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461  Economy / Economics / Re: The US Stimulus - How do you feel about it ? Too little to late? on: April 17, 2020, 10:40:50 PM

Do you think more should have gone to small businesses and families/individuals?

This is the economic analysis I feel should be suitable.
1.Businesses need money for production.
2. Households need purchasing power.

So, for the economic equation to be complete then the money should be shared to both but business should be more than households.
462  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Malthus Catastrophe - Thanos's Ideal - Bitcoin Supply and Increasing Demand on: April 17, 2020, 10:36:47 PM
Thomas Malthus population theory is accurate without technology but not accurate with technology.

So, with crypto technology the resources will be more than  the population especially when the resources is handled in a transparent blockchain technology.
463  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Experts On Bitcoin on: April 17, 2020, 10:31:30 PM
I have Read some opinions from other Expert I think it will be good to share

1.The Bitcoin protocol has immense intrinsic value as a self-regulating frictionless payment network affordable to almost anyone.

2.Through rose-tinted glasses, Bitcoin can do no wrong. It is a currency that is free of central bank control, is decentralized, and it has proven that it can serve as a store of value for people

3.As a fee-only financial planner, I have a fiduciary responsibility to my clients to only recommend investments that are suitable to their specific investment plan and risk profile.
4.Currently, Bitcoin is a virtual and decentralized currency used to trade for goods and services, not backed by any government, company, or organization.

5.Think of the implications of a currency that has no borders, bars no one from entry,

Read More ::https://www.tradingacademy.com/financial-education-center/financial-professionals-share-their-opinions-on-bitcoin.aspx

What are Your opinions?
The basic philosophy and ideology behind crypto according to Satoshi Nakamoto is the collection of trust from the traditional reserve bank to the public.

So, to do this we need a technology called cryptography and blockchain. So at the end of the day, its technology that'll make the above points you've mentioned possible.
464  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Beginner experience. on: April 17, 2020, 10:21:33 PM

For all the beginners out there, keep on reading and understanding in this forum and in other websites, that is the best thing you should do to become a better person. Learning is what we really need.

Quote

Quote
I just want to share my merit summary, hoping that this would help my co-beginners on creating topics. I know that this is not that so good compared to others topic but I just want to include this because its part of my experience and receiving of merits is has a great feeling.

April 10, 2020, 09:21:50 AM: 1 from @ZaraCB for List of Gambling Investments and Discussion.
April 08, 2020, 06:02:14 AM: 1 from @Peanutswar for List of Gambling Investments and Discussion.
April 07, 2020, 04:06:22 PM: 1 from @buwaytress for List of Gambling Investments and Discussion.
April 07, 2020, 01:47:05 PM: 1 from @casperBGD for List of Gambling Investments and Discussion.
March 28, 2020, 02:02:49 PM: 1 from @nutildah for Corona Virus in the Philippines.
March 15, 2020, 07:29:07 PM: 1 from @OgNasty for Strengthen our immune system.
March 10, 2020, 02:03:10 AM: 1 from @SamboNZ for Corona Virus in the Philippines.
February 28, 2020, 12:09:45 PM: 3 from @KrisAlex18 for Re: A good advise for the beginners.

Thanks for this people who sent me merit, this is really appreciated.



Well this is a very good thread. But from what you said about having thoughts of quitting, this is what I have to say.

As a starter, you must have a mission beyond the short run when joining a forum like this because its the long teem mission and goal that'll sustain you when you face obstacles.

The best goal is suppose to be: I want to be a lover of crypto knowledge (crpto philosopher) the result will be determine by you pursuing this.
465  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: What Everyone Should Know About Atomic Swapping. on: April 17, 2020, 11:37:33 AM
In the atomic wallet, one can swap coins directly in the wallet and there is no third-party (in short there is no custodial exchange involved in it). Atomic swap saves the time which exchanges are taking while swapping the coins the biggest drawback of an atomic swap is without any trustable exchange you have to swap with the person. This swap occurs on the peer to peer network. As there is no exchange involve in it so you have to pay the blockchain fee which is required.



Exchange and swapping are somehow interwoven in cryto. One Ares of similarity is that they bought have a fee.

Is that what you mean?
466  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Collision in Hash Function. Everyone Should Know this on: April 17, 2020, 11:21:06 AM
There's nothing "harsh" about that quote, it's actually mild and comforting  Smiley

FTR, There is currently no recorded collisions for both SHA-256 and RIPEMD-160, Bitcoin is using the two famously for computing "pubkey hash".

1.What's the effect of detecting collisions on the harsh outputs?
For the particular hash function, projects that are using it like Bitcoin would start looking for safer alternatives.
Like if SHA256 proved to become unsecured after discovering multiple collisions or successful collision attacks, developers might consider using SHA512 instead.

