I appreciate the attempt here, because I am very new, and still trying to wrap my head around this. I've had no previous experience with Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency. So I'd be just as lost dealing with them. :)
I guess this is my main question/perplexity: if Steem is just a token that people agree to put their faith in, that's one explanation. But then, there would technically be an infinite amount of Steem to go around. But the way this seems to be set up (and all of these cryptocurrencies), is that there is mining or creation of each token (whatever the name), and therefore there is a finite amount to go around. That "finite-ness" presumably makes the token's value more "real".
Now, you say above that Steem is created out of thin air. But what does that mean? Is it created/mined, and if so, how?
This is probably a very complicated answer, and may not be suitable in a comments section. But if anyone has a link to some further explanation, I would appreciate it. Thanks!
Just like Bitcoins, Steem is a digital currency. And just 2 days ago it went up to 8 dollars. So you need 8 dollars usd to buy 1 Steem. Steem circulating supply right now is 246,000 and total supply is 263,000,000. Steem value can fluctuate in the market. So it could go up or down, we never know.
I understand that part. What I don't understand is why/how there are 246,000 Steem circulating. How/why were they created? Why/how does that process keep things limited? Either Steem is an arbitrary token created by whim (or fiat, as the jargon goes), or it is a specific thing found in the world. If it's the latter, what the hell is it?! Ha, I really just don't get it.
I guess a different way to put it is. Anything has value as long as people believe it has value. Our economy could change to bottlecaps tomorrow (Sorry Fallout reference) Just like that the dollar bill becomes nothing. Then the economists and financiers figure out comparing the different currencies to come to a 'value' Was cryptocurrencies created out of thin air? (a very basic breakdown)...essentially yes, but when people started putting real monies in to change it to a cryptocurrency it gave it 'value.'
This is where cryptocurrency is like buying stock. You purchased the cryptocurrency at one price. Due to other people doing the same thing you're doing makes the price go up and therefore your currency that you bought has more value. If you were to sell it back to get your money back you wouldn't get back your orginal investment you would get back whatever the 'value' price is at that time. That is why prices go down. People worry it will not have value anymore so the either cashout or purchase a new type of currency.
I hope this helps.