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3601  Economy / Speculation / Re: "Banks and exchanges turn to blockchain" on: July 01, 2015, 01:26:44 PM
Also see: Blockchains without the holy ledger of satoshi, or the cultists reaction to try astroturf against it using the term "world wide ledger"
http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/367k45/why_the_moniker_world_wide_ledger_will_help_us/

desperate much?


possible, but far away from your levels
3602  Economy / Speculation / Re: I'm regaining the habit of checking btc price first thing in the morning... on: July 01, 2015, 12:20:14 PM
you are seriously hooked. big time.


me too....    Kiss
3603  Economy / Speculation / "Banks and exchanges turn to blockchain" on: July 01, 2015, 12:15:12 PM
imagine a headline like this in the financial times in 2013 !

thanks to all bitcoiners. great to be part of something so exiting.


Quote
Blockchain technology continues to redefine not only how the exchange sector operates, but the global financial economy as a whole,” says Bob Greifeld, chief executive of Nasdaq.


http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/764aed26-198a-11e5-8201-cbdb03d71480.html#axzz3edc85ySy (paywall)

https://www.google.de/search?q=banks+and+exchanges+turn+to+blockchain+financial+times&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&gws_rd=cr&ei=79iTVZPQE8OTsgGTkL-gCQ  (click on first link, via google no paywall)
3604  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: June 30, 2015, 08:11:19 PM
Eine historische Stunde, wie mir scheint.
Demokratie vs totalitärer Kapitalismus
und der Austragungsort ist die Wiege der Demokratie Athen.


Was für ein schlechter Vergleich. Da hast Du wohl einfach nur drauf los geschrieben. Demokratie bedeutet das Recht der Mehrheit zu wahren und nicht des einzelnen. Das Referendum war tatsächlich nur ein simpler Erpressungsversuch. Das hätten die schon längst machen können wenn sie nur wollten. Tsipras und Varoufakis haben im Vorfeld auf einer Parteiversammlungen Wort wörtlich gesagt das die Mitgliedsstaaten den Schuldenerlass mitgehen müssen um den Euro zu schützen. Kurz gesagt: reine Erpresser. Links dazu kann ich keine nennen, nur öfters im Fernseher gesehen. Aber an allem ist immer auch ein großer Teil Wahrheit dran.


vielen dank non serviam für das schöne beispiel wie massenmedien märchen erfolgreich unters volk bringen.

3605  Economy / Speculation / Re: Permabull Party Thread on: June 30, 2015, 11:39:26 AM
Really, I just want to create a thread that I can resurrect at a later date when the price is > $1000 again. Or higher... Cheesy

1st bump: $1K
2nd bump: $10K
3rd bump: ??

I'm not going to make any predictions other than one day I will be able to bump this thread and laugh at the permabear trolls and their "bitcon is dead!" nonsense.

See you all in a year or few. If any bears would be so kind as to post here saying Bitcoin will never reach that point again, it would be highly appreciated, and make this even more entertaining. Price currently is around $250.



* not to be confused with the "when bitcoin reaches $1000 party" thread which is also an excellent thread and can perhaps be resurrected one day too

Bitcoin is a groundbreaking invention: a global and borderless money open to any computer programmer / entrepreneur, and this will be enough for it to wildly succeed, despite any problems it may encounter along the way. It also has the network effect and first mover advantages.


how on earth did i miss this thread completely ?

great one, xdan

i might add that this ending down trend has been brutal sometimes. i went all in in the summer of 2013 and by the end of november of that year i thought i was a smart smart fucker. and did not sell any. and laughed at those who did.

being overexposed was sometimes a bit nasty.
 
now that this downtrend could be over i will try to look at it as mr mujica looked back at his 13 year imprisonment.  he said it was helpful to form his character.


resurrect the btc1k party thread...  hm..      let´s see...  
3606  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 30, 2015, 06:06:09 AM
i knew one day i would wake up and there would be a higher high.

