User Panel
Originally Posted By SBR_Slut: Which exchange(s) would you guys recommend for Snow Mexicans? View Quote I just found this discussion of Canadian exchanges on /biz/: https://boards.4channel.org/biz/thread/24240491 @SBR_Slut |
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No one is coming. It's up to us.
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Originally Posted By woodsie: Binance is a Chinese company based in Malta. Getting out of there and getting into Coinbase is a good call as they are a U.S. based company. I'm a strong believer in having a throat that I can physically go choke in the event of shenanigans. I'm sure plenty of former Mt. Gox users would agree. View Quote They just flee to China. I lost a little on the Florida based Cryptsy fraud |
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Black Friday deal:
Ledger 40% off their hardware wallets with code "BLACKFRIDAY20" Remember, if you don't hold your coins, they're not your coins. |
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“Let everyone sweep in front of his own door, and the whole world will be clean.”
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
I really enjoyed that video. I have always been a huge fan of Max and Stacy. I heard about bitcoin for the first time on their show back in 2011.
Can't say I disagreed with a lot of what Sean Lennon said either. |
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Originally Posted By Notcalifornialegal: Its like saying Ford will sell 10 billion F150s. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Notcalifornialegal: Originally Posted By jaqufrost: There are some real limits as you start approaching the combined wealth of the world. Thinking bitcoin will continue massive exponential growth beyond that is stupid. Its like saying Ford will sell 10 billion F150s. I think the bigger point is that no good analogy quite exists. Ford is constrained by the total market for light trucks and their ability to produce them. That's the theoretical limit for F150s with a pretty fair degree of certainty. Everybody is guessing at what the theoretical limit of what Bitcoin market cap should be constrained to. There are so many new and novel concepts in Bitcoin that its difficult to pin down. Even the calculated current market cap is probably exaggerated. There are certainly tens of thousands if not hundreds of bitcoins that are lost forever and unrecoverable and more will be lost overtime whereas that 21,000,000 cap is a hard limit. It's not possible to count all of the lost bitcoins but if you could, they shouldn't be included in the market cap because they are not marketable. |
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I really wish I knew where Bitcoin was going. I have done well and would like to cash out but will be sick if it goes to $50-100K.
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WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin?
How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. |
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Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. View Quote It's an allocation on a ledger that can be used to buy/sell goods or other currencies. Rather than being quantity controlled by the government, it follows a release algorithm and maxes out at 21 million bitcoins on the ledger. To convert to USD I tell my exchange to sell my btc for USD, then transfer the USD to my regular bank account. Currently a bitcoin is divisible to 8 decimal places, so extremely small amounts of bitcoin can be bought sold. |
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A scarce resource won’t stand the test of time and BTC is no different.
A currency subjected to volatile swings in value because of supply and demand isn’t a currency at all. Economies aren’t sustainable with volatile currencies. When any resource becomes scarce, the value increases commensurate with the scarcity. Pretty soon the price exceeds what’s attainable for the average Joe and economies look elsewhere to fill the needed balance in the market. |
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Originally Posted By jaqufrost: It's an allocation on a ledger that can be used to buy/sell goods or other currencies. Rather than being quantity controlled by the government, it follows a release algorithm and maxes out at 21 million bitcoins on the ledger. To convert to USD I tell my exchange to sell my btc for USD, then transfer the USD to my regular bank account. Currently a bitcoin is divisible to 8 decimal places, so extremely small amounts of bitcoin can be bought sold. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By jaqufrost: Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. It's an allocation on a ledger that can be used to buy/sell goods or other currencies. Rather than being quantity controlled by the government, it follows a release algorithm and maxes out at 21 million bitcoins on the ledger. To convert to USD I tell my exchange to sell my btc for USD, then transfer the USD to my regular bank account. Currently a bitcoin is divisible to 8 decimal places, so extremely small amounts of bitcoin can be bought sold. Great answer. And for completeness: 21 million BTC will not be achieved until the year 2140 The miner "reward" halves every so many years; currently the block reward is 6.25 BTC, which is "mined" approximately every 10 minutes. This is approx US$113,293 at current market price 1 / 100,000,000 of a bitcoin is called a Satoshi. References https://www.bitcoinblockhalf.com/ https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Help:FAQ |
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==COLLECTIVISM IS SLAVERY==
Everyman, I will go with thee and be thy guide, In thy most need to go by thy side. |
Originally Posted By Jacon: A scarce resource won't stand the test of time and BTC is no different. A currency subjected to volatile swings in value because of supply and demand isn't a currency at all. Economies aren't sustainable with volatile currencies. When any resource becomes scarce, the value increases commensurate with the scarcity. Pretty soon the price exceeds what's attainable for the average Joe and economies look elsewhere to fill the needed balance in the market. View Quote I think some of the price swings will stabilize out a bit more with increased value of the bitcoin. |
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New all time high this morning.
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Pick up that can.
