Greek Financial Crisis Is an Opportunity For Bitcoin
An anonymous reader writes: Greece's economy has been in trouble for several years, now, and a major vote next weekend will shake it up even further. The country can't pay its debts, and the upcoming referendum will decide whether they face increased austerity measures or start the process of exiting the Euro. One side effect of the crisis is that alternative currencies like Bitcoin suddenly look much more attractive as the "normal" currencies become unstable. "Tony Gallippi, the co-founder of bitcoin payment processor Bitpay, tweeted on Sunday night that he expected the price of bitcoin to rise to between $610 and $1,250 if Greece exits the Euro. The currency is currently worth $250. Part of the reason why the crisis is so tempting for proponents of the cryptocurrency is the echoes of a previous crisis in the Eurozone: the banking collapse in Cyprus in 2013, which saw that nation also impose capital controls to prevent massive outflows of currency from the panicking country. That collapse came at the same time as the first major boom in the price of bitcoin, which began the year at less than $20 and peaked at ten times that by early April – before it all came crashing down."
Follow my links for free bitcoins and dogecoins!
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
No, you see, you are looking at it wrong. Bitcoin *is* stable, it's the other currencies that fluctuate wildly (yet almost perfectly synchronised with each other for some reason which probably has to do with them being fiat currencies).
You should trust trustworthy algorithms, not just all algorithms. Bitcoin in particular is a pyramid scheme algorithm.
Yes- but you can trust it to be a pyramid scheme algorithm.