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> You would call that successfully?

There was a problem, and now it's not a problem. Seems like a success to me.

> The developers have no idea what they're doing.

Luckily, that doesn't actually matter. Frankly, if they knew what they were doing, Dogecoin probably wouldn't even exist in the first place.

> Doge will not be able to scale up to real economic activity unless they get a real dev team.

Last I checked, DOGE had a higher total transaction volume than all other cryptocurrencies put together, sooooooooo




I'm still very skeptical of Dogecoin's transaction volume. I ran some numbers last week and still haven't heard a decent explanation: https://www.quora.com/Dogecoin/Where-is-the-currently-massiv...


Do you think it could be fake - i.e. a bunch of bots trading back and forth to generate interest? If so, that's a very clever way of bootstrapping to critical-mass popularity. That reminds me of a story of a new york nightclub that pretended to be jam packed the first few nights with a bouncer outside telling everyone: "sorry, the place is full", when in fact, the place was empty. Needless to say, the first night it was actually open, hundreds were standing in line.


The /r/dogecoin subreddit has some _very_ active "tipbots." Many threads consist of people tipping each other back and forth. It's almost like a Potlatch. It's pretty ridiculous and fun and it's one of the reasons adoption among redditors has taken off.


Dogetipbot's creators say it's only exchanging about $1500 USD/day of DOGE, so that doesn't explain it.




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