• WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      28 days ago

      I would actually pay like $100 to say I own the EFT some moron paid millions of dollars for. I’ve bought dumber things. I paid real money for a 100 trillion dollar zimbabwe bill that is completely worthless. Great for cocaine! I’ve also paid hundreds of dollars for 1 night of cocaine, dozens of times, and have nothing to show for any of them.

  • ozoned@piefed.social
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    28 days ago

    What? You mean digital art that infinitely reproducible, can’t actually be owned, WASN’T the next big thing? Oh jeez. I hope the metaverse succeeds and if not then AI surely will RIGHT?!?!

      • BioDriver@lemmy.world
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        27 days ago

        High Fi audio is actually legit to a point. Over $300 (well, $400 now with tariffs) is when the scam begins

        • REDACTED@infosec.pub
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          27 days ago

          Not necessarily. For headphones it can go higher. I’m currently looking at hifiman unveiled.

          • CaptSneeze@lemmy.world
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            27 days ago

            This sequence of comments has me cracking up.

            “I need a thing to make suckers out of morons”

            “You should sell them audiophile shit”

            “Well… some audiophile shit is ok… up to point… after that, you’re def a sucker!”

            “Actually… you’re not a sucker at all if you spend a bunch of money on this shit. Here, take my money!”

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    27 days ago

    Etherium was run out of the offices of JP Morgan Chase and NFTs were a gimmick to boost the deal flow of their then-underperforming crypto offering.

    It was, by and large, an enormous investment in sales and marketing on top of a ton of insanely shady business practices. Case in point, the infamous Beeple NFT that sold for $69.3M was purchased with Etherium to showcase Christie’s auction house accepting cryptocurrency for auction bids. The winning bidder for artwork was an early crypto adopter and marketer named Vignesh Sundaresan who was flush with these tokens, but lacked any kind of liquid market to sell them into yet. That’s before you get into the Congo Line of largely clueless celebrities going on Late Night comedy shows to plug their online pogs.

    It’s trite to say that the whole thing was a scam because… duh. But I think people read this as “just dumb people being stupid with their stupid dumb money” and ignore the layer upon layer of market manipulation and con-artistry that went into making cryptocurrencies what they are today.

    The fact that Donald Trump is using them to launder bribes from Middle Eastern dictators and East Asian kleptocrats should illustrate how deep these rabbit holes can go. It’s so much more than just peddling bad clipart to dumb bros.

  • expatriado@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    but for a brief period of time, some people made some money, while most participants lost

    edit: do AI next

  • fierysparrow89@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    As with everything crypto this was a huge scam. Besides the obvious profiting from gullable idiots, the other use case is to illegally funnel money.

    • shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
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      28 days ago

      Not absolutely everything in crypto is a scam, though 99% of it is, and I will definitely agree with you there. But there is 1% that is actually trying to do something useful, and you’ve got to be able to find that 1% and not throw it out with the bath water.

      • traxex@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        28 days ago

        I’d wager even the 1% is the stereotypical “solution in search of a problem”. Seems to be a reoccurring theme as of late in the tech industry.

        • Abyssian@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          Having a currency not backed by a government or different currency is actually something the world could benefit from. Iranian currency was backed by USD, the US caused a shortage of USD there, and their currency value dropped to under 3% of it’s former value. 90 Million people.

          That said, I think most of us have only ever used crypto to buy drugs off the internet.

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            27 days ago

            Yeah, but a currency practically needs a military and an economy to back it.

            Who is going to stop me from fucking with the bitcoin supply if I own the US economy?

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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                27 days ago

                You misunderstand, if I own the GDP of a world power, what’s preventing me from buying a ton of Bitcoin and fucking with the supply that way?

                Crypto nowadays looks like a pump and dump free for all.

                • Matty Roses@lemmy.today
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                  27 days ago

                  How is buying the asset fucking with the supply?

                  If you mean hoarding it, that’s pretty much all Bitcoin is good for.