To some people, Bitcoin is an experiment that can end in one of two ways: it will either fulfill its promise to become the “Internet of Money” or it will die a fiery death at the hands of regulators.
But what about a third option, in which a rival like Ethereum overtakes Bitcoin?
The rise and rise of Ether
Ether, the native coin of Ethereum, has risen more than 5,000 percent in 2017. It peaked at $396.40. Investors first attributed the surge in the Ethereum price to its faster platform, which processes transactions more quickly than Bitcoin’s. But it turns out that transaction times are just the tip of the iceberg.
Smart contracts, initial coin offerings (ICOs), variable block sizes - the evidence is overwhelmingly in Ethereum’s corner, regardless of what you might hear from so-called purists within the Bitcoin community. Even major institutions are siding with Ethereum. For instance, the Central Bank of Russia is currently testing an Ethereum fork for its own monetary system. This will effectively create the world’s first national cryptocurrency, a service that Bitcoin is incapable of providing.
Some in the community argue this unchangeability is precisely what protects Bitcoin price. To them, Blockchain technology only exists in service to Bitcoin to the singular vision of a decentralized currency.
Can Bitcoin emerge as a global digital currency?
This question is hotly contested, even by futurists like Ray Kurzweil. The famous head of Google’s engineering lab recently said that Bitcoin’s instability is a serious threat to its monetary ambitions.
“Currencies like the dollar have provided reasonable stability,” said Kurzweil. “Bitcoin has not. And it’s not clear to me that the whole mining paradigm can provide that type of stability.”
When he talks about stability, Kurzweil is referring to the kind of short-term volatility that is associated with risky investments. Currencies are not supposed to follow these roller coaster-like patterns. They are not supposed to lose 10 percent of their value in a day, as Bitcoin has done on a regular basis. They should, instead, keep fairly steady for a long while. Put another way, today’s price should be tomorrow’s.
That is how currencies establish credibility and secure buy-in from the population at large. If the general public believes that tomorrow’s price is going to be drastically different, it can lose faith in the currency and that would be disastrous.
Whatever existential criticisms that might exist of the US dollar, few people would argue that tomorrow is a concern for the Greenback. Bitcoin cannot boast similar reliability. Its price is an open question from one day to the next.
Nice post! I may have missed why you think what you said about Bitcoin won't also apply to Etherium? I mean you speak about the fact that Etherium may pass bitcoin, you then suggest why bitcoin isn't stable enough compared to the greenback, however, why is etherium different then bitcoin in that sense (sorry if I am missing some basic information, I am new on bitcoina nd Cryptocurrencies) - I am here to learn, so feel free to eductae! :)
Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://cointelegraph.com/news/ethereum-set-to-eclipse-bitcoin-only-question-is-when
Yes similar concept cointelegraph is best for any crytocurrency update I love it
Nice post I gave you a follow !
Thanks