Bitcoin Forum

Economy => Speculation => Topic started by: RandomPedestrianN9 on May 30, 2014, 04:41:29 PM



Title: Pump and dump.
Post by: RandomPedestrianN9 on May 30, 2014, 04:41:29 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Gingermod on May 30, 2014, 04:47:38 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.

Noted, thanks

;)


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Wandererfromthenorth on May 30, 2014, 04:54:12 PM
You don't even believe the shit that you are saying yourself  ;D
Spare us the embarrassment.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: JimboToronto on May 30, 2014, 05:00:28 PM
pump and dump... pyramid scheme... drug cartels.

You forgot Ponzi, money laundering and terrorism.

Pretty lame FUD bro.

 ::)


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: spazzdla on May 30, 2014, 05:01:16 PM
And he is a Jr member some how.. hum.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ibian on May 30, 2014, 05:07:36 PM
Boo! BOO! /rottentomato


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Wandererfromthenorth on May 30, 2014, 05:14:10 PM
Boo! BOO! /rottentomato
http://www.babylon-idiomas.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/tomatina-valencia.jpg


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: piramida on May 30, 2014, 05:23:33 PM
In fact it's called dump and pump in bitcoin world. Dump the price down so the losers sell, then buy cheap coins and pump the price back to new heights.

But until you figure it out, sure, whatever :)


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Elwar on May 31, 2014, 12:32:49 AM
Shake and bake!


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: YipYip on May 31, 2014, 12:34:56 AM
Fool then School :D


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Alley on May 31, 2014, 01:30:24 AM
http://37.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_maz3tt1rBT1rpga6zo1_500.jpg


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Buffer Overflow on May 31, 2014, 06:28:47 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.
I detect a little underlying butthurt.  :D


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: RandomPedestrianN9 on May 31, 2014, 07:33:58 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.
I detect a little underlying butthurt.  :D

Why should i be butthurt? Im investing elsewhere, im not the one losing 90% of his investment in minutes. (bubble, cough, cough)


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Gingermod on May 31, 2014, 07:35:19 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.
I detect a little underlying butthurt.  :D

Why should i be butthurt? Im investing elsewhere, im not the one losing 90% of his investment in minutes. (bubble, cough, cough)

I probably have more money than you sitting in this one commodity.

Go shill elsewhere.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: socal on May 31, 2014, 07:35:34 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.
I detect a little underlying butthurt.  :D

Why should i be butthurt? Im investing elsewhere, im not the one losing 90% of his investment in minutes. (bubble, cough, cough)


Then why are you here?


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: romneymoney on May 31, 2014, 07:48:02 PM
 :P
still waiting for the dump part
OP will probably think he's right for a few when there is a Bull trap.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Benjig on May 31, 2014, 07:52:29 PM
Very nice volume. Tryhard fanboys pump the price twice, the price and volume continue to decrease afterwards, volume was again back to extremely low levels yesterday. Get the bigger picture, pump and dump, BTC is done.  This is not how you attract masses, if you want to attract masses to sponsor your pyramid scheme, you gonna need to solve a problem for the masses, not for drug cartels.

This things usually are said by people who dont have even a satoshi... its like the people who said "money is not important" is because they dont have a buck at that time  :D

Pd: i have forgot about the "piramid scheme " fud commonly used in early 2013 lol what a fools


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: socal on May 31, 2014, 08:03:34 PM
I will admit SOMETIMES the fervor of BTC supporters DOES remind me of the Dutch Tulip Craze in the 1600's (I think) anyway Tulips (Yes the flower) for some reason or another became so prized and sought after that people blindly spent everything they had on them until one day everyone looked around and said WTF!!! these are fucking FLOWERS! Why was I gonna sell my house, land, and everything else for some again? and just like that they were worthless ***BUT*** BTC has an actual real world USE instead of being a stupid ass flower I'm just saying that it probably isn't the best move to take out loans and sell everything you own to buy BTC but deff get what you can with what you can spare


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: saddambitcoin on May 31, 2014, 10:40:14 PM
Sorry, bitcoin does solve a problem for the masses! You use bitcoin to easily and securely send money to anyone in the world for very low cost!

