i wanna do yours. without collateral. payback .25 within 14 days. hurr... durr... let's see if you grant.
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then, i am contacting the government to apply bitcoin payment, i must get it to the larger places. this time i will grant the standard to pay the rent in bitcoin.
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i do not build trust! i am here for service! payback address: 1KvdN7tm9Vf6Mx2XRG3EhzdhtxxHDpZkLq no collateral is only for members with 'member' or higher ranking, and without negative trust that can directly figure out if you are gonna scam.
collateral requires at least 120% of the total loan value. acceptable collateral (only in escrow): only altcoins, and/or any digital goods which can be shipped with low shipment cost. remind you that to delete your personal data for a certain goods like phone, memory cards, and backup before you do so.
collateral rate is ~1.7% per day no collateral rate is ~2.5% per day. can be negotiated, depends on your loan period, longer you are, the higher daily interest will be, still can be negotiated.
with or without collateral loan can be up to 7 days default, flat rate of 3% maximum per day you have defaulted. collateral cannot be liquidated without notifying loaners. template
amount: collateral: payback period: payback amount, including interest: reason: address: (i made one for this once, but this is the true one)
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need more loan, man? i have no idea but if you need it, tell me, i can provide a loan immediately. or if you don't need, inform me.
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So you have to pay the venue in fiat? that's not cool--then you have to use fiat
and that is the only expectation. we are gonna follow all of the rules as we can. It's basically the most important tradition of CoinFest. You can do whatever you want, of course, but for listing on www.coinfest.org, you cannot pay a venue using fiat money. The venue must either be free or accept cryptocurrency. Even in Russia--where use of Bitcoin is illegal--they managed to find a Bitcoin venue without getting in trouble. we have no choice, if they accepted that, we would pay it in bitcoin. You could choose to host CoinFest at another venue. but bitcoin-accepted venues are either too small or too expensive. i can only apologise that the venue renting is the only expectation. maybe if we held coinfest, the government would accept bitcoin? Why do you think restaurants, bars, cafes, and other event venues accept Bitcoin? They do it for customers. If CoinFest goes to places that accept fiat, the Bitcoin venues will think there is no point in accepting Bitcoin. We will be betraying them. This method of operation has already convinced multiple venues to accept Bitcoin--it's an ultimatum. You must go to this venue in Hong Kong and say you are looking for a place to host CoinFest, but that CoinFest cannot use "regular" money. If they agree, they will get free business and publicity--if not, they don't deserve it. the bold place said what i need. we need to come with the fiat first before they actually accepts bitcoin. (since they didn't even know what that exactly is, we need to teach them before we gain ability) i can only apologize for that matter, otherwise i would not need to
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So you have to pay the venue in fiat? that's not cool--then you have to use fiat
and that is the only expectation. we are gonna follow all of the rules as we can. It's basically the most important tradition of CoinFest. You can do whatever you want, of course, but for listing on www.coinfest.org, you cannot pay a venue using fiat money. The venue must either be free or accept cryptocurrency. Even in Russia--where use of Bitcoin is illegal--they managed to find a Bitcoin venue without getting in trouble. we have no choice, if they accepted that, we would pay it in bitcoin. You could choose to host CoinFest at another venue. but bitcoin-accepted venues are either too small or too expensive. i can only apologise that the venue renting is the only expectation. maybe if we held coinfest, the government would accept bitcoin?
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So you have to pay the venue in fiat? that's not cool--then you have to use fiat
and that is the only expectation. we are gonna follow all of the rules as we can. It's basically the most important tradition of CoinFest. You can do whatever you want, of course, but for listing on www.coinfest.org, you cannot pay a venue using fiat money. The venue must either be free or accept cryptocurrency. Even in Russia--where use of Bitcoin is illegal--they managed to find a Bitcoin venue without getting in trouble. we have no choice, if they accepted that, we would pay it in bitcoin.
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and now, let's see if the bitcoin rises again. yay we have support from japan!
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So you have to pay the venue in fiat? that's not cool--then you have to use fiat
and that is the only expectation. we are gonna follow all of the rules as we can.
