Right, but it can also be frozen due to the whims of the bank, garnished by the IRS, taken by wire fraud...
Obviously cryptocurrencies are sharp tools, but they're stronger financial primitives than what we have. We just need to use them to rebuild the consumer-facing components.
By which you mean, take everything provided by current currencies and monetary regulation and financial institutions assuming risk... then put a pretty fascia of your kinda UX on it, called crypto currencies.
> but it can also be frozen due to the whims of the bank, garnished by the IRS, taken by wire fraud...
If given the choice between the whims of banks vs the whims of cryptocurrency speculators, and the potential for wire-fraud vs the potential for wholesale 'hackfraud', I think I'll take the whims of the banks please.
Obviously it's early. No reason there we can't have. Stable store of value as cryptocurrencies mature.
Regarding bank whims, if you're a properly banked person who's never had an issue, great. If you've never had trouble with the IRS or anyone else who can take your money by force- great. But that's not everyone.
You don't think the IRS can't seize your coins? They just have to demand your wallet or put you in jail. The fact that they can't drain your account isn't some magical cloak that keeps them locking you up. Or you could try and lie about the value of your wallet and perjure yourself.
Banks are not allowed to freeze your account arbitrarily. And don't pretend that the IRS won't figure out how to seize bitcoin. And, if you do get wire frauded (which crypto dorks all seem to be irrationally concerned about for some reason) you have insurance and recourse to quickly get it corrected (unlike buttcoin). So don't spread FUD.