I want to sincerely thank you for keeping all eyes on DGB. Regardless of what you say, the price still goes up, and DGB attracts new users everyday. Thank you for trolling.
You think my posts in here don't damage DGB, but you're wrong. Majority of people reading here are just altcoin gamblers and don't care that what I say is true. They're in it for the quick buck— they're ATTRACTED to these unethical reward changing schemes.
The guys over at findevr, on the other hand, they will actually investigate the coin's blockchain history and its source code..... To find out I'm completely correct!
I'm going to propose 3 scenarios, in order of likelihood, with 1 being most likely, and 3 least likely:
1. Multi-algo fails or becomes irrelevant. Digibyte, Myriad, and all the multi-algo family go to nothing.
2. Multi-algo becomes the next big thing in altcoins, and after a couple of years Myriad (or a better multi-algo coin yet to be born) secures its place high up in the market cap rankings.
3. IBM and all these other big companies ignore Digibyte's huge red flags, multi-algo turns out to be a flawless concept, and IBM et al. pump it to the moon.
you are so wrong... It's not about the code, it's not about what algo or multialgo is used... It's about the technology behind it and the marketing of that technology. I spend two days on the Cebit, the major exhibition for technology in Europe and guess how many exhibitors had something with blockchain related technology? next to none...
IBM had a fuzzy demonstration about usage of blockchain technology and when I asked the guy how they implemented consensus he was beating around the bush by stating that it was to others to use their platform...
10 thousands of square meter tech and no bitcoin related atms no pos systems no blockchain related companies nada.
The ones that float to the top are the ones that have
usage, thats where its all about, exposure, education and marketing. Ecxept for a few, they all really don't know how things work under the hood and don't care either.