Only 36 out of the top 100 coins by marketcap have working products. Less than 10 of those have what Coinbase is looking for in a project listing. So this is how we deduce what Coinbase will list next.

Coinbase released their criteria for what they look for here --> https://ift.tt/2JFcd9W this and our basic knowledge of which projects have active users, working products, active communities, we can make educated assumptions.I wrote this article one month ago (it included BAT which was recently added to Coinbase) and created my own criteria as to what I think constitutes a working product.Active and available to the publicVersion release history (v1, v1.1, etc)Daily use volumeViable roadmapActive communityIt is important to recognize the distinctions between having a working product and a dApp platform with no use cases or an active user base. By this definition, the dApp platform will not constitute as a working product.According to Invest in Blockchain, “just taking into account the fact that a project is open source and built on top of blockchain does not meet the threshold in affirming a working product. Some cryptocurrencies claim to have a working product just because it is in the public domain yet no one has ever used it.”https://ift.tt/2DhrFc1 these simple guidelines and you won't be holding a bag of worthless vaporware for Coinbase's next listing.

Submitted November 03, 2018 at 09:58PM

No comments:

Post a Comment