Let's examine the competition:

Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees
Personal check / money orders - mailing time + 3-4 days to clear + small fees (also your mail can be lost by carrier)
Cash - instant + no fee BUT you have to be in the same physical location. or take the risk of losing all by sending cash in mail
Paypal - instant, but expensive fees to receive money (i think like 2-3%). also paypal can freeze your money for whatever reason they want
Western Union / Moneygram - same day transfer + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: BitPhotos on June 01, 2014, 01:05:32 AM

best thing ive seen all day lol  :D


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: harlenadler on June 01, 2014, 01:10:07 AM
Not the most effective troll I've ever seen, but he's got a point with the low volume/momentum. Seems this whole up trend is petering out a bit. I wonder if we might head down for a bit.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 01:42:44 AM
Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents

Oh yeah?

And how am I going to get Bitcoins sent to me from the UK, turned into Tanzanian Schillings that I can actually spend in Dar Es Salaam u fkn dick? I wonder what the 'LocalBitcoin' premiums on cash deals are like out there?

Ya never thought aboot that ane did ye?

Not the most effective troll I've ever seen, but he's got a point with the low volume/momentum. Seems this whole up trend is petering out a bit. I wonder if we might head down for a bit.

Yep. It is petering out for sure. The whales have stretched this sucker out as far as it can go for now I reckon. But I will probably be wrong and we will wake up with $720 Bitcoin tomorrow. What I am noticing though is some very fishy trading patterns. Like someone somewhere is rolling Bitcoins back and forward between accounts to try and manipulate the 'indicators' or something. It's all fucking bullshit, and its bad for you. But hey, if you can buy some piece of digital code for $500 one day and reliably sell it for $600 the next, who can complain?


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Xer0 on June 01, 2014, 09:41:18 AM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin
if the amount sent has to be received in FIAT, there can be losses even bigger then all your competitors called. most exchanges dont deposit before 6 confirmations, which is long time for an always movin market. and there are the exchanger fees and price difference between sender/receiver market


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ibian on June 01, 2014, 09:44:56 AM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin
if the amount sent has to be received in FIAT, there can be losses even bigger then all your competitors called. most exchanges dont deposit before 6 confirmations, which is long time for an always movin market. and there are the exchanger fees and price difference between sender/receiver market

SEPA is not free in any bank I know of in this particular country, and it often takes 2-3 days. Price is about 4-50 bucks depending on bank and method.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Wolf Rainer on June 01, 2014, 09:50:44 AM
Pump and dump? I only see healty grow, this is not speculation it΄s real rise and i will keep on rising.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: calmindifference on June 01, 2014, 09:57:05 AM
Sorry, bitcoin does solve a problem for the masses! You use bitcoin to easily and securely send money to anyone in the world for very low cost!

Let's examine the competition:

Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees
Personal check / money orders - mailing time + 3-4 days to clear + small fees (also your mail can be lost by carrier)
Cash - instant + no fee BUT you have to be in the same physical location. or take the risk of losing all by sending cash in mail
Paypal - instant, but expensive fees to receive money (i think like 2-3%). also paypal can freeze your money for whatever reason they want
Western Union / Moneygram - same day transfer + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents

Yesterdays estimated BTC transaction volume was 80,000, but 4000 new BTC got mined. That's 5% + tx fees.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: DustyRah on June 01, 2014, 12:58:46 PM
Sorry, bitcoin does solve a problem for the masses! You use bitcoin to easily and securely send money to anyone in the world for very low cost!

Let's examine the competition:

Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees
Personal check / money orders - mailing time + 3-4 days to clear + small fees (also your mail can be lost by carrier)
Cash - instant + no fee BUT you have to be in the same physical location. or take the risk of losing all by sending cash in mail
Paypal - instant, but expensive fees to receive money (i think like 2-3%). also paypal can freeze your money for whatever reason they want
Western Union / Moneygram - same day transfer + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents

True that, its the most easy way to send money at this time. I just wish supermarkets and grocery stores start to accept BTC. Anyone know of any supermarket or grocery store accepting BTC at this time?

