Imagine if governments decided to relaunch major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana by pushing prices beyond current levels. What would actually happen? The answer lies in a fundamental reality: these assets operate on fully open-source protocols with zero intellectual property restrictions, no copyrights, and no patents controlling them. This means anyone—including governments—can technically fork or replicate these networks, but it wouldn't grant them exclusive ownership or market dominance. The beauty of decentralized, open-source blockchain systems is that their value isn't determined by who created or controls them, but by network adoption, security, and utility. A government-backed version wouldn't automatically outperform the original because the cryptographic foundation and community consensus remain distributed and permissionless. It's a fascinating thought experiment about how open-source infrastructure fundamentally differs from traditional assets.

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