f  i  n  a  l  l  y




this is gentlemoon
3607  Economy / Economics / maybe the big opponents of bitcoin are not the banks but their IT providers on: June 23, 2015, 09:27:35 AM
after reading this article i thought that maybe it is not the banks themselves that oppose bitcoin so much.

it is an $ 180 billion industry (per annum) that provides the banks their IT. maybe some banks don´t care so much about what kind of ledger they keep, maybe they would use the blockchain easily. but their own IT staff and the entire network of IT support they used the last decades, it is possible that they are fearing bitcoin much more than the banks themselves.

i know, bitcoin is like "be your own bank" . but a 500 year institutionalized way of sucking up peoples money of keeping and transferring money may not vanish overnight. there could be some transition time.

some of the harshest critics of bitcoin are IT folks. it always surprised me, since i expected that IT pros would be the loudest proponents of bitcoin, since they ride the digital wave themselves, which is changing our lives so fundamentally. 

so maybe it is not IT vs analogue dinosaurs so much, but more new/decentralized IT vs "old" IT.



http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/90360dbe-15cb-11e5-a58d-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3dn73mNjc#


frickin paywall...

Quote
Banks’ old IT systems buckle under strain

Igor Feitoza, a Brazilian-born entrepreneur, left an angry message on his bank’s Facebook page this week. “I want to see if you guys will pay my overdue bills and my employees as I can’t access my money which I . . . deposited last Friday to pay them,” he wrote following a “ridiculous” three hours spent at the bank. Mr Feitoza is not one of the many frustrated Royal Bank of Scotland customers hit by the latest technology failure this week. He is a client of Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the country’s biggest bank by market capitalisation, which had its reputation as one of the most digitally advanced lenders tarnished by an outage in its payment and online systems late last week.

As well as provoking outbursts on social media, the technology glitches at RBS, which caused some 600,000 payments and direct debits to go missing, and CBA underline how the world’s biggest banks are often failing to get to grips with the growing demands being placed on their IT platforms. Banks spent about $188bn on IT last year and that figure is expected to grow at close to 5 per cent a year, taking it above $200bn by next year, according to Celent, the research company. Many banks, such as RBS, are plagued by computer systems that have been built up over several decades through acquisitions and new product launches to form a costly and complex patchwork of systems. “A lot of these programmes get three-quarters done,” says a senior technology executive at one of the largest US banks. “It’s one of these technical debt problems that builds up over the course of time. If you have one thing happen it might cause the whole thing to fall down.”

The cost of maintaining these often ageing and unwieldy systems eats up three-quarters of banks’ IT spending, according to Celent. That leaves only a quarter to spend on innovations to keep up with the rapidly emerging threat from the many technology groups and start-ups trying to steal market share in areas such as payments. “For a sector that spends significantly more on technology than most other sectors in the world, it is the least innovative, so there is a paradox here,” says Bill Michael, head of financial services in Europe at KPMG.

As many banks struggle in the post-financial crisis environment to generate returns above their cost of capital, these spiralling costs and inefficiencies are becoming increasingly unacceptable to managers and shareholders. Bank-IT-spend-chart “The banks are all putting their hands up and saying: ‘Help, I no longer want to do this alone any more — can someone else come and help, whether that be a cloud services provider or a partnership with a start-up’,” says Mr Michael. RBS, which last year paid a record fine to regulators for a bigger systems outage in 2012, hoped to solve its problems by replacing its core processing engine at a cost of £750m. But in a recent interview, its chief executive Ross McEwan conceded there was still a big job to reduce the number of systems and applications at RBS from more than 3,000. Andrea Orcel, global head of UBS’s investment bank, says: “The challenge for most banks is that they are not technologists … As technology continues to evolve at a fast pace, becoming ever more critical to their business, they are having to navigate a space that is both highly complex, and does not play to their core competencies.” Asian banks spend more than Europeans or US rivals on IT; their spending is growing faster; and more of their IT dollars are going on new projects than on maintenance. However, they are hardly glitch-free.