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The thing is, 10 bitcoins is a lofty goal. Except for CoinFest Vancouver, I don't think any city-node has never managed to raise that much money. Vancouver was only able to pull it off because CoinFest was founded there, and it took 3 years of operation to achieve that success. What I do is start small and expand the scope of operations as more resources are acquired. CoinFest in Hong Kong could be as simple as a gathering of enthusiasts at a cafe or bar that accepts Bitcoin--that's what the first CoinFest was. To be added to the world map on www.coinfest.org, you must be committed to hosting an event, even if you do not meet your original fundraising goals. Can you make this promise? got them, i will try to make this promise. it is ~20000 HKD. it holds for at least 4 days with everything needed. You can't "try" to make a promise. Promises are binary declarations--you make them or you don't. Listen, just remember not to shoot for the Moon. You can't just pick a number and hope to meet it. You must look around for sponsors and fundraising opportunities, and plan your expenses based upon the estimate you come up with. The first CoinFest event had a budget of $100 USD (worth of bitcoins), and it went fine. I got a free venue and cut costs as much as possible. i am not trying to shoot it for the moon, mate. nowadays in hong kong, renting a venue is ridiculously expensive. originally, we decided to rent a small theatre in somewhere, however, after a round of calculation, i found that renting a small theatre is more expensive than renting a soccer ground. i don't wanna use the small venues because it does not comfortable to people when crowded. we decided to rent soccer ground as preliminary, as it is more affordable and more possible visitors/audiences. and originally we had venue that we always use, but it is not avaliable for us that period. we have no choice, if we got that venue, we would not need to spend such a lot of money. for our one, we have to accept general audiences of admission in order to have better popularity. more importantly, we need to grant children friendly, and legitimately promoting bitcoin even though the past incident affected the popularity. coinfest uses to help promoting bitcoin, if we make this event but cannot attract a certain popularity, then we won't call it successful. hope you understand. If even ten people get together, it is a success--we've had CoinFest events that small before in a couple cities. This decentralized convention is open source, however, so how you handle it locally is up to you so long as you follow the basic protocols: no using fiat (the venue must let you pay in Bitcoin), it must be free to attend, and no making any profit. Keep me informed, and if it looks like you'll meet your goal in line with those protocols, I'll add you to the map. we do not use fiat, and we make it free admission, protocol is gonna be granted, explicitly. :l (only expect for the venue renting the venue belongs to the government and they are not yet accepts bitcoin. )
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The thing is, 10 bitcoins is a lofty goal. Except for CoinFest Vancouver, I don't think any city-node has never managed to raise that much money. Vancouver was only able to pull it off because CoinFest was founded there, and it took 3 years of operation to achieve that success. What I do is start small and expand the scope of operations as more resources are acquired. CoinFest in Hong Kong could be as simple as a gathering of enthusiasts at a cafe or bar that accepts Bitcoin--that's what the first CoinFest was. To be added to the world map on www.coinfest.org, you must be committed to hosting an event, even if you do not meet your original fundraising goals. Can you make this promise? got them, i will try to make this promise. it is ~20000 HKD. it holds for at least 4 days with everything needed. You can't "try" to make a promise. Promises are binary declarations--you make them or you don't. Listen, just remember not to shoot for the Moon. You can't just pick a number and hope to meet it. You must look around for sponsors and fundraising opportunities, and plan your expenses based upon the estimate you come up with. The first CoinFest event had a budget of $100 USD (worth of bitcoins), and it went fine. I got a free venue and cut costs as much as possible. i am not trying to shoot it for the moon, mate. nowadays in hong kong, renting a venue is ridiculously expensive. originally, we decided to rent a small theatre in somewhere, however, after a round of calculation, i found that renting a small theatre is more expensive than renting a soccer ground. i don't wanna use the small venues because it does not comfortable to people when crowded. we decided to rent soccer ground as preliminary, as it is more affordable and more possible visitors/audiences. and originally we had venue that we always use, but it is not avaliable for us that period. we have no choice, if we got that venue, we would not need to spend such a lot of money. for our one, we have to accept general audiences of admission in order to have better popularity. more importantly, we need to grant children friendly, and legitimately promoting bitcoin even though the past incident affected the popularity. coinfest uses to help promoting bitcoin, if we make this event but cannot attract a certain popularity, then we won't call it successful. hope you understand.
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The thing is, 10 bitcoins is a lofty goal. Except for CoinFest Vancouver, I don't think any city-node has never managed to raise that much money. Vancouver was only able to pull it off because CoinFest was founded there, and it took 3 years of operation to achieve that success. What I do is start small and expand the scope of operations as more resources are acquired. CoinFest in Hong Kong could be as simple as a gathering of enthusiasts at a cafe or bar that accepts Bitcoin--that's what the first CoinFest was. To be added to the world map on www.coinfest.org, you must be committed to hosting an event, even if you do not meet your original fundraising goals. Can you make this promise? got them, i will try to make this promise. it is ~20000 HKD. it holds for at least 4 days with everything needed.
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don't you accept bitcoin payment? >_> isn't you are selling ASICs? idk why to use raspberry pi.
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holy shit, isn't that you can go through Tor? idk where to buy drugs since it is illegal.
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lol dud idk. i don't like the >256MB blocks in blockchain, it is space wasting.
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lol give them back 20% u jelly?
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nope. unless it contains explicit threats, else it must not be banned to prevent admin abuse (admin self-banning disaster).
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Too big blockchain, too slow synchronization.
legit. the blockchain synchronization is too slow and too space hungry. as a result the size per block should not be more than 256 MB.
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