I would say that people were pricing a future Internet revolution that probably a lot of the companies involved in were not able to deliver. I would say the difference between the Internet bubble and the actual cryptocurrency market is that the Internet bubble was using a lot of leverage. There's no leverage in Bitcoin. It's pretty much an all-cash market, so you cannot have a cascading effect of market crash and margin calls and people losing everything. That's why people involved in Bitcoin and cryptocurrency are able to sustain 50%, 60%, or 80% loss: it's because they probably paid entirely in cash, their holdings. That's a big difference from traditional markets.
I think we can safely say that the real Internet revolution came after the Internet bubble. Companies like Amazon went through it, and bigger companies like Google emerged afterwards. The multiplication of all coins—coins that are copied based on Bitcoin and launched through initial coin offerings, which pretty much look like scam IPOs—are probably similar to the dot-com bubble. However, we think that the true revolution will come afterwards.