Swan[1] is the platform I've been seeing a lot when it comes to recommendations concerning auto DCAs. It's a US-only platform though as far as I know. Though you can probably use the likes of Binance, etc using scripts.
[1] https://swanbitcoin.com/
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The simple fact alone that I will have a huge buy offer at $0.0001 per BTC if ever BTC crashes that hard(obviously very unlikely that I'd even call it impossible), is enough proof that bitcoin will never go to zero.
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If you're building a cryptocurrency-general platform: probably try interacting and contacting investors on Twitter. If you're building an Ethereum platform: the biggest so far as far as I know is Gitcoin[1].
[1] https://gitcoin.co/
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a good exchange thats well managed doesnt need to do anything..
This assumes the exchange wouldn't have any technical problems at all, which is a bit too ambitious. Obviously literally any platform inside and outside exchanges and the cryptocurrency industry as a whole will inevitably have problems.
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Screw bitcoin ATMs; there are so much ways to buy bitcoin already in the US. What we need is more ways to use bitcoin for payments through brick and mortar stores. (Square/Block is doing really good in this front imo.)
Still good news tho nonetheless.
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Getting a Ledger or a Trezor is good enough. I wouldn't recommend trying out other hardware wallet brands outside of both, and probably Coldcard if you're a bitcoin-only type of guy. Is a hardware wallet a must? Or is leaving my crypto all on Coinbase OK?
How likely is it that Coinbase could get into trouble one day?
https://cryptosec.info/exchange-hacks
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Kalou I wouldn't be prepared to see the price of bitcoin fall too far like that. $10k is a terrible bitcoin price for me. There will be many investors who feel they have lost their money if the price of bitcoin drops to the point of $ 10 thousand and of course they will be torn apart again. Hopefully the worst thing will never happen.
It would only be terrible for people that have been over-invested and have no capital for buying dips. On the other hand, if you're always making sure you have enough capital to deploy, a crash to $10,000 would be a godsend if you're long-term bullish on bitcoin.
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That'd be decent — but really, it's such a minor problem(heck, just a very small inconvenience if you make the mistake) that I doubt Theymos would implement it.
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I'm guessing nothing super major if the seller was smart enough to not dump it in one go. If anything, if sold on spot (through a sell offer, not dumped in one go), it would probably just give bitcoin a good amount of difficulty to go higher. Or maybe they're going to do OTC. Since it was first created, Bitcoin has repeatedly died a thousand times, but it has continued to exist. Will there be another round of "Bitcoin is dead" propaganda from the government and gold holders?
We're going to hear "Bitcoin is dead" for years and years and years. Get used to it.
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It's really no different from wallets with multi-coin support such as Exodus and Trust wallet, no? The only difference is that the Avalanche bridge is integrated in the plugin instead of manually going to the URL of the Avalanche bridge.
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Not gonna lie — they totally sucked at FUDding on this one. They could've probably used something that could convince the normies far easier such as the "quantum computing will break Bitcoin's security" or something like that.
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I can only hope that we're going to get further market wipeouts. I can stack at better prices, and more useless cryptocurrencies die out.
I'm really clueless though. I'd say there's a good chance that we've bottomed if we're in normal market conditions, but macro's kinda bad.
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BOTTOM LINE: Do NOT listen to anyone that was so very wrong in their predictions last year.
Or.. don't listen to literally anyone concerning price predictions and just quietly dollar-cost average in. Even if you managed to buy in at the top, chances are, it's going to reach back at those prices after a few years. It's really not that complicated.
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Are we going to have the typical unit bias argument again?
As with the advice part, seriously if you don't know how to pick good trades then simply don't do it. There are other so much ways to make money out in the world that's going to be worth more your time and money.
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If you're from the United States then Swan Bitcoin[1] seems to be a pretty good platform from what I've read. But really, an important factor is where you're from. A lot of times using a local platform is the better choice.
[1] https://www.swanbitcoin.com/
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As if using your phone while driving isn't bad enough, our dude here was actually doing a crypto transaction while driving lmao. Carelessness is through the roof.
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As far as I know, yes mining lang ang way para makakuha ng "non-fingerprint" BTC because of proof of work mechanism niya. Medyo nalilito ako dun sa part ng miner na magbebenta ng coins na wala pang transaction history, Do you mean mag benta ng wallet na ginamit sa pag mine ng BTC? Kasi I think na once sinend ng miner yung BTC to other wallet address is may history na agad siya sa blockchain.
Yes obviously magkakaroon ng transaction history pag sinend na. Pero ang point is wala pang transaction history from other entities na pwedeng mag-cause ng suspicion sa kahit anomang bagay dahil miner->you transaction lang ung history.
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Aha, salamat po. Mas naiintindihan ko na po. Pero sa part na "sakin lang iyong fingerprint"(meaning po nito untainted coins diba) Paano po ba iyong ginagawa para maging sayo lang iyong fingerprint. Iyon po ba eh pag newly generated coins lang?
Walang way para ma-achieve ito, dahil technically impossible lang talaga since hindi naman nabubura ung history ng BTC transactions. And yes, kung gusto mo ng coins na literally na sayo lang ung "fingerprint", ang paraan lang is ikaw ung magmine nung coins mismo. Or probably maghanap ka ng miner na magbebenta sayo nung coins na wala pang transaction history.
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You should have used a better example because Ethereum is just as bad as any of the other shitprojects if not worse. Lest we forget how they reversed a lot of ethereum blocks so that they could save their own ass when they lost a lot of money in a "bet" on DAO made in their own flawed protocol. They didn't even fix the flaws, they just reversed the blocks to get their money back!
Yea sure you can definitely criticize Ethereum (and the broader cryptocurrency space) for all those issues all you want, but I was just stating facts due to a lot of people here totally misunderstanding the controversy.
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