It's not about
believing, it's about
doing. If the Qora community as a whole can fix the flaws in its code, then it can succeed. If not, then not.
A point in favour of Qora is that it should be an attractive option for "dead coin collectors" because it at least has some unique selling points. If a dead coin collector with some programming skills is found, then the future should be bright (at least, compared to now

).
This looks like an interesting idea:
Would'nt it be possible with smart contracts for example to set one or several bounties that would be only paid if someone gets the job done ?
And as far as I can evaluate the AT mechanism (without being a coder myself) that should be possible to do. The problem would only be to prove "that the bug is fixed". So there must be a possibility to vote for the "bounty donators", and that would require some trust in them because they could collude to "never pay the bounty to nobody".
How severe are those problems within the code and are the right devs available to sort that out?