Some of you may start to understand why all early Bitcoin OGs (2009-2012) are now in Monero.
HODL's avatar HODL
It feels like Bitcoin has finally crossed the Rubicon into the mainstream both a triumph and a tragedy. Walking around the conference this year, you could easily mistake it for a fintech summit or SaaS expo in Vegas. Same blazers, same VC pitch decks, same awkward networking energy. The suitcoiners outnumber the cypherpunks by 100:1. On one hand, this is what we fought for: global legitimacy, serious capital, institutional attention. On the other, something’s been lost in translation. The raw edge, the revolutionary energy, the sense that we were building something against the system not polishing it up to sell it back to the system. Bitcoin doesn’t feel quite as dangerous anymore. It feels… professional. Predictable. “Respectable,” even. Maybe that’s just the mask Bitcoin wears while it continues hollowing out the old world from within. Either way, the vibe has shifted.
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twofish 6 months ago
Yeah it's the equivalent of a rage quit, and quite unfortunate on either side.
Try to understand what crypto is all about. Things like mining, paying for real stuff on the streets and privacy is the very definition of crypto that we do with Monero. There are more daily transactions with Monero than that fedcoin. Think about it.