
Bitcoin—the jury is still out
Jerry Chan gave his opinion on the biggest civil court case in recent history - Kleiman v Wright trial before the case winds down and an official court ruling soils his perspective.
Jerry Chan gave his opinion on the biggest civil court case in recent history - Kleiman v Wright trial before the case winds down and an official court ruling soils his perspective.
The token craze has taken off on BSV recently, and it is finally refreshing to see so many ambitious projects take advantage of the unbounded possibilities and scalability of the BSV blockchain.
The world of BSV is finally starting to think ‘big’ and beginning to discuss and debate the economic inevitabilities that your wallet seed phrase isn’t going to work forever.
Jerry Chan takes a look at how the bubble of 'crypto' got so big, and the larger battle being fought on the global mind stage, that of the anarchists vs the rest of society.
Along with all the technical breakthroughs that Bitcoin (BSV) has enabled, the economic innovation of using a self-incentivized proof-of work system to reward infrastructure providers via transaction fees, is actually a brilliant, self-tuning economic “anchor/gauge/regulator.”
We are about to have a potentially explosive early November event coming in Bitcoin, and it involves the oft worshipped anthropomorphized anti-hero of Bitcoin himself, Satoshi Nakamoto, Jerry Chan writes.
One of the key features of Bitcoin SV which allows it to adapt and thrive without the need for administrators is the fact that it doesn’t try to do anything besides the basic task of being a public traceable indelible record keeper.
With CDBCs and useful tokens on BSV out of the way, Jerry Chan addresses the elephant in the room—non-fungible tokens, or more specifically, the economic viability of the speculative NFT market.
When at first the market discovered cryptocurrencies, people took to inventing new blockchains with new tokens to raise money and cash out at the expense of new adopters buying into their projects filled with high promise.
There has been some active discussions about the mining infrastructure and ecosystem of BSV hashrate adjustments and how it pertains to projects that wish to deploy on BSV, and what they should expect.
Jerry Chan explores some more technical aspects behind Bitcoin BSV, and the lessor known under-the-hood components that are more of an interest to students of computer science.
Bitcoin is not an investment product; it is simply a technology. To be fair, it isn’t exactly the same as technology products in the past, where paying for its use was completely separate from the platform itself.