Besides this pokemon type augmented reality project, is there any other value to GeoCoin? What real value will it have in the real world relative to other coins and technologies? Or is it just for fun and gaming.
Of course, just like any other coin out there, GeoCoin should focus on being instant, secure, and anonymous. The only difference with it and BitCoin then should be that it is a different way of obtaining new GeoCoins, a different way to market the coin, and it promotes a certain type of world activity if commonly accepted as a form of payment in the U.S. or even around the world.
BitCoin, indirectly, promotes and supports the computer server industry, as to obtain new BitCoins, you need computer processing power, which a lot of professional miners purchase from outside server sources. Now, GeoCoin, as it is interactive, promotes health and fun activities of finding treasure. It also promotes people, to a little extent in the least, to be able to find ways of making money by staying healthy. So it directly will offset, to some extent, the medical industry around the world where less people are getting sick and more people are healthy because they go outside. Likewise, if a person is homeless, they can at least go around collecting coins and maybe make $5 an hour doing that. Hopefully buy a suit, get back on their feet, not use drugs, and be insentivized to find a career in the future. Because $5 an hour is not a whole lot, but it is still better than nothing, and it helps people in a social way to "work" by staying healthy in order to collect that amount from the community. It is good for them, because they do not need to go to the hospital at much. And it is good for us, because if less people are going to the hospitals, then insurance premiums are down too, so we do not have to pay as much. It keeps society more active and social and with these activities, it can actually help to spur the economy because people are spending less on medical bills and staying active to doing something with their lives and hopefully using it as a catalyst to find a career in the future and get a job. That is why, my whole argument was, that we need to do frequent coin splits when this coin starts taking off. One, to protect the original investors' investments. And two, so that people cannot just go around and pick up $1,000, then turn around and sell it out and ding the investors by reducing the market capital. In order to achieve that, a coin split must occur as fast as the market capital grows. Even a 1.5 for 1 split is advised, as this will keep the GeoCoin reward for new coins at a relatively low value, but one which is still incentivized, of approximately $5 an hour. So that it does not incentivize people from finding a job and just being a full-time GeoCoin catcher.... because if everyone stops working, then the economy is down the hole. The economy is not money, but more so, the goods and services available to the public. That is why everyone must work and looking for GeoCoins should not be incentivized too much.
Granted, these $5 an hour can grow to $500 an hour once more and more investors begin to invest into the coins. Also, instead of trying to find them, for example, if you can make $30 an hour at your job, it would be more efficient to purchase the coins than to look for them, in which case, you are raising the market capital. Both early GeoCoin catchers and purchasers should see the reward of raised market capital. But I am attempting to spread this advice to the developers.... do not over incentivize people to catch the coins, but more so, incentivize people to purchase them. That is why frequent coin splits are necessary in order to not dilute the market capital of the original investors, or they will stop investing, and just looking for coins, which will in turn dilute everything even more and this coin will never go above $20 million market capital. The economy needs to work organically and logically. I could definitely help with this project if the development team would like to reach out to me about this. I understand both the economy and accounting. That is what I do for a living, after all, and I am an investor.