Thanks Rob, I have responded to yours on the thread. And speaking of winners, we have our 400,000th raffle ticket holder (chiiko)! Congratulations, we have credited 400,000 BUX into your balance to enjoy! There's still chance for our 500,000th ticket winner though
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Thanks for the review Rob, we appreciate your honesty. Based on DNL's response above, BitGo determines the fees (hence the possibility of minor discrepancies) so hopefully that addresses your concern. For the welcome package, the BONUS balance could be wagered on our house games if you feel that you would rather "stretch" the duration, while this does not affect the wagering requirements. It's understandable that 40x might sound a tad daunting, but we do our best to strike a balance between both parties. On the plus side, our non-sticky bonus means that players are allowed to withdraw their main balance as well as their winnings, without involving the BONUS counterpart. Once you're satisfied with your sessions, feel free to play with the house money. And we look forward to seeing you at our scavenger hunt and raffle events
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There are some ways by which people are not spending anything to buy Bitcoin and still accumulating btc at some point like :
1)You could ask your employer to pay you in bitcoin directly some portion if he agrees to do so and it's not banned in your country.
It's not viable 99% of the time. That thing is processed in batches by the HR payroll and there are lots of hoops to go through just to payout. And also the price volatility.
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Aren't altcoin giveaways prohibited here...?
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DOGE is manipulated by that "Musk"quito. I don't think it would be a good idea to include that for betting. It won't be more fun in my opinion.
Musk-quito did manipulate Bitcoin as well. That man could pump and dump any coin he likes
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You have a point, but based on my limited knowledge of the field in question, most of the ones I've seen were limited to POS [with the exception of a few (e.g. Kraken)].
Those are already Centralized Exchanges (CEX), when the risks are higher but you get to stake POW coins which is not possible on hardware wallets
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They create also an attractive game for RLB coin called Christmas giveaway but I still don't know how to play it because didn't launch yet until 2 days. I hope this game brings many players to try it using RLB coin which gives rollbot as a prize every day until the next new Year. Basically players stand a chance to get freebies from the Advent Calendar throughout December. Login once on the site and claim your reward for the day, that's it.
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Mostly online transactions, but when I want to sell BTC then I visit one of the physical exchanges available to me - unfortunately I don't have any physical store nearby that accepts BTC. When I started 2014 and the price was below $1000 and then it fell below $200 - it was possible to collect very nice amounts on faucets, and so I earned my first BTC. It was a time of opportunity, and the waste of time as some called it paid off I have to admit that it was a completely different time, because given the price of BTC most people didn’t care too much about the safety of coins, although the Trezor made its first model just in early 2014. It took years for hardware wallets to become interesting to the wider crypto community, and I think I only bought the first device in 2018. At least you have a physical exchange. I have to trade mine online Yea man, back then we were busy mining on laptops and PCs, they weren't taken "seriously" as they are now. I remembered buying some BTCs but didn't really think of the price appreciation. Simply chucked some chump change out of curiosity and somewhat forgot about them until the end of 2017. Color me surprised as well! That's a selling point, but if your coins are POW (e.g. Bitcoin) then 😅
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I also use Bitcoin as a currency on a regular basis, and sometimes I sell a small portion when I want to buy something that I would not otherwise be able to buy. It’s good if a person finds a measure between spending and saving, and with Bitcoin, it really makes sense given that its value has increased incredibly over the past 5 years.
That's nice! You mean like when you're outside or online transactions? Well, it'd be easy for those that managed to keep during the early days. Imagine trying to reach the 1 BTC club, would be a major achievement for most of us haha.
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For every Freebitco.in's users I would highly recommend that they also become bitcointalk forum members, not only to solve personal issues with their accounts faster, but also to stay in touch with the most recent news, updates and discussions.
