Can I buy a pizza with it or pay my bills with it? Can my employer pay me in it? Or is it just an “emperor’s new clothes” thing? I just don’t see the tangible value in it. Rhetorical questions, BTW, I know you can’t buy a pizza with it, at least outside of some edge cases that I’m not aware of.

I thought what made money money was everyone agreed it was valuable and was willing to exchange it for goods and services directly. I don’t see that with crypto.

  • scarabic@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Just one point to add: there is no currency that is universally accepted. You probably cant buy a pizza with Kuwaiti dinar right now either. But that’s definitely a currency. So your part about “everyone agrees” is not really true of any currency. They work only for a subset of humanity who mutually agree it has value. And you can absolutely find people who will buy crypto from you using other currencies, or give you goods and services for it. Those people are rather randomly distributed around the world though instead of being grouped inside one geographic border. That’s the only difference.

  • percent@infosec.pub
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    6 days ago

    It’s useful for sending money internationally in situations that would be otherwise difficult

  • irelephant [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    It lets people buy illegal stuff (like drugs or HRT), which can be good and bad.
    It’s possible to buy gift cards for different services with it.

    The first real-world transaction with bitcoin was a pizza funnily enough.

  • Pirate2377@lemmy.zip
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    6 days ago

    You can use Monero to buy things anonymously. Whilst not perfect, it makes it significantly harder to identity or trace you. Other than that, not really, that’s the only real use case for crypto in my opinion, for privacy

    • melooone@feddit.org
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      6 days ago

      +1 for Monero for sure. I wouldn’t even say its just good for buying drugs like some others suggested.

      https://monerica.com/ is made for you to find stuff to buy with monero. You can find almost anything there including phsical wares like clothes, food, and also lots of online services lile hosting providers for example. I even saw an accounting firm there.

      • Pirate2377@lemmy.zip
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        6 days ago

        If you’re able to use cash, then that works too. Unfortunately, you can’t insert cash into your computer though, lol

  • FrankLaskey@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    Very low fee cross-border (remittance) transfers using stablecoins (cryptoassets that are pegged to a fiat currency like the dollar) allow people to avoid getting ripped off by companies like Western Union.

    On crypto platforms like Ethereum that support smart contracts (basically computer programs that run on the blockchain and allow you to automate transfers etc), you can provide liquidity to money markets and asset exchange platforms and earn many times the interest yield (APY) of what you might get at a bank for a similar thing (like 12-60% vs 2-5%). If you’re a real finance nerd you can also access various exotic financial instruments on other platforms that otherwise wouldn’t be available to you unless you were at a huge investment bank or hedge fund and even some that aren’t possible there. These are often called DeFi platforms (Decentralized Finance)

    Another huge use of crypto networks are money laundering and scams though so beware. It’s still a largely unregulated black market. Never put more money into a crypto network than you can afford to lose.

  • Seefra 1@lemmy.zip
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    6 days ago

    Crypto is mostly useful for extralegal activities.

    You can technically donate for some services with it, but to acquire crypto you need to either KYC to some exchange which isn’t not only a massive pain, but there are very serious privacy implications with it. Or you can acquire it via other means which means you will be buying it at high prices.

    Also note that most cryptocurrencies aren’t anonymous, every transaction is public in the block chain and can be traced back to you.

    So if you really know what you’re doing you can use privacy coins as a tool to transfer money anonymously, but that’s pretty much it’s only real world application.

    Also, from what I understand (I’m no cryptographer) cryptocurrencies use public key cryptography so quantum computers may in the future break all cryptocurrencies and well deanonymise all previously anonymous privacy coins transactions stored in the blockchains.

  • CriticalMiss@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    You can donate to private trackers with it, they already figure out how to convert it to fiat and take care of hosting

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Is a question still rhetorical if you’re wrong? Because you absolutely can buy a pizza and pay bills with it, you’ve been able to for years. You can also get paid in it, you’ve been able to for years.

    Just because you choose not to, doesn’t mean you can’t.

  • swelter_spark@reddthat.com
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    6 days ago

    It’s good for buying things online when your bank has an overly strict fraud detection system that blocks legitimate purchases because the seller is in a different country or whatever.