Can you protect a piece of paper with 12 words written to it better than a third party entity yes or no? If yes, you don't need any other (State/Private) protection gimmicks.
If no, go place it in a bank vault and pay the monthly fee to have it secured. At least you are forcing that bank to play by full reserve rules, without they even knowing it.
Banks by themselves are not evil, its the current version of banking, under fractional reserve that is more akin to a ponzi scheme that is.
Bitcoin is a digital money that many people get some income and also a profit that we can use to answer our daily finance. To make secured in your bitcoin because there are to many scammer that wants to get your money.The another way to keep your money is banking system. We also need the old transaction and banking system.
This is a bit of a useless post - he's talking about the interest rates that savings accounts offer, and what benefits there are from holding BTC compared to the benefits of having regular savings account and just keeping money in it.
In the US some non-banks are getting into savings account game. Robin Hood, a mobile app for stock trading, created buzz about a project offering 3% interest. It offered no FDIC protection however and has yet fully launch. Wealthfront and Betterment have been offering ~2% interest rate as leading 'high yield" savings accounts. Credit Karma announced this week that they will be joining the fray offering a ~2% interest savings account with industry-leading $5M in FDIC protection.
These are not banks. Technology is already eating up banks and governments around the world are clearly conscious of the fact they won't be able to maintain faith in their national currencies while increasing money supply to bail out failed banks time and time again. We are now seeing the FDIC extend coverage to non-banks that do not have the intention to ever become a bank. What cannot go on forever won't.
My hypothesis is that a primary hurdle that keeps people from seeing bitcoin as an option for their savings strategy is the learning curve with safe storage combined with a lack of consumer protection offerings for those that are willing to sacrifice their financial liberties for custodial security. This market segment includes early majority and late majority adopters. I understand Bitgo has tackled this problem set to some effect and seems established as an industry leader. Some other interesting teams are looking to nail down custody as a service, so I feel there is some validation here.
In searching for solutions that might convince people that see this as a fatal flaw for Bitcoin, I thought about dao projects that we've seen rolled out with varying levels of success and blazing flames of failure. A dao could be the perfect format for a FDICesque organization that allows holders to pay a small premium for btc protection. Without the shareholder profit prerogative the dao would be able to offer the most competitive combination of high limits for protections and low premium costs.
What are the other solutions you've turned to or are excited about?
Cheers
I am actually getting surprised here that people are taking money out of the bank because of the benefit of 2% where the place I am currently resident, what would come as an incentive is within the range of 10% and 15% as against the 5% to 7% banks are giving on saving deposits but really people should be further encouraged to save money and the incentive should be something to be on the high side. The reason for that for me is due to the fact that in an established economy and advanced economy a whole lot of people have been captured into the banking net while lots of transactions have equally been captured.
The solution, for me, is no solution. Its good that interest rates are low, it further put some entrepreneurship spirit in the minds of people to better utilise their funds rather than keeping or saving thinking its going to make them rich. I would prefer to be in that economy rather than this. Crypto as a solution, I would agree what is lacking is the customer protection because investing in crypto is opening up to risk which no one is ready to subsidize for you and that is a turn off for many people especially the risk averse individuals.
I agree - in the place I live, interest rates are pretty low and it actually barely covers the inflation that happens every year, and due to this, people need to be smart about how they keep their money, whether it would be in real estate, or cryptocurrencies, or actually using it.