Thanks for your times friends all of you and your useful guides. I always trying to learn from experienced people.
I am planning to purchase some BTC when i have and can afford to put it on BTC for holdings. I will try purchase little by little whenever i will be able and will use Electrum as you friends advised me.
In exchanges i will just will keep for alts for some profits.
My goal is like that: My main investment 80% will to BTC and 20 % on alts. Hope that is normal .
Thanks.
Once your BTC holdings gets to the point that it's already a good amount of money, immediately grab a hardware wallet. At some point you need to beef up your security so you won't lose your funds from hackers. https://cryptosec.info/walletshttps://ledger.com/https://trezor.io/
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Yea because a certain project's team can just pump their own coin in a sustainable manner with just a flip of a switch. You probably need to take a look at most coin's/token's prices in 2018.
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It's neither good or bad — because it's just a tool. You simply use it if you want to idle out a bit. Basically you use it to automatically sell if it drops too much to a certain pricepoint where you think it could drop more. And as with any other tool, people use it differently. You just need to use it in a way that it benefits you with your strategy.
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Let me get this straight — you're asking this now because you don't have an idea on how to run a pump and dump group, whereas you created a thread advertising your 5-member group a few days ago though it got immediately deleted for obvious reasons.
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Short term is almost always a gamble regardless of what asset you buy. You could literally buy the best stock or the next best performing cryptocurrency of the year but you can still end up losing when talking about a short timespan.
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Just casually mention it to them, and don't force it down their throats especially if they didn't even show at least a sliver of interest. Unless you have the time to literally explain most of the things about it concerning security and scammers and such; because if you don't and they lose their money one way or another, there's a decent chance that they're going to blame you.
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I'd go for Trezor's most recent hardware wallet. Because I'm now having an OLED screen issue with the Ledger Nano S that I purchased less than a year ago; the screen is steadily fading/dimming, making it impossible to see what is being displayed. You must use your phone camera to view it clearly, which is inconvenient while inputting your pin number or signing a transaction.
I'm not sure if this issue actually exists in Trezor, however there are a lot of technical issues with Ledger products these days.
Probably a rare product QA issue, as I've own Ledger devices since 2016/2017 and I've never had a single problem with the screen or the device in general besides some minor issues with Ledger Live software.
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Electrum for BTC and MetaMask for ETH/BNB/ERC20/BEP20. Obviously, if you're holding a good amount of money and you don't want to get hacked, buy a hardware wallet. https://ledger.com/https://trezor.io/
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It's going to stay the same until(and if) the market matures sometime in the future. Though stablecoins like USDT definitely have sucked a good amount of liquidity from the BTC trading pairs, BTC is still mostly at the top when it comes to trading volume(with Tether reigning).
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Im addicted to volatolity yes as most of us thats the point of crypto to provide volatility to have opporyunity to get usdt
Then go trade something else with low liquidity mate. This is not an airport, you really don't need to announce your departure.
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Mate literally no one is forcing you to hold BTC. Go trade some micro-cap shitcoin in the 50th page of CoinMarketCap if you want volatility that much.
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Yes, it seems that the pope is more eyeing the price of coins that are still low to be manipulated, because as you said that with the high price I think they will consider a lot of things to manipulate Bitcoin, other than that maybe the pope wouldn't go that far
It's the marketcap + liquidity, not the price. Cardano has a low unit price of $1.04(as of today) but it has quite a high marketcap and a good amount of liquidity; compared to a lowcap coin that could be priced at $100+(because of low supply).
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A certain asset being able to be manipulated by "whales" depends a lot less of the asset class but a lot more of the liquidity of the said asset. Like how a microcap stock can be far more likely to be manipulated compared to a cryptocurrency like bitcoin that has a lot of liquidity.
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Thank you! I was sure this has to be a scam but couldn't find that xhexs.vip URL anywhere in google search.
Literally zero reviews? That itself should be a very clear sign that it's 99.9% a scam. ![Tongue](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/tongue.gif) Rule of thumb: if you're going to use exchanges(or whatever service that's going to handle your money), don't risk using the newer ones. Always stick to the reputable ones.
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- Send them affordable Bitcoin on their birthday.
Give them bitcoin as a gift, but not on birthdays and valentines days and Christmas and stuff. A gift(especially for these special days I've mentioned) are mostly something to make them happy; not an opportunity for you to shove down your interests to them regardless if you have good intentions.
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Virtual debit card providers that provide service without KYC will just be either:
1. a scam 2. will be forced to require KYC once it gets the attention of the authorities
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Depends — what service are you planning on providing? It's just like your typical business — if it's good and there's demand, then you earn money, if it's bad and/or there's little to no demand, then you don't make money.
Also take note that the internet is in your hands. You're not limited to Bitcointalk.
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"When you think ESG, think CCP." That sht was a mic drop moment right there.
Like or hate Thiel's opinions, what I like about him is that he ain't afraid to voice his thoughts regardless how controversial they can be lol.
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Sounds great. Isn't Robinhood traders the kind of people who just leave funds on the platform though? Not necessarily the people who buy bitcoin and withdraw them to a non-custodial wallet?
Regardless, even if I don't think it would be used on Robinhood that much, I hope this move pressures exchanges to follow suit.
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