> I don't know about you, but I'd rather use a system that allows me to do what I want with my funds without anyone else controlling it.
How do we know that this unusual transaction is you doing what you want and not someone else controlling and defrauding you?
A small well-understood amount of friction that significantly reduces everyone's risk is not an attempt to control your funds.
Old systems with arbitrary delays based on twentieth century processes should be replaced, but not everything needs immediate infinite speed to be valuable.
> How do we know that this unusual transaction is you doing what you want and not someone else controlling and defrauding you?
That's what they'd like you to believe, but fact of the matter is that you're still not protected. For example, at my last company, the finance department was phished into changing a bank account number and transferred $50k to another account. Bank just shrugged.
Do you want to live in a world where everyone else can do whatever they want with their funds without anyone else controlling it, though? Seems pretty optimistic for anyone to think they'd do well in that world.
I want to live in a world where responsible, law abiding citizens can use their money however they choose.
In the US, we already have credit scores, a system meant to reflect some sort of trustworthiness. Right now, it mostly determines your interest rates and access to capital. But why not extend that trust to granting people more freedom in how they use their funds?
If I want a large loan from my bank, I’m forced to provide endless paperwork and deal with people, despite having a great credit score. In DeFi, I just post collateral and instantly borrow against it. No gatekeepers, no conversations.
These limitations become even more obvious if you’re a nomad or frequent traveler. Suddenly you’re not just facing your local government, you’re up against borders and layers of extra regulation.
If you want to buy a house and you need a loan, it is a deep investigation into your bank finances.
If I have the money for a down payment, and I want to buy a house, I don't need someone poking around at my finances, even if I have nothing to hide.
> Usually people getting loans don’t have the funds in cash already.
Source? People get loans for all sorts of reasons. Loans are backed by some sort of collateral and if that isn't assets, it definitely involves having someone look at your records.
> Defi is nothing like that its currency speculation at best.
Wrong. DeFi itself has nothing to do with speculation. There is $57B locked up in AAVE on ethereum alone. It isn't a toy.
I don't know about you, but I'd rather use a system that allows me to do what I want with my funds without anyone else controlling it.