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4chan users are handing out dogecoins like candy

It’s Dogecoin Christmas!

Photo of Fernando Alfonso III

Fernando Alfonso III

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As the price of Bitcoin continues to fall from its height of $1,000, another, lesser-known cryptocurrency is having its day in the sun.

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It’s called Dogecoin, and while its value is nowhere near Bitcoin’s, its popularity is spiking this week thanks to 4chan users.

Over the past three days 4chan’s random imageboard, /b, has been engaging in what can best be described as Dogecoin Christmas. In more than three dozen threads, /b/ users have been giving each other dogecoins—sometimes up to 10,000 coins at once. 

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Dogecoin was launched on Dec. 6 as the first open-source, peer-to-peer cryptocurrency based on the “Shibe” or “Doge” meme, a popular photo featuring a dog that shows what he’s thinking in Comic Sans. Doge’s unique use of language has made it 2013’s funnier answer to lolcats. 

There are currently more than 7 billion dogecoins on the market, with a cap of 100 billion that can eventually be mined. The current value is set at $ 0.00025 per dogecoin. In comparison, there are 12 million bitcoins on the market, valued at about $700 per coin.

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So if one Dogecoin is worth less than the lint between your toes, why is /b/ going crazy over it? There’s two answers: It’s all for fun and wishful thinking.

4chan users were early adopters of the Doge meme— /b/ raided reddit with Shiba Inu pictures before Doge really became popular—and they’re fans of cryptocurrency in general. A /b/ user just paid for a Lamborghini entirely in Bitcoin.

But with basically no place to spend them, and the conversion rate being roughly 2.8 million dogecoins to 1 bitcoin, gifting dogecoins is just a way to spread good cheer and lulz. Or, as a few /b/ users have suggested, this is a way to establish the currency and market it. 

And from the looks of it, Dogecoin Christmas couldn’t have come at a better time.

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Third-party Bitcoin payment companies have allegedly been banned from doing business with the People’s Bank of China, according to a report Monday from Business Insider. This news broke around the same time a business owner on Reddit was told by Chase Bank that “any activity involving Bitcoin … is banned from our company.”

Dogecoin has a long way to go before it is taken seriously. It currently sits in 22nd place on a list of all cryptocurrency market capitalizations with $2.1 million. 

If that happens to change, there could be a couple hundred /b/ users dropping dogecoins on Lamborghinis.

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Illustration by Jason Reed

 
The Daily Dot