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01/09/2025, 12:11:38 UTC POST DELETED
Version 1
Scraped on 01/09/2025, 11:46:30 UTC
The “HODL” meme did more for Bitcoin adoption than many technical papers.
The only reason you feel that way is because more people are attracted to BTC's speculative nature due to its volatility, rather than its code or the underlying technology on which it was built. However, it does not make your statement true.
Bitcoin art, music, and even fashion seem to push the narrative further.
Nobody cares about BTC music, whatever that is by the way, or a T-shirt with BTC on it. What pushes adoption is BTC's rise in price and investors confidence in BTC. However, take note that the confidence is derived from the technology, the fact that there is no third party control, it is censorship resistant and there is no single point of failure, it is decentralized and no entity can shut it down, etc, these and more is what gives people confidence to buy BTC, and that usis why countries and companies are buying BTC.
Original archived Re: Does Bitcoin Need More Art Than Code?
Scraped on 01/09/2025, 11:41:17 UTC
The “HODL” meme did more for Bitcoin adoption than many technical papers.
The only reason you feel that way is because more people are attracted to BTC's speculative nature due to its volatility, rather than its code or the underlying technology on which it was built. However, it does not make your statement true.
Bitcoin art, music, and even fashion seem to push the narrative further.
Nobody cares about BTC music, whatever that is by the way, or a T-shirt with BTC on it. What pushes adoption is BTC's rise in price and investors confidence in BTC. However, take note that the confidence is derived from the technology, the fact that there is no third party control, it is censorship resistant and there is no single point of failure, it is decentralized and no entity can shut it down, etc, these and more is what gives people confidence to buy BTC, and that us why countries and companies are buying BTC.