We’ve had crypto for over a decade, yet most usage is still limited to trading, holding, and speculation.
But if the original idea was direct value exchange, why isn’t peer-to-peer commerce more common?
In theory, crypto should enable:
– direct buyer ↔ seller transactions
– no intermediaries or platform fees
– global access without restrictions
In practice, it’s still rare to see real marketplaces where people actually trade goods and services using crypto.
Main issues seem to be:
– trust between unknown users
– lack of verification mechanisms
– too many platforms acting as middlemen instead of removing them
– user experience barriers for non-crypto users
What’s interesting is that some newer approaches are trying to go back to basics:
connecting users directly and letting them handle transactions wallet-to-wallet, without platform involvement.
Still early, but it raises a bigger question:
👉 Is the future of crypto in trading assets… or in enabling real-world peer-to-peer markets?
Why crypto still hasn’t solved real-world peer-to-peer trading
byu/RealP2PMarket inCryptoTechnology
Posted by RealP2PMarket