Hopefully if Amazon starts accepting it, some supermarkets may follow.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: DustyRah on June 01, 2014, 01:04:06 PM

Yep. It is petering out for sure. The whales have stretched this sucker out as far as it can go for now I reckon. But I will probably be wrong and we will wake up with $720 Bitcoin tomorrow. What I am noticing though is some very fishy trading patterns. Like someone somewhere is rolling Bitcoins back and forward between accounts to try and manipulate the 'indicators' or something. It's all fucking bullshit, and its bad for you. But hey, if you can buy some piece of digital code for $500 one day and reliably sell it for $600 the next, who can complain?

There is nothing fishy mate. The volume you see is based on  positive BUY indicators. When the indicators turn SELL, you will see the opposite. Don't be paranoid, there isn't any guy sitting around buying up a whole lot of BTC at his own losses just to sell it lower than he bought it for.

Note that BTC did not go anywhere for a full month because it was neither a SELL nor a BUY as per the indicators at that time. Also, we don't have as much sucky news as we used to have thanks to the Chinese squirrels selling out and taking their nuts out of the game.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 01:25:14 PM
The volume you see is based on  positive BUY indicators. When the indicators turn SELL, you will see the opposite. Don't be paranoid, there isn't any guy sitting around buying up a whole lot of BTC at his own losses just to sell it lower than he bought it for.

He doesn't have to sell BTC back at a net loss. He uses his buying power to engineer those very positive BUY indicators that you mention. For example. Place a 2K Bitcoin wall right at a major resistance point. If there are a few panic sells at the Ask Wall, buffer the Bid wall up enough to absorb the selling pressure from all the little fishies looking to lock in profits. That way, the less twitchy little fishies will see that Bitcoin isn't going to fall and will hold. When market settles, Whales then move buffer pressure in Bid wall increasingly further up towards spot, so as to form an ascending triangle against the resistance price. AT some point, the whale might take away his 2K Ask wall and see if the little fishies start panic buying way up past the resistance point. Or he might simply buy up his own wall, resulting in a huge volume spike which will then ensure that the little fishies start panic buying, thus driving the prices up. The whales doesn't take a net loss. The whale uses his buying power to engineer the market into bidding the price up which in turn increases his net value. As I have said, I suppose the desired end game might be another stampede of fresh capital piling into Bitcoin. Then the whales can really cash in before they let the market fall, by selling their coin into the stampede of new capital and ceasing to support Bitcoin with their buying power.

Exchange fees from the continual swishing of BTC and fiat between accounts?

I am sure the very biggest players are on very good terms with the exchanges, and we now know that Karpeles had fee free accounts on MtGox through which 'Willy' and 'Markus' would ramp the price. But this is the market. It may be hooky but the fact is that their are certain forces at work just now intent on ramping Bitcoin up. Only they will know when the saturation point has come or when it is no longer prudent to ramp.

It is a highly engineered market. PHACT!



Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: maok on June 01, 2014, 01:43:16 PM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin


I sent a SEPA payment on friday night, fees were included, the receiver has to wait till monday afternoon or tuesday to receive it. Using bitcoin that would've be done in minutes depending on first confirmation, and if i have no time schedule I could send the btc transfer with no fees which will last couple of hours for the receiver to get it, with no costs. One word: evolution


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ibian on June 01, 2014, 01:50:32 PM
The volume you see is based on  positive BUY indicators. When the indicators turn SELL, you will see the opposite. Don't be paranoid, there isn't any guy sitting around buying up a whole lot of BTC at his own losses just to sell it lower than he bought it for.

He doesn't have to sell BTC back at a net loss. He uses his buying power to engineer those very positive BUY indicators that you mention. For example. Place a 2K Bitcoin wall right at a major resistance point. If there are a few panic sells at the Ask Wall, buffer the Bid wall up enough to absorb the selling pressure from all the little fishies looking to lock in profits. That way, the less twitchy little fishies will see that Bitcoin isn't going to fall and will hold. When market settles, Whales then move buffer pressure in Bid wall increasingly further up towards spot, so as to form an ascending triangle against the resistance price. AT some point, the whale might take away his 2K Ask wall and see if the little fishies start panic buying way up past the resistance point. Or he might simply buy up his own wall, resulting in a huge volume spike which will then ensure that the little fishies start panic buying, thus driving the prices up. The whales doesn't take a net loss. The whale uses his buying power to engineer the market into bidding the price up which in turn increases his net value. As I have said, I suppose the desired end game might be another stampede of fresh capital piling into Bitcoin. Then the whales can really cash in before they let the market fall, by selling their coin into the stampede of new capital and ceasing to support Bitcoin with their buying power.

