▲ | idiotsecant 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Not a single one of these examples is trustless, decentralized crypto. Of course people are going to steal your money if you don't own your keys and put faith in protocols that are not permissionless. That's the problem with people who paint 'crypto' with one giant brush. It's like saying 'websites' will steal your money. Statistically it's probably true, but anyone with 2 brain cells to rub together isn't giving money to realbankwebsite.ru/chasebank | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | yunwal 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Ok, so at the very least we can both agree that what stripe is doing here is sketchy, since it’s not permissionless at all. The second question is, once you take away anything that’s not permissionless, what’s left in crypto? - Buying a physical good? You’re trusting the person manufacturing it, storing it, shipping it. If it comes to your door and it’s defective, they’ve already got your money, and it turns out your trustless system actually makes this impossible to resolve. - Buying some skin for a game or something? Unless the game is also run in a decentralized fashion, they can just choose not to render that particular skin. So, like, can you give me an example of a single transaction that is rendered trust-less because of cryptocurrency? It seems to me like whenever anyone actually tries to do anything useful with crypto, it ends up being what you would describe as an obvious scam. | |||||||||||||||||
|