BlueLlama
10/11/17 TWAIN CRUSH DAY
That’s a lie detector when you get asked about your internet browsingGood start, that is the Tshare chart, not the actual coin. This one is beautiful;
View attachment 133394
That’s a lie detector when you get asked about your internet browsingGood start, that is the Tshare chart, not the actual coin. This one is beautiful;
View attachment 133394
Not having much luck with your memes Tory mate.
I can't find a tulip bulb coin on any exchange........Mate, I don't think anyone here is arguing BTC hasn't performed brilliantly over (most of) the last 10 years. I think the argument/question is whether it will do anything useful over the next ten years, and fundamentally why?
I'm sure everyone in this here forum is aware, but it wasn't that long ago that the most valuable item in the world was tulip bulbs.
some in this thread may be tulip bulbs
how many would you like?You have said it but still haven't shown us any actually doing it.
Hence why I said pseudoanonymous. Nearly every on ramp right now requires some kind of ID verification to buy Bitcoin, there are still some ways around this, but for the most part banks ands governments know exactly which address is linked to which person.See my point above regarding the wallets being anonymous.
You don't know who owns those unless they want want to.
I agree that the majority of cryptos are useless and have no use other than speculative gambling a bit like penny stocks.Good point, and it's easy to conflate (which I do frequently.) I think a genuine question many have (certainly true for myself) is what use does crypto have? I think a "digital cash" is a perfect use, but not with price instabilities. And if crypto prices converge to a unifying and useful valuation, what determines this? But if it's not able to provide credit/liquidity then it's only a speculative asset. And if so, enjoy the ride as much as you can.
Not quite, the base unit of bitcoin is a Satoshi and is one hundreth million of a bitcoinExcept that bitcoin is infinitely divisible?
When the demand of an asset decreases and you have excess supply, the price goes down. If you can't imagine how/why demand for crypto will decrease then you will be blind to see it coming.
I can't find a tulip bulb coin on any exchange........
Not quite, the base unit of bitcoin is a Satoshi and is one hundreth million of a bitcoin
its already solved with the lightening network,Upon reflection there is a minimum divisible unit but I don’t think it would be based on any logical or digital limit. Shares trade in fractions all the time and size is limited by voting rights or transaction costs.
Voting rights have been solved in traditional securities—funds don’t transfer voting rights in the underlying assets. Berkshire has done very well selling a Class B stock with no voting rights at all. Brokers are now selling $5 “slices” of shares. Of course none of this is relevant to crypto which holds no voting rights.
But transaction costs are relevant—probably a huge constraint on the utility of crypto, specifically BTC which apparently already has a cumbersome ledger. You can definitely split shares of crypto but I can only see this increasing the ledger, which ends up becoming an increase in transaction cost. Maybe in the future there will be ledger archives and truncated ledgers and this can be solved.
And if you can solve the ledger/transaction costs then I don’t see why you can’t own 1/2 a satoshi or whatever size unit you desire.
So how do you feel about these first steps towards your independent crypto currency being controlled by the same banking system it was designed to replace?how many would you like?
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BlackRock lets two of its funds buy bitcoin investments
The BlackRock Strategic Income Opportunities and BlackRock Global Allocation funds are authorised to invest in bitcoin futures.citywire.co.uk
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Tesla buys $1.5 billion in bitcoin, plans to accept it as payment
Elon Musk has been promoting cryptocurrencies on his Twitter account in recent weeks, sending prices soaring.www.cnbc.com
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MicroStrategy now owns over 100,000 bitcoins worth more than $3 billion after latest purchase
The enterprise software company said Monday the average purchase price of its 105,085 bitcoin trove is $26,080 apiece, including fees and other expenses.www.cnbc.com
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Fidelity to launch bitcoin ETF as investment giant builds its digital asset business
Fidelity is preparing to launch its own bitcoin fund as the investment giant works to cement its clout in the market for digital assets.www.cnbc.com
https://www.coindesk.com/new-zealand-wealth-management-firm-bitcoinhttps:/![]()
Square buys $170 million worth of bitcoin
The company said it bought approximately 3,318 bitcoins, expanding on its October 2020 purchase of 4,709.www.cnbc.com
lol![]()
Cathie Wood Loads Up On Bitcoin
The ARK ETF leader is a notorious dip buyer and just added shares of the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) and Coinbase (COIN).www.thestreet.com
i use the blue wallet and i can send as much or as little as i want for next to nothing.
it will replace the current system eventually,So how do you feel about these first steps towards your independent crypto currency being controlled by the same banking system it was designed to replace?