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25 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 1 Sep 2022
Is useless anyways.
You don't need a "license" to use Bitcoin.
The definition of the word "license": to give someone permission to do or have something.
But the main question is: WHO is that authority to permit you to use your own money? And WHO gives that authority to somebody over you?
These 2 simple questions that people do not ask...
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25 sats \ 1 reply \ @SimpleStacker 1 Sep 2022
Can someone ELI5 why I should care about stablecoins? Are they just "dollars" that don't follow the same rules of actual dollars and thus can be traded freely on DeFi platforms?
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @DigitalCurrLA OP 2 Sep 2022
There are numerous reasons stablecoins are used. A big use case is for lending, for the purpose of earning interest. Another use case is to hold funds as "dry powder" to have tradable funds ready for trading should an opportunity present itself. Traders who perform arbitrage trading and need to move a USD balance from one exchange to another, so a stablecoin can be used to perform that transfer.
And then there's the DeFi use case you describe. A smart contract can act on a stablecoin token same as it would act on any other token for that chain. And a stablecoin can be issued on various blockchains. For example, Tether is on bitcoin (OMNI), Ethererum, Tron, and about a half dozen other blockchains.
And there are different types of stablecoins. There are ones for different currencies ... e.g., Tether has a EURt stablecoin.
Here's the Wikipedia article on stablecoins:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stablecoin
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