MinnesotaEric
Super Member
While we continue to wait for legislation to be enacted domestically so our banks and financial institutions can actively participate in crypto, elsewhere at least one central bank is discussing hyperbitcoinization. 
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			So who's being burned by the crypto crash? Be honest.
As time goes on, my belief that Crypto is not an asset is being confirmed. It is a pyramid scheme. There is no money there. It's just a way to get a greater fool to pay more for nothing than you did. Invest in productive endeavors that do not rob people dumber than you and you'll be fine.
Without making my head explode can anyone explain two things to me:
1) If I buy one bitcoin (over $100K now) I assume it's "purchased" on line. I buy it by transferring money from my bank. I recieve nothing tangible though, correct?
2) Who started bitcoin? We all know for example Henry Ford was the founder of Ford...but who is the founder of bitcoin?
I'm not an expert, but I'll attempt to answer your questions, without telling you to go read a book.Without making my head explode can anyone explain two things to me:
1) If I buy one bitcoin (over $100K now) I assume it's "purchased" on line. I buy it by transferring money from my bank. I recieve nothing tangible though, correct?
2) Who started bitcoin? We all know for example Henry Ford was the founder of Ford...but who is the founder of bitcoin?
I'm not an expert, but I'll attempt to answer your questions, without telling you to go read a book.
You don't receive anything tangible for bitcoin in the same sense as cash or gold. You have electronic information that is your connection to your bitcoin assets. I believe that information is typically stored on a tangible electronic device. If you lose that device, your access to your bitcoin is gone.
We don't know who started bitcoin.
Thank you. I was not familiar with the seed phrase, which sounds to me like a new word for a password. That seems like a security flaw to me. Plenty of websites for sensitive data have deemed the userid/password security to be inadequate. They add some form of multi-factor authentication. A person could potentially have a LOT of "money" in Bitcoin, and the only thing protecting it from being stolen is a password?If your Bitcoin is "stored" on a software or hardware wallet, and the wallet is lost, then the Bitcoin can be recovered if you get a new wallet and enter your "seed phrase" into that new wallet which connects your ownership of the Bitcoin as the recording of your Bitcoin holdings is stored on the blockchain, not actually "on" or "in" your digital wallet.
A huge reason not to digitally store your seed phrase in any kind of digital format (photos of, or text) is to protect ownership from theft, as anybody with access to your unique seed phrase has access to your Bitcoin and any other crypto held in the digital wallet connected to that particular seed phrase.
Understanding stuff like this is why I'm suggesting a book.