Exchange fees from the continual swishing of BTC and fiat between accounts?

I am sure the very biggest players are on very good terms with the exchanges, and we now know that Karpeles had fee free accounts on MtGox through which 'Willy' and 'Markus' would ramp the price. But this is the market. It may be hooky but the fact is that their are certain forces at work just now intent on ramping Bitcoin up. Only they will know when the saturation point has come or when it is no longer prudent to ramp.

It is a highly engineered market. PHACT!


Even supposing you are right about all that. Why not work with it instead of endlessly complain about it?


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Xer0 on June 01, 2014, 01:58:16 PM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin
if the amount sent has to be received in FIAT, there can be losses even bigger then all your competitors called. most exchanges dont deposit before 6 confirmations, which is long time for an always movin market. and there are the exchanger fees and price difference between sender/receiver market
SEPA is not free in any bank I know of in this particular country, and it often takes 2-3 days. Price is about 4-50 bucks depending on bank and method.
what country are you in? SEPA was designed to be fast and free for all participating countries (EU+CH)


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 02:04:24 PM
Even supposing you are right about all that. Why not work with it instead of endlessly complain about it?

These are my observations. I have been 'working with it', but have limited myself to around 50% of the potential total upside that has been offer so far, due to anticipating 'the correction', which never seems to come, no matter how frail and weak the buying pressure seems to get.

True, had I just held, then I would have had around 90% of the upside (my initial buy-in was at $460), but then again, if I was a holder, then I would still be underwater to this day, if I hadn't already cracked and done a 'Veronica', which I probably would have.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ibian on June 01, 2014, 02:08:42 PM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin
if the amount sent has to be received in FIAT, there can be losses even bigger then all your competitors called. most exchanges dont deposit before 6 confirmations, which is long time for an always movin market. and there are the exchanger fees and price difference between sender/receiver market
SEPA is not free in any bank I know of in this particular country, and it often takes 2-3 days. Price is about 4-50 bucks depending on bank and method.
what country are you in? SEPA was designed to be fast and free for all participating countries (EU+CH)

Denmark. They have been introducing ridiculous fees lately, dunno what it used to be. Also regular savings accounts get 0% interest. Zero. Not 0.025% like we used to, nothing.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: maok on June 01, 2014, 02:14:35 PM
what country are you in? SEPA was designed to be fast and free for all participating countries (EU+CH)


SEPA was designed to lower transfer fees between european countries to those of domestic national transfers which are not free, even same bank to bank transfer has a fee in place so I really don't know which bank you're using with free transfers. Also 4 days is not fast(friday, sat, sunday, monday) unless you live before 18th century when money was moved using horse carriages, in those times 4 days is pretty fast I agree.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: gentlemand on June 01, 2014, 02:16:40 PM
what country are you in? SEPA was designed to be fast and free for all participating countries (EU+CH)


SEPA was designed to lower transfer fees between european countries to those of domestic national transfers which are not free, even same bank to bank transfer has a fee in place so I really don't know which bank you're using with free transfers. Also 4 days is not fast(friday, sat, sunday, monday) unless you live before 18th century when money was moved using horse carriages, in those times 4 days is pretty fast I agree.

In the UK you can bank transfer yourself stupid and it costs absolutely nothing. It arrives within the minute usually too. I'm not sure if my bank does SEPA but any transfer abroad is still pretty expensive.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 02:27:22 PM
SEPA was designed to lower transfer fees between european countries to those of domestic national transfers which are not free, even same bank to bank transfer has a fee in place so I really don't know which bank you're using with free transfers. Also 4 days is not fast(friday, sat, sunday, monday) unless you live before 18th century when money was moved using horse carriages, in those times 4 days is pretty fast I agree.

Right.

