I very much agree with the notion that Bitcoin will improve fiat first, then replace it entirely. It follows the Store of Value -> Medium of Exchange -> Unit of Account pipeline. Improving fiat by acting as a rails is the Medium of Exchange part. That will bolster the Store of Value use case for Bitcoin and lay the foundation of the Unit of Account stage (replacing fiat completely).
What I'm unsure about is how to correctly implement a stablecoin. Should it be via stable channels? A separate asset? An onchain asset? Perhaps the point is that there really isn't a good way to implement stablecoins. Maybe a combination of this fact and the fiat becoming more and more useless due to the actions of governments and central banks will naturally lead people to the Unit of Account stage.
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Call me crazy, but I'm starting to think that this could become an attack vector on the Lightning network, as it will attract regulators and also compete with bitcoin.
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Lightning network compliments bitcoin and who cares if regulators come into the space. Plebs and businesses outside the USA will just ignore all the regulations.
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I agree with this article that stablecoins are important. This morning I posted a Bitcoin Audible article #77558 that discusses this issue from a slightly different angle. In essence, it sees main chain high value transactions as being as important as the lightning network at this stage of adoption. A real use example may already be in use as Russia seeks to avoid sanctions in selling oil and natural gas.
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Fiat is dying and so will stable coins. Not important imo. Should focus on tokenizing land claims, and company shares instead.
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Tokenizing real world assets on a blockchain does not make sense and it's most likely a shitcoin scam.
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On the lightning network using taro or rgb. Holy shit did you really think cbdc was what I was talking about?
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