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Ha, thanks, that's perfect. I am so guilty of that same behavior.
I'm going to fwd this to a friend who needs to see it ;)
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I think this is really interesting as another example of how things get financialized in weird ways -- just as a house is no longer a place to live, but rather a store of value, airlines have become a weird financial vehicle. Car dealerships are a little this way, too.
The implications are pretty nutty.
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Another money quote:
Like the federal reserve, airlines issue currency—points—out of thin air. They also get to decide how much that currency is worth and what it can be spent on. This helps explain why the points system feels so opaque and, often, unfair. Online analysts try to offer estimates of points’ cash value, but airlines can reduce these values after the fact and change how points can be redeemed. Airlines even sell points at above their exchange-rate valuation, meaning that people are paying for something worth less than the money they’re buying it with, in part because it’s so hard to know what the real value is.
Much fiat.
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Starbucks is the biggest bank in the world. With their gift card balances
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You might say that frequent flier miles are essentially shitcoins.
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I think that's literally the case, except FF miles are somewhat more valuable because they give you a claim on actual stuff. So shitcoins++
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