I have a UK bank account and a German bank account.

To send via SEPA using my German bank account, it is same day, and costs nothing.

To send via SEPA using my UK bank account, it costs me around 4% premium on the total I sent if I want it there next banking day. This is fucking expensive true enough, which is why I get money onto Bitstamp (or I used to do it b4 Bitstamp started requesting anal probes), by sending funds to my German account via Transferwise (0.5%) fees or less if I am prepared to wait, and then transfer the funds from my German account to Bitstamp for free using SEPA. I don't use Transferwise or any of the other cheaper money transfer options to fund Bitstamp account directly, because they are prohibited from allowing transfers to Bitcoin exchanges.

I cannot think of any possible circumstances where it would be too my advantage to send Bitcoin other than Fiat currency to anyone abroad. For any currency in any developed or economically powerful nation, Transferwise or similar services can be used to send funds from as little as 0.25% fees. For sending funds to some 3rd world nation, what fkn good is Bitcoin going to be to anyone in Tanzania anyway? Even if there was a means of exchanging the Bitcoin, for Fiat that can actually be spent, the premiums would be fucking horrendous.



Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ibian on June 01, 2014, 02:30:39 PM
Bank transfer (ACH/wire/SEPA/etc) - 3-4 business days + big fees

Bitcoin - instantly received, spendable within 30 minutes to 1 hr. transaction fee of roughly 5 cents
nah, cant sign that, bro

first: SEPA is free and takes 1 bank day

snd: BTC's low fee is only valid when you think in Bitcoin
if the amount sent has to be received in FIAT, there can be losses even bigger then all your competitors called. most exchanges dont deposit before 6 confirmations, which is long time for an always movin market. and there are the exchanger fees and price difference between sender/receiver market
SEPA is not free in any bank I know of in this particular country, and it often takes 2-3 days. Price is about 4-50 bucks depending on bank and method.
what country are you in? SEPA was designed to be fast and free for all participating countries (EU+CH)

Denmark. They have been introducing ridiculous fees lately, dunno what it used to be. Also regular savings accounts get 0% interest. Zero. Not 0.025% like we used to, nothing.
ah, ok. because you dont have EURO as state currency

SEPA is free for EU countries and tranfers in EURO, would be correct
That could be it I suppose. If so, a worthwhile tradeoff. Our Great Leaders tried to switch us to euro 3 times. We voted no every time until they stopped trying, and sentiment polls have remained negative.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: maok on June 01, 2014, 02:46:40 PM

I have a UK bank account and a German bank account.

To send via SEPA using my German bank account, it is same day, and costs nothing.


Sepa is based on your domestic fee for your particular bank, SEPA is not free across European Union

really same day ? must be nice for you, I wish I was with a bank that works during weekends.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 03:02:01 PM

I have a UK bank account and a German bank account.

To send via SEPA using my German bank account, it is same day, and costs nothing.


Sepa is based on your domestic fee for your particular bank, SEPA is not free across European Union

really same day ? must be nice for you, I wish I was with a bank that works during weekends.

I get the feeling that I, and the others who have responded to your relentless tin drum banging about Bitcoin's supposed advantages in sending funds across the world, are speaking to a brick wall.

I don't know where you are in the world. But say you wanted to send me Funds of say $10K in value. Explain to me one single advantage of using Bitcoin instead of the various other cash transfer methods and I will tell you why you are wrong. Please don't bleat on about 10-60 minute transfer times and tiny fees, because remember, I in the UK still need to turn that Bitcoin into physical or digital cash that I can spend. So tell me, what are the advantages of using Bitcoin, presuming that I don't care if the transaction is traceable or not?


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: elliwilli on June 01, 2014, 03:10:19 PM
You tried to spread FUD and Failed at spreading FUD
Try harder next time OP


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: maok on June 01, 2014, 04:06:13 PM

I have a UK bank account and a German bank account.

To send via SEPA using my German bank account, it is same day, and costs nothing.


Sepa is based on your domestic fee for your particular bank, SEPA is not free across European Union

really same day ? must be nice for you, I wish I was with a bank that works during weekends.

I get the feeling that I, and the others who have responded to your relentless tin drum banging about Bitcoin's supposed advantages in sending funds across the world, are speaking to a brick wall.

