$190k is not the cost to mine a block, its the reward. you are very confused.eric76 said:Is there any more inefficient method of doing this than how bitcoin does it?ac04 said:i find people who haven't jumped in yet generally fall into at least one of four categoriesTTUArmy said:
What would crypto investors/users say are some of the biggest sticking points or obstacles for large scale adoption by the general public?
I'm aware it's been around awhile. And, I was really taken by the idea of currencies operating outside of the prying eyes of government. Will admit that I even dabbled in it myself to be familiar with the functionality. The complexity in learning curve is certainly there for new users.
When BTC was turned into, what I would consider, a hedge tool by large institutions, I didn't rejoice like many others. I'm a physical precious metals investor, so I understand all too well the manipulation angle.
So, what would you guys say keeps more people from buying in to crypto?
1) statists who believe that only governments can create money
2) people who believe what the TV tells them RE: boiling the oceans, use by criminals, bitcoin getting "hacked" etc.
3) people who haven't yet figured out that fiat is broken because they're doing ok
4) people who are bitter that they didn't buy bitcoin when they first heard about it and aren't humble enough to correct their mistake
sadly the vast majority of the general population is not intellectually curious at all, so few are willing to put in the work to understand what bitcoin is and why its important. if it can't be explained to them in a 30 second tiktok they're out.
Think about it. For every mined block, 3.125 bitcoins are issued. At the current approximately $61,000 per bitcoin, that is a cost of $190,625 per block. Isn't there something like a megabyte of data per block?
$190,625 per megabyte is ridiculous.
According to one site I found, https://charts.bitbo.io/blocks-daily/ , there is approximately 150 blocks per day. In other words, the cost is $28,593,750 per day! To process and store an additional 150 megabytes of data per day!
That's absurd.