No this is not Bitcoin-like. It's premined and requires trust. Besides, it's just a fork of Ripple, which has already failed after being dumped by its creator.
Bitcoin also requires trust, specifically the trust that miners will not collude to double spend.
There is also nothing fundamental about the idea of issuing coins as a reward for mining. It's just one possibility among many, there's nothing intrinsically "fair" about it.
In Bitcoin, you trust the way the network as defined by the code has been set up, not the miners specifically.
In this situation you have the code to audit but you also have to trust the Stellar Foundation... I have to trust they are telling me the truth about how they are distributing the currency, that they won't sell their shares early, that these 3 people heading the foundation are going to act in my interests, etc.
What if the Stellar Foundation dissolves in a month? What happens to the currency?
No, you don't have to trust the miners because there are no known collusive schemes that would make more money for that volume of miners than playing by the rules would.
Maybe you think that some scheme will be discovered, but that's pretty speculative at this point. It's been many years and not a whiff of one.
>No, you don't have to trust the miners because there are no known collusive schemes that would make more money for that volume of miners than playing by the rules would.
Yes there is, coordinated conditional double spending on gambling websites.
There are also non pecuniary reasons to attack the network, such as vandalism (miners could be pressured into colluding by a government for instance)
http://i.imgur.com/DvyNzY3.jpg
Oh but it has integration with Facebook, so I guess that changes everything! /s