In January, a problem in the system linking accounts at Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the country’s largest lender, with securities brokerages, disrupted Rmb4.9bn in fund transfers, affecting nearly 55,000 customers at 90 brokerages. Bank-IT-spend-chart As regulators make ever growing demands on banks to provide them with vast amounts of data for everything from stress tests to anti-money laundering checks, banks are racing to keep their systems up to speed. Deutsche Bank insiders blamed its failure in this year’s US stress test on years of under-investment in IT that made it unable to meet US regulators’ demands.

Concern is growing about cyber security after a string of high profile hacking attacks, such as last year’s theft of data on 76m customers from computer systems at JPMorgan Chase. Executives say this focus on cyber security is a catalyst for change, pushing banks to simplify and upgrade their IT systems. “Making something secure requires it to be consistent and clean and up to date and well managed,” says the US tech executive.

James O’Neill, senior analyst at Celent, predicts that within a decade most big banks will have switched from using costly mainframe computers for overnight processing of customer data to using much more flexible cloud-based services. If nothing else, the shortage of developers trained in the Cobol programming language that drives most bank mainframes will force them to make the switch. Australia’s CBA has moved to a cloud-based system, while Deutsche recently outsourced many of its applications to a cloud provider. Bank-IT-spend-chart “The story about legacy systems impeding innovation is a bit oversold,” says Mr O’Neill. “I’m not saying they will go on for ever, but they have done a pretty decent job of supplying new products and services.” Like many sectors, however, banks are realising the need to harness the power of “big data” to offer better digital services to their customers. Mr Michael at KPMG says his banking clients know the stakes are high. “They have seen what technology has done to music and home shopping and so far they have been relatively slow to adapt — but the longer they wait the harder it will get.” Additional reporting by Ben McLannahan, Emma Dunkley, Jennifer Hughes and Gabriel Wildau BBVA tackles the US via digital banking

Francisco González, the former software engineer who is now chief executive of Spain’s BBVA, is scathing about the messy compromises that many banks make to patch their IT systems together. “Most of the banks have started at the rooftop. How did they manage to work without the foundations and the floors? Just middleware — more spaghetti on the spaghetti.” he says in an interview with the Financial Times.

After rounds of acquisitions, many large retail and commercial banks are tangled up in legacy systems which run the risk of breaking or presenting opportunities for intruders to gain access. At the same time, banks are building on more features because they need to present an attractive digital product to consumers. At the same time, financial technology start-ups are nibbling away at the business, presenting what Mr González asserts is an existential challenge for lenders. “My view is that many of them won’t make it,” he says. “They don’t know that. That is my opinion. We are ahead of the pack and we aspire to be the disrupter, coming from the conventional world, the banking sector.”

BBVA has spent more than €850m annually on technology for the past few years, including the painful and expensive decision to replace legacy systems — Mr Gonzalez’s loathed spaghetti — with a modern data centre. The chief executive now feels ready to tackle the US, where he has the country’s 33rd largest bank by assets, branded BBVA Compass, which last year acquired Simple, a digital bank. The bank’s active Silicon Valley ventures arm has also invested in Coinbase, a bitcoin platform. “For us the US is the most promising market,” he says. “It’s the largest market in the world, one of the most digital societies in the world, and the retail banking system is quite a bit elementary.” “The gap has to be filled by someone and we want to be one of the guys. BBVA Compass is the platform. We need to be a digital challenger in the States,” he says. “We have installed all the platforms, and we can connect start-ups to it. BBVA Compass will roll out a complete universal bank in the digital world.”
3608  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: June 22, 2015, 01:23:01 PM

Paywall? Wenn die mich einfach den Artikel gegen ein paar BTC-Bruchteile lesen lassen wuerden - das waers mir wert, no doubt. Aber so... registrieren und co? Danach laufende Zahlungen? Nein, danke!


was für ein mist. sorry, vor ner stunde ging es noch ohne.



edit:
von reddit:
you can also just google the title and click the ft link

https://www.google.de/search?q=Banks%E2%80%99+ageing+IT+systems+buckle+under+strain&gws_rd=cr&ei=rAyIVf-yHoT1UNzLgPAL

the content displays when coming from google.
3609  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: June 22, 2015, 12:36:35 PM
ratet mal, wieviel banken pro jahr für IT ausgeben.