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Originally Posted By FlyNavy75: I really wish I knew where Bitcoin was going. I have done well and would like to cash out but will be sick if it goes to $50-100K. View Quote Bitcoin's long term trend is fairly well represented by a logarithmic regression. This guy probably does some of the most level headed analysis on the TREND. I emphasize the term TREND because not all trends continue but if this one does, he does a good job of breaking down where it is headed: Bitcoin: Logarithmic regression price analysis He has other videos which further update on this concept as time passes but the one I posted one that walks it through in pretty plain language. For what it's worth, I screenshot a similar analysis way back in 2013 and I'll be damned if it hasn't turned out to be fairly accurate even 7 years later despite working with much less data than is available today: Attached File The one thing you have to really appreciate in all of this is that the range that Bitcoin can swing and still follow this trend is absolutely massive. Bitcoin can still go below $10,000 in the next few months without breaking the long term trend just as easily as it could go to $100,000 in the next few months. You have to be to be willing to sit on your hands for potentially years AND be willing to watch your money ride a roller coaster for the duration. The last thing I'll add is that I think the fact that logarithmic regression represents Bitcoin pricing so well is because Bitcoin pricing itself is a result of very reliable human behavior more so than any other factor. The fact that the current trend has been sustained despite 3 prior bubbles and bursts is really saying something. Bitcoin is often compared to tulips, but the speculative market for tulips didn't even survive it's first bubble. |
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Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. View Quote Just watch a YouTube video. It's honestly the best way at this point. As far as turning it into money, you just sell it on an exchange. Not really much different than selling shares of stock on E-Trade. |
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Originally Posted By Jacon: A scarce resource won’t stand the test of time and BTC is no different. A currency subjected to volatile swings in value because of supply and demand isn’t a currency at all. Economies aren’t sustainable with volatile currencies. When any resource becomes scarce, the value increases commensurate with the scarcity. Pretty soon the price exceeds what’s attainable for the average Joe and economies look elsewhere to fill the needed balance in the market. View Quote @Jacon And therein lies the genius of the design of Bitcoin. Bitcoin is divisible down to 0.00000001 also known as "1 Satoshi". The cost of a single Satoshi isn't even worth a penny right now or even 1/10th of a penny. Bitcoin would have to be worth $1,000,000 per each before a Satoshi was worth 1 cent so your particular argument won't be relevant for a very long time if ever. |
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Originally Posted By dog-meat: New all time high this morning. View Quote Damn, you are right. If it manages to get back there and stick for any period of time, that's my personal signal for the start of Bubble 4.0®. Earlier than I expected, but not impossibly earlier. I guess we will see if it sticks or not. |
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he, him,
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Originally Posted By dog-meat: New all time high this morning. View Quote Only on some exchanges. Yahoo's data shows 20,089 as the ATH (12/17/2017), which we still haven't reached. Although admittedly the peak so far today was only about 1% below that. Date Open High Low Close Volume 2017-12-15 16601.300781 18154.099609 16601.300781 17706.900391 14309999616 2017-12-16 17760.300781 19716.699219 17515.300781 19497.400391 12740599808 2017-12-17 19475.800781 20089.000000 18974.099609 19140.800781 13314599936 2017-12-18 19106.400391 19371.000000 18355.900391 19114.199219 14839499776 2017-12-19 19118.300781 19177.800781 17275.400391 17776.699219 16894499840 Still, right now there are only very small portions of two days when anyone might have paid more for BTC than it's worth right now, and that ain't bad. |
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Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. View Quote Bitcoin is like buying colonial scrip living in England in 1689. Either you choose to remain in England and speculate on the future of these crazy colonies. Or you choose to move to the colonies. The biggest mistake people make is equating Bitcoin to a currency. It is not a currency, or store of value, or any of that nonsense. Its a stake in an alternative political/economic systems. Bitcoin works because there are people that believe in that system. Whether its around in 6 months, 5 years, 100 years who knows. The ability of this system to compete right now, is because it is independent and self organizing, and very hard to suppress or censor. It can only function in the modern digital world. If you have faith in the current systems, or their future, then I wouldn't really worry about Bitcoin, anymore that people living in England in 1689 worried to much about those nutjobs who sent their families on diseased ships to a remote location, because they couldn't hack it in the British Empire with all the opportunities it offered. |
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Originally Posted By woodsie: @Jacon And therein lies the genius of the design of Bitcoin. Bitcoin is divisible down to 0.00000001 also known as "1 Satoshi". The cost of a single Satoshi isn't even worth a penny right now or even 1/10th of a penny. Bitcoin would have to be worth $1,000,000 per each before a Satoshi was worth 1 cent so your particular argument won't be relevant for a very long time if ever. View Quote @woodsie This makes sense; thanks for the education. What you're describing is the exact inverse of how modern currencies are devised, therefore making BTC a deflationary hedge against the USD, for example. [start with a finite amount and divide down at a controlled rate to create deflation against the USD, if needed] |
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Originally Posted By Jacon: @woodsie This makes sense; thanks for the education. What you're describing is the exact inverse of how modern currencies are devised, therefore making BTC a deflationary hedge against the USD, for example. [start with a finite amount and divide down at a controlled rate to create deflation against the USD, if needed] View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Jacon: Originally Posted By woodsie: @Jacon And therein lies the genius of the design of Bitcoin. Bitcoin is divisible down to 0.00000001 also known as "1 Satoshi". The cost of a single Satoshi isn't even worth a penny right now or even 1/10th of a penny. Bitcoin would have to be worth $1,000,000 per each before a Satoshi was worth 1 cent so your particular argument won't be relevant for a very long time if ever. @woodsie This makes sense; thanks for the education. What you're describing is the exact inverse of how modern currencies are devised, therefore making BTC a deflationary hedge against the USD, for example. [start with a finite amount and divide down at a controlled rate to create deflation against the USD, if needed] Bingo, that is exactly it. This is one of the reasons why I believe that logarithmic regression analysis is appropriate for Bitcoin and why I think that it has better chances than not of that trend holding true for a long time. Never a sure thing but boy if it isn't one of the best speculative bets out there. |
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Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. View Quote If you're truly curious it's worth buying. The Bitcoin Standard |
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-- Thomas Paine, "filthy little atheist" |
Here's an infographic on the system. It may be hard to read when hosted, search on the net for the original full size.