<addition, because my answer didn't really answered the question: For Bitcoin address collisions (because it was created through hashing),
the two persons who own the private keys that derived the same address can spend each other's funds
>

Quote from: Wenbing
2.Is collision an  advantageous cryptographic occurrence or not.?
No.

Quote from: Wenbing
3.Are there cryptographic measures in place in order not to experience  collisions in harsh outputs?
For "pubkey hash", Bitcoin has been using two entirely different hash functions. So if one got compromised, there's another one to break.
For some "Redeem script" and "P2SH addresses", the same as above.
For Mining, Bitcoin uses SHA-256d (d=double) for a reason: (wiki: SHA-256d)

While taking a course on cryptography and block chain,
Are those questions part of your exam?

Firstly, I'm sorry for using HARSH instead of HASH, it's a typo error.

Secondly, the questions are not part of my exams but part of my efforts to seek more knowledge about what I'm learning since the course didn't treat it the way I wanted.

Thanks.




we have two hash function types, the non-cryptographic and cryptographic hash function. the former is usually used for hash-based lookups like hash tables,... one example is MurmurHash. collision is a common thing in this group and we don't care about it. the later is used for cryptography when security is needed. the output lengths are larger than 160-bit. the one bitcoin uses is SHA256. collision in this group can be considered impossible due to the huge result size that the data is being mapped to.


That's an intelligent input, thanks.
From what you mentioned "non cryptographic hash function does not care about security while cryptographic hash care more about security"

I want to know what are the applications of the former and why is security negligible ?



One of the primary uses of a hash is to validate the authenticity of a digital item. If the hash for an item is known, then any change to the item is easily detected because the hash of the modified item will not be the same as the known hash.

However, the ability to find a collision gives an attacker the ability to make changes to the item in such a way that the hash does not change. Read this article: https://www.zdnet.com/article/sha-1-collision-attacks-are-now-actually-practical-and-a-looming-danger/



Is collisions not a malfunctioning of the cypropgraphic Hash function or is it what human or hackers cause in order to have access into another user's  private key?

I'm not clear about what you explained.
467  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Blockchain Basic: Number System | Random Number | Hash Function on: April 17, 2020, 07:03:00 AM
Detailed computer mathematical breakdown.

Since you've explain concepts like, binary, hexadecimal , decimal, bit and byte, I'll suggest you explain related mathematical concepts such as:
1. Integer
2. Strings
3. Functions
4. Megabyte, gigabyte, terabytes
3. The hash function.

This will help many. Thanks for your effort.
468  Other / Beginners & Help / Collision in Hash Function. Everyone Should Know this on: April 17, 2020, 06:09:33 AM
While taking a course on cryptography and block chain, I came across the concept of Hash function in cryptography.

Here is a quote:

Quote
"
start by mentioning what a hash function is. A hash function is one that receives information of any length as input and outputs a fixed-length alphanumeric string, regardless of the size of the input message, the results it is called the hash of the initial string. A particularity of this hash function is that if for some reason the input message has any variation, however minimal it may be, the alphanumeric string would change radically, it remains the same size but its content will be totally different.

There are several hash functions out there; some are in disuse due to real or theoretical demonstrations of weakness, particularly, for finding what is called collisions: this is, find two different inputs that produce the same hash output."


I'm particular about the collisions concept of the hash function.

1.What's the effect of detecting collisions on the hash outputs?

2.Is collision an  advantageous cryptographic occurrence or not.?

3.Are there cryptographic measures in place in order not to experience  collisions in hash outputs?
469  Economy / Economics / Re: Proposed Bill Would Give Americans $2,000 A Month Until Economy Recovers on: April 16, 2020, 05:52:46 PM
more helicopter money on the way?! everybody over age 16 would get $2k/month, no questions asked:

Quote
Washington, DC – Today, Representatives Ro Khanna (CA-17) and Tim Ryan (OH-13) introduced the Emergency Money for the People Act to provide additional cash payments for hard-working Americans who have been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. While the CARES Act was an important first step, its one-time payment does not provide nearly enough support for American families.

The Emergency Money for the People Act expands relief to more Americans and includes a $2,000 monthly payment to every qualifying American over the age of 16 for up to 12 months. It also fixes a bug in the CARES Act to ensure college students and adults with disabilities can still receive the payments even if claimed as a dependent. The Emergency Money for the People Act additionally recognizes that not everyone has a bank or a home address to receive a check –  so it allows individuals to get this money through direct deposit, check, pre-paid debit card, or mobile money platforms such as Venmo, Zelle, or PayPal.

Under the Emergency Money for the People Act, monthly cash assistance payments would be guaranteed for at least six months and would renew for another six months unless the employment-to-population ratio for people ages 16 and older returns to the pre-covid crisis employment level of 60%. These payments would not count as income in order to protect eligibility for any of the income-based state or federal government assistance programs.