5 milliarden ?

10 milliarden ?



oh nein....

es sind 188 milliarden. pro jahr. und die kosten steigen ca. 5% pro jahr.


http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/90360dbe-15cb-11e5-a58d-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3dn73mNjc


edit:
best quote:

Quote
“Most of the banks have started at the rooftop. How did they manage to work without the foundations and the floors? Just middleware — more spaghetti on the spaghetti.” he says in an interview with the Financial Times.

edit II:
wenn man das mit dem wert aller im umlauf befindlichen bitcoins vergleicht, kann einem schwindelig werden.
3610  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: June 16, 2015, 05:49:53 PM
Es wurde auch langsam mal zeit..... Wink


confirmed.
3611  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 16, 2015, 04:36:05 PM
For the past year, or since the last ATH, I was saving gif's to post in this thread for during the rally.

Last week I reformatted my hard drive. SMH.  Undecided


that was the final capitulation we have been waiting for over a year. excellent job, mate. but @next bear market please re-format a bit sooner.  Cool


edit: typo
3612  Local / Presse / Re: Presseberichte / Bedeutsame Erwähnungen on: June 16, 2015, 09:27:23 AM
http://www.finanzen.net/nachricht/devisen/Virtuelles-Bezahlen-Bitcoins-Die-wilde-Waehrung-4382383#comments

eigentlich relativ ausgewogen. aber auch richtige schnitzer:

Quote
Thailand und China haben die Währung verboten: Durch ihre Anonymität lässt sich bei Zahlungen bislang nicht erkennen, wer dahintersteckt - das erleichtert kriminelle Geschäfte und erschwert die Arbeit von Finanzbehörden. Zudem fehlt den Notenbanken jegliche geldpolitische Kontrolle über das digitale Geld.


4 falsche aussagen hintereinander und als abschluss ein feature als mangel fehlinterpretiert.

und welche finanzbehörde hat nun schwerere arbeit ?
3613  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: June 12, 2015, 10:22:22 AM
http://www.handelszeitung.ch/invest/bits-coins-keine-neuen-steuern-auf-bitcoin-674634

Quote
Die Schweizer Behörden behandeln die Währung bei der Mehrwertsteuer wie traditionelles Geld.

b.. b.  bullishhhh














3614  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 12, 2015, 10:19:59 AM
no extra vat on bitcoin sales in switzerland. bitcoin treated like a foreign currency.

http://www.handelszeitung.ch/invest/bits-coins-keine-neuen-steuern-auf-bitcoin-674634






















3615  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 08, 2015, 08:40:59 AM
What's going on!""?!

I go to sleep and the price is $223 and wake up to $224!!??!!

I will never go to sleep again, this is so exciting!!!?!


let´s just hope it continues in that manner. it will hit $ 10000,- by the year 2042...
3616  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 03, 2015, 08:20:27 PM
I don't wanna...

No worries we will make it to $230's or almost today I'd bet.
Sweet...




what an ignorant astronaut !

he should have been drinking this:


3617  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: June 03, 2015, 05:12:48 PM



 Roll Eyes
3618  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: May 28, 2015, 03:12:27 PM
all good news again, why is the price not tanking ?
3619  Local / Presse / Re: Startup 21 will Bitcoin-Mining massentauglich machen - Startup mit 116 Mio $ on: May 21, 2015, 06:49:57 PM
es geht imho nicht um profitorientiertes mining sondern mehr um den ausbau von infrastruktur. der mitgründer von 21 spricht davon, dass bitcoin eine technische resource werden soll, ähnlich bandbreite oder ram.
3620  Economy / Speculation / Re: I cannot believe the price does not move after NYSE news on: May 21, 2015, 02:23:20 PM
no sry 4 u
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