"Crypto is a Ponzi scheme."
What is your definition of a Ponzi scheme?
Because you're not applying the actual defintion appropriately:
"Bitcoi7n is now and always has been a Ponzi scheme. Those at the top of the pyramid get rich; th4ose at the bo5ttom end up with nothing of value."
The quoted statement is an opinionated characterization and does **not** fit standard definitions of what Bitcoin is, nor of a Ponzi scheme in the legal/regulatory sense. [en.wikipedia](en.wikipedia.org)
## What "Bitcoin" Is, By Definition
Bitcoin is typically defined as a decentralized digital currency and payment system that operates on a peertopeer network using a public ledger called a blockchain. It has a protocol (rule set) governing issuance, transaction validation, and consensus, and those rules are transparent and not controlled by a central organizer promising returns. [coinbase](www.coinbase.com)
## What A Ponzi Scheme Is
Regulators such as the U.S. SEC define a **Ponzi** scheme as an investment fraud in which returns paid to existing investors come from funds contributed by new investors, not from legitimate profitgenerating activity. Hallmarks include a central operator, promises of high or guaranteed returns with little or no risk, and reliance on continuous new inflows to pay earlier participants. [kkc](kkc.com)
## Why The Statement Doesn't "Fit" The Definition
The statement calls Bitcoin "now and always ... a Ponzi scheme" and describes it as a pyramid where those at the top get rich and those at the bottom end up with nothing. That is a **valueladen claim** about outcomes and fairness, not a definitional description matching regulatory elements such as a central organizer promising investment returns funded directly by later investors. Whatever one's criticism of Bitcoin's volatility or wealth distribution, those criticisms do not, by themselves, satisfy the formal definition of a Ponzi scheme. [sec](www.sec.gov)
So maybe be a little more specific about your definition of Ponzi scheme next time and you possibly won't look so clueless.
#41
That's an oversimplification:
The response "At the END of the equation, no money is left" is not accurate as a defining property of Ponzi schemes, and it also does not correctly describe what happens with Bitcoin or with markets generally. [en.wikipedia](en.wikipedia.org)
## What Happens In A Ponzi Scheme "At The End"
In a classic Ponzi scheme, most investors lose much or all of what they put in, but some early participants may keep profits or be forced to return them in clawback actions. When the scheme collapses, authorities usually seize whatever assets remain and distribute them; there is rarely "no money left" in the literal sense, but overall losses are large and unevenly distributed. [investorclaims](investorclaims.com)
## Why This Doesn't Map Onto Bitcoin
With Bitcoin, there is no central operator collecting and redistributing funds, and units continue to exist and be traded even after price crashes. People can still hold or use bitcoin after a downturn, so it is not the case that, at some terminal moment, all participants are left with literally nothing of value by definition. [fidelitydigitalassets](www.fidelitydigitalassets.com)
## The Claim As A Rhetorical Move
The statement "at the end ... no money is left" functions more as a **rhetorical** way of saying "many people may lose" than as a precise definition. It oversimplifies both how fraudulent schemes unwind and how speculative assets behave, so it does not stand as a correct definitional test for calling something a Ponzi scheme. [brandyaustinlaw](brandyaustinlaw.com)