Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) could become irrelevant if any of the ideas put forth by MIT students become a reality. First though, let’s go back to 2008 when the US went through the worst recession in history; it was even considered to be greater than the “great depression”. The cause of it ultimately came down to the banks issuing money/mortgages to individuals that they didn’t have and the housing market burst as a result.

A year later, the still unknown Satoshi Nakamoto served the world an entirely new solution to the problem and Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) was born. Nakamoto’s original whitepaper outlined a peer-to-peer elecTron (available on Binance)ic payment system. It removed the need for a financial institution to be the intermediary between two people when sending money to one another. Now almost a decade later, there are  24 million active Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) wallets currently in use around the globe.

Back in 2011, a single Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) was worth around a dollar, but today, BTC is valued at just over $9,300. The coin reached its record-high of just over $20,000 in mid-December 2017 and grew 1,245% in 2017 alone.

Despite its popularity, a tech writer at the world-renowned MIT – Morgan Peck, just proposed a scenario (or three) where Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) could become irrelevant. Let’s take a closer look.

Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) could become irrelevant: Government Takedown

The first scenario entails the government creating their own form of digital currency – dubbed “Fedcoins”. This is basically the same system we currently have, except everything is elecTron (available on Binance)ic. You would set up a “wallet” with the Federal Reserve or an affiliate bank, and you’d be able to buy the digital currency with US dollars at a one-to-one ratio. The nodes, or computers running the blockchain, would be updated by institutions approved by the federal reserve. An undergraduate at Yale, Sahil Gupta, explained that “these authorized nodes could be things like Bank of America, JP Morgan—basically, trusted institutions.”

Gupta went on to explain how he believes the Fedcoins will be used:

“I’d imagine people first get comfortable spending Fedcoin on things like groceries and movie tickets. As people realize it’s easier than cash, as businesses realize it’s cheaper than credit cards, and as banks realize it’s literally more secure, so goes the process by which dollars are phased out of the money supply, and Fedcoin phased in.”

This isn’t a new concept; The Bank of CanADA built a simulation for such a currency back in 2016. Sweden has also taken massive steps towards becoming a completely cashless country.

Facebook

Currently, the social media giant Facebook has over 2 billion active users. The second scenario describes a large platform persuading a large group of its members to branch-off and run its own proprietary version of the Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) software. This can be done by way of a ‘hard fork’ at a certain block on the original blockchain. The new group would then start building upon the new blockchain with its own specifications and could build their own corporate coin. This happened last year with the creation of Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) Cash.

Peck describes another scenario that seems more plausible than trying to get a large group of individuals on Facebook to hard fork.

First, Facebook would create its own third-party Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) wallet and integrate it into its product suite.

Peck explains:

“For those who already use Bitcoin (available on Coinbase), the experience is so vastly superior to what they’ve previously experienced that they immediately migrate their funds to their Facebook wallet. Those who don’t yet own any Bitcoin (available on Coinbase)s, or have never heard of them, could be given the option of earning some on the site, either by watching advertisements or by writing Facebook posts for others to see. For those tired of watching ads, you mix in another fun feature. In exchange for a clean, ad-free experience, users can choose to let Facebook mine Bitcoin (available on Coinbase)s with their computer’s unused processing power.”

Once Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) has entered into the mainstream and is used daily by millions of individuals on Facebook’s product suite, the company could quietly fork and adopt a new version meaning hte original Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) could become irrelevant. Most of these users would have no clue, and now Facebook could control every aspect of its own blockchain.

Multiplication

The last scenario in which Bitcoin (available on Coinbase) could become irrelevant, is one that is already unfolding. Peck describes it as the “tokenization of everything” and it involves the world transforming into a hyper-efficient barter system. Every company would release their own cryptocurrency and an automated system would allow individuals to trade each asset seamlessly.