The faucet does have a contact form so they would likely sought help from there. Imagine the ones that come here are mainly the faucet roll winners
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It’s your prerogative, but the idea that a hardware wallet is much safer than a custodial online wallet still prevails. The data breach did not weaken the device’s security, but rather opened a window for targeting Ledger owners through targeted campaigns, most of these were some sort of phishing attempt. Dreadful set of events, which should not have taken place, but not directly weakening the strengths of the device per se, albeit conceptually affecting owner’s overall security.
Some more costly malicious campaigns, with a more delimited scope (not quantified), tried out something different, like the case depicted on the article you reference. The basis used there was using a physically tampered Ledger device to essentially camouflage an enclosed flashdrive, bearing some phishing software that would ask you for your mnemonic (similar to those sites we’ve seen multiple times requesting this information pretending your device was faulty, and that it was a necessary recovery procedure). Of course, the information leak allowed for the attack to be targeted, and crafted with a gullibly plausible explanation as to why you should use the bootleg device to replace his existing device. Nevertheless, this is not a vulnerability of the existing Ledger devices themselves itself at all, and no new exist of this being a widespread semi-counterfeit practice.
While there are definitely instances of compromised units, which is the sole reason it's advised to buy from Ledger themselves, I wouldn't say the unit itself is exploit-free, because there are always people finding ways to force their way into things. Here's an article which mentions Ledger being aware of it in 2019 and released a fix https://decrypt.co/37651/ledger-exploit-makes-you-spend-bitcoin-instead-of-altcoinsThe exploit was reportedly disclosed to Ledger back in 2019.
"A new version of the Bitcoin app will be released today, with an update that will display a warning and prompt for confirmation when an unexpected path is used—therefore solving this issue," said a Ledger spokesperson (who later confirmed that the fix is now live). Still, I'm not discouraging anyone from buying hardware wallets. You do you. There is no need for sarcasm, your coins, your right to keep them any way you want. While the possibility of earning interest seems tempting to many, for me and many others it is simply too much of a risk for some 4% or maybe more per year. I’m just one old type holder who was here when 1 BTC was only worth about $200, so from a profit perspective I don’t mind keeping BTC in my HW with 0% risk and huge profits all these years It wasn't sarcasm, as what I'm doing is indeed against the whole principle And I'm not forcing everyone to ditch hardware/ cold wallets altogether; their coins their rights. On a side note, good to know that you have the ultimate patience! Many would have sold the moment they see some sweet gains.
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I conducted a similar experiment, the icash coin, then the coin was not completely abandoned yet. I created a website, pool, block explorer, started looking for a developer to update my wallet. But nobody was interested in it. By the way, icash is still traded on the Yobit exchange, but their wallet is closed for deposit, the coin network is still working. I am thinking to stop supporting the coin and close the site, pool and explorer due to lack of user interest. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=996567.1220https://icash.bittogether.comTo make a coin "successful", you'd need lots of hype especially from those influencers.
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right, it's better for us to play at betfury as usual without thinking about what will happen to the future of BFG tokens because the team definitely has a good plan for BFG. let's just say getting BFG is a bonus when playing at betfury and use it well.
Exactly. The tokens are already a source of passive income so they're always welcome.
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The purpose of the site is to provide ways to make money, from all possible avenues whatsoever - that's why it's also called "Freebies" and not only Gambling. Likewise faucets are types of gambling - you roll a number in order to win.
If that's the case, you should separate them into separate categories. You know, for the sake of user experience. I have a website which promotes casinos and faucets but I keep both separate so people know what they're looking for.
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Well the thing is, are people gonna buy the actual dip and that is the big question. Of course, El Salvador is always waiting for the dip and then buy at least 100 BTC for their reserves. But how about retail investors? it seems that they are still undecided and maybe now ride the hype on the #buythedip. As far as the latest covid strain? I don't think it has an effect on the market.
I believe there are. It doesn't have to be the investors to take advantage though, commoners like us are happy to take advantage of the "Black Friday" sales
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