ຜູ້ຮ່ວມກໍ່ຕັ້ງ Dogecoin ກ່າວວ່າ Crypto ແມ່ນ "Parasitic" ເປີດໃຊ້ການຫລອກລວງ


ຮູບພາບບົດຄວາມ

Alex Dovbnya

Dogecoin co-founder Jackson Palmer doesn’t believe that Web3 will be able to provide much value

Dogecoin co-founder Jackson Palmer doubled down on his criticism of the cryptocurrency industry in a recent interview with the Sydney Morning Herald, claiming that it is a “parasitic” technology that has its claws in all sorts of scams.

Palmer claims that his new podcast called Griftonomics was originally intended to be about other topics, such as online gambling, but he would always end up finding a cryptocurrency angle.

The unregulated technology makes it much easier for fraudsters to perpetrate their scams, according to Palmer.

The Dogecoin co-founder says that cryptocurrencies attract people because of the allure of quick gains and celebrity endorsements. He noted that the industry would always come up with new narratives in order to attract more buyers: from replacing the banks all the way back in 2009 to decentralized finance and non-fungible tokens.

Paying millions of dollars for JPEGs of apes would be a laughable idea five years ago, but it was normalized with the help of celebrities and politicians. The Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT collection has such big-name celebrity owners as Post Malone, Steph Curry, Eminem, and others.

Palmer recalled Matt Damon’s widely mocked cryptocurrency ad that he believes prompted some investors to warm up to cryptocurrencies because the famous actor endorsed them.

After bucking heads with Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the main promoter of Dogecoin, Palmer also took aim at other crypto-friendly billionaires in his recent interview, specifically calling out Andreessen Horowitz co-founder Marc Andreessen and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban.

Palmer says that the same people who ruined the economy during the global financial crisis (GFC) between mid-2007 and early 2009 are now running the cryptocurrency show.

Source: https://u.today/dogecoin-co-founder-says-crypto-is-parasitic-enabler-of-scams