Example:
Suppose I gave my cousin 0.5 BTC as a gift for her birthday. She's not tech savvy, but she's curious about the idea somehow.
1) What happens if BCC becomes the official coin leaving BTC behind, which was what I gave her in the first place?
2) Why the fuck should she go through the incovenience of splitting her coins, downloading shady wallets, and trying to figure out how to make use of the new version of the original coin?
3) How do I explain her which coin is the official?
4) Why did her coin changed the name?
5) How do I explain her that if, for some reason, the hashpower of the network flips, then my original gift is completely worthless now?
6) Why the fuck would she even think about buying Bitcoin by herself in the future if there is a chance that her investment will end up arbitrarily wiped out?
7) One of the major objectives of BCC is massive adoption, right?
8) How anything of this (the fork) doesn't add up as a complete SCAM to profit from the Bitcoin name?
Please explain.
>>2882709
sounds like cousin shouldn't try to play with crypto currency since it's beyond her IQ level; maybe buy her a couple fidget spinners off alibaba and tell to sell it on ebay.
>>2882709
fuck BCC its the next shitcoin made up by greedy chinks, thx to jihan that little piece of shit
>>2883194
trust chinks get robbed pretty simple and applicable in 99% of scenarios
>>2883194
technically is the same as bitcoin with variable blocksize so that miners don't go away. I do prefer segwit because removes unnecessary data from transactions, even though is more complicated, and we can always increase block sizes in any way later, but it's hard to tell what will happen. If bitcoin it's still heavy after segwit (in case of spam or something) bcc will gaint traction
BCC IS IRRELEVANT
Fucking summerfags lurk more.
>>2882709
Explain to her that all you gave her was the equivalent of a stock. The value of that stock will either go up or down. The end.
BCC is dead on arrival