general, is ridiculous.

    Green paper, gold rocks, digital numbers.

    Let’s go back to the barter system… or bartender system… whichever.

    • Djinn_Indigo@lemm.ee
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      6 hours ago

      You know, I’ve heard that the barter system, as a foundation of economics, is essentially made up. Like, obviously people barter, but the idea that it was a universal precursor to money was essentially invented by capitalists in the industrial era, who never could have dreamed of the myriad interesting ways thar people distributed wealth!

      Apparently one of the more common ones was a sort of “gifting” system, where people just gave each other what they needed. 🤷 But of course this wasn’t universal either.

  • LupusBlackfur@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    The Senate gave its stamp of approval on Wednesday to a massive and growing chunk of the cryptocurrency industry, blessing it with a light-touch regulatory regime that, experts say, may come with a price tag: the stability of the country’s financial system.

    Yeah, thinking that the demise of the USD($) and its attached system is the point.

    Easiest way to get out from under the “onerous regulations” in the current financial system is to eradicate that system and replace it with the scam/multilevel market that is crypto (having little to no regulation).

    When entities make their own “coins”, they’ll be able to write the rules enabling the Robber Barons/Tech Bros to fuck us even harder than they are accomplishing now.

    🙄 🤡 🤷‍♂️ 🖕 💩

  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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    17 hours ago

    An easier way to avoid taxes while I collect my bribes…don’t mind if I do!

    The rats are stealing the cargo as they abandon ship, what a bunch of enterprising rodents we have.

    • Placebonickname@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      I was trying to sell an old MacBook on FB marketplace last week and one guy offered me meth or “800 dollars in crypto”…I couldn’t take either.

  • Placebonickname@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    A)What is the point of bitcoin if the value is directly tied to another currency? This sounds more like a digital dollar and not a truly decentralized system.

    B) if everyone creates their own stable-coins, won’t see lose value of individual satoshi or fragments of coins if there are exchange and transaction fees on both ends?

    • untakenusername@sh.itjust.works
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      14 hours ago

      What is the point of bitcoin if the value is directly tied to another currency?

      well this stuff isn’t Bitcoin, that’s a separate system entirely, and the point isn’t for these stablecoins to rise over time. the hope with them is that by using the dollars relative stability they can be used to conduct financial transactions that have a much more stable value than using something like Bitcoin

      for example the prediction-betting site Polymarket uses a stablecoin called USDC for its transactions, instaid of some other cryptocurrency

      its decentralized in a sense that it’s extremely difficult to reverse transacitons and that you can keep money in a wallet without people being able to take it from you, but the value of it is set by a single company so it’s isn’t really decentralized

      idk how to answer your second question

  • untakenusername@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    I dont see how stablecoins are gunna mess with the economy

    there’s actually bad stuff going on right now, and especially compared to that, this doesn’t seem like a problem at all

  • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    bill allows bank subsidiaries and big tech companies to issue their own stablecoins.

    These are usually called corporate bonds. What is the fuss?

    • dhork@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      No, Bonds are regulated.

      This is more like Disney Dollars. Remember those? Disney used to print their own money, that people could “buy” 1:1 to the Dollar, that was only redeemable at their properties. The idea was that kids going to Disney could get Disney Dollars as gifts from their relatives ahead of a trip to Disney, and then they could spend it just like cash. You could never redeem it back to USD, though, just spend it on stuff. So if you had any of the scrip left over, you had to hold it until the next time.

      Disney discontinued printing the scrip years ago, because gift cards do the same thing, only better. They still accept Disney Dollars, but ironically their discontinuation made them scarce and they sell for more than face value as collectibles.

      This bill allows any entity to create their own crypto-enabled version of Disney Dollars, collecting real money in exchange. What happens if the entity goes out of business, or “gets hacked”? I don’t think this bill addresses any of that.

        • dhork@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          No, the Crypto part is important, because it makes it trivialize easy to issue any number of tokens (trillions? quadrillions? 2^64?) and then trade with them. Gift cards still have the limitation that you need a network to accept them, and they are commonly understood in accounting practices so retailers need to account for them.

          How can we be sure that some random stablecoin is really backed by currency 1:1 like they claim? The largest stablecoin in use today is Tether, which claims to have over $100B in circulation, all “backed 1:1”. But every audit they have released has been deficient in some way. You would think with that much money in a bank somewhere people could figure out where it all is.