re: The Cryptocurrency & NFT Thread Dogecoin, a Cryptocurrency joke that turned real
A really interesting read on how majority people in the Crypto currency space are behaving, conflating the technology with the product itself. A few excerpts that make a lot of sense
This is the story of Dogecoin a Crypto currency made for fun but turned too serious.
This is how it started Quote:
At the peak of the meme's popularity near the tail end of 2013, Palmer, an Australian marketer for one of the world's largest tech companies, made a joke combining two of the internet's most talked-about topics: cryptocurrency and Doge. It was a joke taking aim at the bizarre world of crypto and bitcoin's multiple derivatives.
"Investing in Dogecoin," Palmer tweeted, "pretty sure it's the next big thing."
The tweet got a lot of attention.
For laughs, Palmer decided to keep the joke going. He bought the Dogecoin.com domain and uploaded a photoshopped Shibe on a coin.
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Markus was an IBM engineer obsessed with gaming and he created a Crypto currency 'Bell' for fun. And importantly he created a Crypto currency just over a weekend. Quote:
He decided to take a weekend and do something weird. He tried to create his own cryptocurrency for "sillies," as he put it.
Bells wasn't meant to be serious, it was a digital currency based on a video game about animals who live in a village and go fishing together.
The cryptocurrency community didn't really get the joke.
"People were just trashing it," laughs Markus, who quickly discovered there was very little crossover between crypto-obsessives and gamers.
"I was like alright, I retire," says Markus. "I don't need to do this anymore."
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And then Markus saw Palmers funny tweet about Dogecoin and decided to join the fun. Quote:
"Dogecoin," says Markus, "from 'that seems like it's funny' to actually doing it, took about three hours. It's almost trivial to create a new cryptocurrency."
It was a find-and-replace job.
Ctrl+F 'Bitcoin,' replace with 'Dogecoin.'
Markus freely admits to finding large chunks of bitcoin's source code completely incomprehensible, but knew enough to change a few core elements for Dogecoin. For example, Markus created 100 billion dogecoins (as opposed to bitcoin's 21 million) and made them easier to mine. (Dogecoin is already close to being mined out, while bitcoin's final coin will be mined in 2140.)
He changed the font (to comic sans of course) and changed every mention of the word 'mine' to 'dig' (because dogs don't mine, they dig...).
And then, during his lunch break, Markus set Dogecoin live.
But Markus and Palmer didn't premine any Dogecoin. Because they weren't serious about launching a cryptocurrency.
"We thought it was this big joke that would die off," laughs Palmer.
And according to Markus, Palmer wasn't even sure how to mine a cryptocurrency.
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And then the frenzy starts Quote:
Reddit was almost certainly the main driver in Dogecoin's rapid rise to crypto stardom. The Dogecoin subreddit exploded almost immediately, and with that explosion came the infrastructure any cryptocurrency needs if it is to become successful: mining pools, services.
"It was moving at light speed," explains Markus. "Within minutes we were like, 'Wow, this is way out of our control."
But it was the Reddit "tipping bot" that drove Dogecoin into the stratosphere.
If a user posted something to the effect of, "hey 'dogebot' tip this person five dogecoin," that Reddit user would automatically receive five Dogecoin.
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Both Palmer and Markus still used the popularity of Dogecoin for charity purposes and donated all their coins for different charities in Kenya etc. But that spirit was losing ground Quote:
"We wanted to create something that was a force for good," explains Palmer.
But as the community grew, the initial spirit in which Dogecoin was launched was difficult to preserve. People started to care about the price of Dogecoin. They were literally and figuratively invested in it.
And that terrified Markus.
"I don't mind if someone spends ten bucks and gets some Dogecoin," says Markus. "It's like buying a movie ticket or something, that's fun.
"But when someone puts $20,000 in? That makes me really, really uncomfortable."
Markus began clashing with members of the community. For him, Dogecoin was still crypto "for sillies," but here it was ballooning into a currency people were trading for real money. In his view Dogecoin was a silly thing that should remain silly. Many in the community disagreed.
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At one point Dogecoin's market cap reached $2 Billion and right now it is around $770 Mln. $770 Million market cap for a Crypto currency created in 3 hours by some one for fun . The most important bit is the quote by Markus "It's almost trivial to create a new cryptocurrency."
Last edited by vamsi.kona : 22nd February 2018 at 12:03.
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