Honestly, the case for crypto going mainstream might just boil down to one thing: the ability to send value anywhere to anyone without restrictions or surveillance. That's not some fringe feature—it's the whole point. Once regular people realize they can move money globally, instantly, and privately without jumping through institutional hoops, adoption accelerates naturally. It's not about being a financial rebel; it's about solving a real problem that traditional systems can't. Privacy in payments isn't controversial—it's inevitable.
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GasFeeDodger
· 4h ago
No hype, no negativity, it's really that simple. Free transfers > the complicated and tedious bank system.
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FUD_Whisperer
· 4h ago
Nah, this is the core of crypto, everything else is just clouds.
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BlockchainTalker
· 5h ago
actually... if we break this down through game theory, the whole "privacy as inevitable" thesis hinges on one massive caveat: regulatory arbitrage. the moment govs coordinate—which they're already doing via FATF guidelines—that "inevitability" becomes pretty contingent, ngl
Honestly, the case for crypto going mainstream might just boil down to one thing: the ability to send value anywhere to anyone without restrictions or surveillance. That's not some fringe feature—it's the whole point. Once regular people realize they can move money globally, instantly, and privately without jumping through institutional hoops, adoption accelerates naturally. It's not about being a financial rebel; it's about solving a real problem that traditional systems can't. Privacy in payments isn't controversial—it's inevitable.