Faking voices are unfortunately just the tip of the iceberg. With the rise of AI and deep fakes, misinformation and fake news will just get slowly but surely worse from here.
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NFT is still questionable. Founder of Wazirx once shared how to double your money within seconds. Mint an NFT, place a floor price of X. Buy the NFT. Now you have your fund in your address, and you have that X worth of NFT too lol. That was funny but true.
You didn't double your money though. You literally just bought your own NFT with your own money, plus your losses due to royalties(2%-10%) and platform fees(2%-2.5%). You pretty much just added sort of 'fake' trading volume for that NFT collection.
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but that is what is called a signature and we are free to edit it, does that mean?
Yes. You can put your own links (maybe to your blog or your own service), or you can receive payments from advertisers (hence signature campaigns) in exchange for them putting their site/service onto your signature.
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we should not be over anxious about our investments in bitcoin or cryptocurrency because what will be will definitely be, then why the panic for nothing but only cause a rise in bp, we are expected to be patient for the time of maturation to come upon our investment, you plant today on the field and go home to rest and wait for growth to occur and lastly, we should always learn to do crypto all by ourselves.
Funnily enough, that's actually a popular opinion. Bitcoin and most especially other cryptocurrencies aren't guaranteed to increase and can easily go the other way; like what NeuroticFish said. Also, it seems like people are misunderstanding the topic lol. Look up the meaning of "unpopular", folks.
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The popularity of cryptocurrencies has seen exponential growth in the past few years. It all started with bitcoin, but now, there are over 18,000 cryptocurrencies in existence. This level of growth in such a short period is remarkable and has benefitted early adopters of the nascent industry.
Saying that this industry has "grown" just because we have more cryptocurrencies is just like saying that the US Dollar is "rising" because more US Dollars are being printed.
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But money laundering doesn't talk about how large sums of money are moved elsewhere. In fact it can be split into smaller pieces and exchanged for other more anonymous coins. That is how to disguise the reason for an unreasonable transaction into a reasonable one.
Far easier said than done especially when talking about big amounts of money, and most especially talking about how transparent the blockchain is. It's not as if they just press a few buttons then boom anonymity achieved.
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We don't literally have to exit the whole market, you've just got to exit at the right time and price if you're wanting to take some profits.
The most common strategy is by using stable coins so your profit will be there and you can reinstate to the crypto that you've got originally as you get back those cheaply.
You're taking everything too literally as the topic is just badly titled. The "methods" can be used to exit positions in general, regardless if it's bitcoin/crypto/stocks/etc. A "crypto exit" doesn't necessarily mean you literally cash out to your local boomer bank.
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What I'm I saying in essence? The fast food chains that accepts bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies today are said to be taking a huge risk but, on the long term I don't see any risk attached to it. A friend said on his comment about accepting bitcoin, that it'll affect the price of products and they'll keep changing their prices as Bitcoin price fluctuates.
The prices(in crypto) will surely fluctuate by the minute but the prices(in crypto) will also adjust every time the business' point-of-sale software would do a payment request. It's not like they'd calculate manually how much BTC a customer needs to pay every few minutes.
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Bitcoin isn't guaranteed to follow the 4-year cycle thingy, and that at some point it will take longer (probably more than 2x longer than usual) for bitcoin to reach new all-time highs.
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In the first place, how would you know if coins on certain wallet addresses are actually 'lost' and not with the owner just holding silently by not spending or moving the coins around?
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Congratulations mate. But for security and privacy reasons, if I were you I'd edit out your son's name and birth date on your post. This might seem too overly paranoid but I wouldn't take my chances.
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Though I'm pretty sure an orange UI can be used without making it feel like you're looking directly into the sun, not literally everything needs to be sort of "bitcoin branded".
The blue color is fine as it is; there will no be advantages of switching to orange.
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In summary: "Computer Scientists" makes comments on one of the most important technological and financial inventions in the last 15 years without knowing anything about money, markets in general, and the importance of decentralization.
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but I like to embark on any platform which gives good returns, like Exness or Position exchange.
So.. are you looking for a trading platform or a platform that gives you good returns? Because I'm pretty sure trading returns will totally depend on your performance, not necessarily the exchange. Also, if you're talking about gas fees(Ethereum), then every platform is guaranteed to have $10+ withdrawal fees because Ethereum fees are expensive.
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No sane non-crypto company would have a "crypto finance manager". A typical non-crypto company's job is to grow the company's one way or another, not to speculate with cryptocurrencies (outside of BTC and other good assets for some hedging).
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If anything, it's much worse today. The decent actual airdrops are now being distributed through project usage, not social media spamming.
I really suggest looking for other ways to earn money. Working at McDonalds is far more worth your time than doing airdrops and I'm not kidding.
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It is a currency with a very high appreciation ratio, starting at 0.23. In your opinion, is it worth starting with this type of currency?
While I'm not 100% sure, let me guess, you saw a certain cryptocurrency and thought it was cheap and has a high chance of going up because it's "cheap" at $0.23? If so, you're falling for unit bias. A thing having a lower price tag doesn't automatically mean it's cheap and that it's going to reach dollar levels. Also take note of the total supply.
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If you're talking about charts in the concept of trading — then sure, charts don't lie — because they don't tell much in the first place.
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I don't hear anything about Luna because when Luna price usually above $97 then I invested more than 150 Luna but my official duty I visited foreign for 7days then I forgot to bring my personal computer. So. .... Now I am owner of 150 Luna with zero values.
That's what happens if you invest in a project that has a system that's broken since it's inception and that's inevitably going to implode anyway. To be honest though, I'd expect it to run a couple of months more. Sadly I missed that huge short potential. Sad.
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I don't know much about analyzing crypto yet because I'm new. but I read in various sources that apart from technical analysis we also need other analyzes such as news and so on for additional information. because after all the news has a lot of impact on the market situation. because even Fibonnaci's technical analysis can be off the mark if suddenly there is big news about something affecting the market. correct me if wrong.
That's simply because there's no single indicator that's going to have 0% failure rate, most especially when talking about technical analysis. If you're bullish on an asset or an idea, then just invest and deploy your money wisely. You don't necessarily need to listen to these so called "eXpErTs" and you most definitely don't need to do some chart astrology.
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