Attached File Random others in my file: Attached File Attached File Attached File Attached File Attached File |
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“Let everyone sweep in front of his own door, and the whole world will be clean.”
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
20k
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Pick up that can.
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20.6k
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Pick up that can.
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New all time high. It will be interesting to see the next major run.
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Originally Posted By GuyfromMN: WHAT EXACTLY, is a bitcoin? How do you turn it into money if you need to? No one I've asked had been able to explain it to me. Thanks. View Quote You will find this helpful |
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VCDL, GOA, SAF, NRA Life Member
"We are born free and we will stay free. America will never be a socialist country!" President Donald J. Trump |
21.4k
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Originally Posted By jaqufrost: New all time high. It will be interesting to see the next major run. View Quote Bitcoin in terms of market cap has already crushed old highs earlier in the year even though unit price was below highest value due to higher coin circulation vs 2017. We were waiting on unit price ATHs that broke today. 2020 was good for BTC in any event. |
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Next stop 100k.
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Pick up that can.
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"...Capitalism...shares its blessings unequally; ...Socialism...shares its miseries equally."
Winston Churchill |
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22k
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3-4k again plllllleeeeeaassee!!
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Still pushing new highs, about to break 22k.
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Originally Posted By FlyNavy75: I really wish I knew where Bitcoin was going. I have done well and would like to cash out but will be sick if it goes to $50-100K. View Quote Guggenheim today suggested they think 400k is achievable and I expect that put pressure on other traditional firms which explains why it just went cray today and passed $22k |
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==COLLECTIVISM IS SLAVERY==
Everyman, I will go with thee and be thy guide, In thy most need to go by thy side. |
Originally Posted By Mr_Psmith: Guggenheim today suggested they think 400k is achievable and I expect that put pressure on other traditional firms which explains why it just went cray today and passed $22k View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Mr_Psmith: Originally Posted By FlyNavy75: I really wish I knew where Bitcoin was going. I have done well and would like to cash out but will be sick if it goes to $50-100K. Guggenheim today suggested they think 400k is achievable and I expect that put pressure on other traditional firms which explains why it just went cray today and passed $22k 400k puts BTC at the market cap of gold, which is exactly where it's heading. It's no coincidence they called out that price target. |
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$22,450!
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I would caution you to at least consider talking to your neighbor before forcibly sodomizing him.
-AJ1018 |
Hodl on to your asses boys, I’ll see ya on the moon!
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Wish i would have bought chainlink and held it.
$0.20 up to$14 would have been a nice return. |
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“I prefer peace. But if trouble must come, let it come in my time, so that my children can live in peace”
— Thomas Paine Socialism is popular amongst people who have never lived it. — bagofcrabs65 |
23.3k
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Originally Posted By Jacon: A scarce resource won’t stand the test of time and BTC is no different. A currency subjected to volatile swings in value because of supply and demand isn’t a currency at all. Economies aren’t sustainable with volatile currencies. When any resource becomes scarce, the value increases commensurate with the scarcity. Pretty soon the price exceeds what’s attainable for the average Joe and economies look elsewhere to fill the needed balance in the market. View Quote This is a perfect example of someone who doesn't understand what money actually is, or how to define it. Don't feel bad; it's not uncommon. A non-scarce money (fiat) is the worst possible type of currency, and the one guaranteed to not stand the test of time. The beauty of blockchain coins is that they are infinitely fractional. Therefore the price of the whole coin is non-prohibitive to the person who wants to use them as currency. Satoshi Nakamoto is a genius. |
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Originally Posted By Default-Gateway: 23.3k View Quote Also, I looked this morning and Lambos are actually very reasonably priced. I had it in my head that they would be a lot more expensive. I wonder if they deliver to the moon? https://www.caranddriver.com/lamborghini |
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No one is coming. It's up to us.
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I bought Ethereum and Litecoin and have doubled that value in 60 days. Just saying...
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Easy money
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You should move to a small clown town, where the rule of law still exists. You will not survive here. You are not a clown, and this is the land of clowns now.
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