WhalePanda in not an economist, not a digital coin developer, nor a professional coin analyst. At his website he describes himself as: "...I’m a Belgian Brand/Online Marketing/UX consultant with a passion for Bitcoin..." https://twitter.com/WhalePanda?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwca...
Obviously partial to bitcoin but has no more "street cred" that I do: "a California fine artist, UI designer, with a passion for Ethereum."
That is to say I am using Ethereum for my art catalog or Catalogue raisonné as an ad hoc copyright tool and historical archive. What does he or most people use bitcoin for?
I couldn't give two shits about 'who' he is; the points he makes are rock-solid. The ICOs are the only 'real' thing currently going on in the Ethereum space, and those ICOs will have costs that they actually have to pay. They are astoundingly fragile.
My best estimate is that the ICO market as a whole will have to be at least 3-4 times more successful than VCs if the house of cards is to stay standing. We're talking about a process that has to churn out unicorns to stay afloat.
Do you think smart contracts really make every business that uses them 3 to 4 times more valuable?
> That is to say I am using Ethereum for my art catalog or Catalogue raisonné as an ad hoc copyright tool and historical archive.
Calling Ethereum a house of cards is terribly hyperbolic but to clarify, here is what Ethereum has going for it.
These are some of the companies, banks and countries interested in the technology.
J.P. Morgan
Credit Suisse
CME Group
British Petroleum
UBS
ING
Microsoft
Thompson Reuters
Bitcoin was ment to be money which is good in the store of value part. Etherum has a higher inflation for all I know, and it is not primarily meant to be money.
Tulips have SOME intrinsic value. If doomsday comes, the world is over.. a toolip can be planted outside your house and it looks a little bit more pretty. Or maybe you can eat it.
Gold has SOME intrinsic value. It is very good for certain applications, I believe trace amounts are used in compute parts. Worst case you can make something shiny to look at, that will be rust proof and easy to shape.
What is the intrinsic value of ETH or Bitcoin? It literally has nothing to back it.
"Tulips have SOME intrinsic value. If doomsday comes, the world is over.. a toolip can be planted outside your house and it looks a little bit more pretty. Or maybe you can eat it."
That's an argument that they don't have intrinsic value, but only value contingent on their ability to look pretty or eat them, both things which themselves will depend on where you are on the Maslow hierarchy and your needs for food vs. decoration.
Same for your argument about gold.
Intrinsic value is not contingent on your needs, and, well, this is why it does not exist and there isn't anything that has intrinsic value and indeed the very concept is incoherent when you try to nail it down. Nothing has intrinsic value; it is all relative to some entity's desires or needs.
People want to have something as "a formal token of delayed reciprocal altruism (Richard Dawkins)" and these tokens have probably existed as long as language (~100k years) first starting as shells of a specific size and species. The first DDG hit of this phrase[1] brings up an essay that looks interesting, although I have not had time to read it yet. Gold and silver (and credit based on them) have been that token for most societies since around 600BC. Fiat currencies have been used but flame out spectacularly. I don't think one has lasted more than 100 years. Private gold was made illegal in the US in 1933 and the dollar debased. State exchanges of gold and currency at a fixed rate ended in 1971 with the dollar going full fiat. People are looking for the new token.
For ETH, that's not really true: you can use it to pay for computation on the Ethereum blockchain. The value you assign to that computation may not be very significant, but it's hard to justify the notion that it's zero.
thats like saying that the value of gasoline is less than zero because you could just walk the distance without polluting the environment.
computing power is inherently valuable. the value of AWS is less than zero because you could just buy a computer and do the computation cheaper at home. duh.
The value of the trickle of gasoline to get me to my kitchen is less than zero. To use it I would have to waste considerable money architecting a way to get my car indoors.
The value of AWS is greater than zero because spending my day monitoring my server would be exponentially more costly than paying Amazon to do it at scale.
And Ether is worth less than zero (as a computation engine) because I could develop and run the computation in less time by opening vim, even if the Ether was free.
Gold glitters like pyrite, but the latter is not scarce and therefore not valuable. For both gold and ETH, it is scarcity, in combination with the network effect, that is critical.
For gold, scarcity is enforced by laws of nature, which encourages networks to treat it as valuable. For BTC, is there a similar constraint? I'm pretty sure the tokens can be reverse-transmutated by the software that counts it. This is true for all cryptocurrencies. Gold today and pyrite (or worse) tomorrow, which would make all of them unsuitable as long-term stores of value.
> What is the intrinsic value of ETH or Bitcoin? It literally has nothing to back it.
The brand and the places where you can pay or donate with it, or exchange it. The fact that it can't be seized by the authorities, the limit on inflation wired into the software and system. And thats most likely not all of it.
People spent most of the 2000s predicting the collapse of the housing bubble.
Coins are strange, because appetite for non-speculative legal use seems to remain low, but appetite for coins continues to be strong. It does seem to be valuable as an unregulated speculation platform...
Just because the bubble is going to pop, doesn't mean that it will pop to 0.
If bitcoin prices crashed to 1000$, everyone would call THAT a "pop", but it would still leave anyone who bought in a year ago ahead on their investment.
And it will leave a lot of investors with a loss. That's the nature of market crashes, and it'll hit the smallest and most inexperienced investors the worst.
It's going to be a big mess, one this bubble pops.