I don't know where you are in the world. But say you wanted to send me Funds of say $10K in value. Explain to me one single advantage of using Bitcoin instead of the various other cash transfer methods and I will tell you why you are wrong. Please don't bleat on about 10-60 minute transfer times and tiny fees, because remember, I in the UK still need to turn that Bitcoin into physical or digital cash that I can spend. So tell me, what are the advantages of using Bitcoin, presuming that I don't care if the transaction is traceable or not?

The face value advantage is that I'm not waiting 4 days to send payment to someone. Currently I have a national bank transfer equivalent to $2500 pending from this Friday night that will most likely be completed Monday afternoon. This is one of the face values advantage of using Bitcoin and as soon as more services/individuals start to accept it the better for all of us.

Now, my main underline argument in favor of Bitcoin is that no one can print more money than it has been set which helps create a healthy economic environment in which businesses success is based on what they're actually producing not on speculating value and if they fail they won't be bailed out using public cash, like Goldman and Citigroup were in 2008 with absolutely no consequences just some bonus cuts. That is unacceptable and of course it won't happen in an Bitcoin environment if it'll ever be adopted by country in 50-100 years.
This feeling will become more and more stronger whenever a bank crisis will occur and most likely by 2016 we'll be part of another catastrophe with many many lives affected and soon the people will smarten up and realize that the problem can only be solved by changing the system from scratch not simply by adding more rules. The current monetary system is broken so hard that the only thing we can do is start from scratch and implement a better solution. The current btc-$ price speculation is unfortunate but don't let that blind you from the real improvement that Bitcoin can bring to our society if we'll choose to accept it.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: criptix on June 01, 2014, 04:23:35 PM
SEPA was designed to lower transfer fees between european countries to those of domestic national transfers which are not free, even same bank to bank transfer has a fee in place so I really don't know which bank you're using with free transfers. Also 4 days is not fast(friday, sat, sunday, monday) unless you live before 18th century when money was moved using horse carriages, in those times 4 days is pretty fast I agree.

Right.

I have a UK bank account and a German bank account.

To send via SEPA using my German bank account, it is same day, and costs nothing.

To send via SEPA using my UK bank account, it costs me around 4% premium on the total I sent if I want it there next banking day. This is fucking expensive true enough, which is why I get money onto Bitstamp (or I used to do it b4 Bitstamp started requesting anal probes), by sending funds to my German account via Transferwise (0.5%) fees or less if I am prepared to wait, and then transfer the funds from my German account to Bitstamp for free using SEPA. I don't use Transferwise or any of the other cheaper money transfer options to fund Bitstamp account directly, because they are prohibited from allowing transfers to Bitcoin exchanges.

I cannot think of any possible circumstances where it would be too my advantage to send Bitcoin other than Fiat currency to anyone abroad. For any currency in any developed or economically powerful nation, Transferwise or similar services can be used to send funds from as little as 0.25% fees. For sending funds to some 3rd world nation, what fkn good is Bitcoin going to be to anyone in Tanzania anyway? Even if there was a means of exchanging the Bitcoin, for Fiat that can actually be spent, the premiums would be fucking horrendous.



Hello mat,

Im from germany too and i must disagree, even internal bank transfers (to the same bank different location/town) takes atleast 2 days... im doing several transfers per week. Also if you want an instant sepa transfer for 1000 € it cost you around 40-50 € ! Im have my account at the volksbank btw

Greetings

Edit: there are no fees though for a normal bank transfer, but i think we are already paying it with the yearly bank account fee that cost around 25-30 €



Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 01, 2014, 04:31:54 PM
Hello mat,

Im from germany too and i must disagree, even internal bank transfers (to the same bank different location/town) takes atleast 2 days... im doing several transfers per week. Also if you want an instant sepa transfer for 1000 € it cost you around 40-50 € ! Im have my account at the volksbank btw

Greetings

Edit: there are no fees though for a normal bank transfer, but i think we are already paying it with the yearly bank account fee that cost around 25-30 €

I am in Scotland.

