not only conjectures, but actual proposals. Prices only matter in the sense that you can act on them. If I tell you that I price object X at price Y, it only matters to you to the extent that I am willing to buy/sell it at this price, aka skin in the game
How to know if anything is a scam: post an offer "Hey I am selling this amazing thing (example: NFT) but it is built in a way where it is both illegal AND technically impossible to transfer it and thus sell it to anyone else." Then see if there is a buyer
Quite a dumb idea but a BSV business could allow users to buy $5 or less in BTC tokenized on BSV by a DAO based on BSV users sharing another chain's cold wallet keys, take a fee on all swaps & sends and voilà you're supporting BSV's price from BTC buyers.
It's in times like these that you're glad that Satoshi walked away from the project, ensuring that Bitcoin would remain neutral and not take sides in global conflicts.
Now that Canada just announced they will be seizing the bank accounts and property of peaceful protesters of the freedom convoy *without a court order*, how can we not be glad that the government doesn't have (yet) the ability to seize blockchain funds.
In the past people did everything they could to avoid doing extra physical efforts. Today, people pay for gym clubs to make extra physical efforts. Today people are doing everything they can to avoid getting a virus, in the future they will be grateful.
The more I think about it the more I realize that automated market makers (AMM) are probably a well designed scam. Information is king and a system that lives as a parasite for information cannot create value. You earn but the total value always goes down.