Are stablecoins not crypto? The DeFi built on top of stablecoins and other assets is basically what the market/banks had been doing for a long time (except that everything is transparent, fraud is easier to detect, etc.)
> Claim 2: Blockchain technology has no non-monetary applications (Confidence: High)
This one is easy to refute. A few ways:
1. The point of cryptocurrencies, is that we found that we could use monetary incentives to build and run services that have nothing to do with money. Sure bitcoin was only for transfers, but other projects have explored how to build services on top: smart contracts, identity registry, archiving of the web, file storage as a service, a tor-like mixnetworks, and I'm sure others can point out all sorts of projects.
2. The core of blockchain technology (although not all of it, see next point) is about protocols for distributed systems when faults can be malicious. Distributed systems are used EVERYWHERE, think distributed databases. As threat models are different for every products, why claim that we don't need distributed databases resistant to malicious faults? Banks are the first target of such products, so it's no wonder that cryptocurrencies were invented. Another example is the web PKI, which currently uses protocols like Certificate Transparency which are good are letting you audit your domain names and detect if any attacks have happened after the fact. I bet you that in the next 10-20 years the web PKI will run on a BFT consensus protocol, or an unknown breakthrough solving a similar problem, to prevent attacks from happening, period. And if nobody builds it I will.
3. What is blockchain tech exactly? Because I can tell you that many fields in cryptography have seen INSANE advances SOLELY because of cryptocurrencies: general-purpose zero knowledge proofs, multi-party computation (and threshold cryptography), broadcast protocols, etc.
> Claim 3: Future monetary use of blockchain technology will be minor (Confidence: Medium)
That really depends on regulations, and if they want to kill the beast (and replace it with a non-fault tolerant CBDC). But we're already seeing countries adopting cryptocurrencies (albeit the wrong ones) so I guess it depends on where you'll be in the world. The dream of crypto is really, no matter bitcoin maximalists will tell you, to make payments as easy as sending an email. And without an open standard that everyone can trust, how will this ever happen?
> Claim 1: Crypto is a Bubble (Confidence: High)
Are stablecoins not crypto? The DeFi built on top of stablecoins and other assets is basically what the market/banks had been doing for a long time (except that everything is transparent, fraud is easier to detect, etc.)
> Claim 2: Blockchain technology has no non-monetary applications (Confidence: High)
This one is easy to refute. A few ways:
1. The point of cryptocurrencies, is that we found that we could use monetary incentives to build and run services that have nothing to do with money. Sure bitcoin was only for transfers, but other projects have explored how to build services on top: smart contracts, identity registry, archiving of the web, file storage as a service, a tor-like mixnetworks, and I'm sure others can point out all sorts of projects.
2. The core of blockchain technology (although not all of it, see next point) is about protocols for distributed systems when faults can be malicious. Distributed systems are used EVERYWHERE, think distributed databases. As threat models are different for every products, why claim that we don't need distributed databases resistant to malicious faults? Banks are the first target of such products, so it's no wonder that cryptocurrencies were invented. Another example is the web PKI, which currently uses protocols like Certificate Transparency which are good are letting you audit your domain names and detect if any attacks have happened after the fact. I bet you that in the next 10-20 years the web PKI will run on a BFT consensus protocol, or an unknown breakthrough solving a similar problem, to prevent attacks from happening, period. And if nobody builds it I will.
3. What is blockchain tech exactly? Because I can tell you that many fields in cryptography have seen INSANE advances SOLELY because of cryptocurrencies: general-purpose zero knowledge proofs, multi-party computation (and threshold cryptography), broadcast protocols, etc.
> Claim 3: Future monetary use of blockchain technology will be minor (Confidence: Medium)
That really depends on regulations, and if they want to kill the beast (and replace it with a non-fault tolerant CBDC). But we're already seeing countries adopting cryptocurrencies (albeit the wrong ones) so I guess it depends on where you'll be in the world. The dream of crypto is really, no matter bitcoin maximalists will tell you, to make payments as easy as sending an email. And without an open standard that everyone can trust, how will this ever happen?