9) Stablecoins are basically the simplest product in CeFi. You take an ERC20 token, and you take dollars in a bank account, and you map them 1:1, with creations and redemptions. There's basically nothing tricky about them (other than holding the bank account!).
How about DeFi?
Conversation
11) All over DeFi you see complicated attempts to solve this. Curve and mStable are entire DEXes built around stablecoin:stablecoin swaps. OTOH you can trade USDC:TUSD 1:1, no fees, infinite size using ftx.com/wallet, or you can do it yourself if you have banking.
1
18
16) Doesn't really sound so stable!
(For a more in depth discussion of the dangers of DAI, see here: medium.com/@ministry_of_a)
2
3
29
19) But it's not super decentralized; it's super prone to centralized failure or API issues. (See e.g. BitMEX and Deribit futures when Bitstamp etc. blew out.)
And if you want to trade BTC on Ethereum, most attemps ultimately have a pack of judges custodying the BTC.
Replying to
20) This even pops up when looking at blockchains. One way to make your chain faster and cheaper is to make it centralized--if it's just you saying what happens you can do so quickly. But of course that starts to cut into the whole point of crypto, and DeFi in particular.
2
14
REN is the exception. RenVM It custodies Bitcoin trustlessly. Not even the nodes themselves know the private keys of the Bitcoin they're custodying (because of SMPC randomly shuffled shamirs secret sharing)
1