My German bank account it is with DKB. And SEPA transfers occur for me same day, and cost nothing. I have no idea if I get charged a fee for my German bank account or not. In the UK, we do not get charged fees, but perhaps on the continent things are a little different. Certainly, the interest I get paid on my German account is actually 'noticeable'.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: Ohh Pewee on June 01, 2014, 05:06:38 PM
Hello mat,

Im from germany too and i must disagree, even internal bank transfers (to the same bank different location/town) takes atleast 2 days... im doing several transfers per week. Also if you want an instant sepa transfer for 1000 € it cost you around 40-50 € ! Im have my account at the volksbank btw

Greetings

Edit: there are no fees though for a normal bank transfer, but i think we are already paying it with the yearly bank account fee that cost around 25-30 €

I am in Scotland.

My German bank account it is with DKB. And SEPA transfers occur for me same day, and cost nothing. I have no idea if I get charged a fee for my German bank account or not. In the UK, we do not get charged fees, but perhaps on the continent things are a little different. Certainly, the interest I get paid on my German account is actually 'noticeable'.

Which proves why bitcoin can be superior.  Laws and fees are different everywhere, sometimes even within the same country.  It's very easy to get confused and overwhelmed.  With bitcoin we know there is a 1-way fee, and we know it is very small.  We don't have to speculate on what or if you're subject to fee's, with bitcoin we just know.  How many crazy laws, 'miscellaneous' fees, and hoops do you have to jump through when sending money to someone else? That's not even considering how slow it is, and the fact that banks in the US close very early on Saturday, and are completely closed on Sunday.

Bitcoin is a very good way to transfer value.  Obviously converting to fiat might be subject to slippage between BTC / your local currency, but that slippage will continue to decrease with time.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: ShakyhandsBTCer on June 14, 2014, 10:09:24 PM
All of the crypto markets are subject to massive market manulipation.

Just look at what happened when GOX was failing and the GOXcoins were trading on bitcoinbuilders website.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: MatTheCat on June 15, 2014, 01:43:26 AM
All of the crypto markets are subject to massive market manulipation.

Just look at what happened when GOX was failing and the GOXcoins were trading on bitcoinbuilders website.

Yep...total Goxcoin market was driven by bots, whilst bots trading on the solvent exchanges still responded to action on Gox. This meant that Karpeles could use Willy to drive the real Bitcoin market around, which I suspect he did. I suspect that Karpeles was the 10K whale who came to Stamp on eve of crash to $400 and tricked the bots on Stamp into eating into around 6K BTC worth of his 10K limit order, as the bot traders furiously bought Bitcoin due to Stamp being undervalued in comparison with BTC-e, Bitfinex, Huobi etc, which had corrected and then ramped due to Gox crashing and then ramping right up. Due to 10K Ask wall, Stamp got stuck some $30-$40 dollars beneath spot price of the other exchanges so the bots kept buying and buying into the 10K Ask wall at $579. Two days later, Bitcoin crashed down to $400.


Title: Re: Pump and dump.
Post by: ShakyhandsBTCer on June 15, 2014, 03:50:10 AM
All of the crypto markets are subject to massive market manulipation.

Just look at what happened when GOX was failing and the GOXcoins were trading on bitcoinbuilders website.

Yep...total Goxcoin market was driven by bots, whilst bots trading on the solvent exchanges still responded to action on Gox. This meant that Karpeles could use Willy to drive the real Bitcoin market around, which I suspect he did. I suspect that Karpeles was the 10K whale who came to Stamp on eve of crash to $400 and tricked the bots on Stamp into eating into around 6K BTC worth of his 10K limit order, as the bot traders furiously bought Bitcoin due to Stamp being undervalued in comparison with BTC-e, Bitfinex, Huobi etc, which had corrected and then ramped due to Gox crashing and then ramping right up. Due to 10K Ask wall, Stamp got stuck some $30-$40 dollars beneath spot price of the other exchanges so the bots kept buying and buying into the 10K Ask wall at $579. Two days later, Bitcoin crashed down to $400.

I don't think it was so much "bots" that manulipiate the market but rather misinformation.

I remember there was so many forged IRC chat logs on reddit around when Gox suspended withdrawals but did not file for bankruptcy yet.