HACKER Q&A
📣 chinathrow

How did you stop your friends talking about Bitcoin?


I never had any Bitcoin and will never buy any - yet a friend of mine can't stop talking about it.

How did you get over this?


  👤 ac2u Accepted Answer ✓
Pretend to be impressed and nod along for a second. "Oh wow, really?"

They're not looking for people to agree with them, they're looking for people to be skeptical so they can engage in debate mode and prove that they're "in the know".

It's the same as when a stranger starts going off on anti-vax rant, quickest way to wind down the point and change the subject is to be all "wow, it's a crazy world out there".


👤 swah
Lend me the guy. I'd love to be around people excited about anything, esp since COVID

👤 reify
Just like all gamblers

Generally gamblers only talk with excitement about the near misses and if only's. The horse that lost a by a nose that could have netted them £10,000 would be regurgitated for weeks. yet never a mention of the low return wins that may occassionally crop up. Gambling is really only about the excitement of losing and near misses.

Though it is quite the opposite for bitcoin gamblers:

A lot more fantasy afoot. They tend to only talk of the wins. I bought £100 of bitcoin last year and its now worth £300, week in, week out. No mention of the times bitcoin crashed and they suddenly only had a mere £40 in their bitcoin wallet.

As soon as Bitcoin crashes again, which it will, after the avarice drove them to invested when the price was tooo high, ooops, the constant blabbering on about all the money they are going to make will stop. Until of course bitcoin rises again.

I usually only here this from Mr hard working, working class man who is struggling anyway because of his proorly paid job.

People with money do not talk about bitcoin as much, in fact people with money do not talk about money at all..

Oh the never ending waves of fantasy deep behind those staring, unblinking eyes.

I just tuck in my earloops as I do for all boring conversations,


👤 ipnon
My hack for ending discussion of a particularly controversial subject is to agree with everything the interlocutor claims:

“The sky is green.” Quite so. “It always has been green.” Undoubtedly. “Those who say otherwise need an eye exam.” I couldn’t agree more!

The success rate is near 100% because controversy feeds on antagonism. If everyone is on the same team, but one has nothing new to add but agreement, the conversation must shortly draw to a close.


👤 fnfjfk
"I'm not that into Pokémon" works for pretty much anything.

👤 rhelz
I recommend pairing them with somebody who will badger them incessantly by telling them their bitcoin can buy enough auditing sessions so that they will be clear.

👤 SamPatt
Be an adult and say "hey man, I know you're excited about Bitcoin but I'm tired of hearing about it. Please stop bringing it up."

Then it's up to them to either respect that or not, and you to remain friends or not.


👤 RecycledEle
I refused to take 1,000 bitcoins for a lunch.

I think that guy is very rich now. I'm not.


👤 d--b
Ask him to give you money.

👤 notahacker
Sarcastic enthusiasm works well.

Got an entire fake crypto "trading" scam WhatsApp group just by expressing my extreme enthusiasm for receiving trading tips from people that had randomly added my mobile to their list.


👤 przeor
I would stop my friend to talk about Bitcoin, and replace it with Ethereum discussions xD

👤 roland35
Try asking him if he has heard of the goatse coin. Or maybe tubgirl coin. After googling that he'll probably not bring it up again!

👤 Finnucane
Have smarter friends.

👤 proc0
Avoid human contact.

👤 quickthrower2
Buy ear plugs and wait 6 months

👤 danlugo92
By showing them Monero.

👤 b20000
you might reconsider

the CBDC is coming


👤 fddrdplktrew
you should buy some... or Moneros would be even better

I started buying in 2017... a bit late

>> I receive a fair amount of email from strangers. My email address is public, which doesn’t seem to be a popular choice these days, but I’ve received enough inspiring correspondence over the years to leave it be.

When I receive a GPG encrypted email from a stranger, though, I immediately get the feeling that I don’t want to read it. Sometimes I actually contemplate creating a filter for them so that they bypass my inbox entirely, but for now I sigh, unlock my key, start reading, and – with a faint glimmer of hope – am typically disappointed.