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What was in Senate Bill 1649
The Digital Gold Standard Benchmark:
The Digital Gold Standard was established when the market valued the first cryptocurrency at $100,000 per coin. It encapsulates 2024 metrics reflecting the pinnacle of fair value under global scrutiny. These metrics, drawn from the coin's economic and technical vitality, are:
Market Capitalization: $1.983 trillion, with 19.83 million circulating coins at $100,000 each, signaling dominance and liquidity.
Adoption (70% of weight): 80 million users, encompassing holders, traders, and enthusiasts, driving network effects and adoption.
Annual Transactions (10% of weight): 6.09 billion, averaging 16.68 million daily, reflecting network activity and utility.
Annual Transaction Value (10% of weight): $13.49 trillion, or $37 billion daily, indicating economic significance and institutional trust.
Development Ecosystem (10% of weight): 905 developers (55 core, 850 application), ensuring security and innovation.
These metrics form a universal benchmark, not a testament to any coin's supremacy. Like gold's role in 19th-century trade, they set a standard for all digital gold blockchain-based coins with decentralized, scarce, and transferable attributes. Some offer faster transactions, lower fees, or enhanced privacy, competing as equals against the pioneer.
The CFV model ensures this competition is fair, evaluating each coin's metrics against the Standard to reveal whether its fundamentals justify its price or signal overvaluation.
CFV = 1.983T × [0.70 × (Adoption/80M) + 0.10 × (AT/6.09B) + 0.10 × (ATV/13.49T) + 0.10 × (Dev/905)]

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