Author

Topic: Central Bank Coins Are the New Altcoins (Read 416 times)

tyz
legendary
Activity: 3360
Merit: 1533
December 23, 2016, 11:08:01 AM
#5
The real competitors of crypto were coming, the crypto nations will be threatening for the crypto. I may think if this wasn't being good news for the crypto user.

Honestly, even the downfalls of the central bank didn't mean something. Hyper ledger a part of them.

What do you understand by crypto nation? Do you mean the upcoming crypto currencies of existing nations or "nations" that will formed virtually in the future and which identify themselves with their own crypto currency? I personally like the latter idea, although I think that this is very unlikely.
hero member
Activity: 2898
Merit: 529
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
December 15, 2016, 09:00:40 PM
#4
The real competitors of crypto were coming, the crypto nations will be threatening for the crypto. I may think if this wasn't being good news for the crypto user.

Honestly, even the downfalls of the central bank didn't mean something. Hyper ledger a part of them.
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 500
December 15, 2016, 05:05:27 PM
#3
very good is centran bank is execute and create digital curency same altcoin
but must can trading and added with pair bitcoin
i hink is very big news if bitcoin can trading bank product
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
http://www.leocoinapp.com/
December 15, 2016, 04:21:51 PM
#2
Consider this: the efforts of central banks to create centralized digital currencies are no different to altcoins. The only difference is who is producing the coin and what funding the development team has. Some might even argue that altcoins have greater credibility, as they in most cases have public and not private blockchains. In an age where there is greater demand for transparency, why not acknowledge the potential downfalls of central bank coins?

More


Thanks man👍🏼
tyz
legendary
Activity: 3360
Merit: 1533
December 15, 2016, 02:40:13 PM
#1
Consider this: the efforts of central banks to create centralized digital currencies are no different to altcoins. The only difference is who is producing the coin and what funding the development team has. Some might even argue that altcoins have greater credibility, as they in most cases have public and not private blockchains. In an age where there is greater demand for transparency, why not acknowledge the potential downfalls of central bank coins?

More
Jump to: