Dude. You're talking about a "limit" on something determined only by the amount of time it takes the development group to change their minds. You've also got an explosion of 1,000s of competing tokens flying around, and devaluing the entire concept.floam412 wrote:I'm confused by this notion that Bitcoin is inflationary at all ... it's a fixed known amount.
Here, let me guys help you out in trying to find and argument against Bitcoin as a legit currency:
https://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexc ... 4/04/money
It is known that Bitcoin is deflationary because there is a set amount and there is a legit argument among economist on how society can function in terms of wages on a token of account that ends up running out. This is known, and honestly it is a valid point of concern. But I find figuring out a system based on code and math to be far more superior than funding a corrupt system of political gain and interest rates made out of thin air. We already are getting paid Zimbabwean cock rings...
Regardless of those 2 points, the 'inflationary' aspect of bitcoin is pretty obviously not related to the supply of coins. The actual value of them has plummeted by half in a couple of months. Anyone that accepted payment in bitcoin a few months ago just watched half of their money vaporize for absolutely no reason. You can't run a business like that, and nobody will.