Reps. Khanna and Ryan proposed the first cash infusion plan a month ago, which the Administration and Senate Republicans embraced, and was passed into law with the CARES Act. But as a record-number of Americans have filed for unemployment in the past weeks, it’s clear a one-time payment will not be remotely sufficient. In some places, this doesn’t even cover a month’s rent.

https://khanna.house.gov/media/press-releases/release-representatives-ro-khanna-and-tim-ryan-introduce-legislation-send

could this pass? 17 co-sponsors and counting. i never thought UBI would be on the table so soon, but with the economy on the verge of collapse, unemployment skyrocketing, social unrest around the corner.....it doesn't seem impossible anymore.

thoughts? what are the limits of money printing? Shocked

Printing more money and increasing the MS will trigger inflationary trend in the US economy unless production keep up with the money in circulation.
470  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Does Libra still pose a threat to Bitcoin? on: April 16, 2020, 05:43:06 PM

Do you think Libra will be a serious threat and competition for bitcoin?


This is the statistics from Statista
Quote
Market leader Facebook was the first social network to surpass 1 billion registered accounts and currently sits at almost 2.45 billion monthly active users

If Facebook has 2.45bn userbase and their data it'll become easy for them to be the early adoptor of Libra. We, know when demand for Libra increases it'll increase its brand and its value.
471  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: STABLECOINS CAN STOP HYPERINFLATION? on: April 16, 2020, 05:27:59 PM
2. Stablecoin is only as stable as asset/fiat which backed it. If the asset/fiat experience inflation, the stablecoin also got inflated.
i don't think stability of a stable coin has that much to do with what it is backed by. in fact i believe that a stable coin is only as stable as the users of that coin perceive it. for example 1 Tether is only worth $1 as long users are not willing to buy/sell it at a higher or lower price. otherwise it doesn't matter. of course the very large supply and a huge number of users contributes to that stability but in the end it comes down to that demand. if some day that demand changes we see the price change too. we have already seen it crash to $0.9 and $0.85 before.

I think you missed my point. Even if 1 Tether is worth $1, it's possible USD experience hyperinflation which weaken USD purchase power/value and 1 Tether have weaker purchase power/value.

What we should agree on is that there are many variables that affect the stability of a stablecoin. They are:
1. Demand for stablecoin
2. Supply of stablecoin.
3. The mode of collaterization
Among other factors.
472  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: STABLECOINS CAN STOP HYPERINFLATION? on: April 16, 2020, 05:24:52 PM
that is a weird question! how can something that supposedly is pegged to something that inflates (ie. fiat) prevent inflation? if anything when these companies print more and more of their coin they are contributing to inflation.

2. Stablecoin is only as stable as asset/fiat which backed it. If the asset/fiat experience inflation, the stablecoin also got inflated.
i don't think stability of a stable coin has that much to do with what it is backed by. in fact i believe that a stable coin is only as stable as the users of that coin perceive it. for example 1 Tether is only worth $1 as long users are not willing to buy/sell it at a higher or lower price. otherwise it doesn't matter. of course the very large supply and a huge number of users contributes to that stability but in the end it comes down to that demand. if some day that demand changes we see the price change too. we have already seen it crash to $0.9 and $0.85 before.


You said that's a weird question? Well I don't think it is if you're familiar with the way money work.

Think over this:
Why is the USD the global reserve currency? It is because it is stable and that stability comes from the fold that the currency is tied to.

So, the items a stablecoin is tied to affect its stability in a technical way.
473  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: What Everyone Should Know About Atomic Swapping. on: April 16, 2020, 07:52:21 AM
What you describe is not an atomic swap, it's a simple conversion from one coin to the other that can be done in various ways, such as instant exchange, trading etc. There are a lot of websites where you can learn this, Google is your friend. For example:
1. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Atomic_swap
2. https://blockgeeks.com/guides/atomic-swaps/
3. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/atomic-swaps.asp
4. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5171728.0 (a list of atomic swaps services, not really updated it seems)
5. https://www.binance.vision/blockchain/atomic-swaps-explained

Thanks for the constructive comment. I'll read through the materials for a better understanding about the concept.
474  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Is it possible for a newbie to send merit? on: April 16, 2020, 06:08:08 AM
Please i have a few question on the merits system
Is it possible for a user as a newbie to send merits?
If yes, How many?
and how many can you receive as a Newbie?


What I was made to understand by members of this forum when I began my bitcointalk journey are:

1. Focus on Knowledge acquisition.
2. Focus on quality content creation on the forum.
3. Participate actively and constructively in discussion in the forum.

The combination of the above three produce vanlue which member will see and reward your efforts with MERIT.

so, the principle is that value produce merit and smerit in this forum. This is what I do and you'll do well by doing same.
475  Other / Beginners & Help / What Everyone Should Know About Atomic Swapping. on: April 16, 2020, 05:52:35 AM
In cryotocurrency holding sometimes it becomes very important to convert one form of digital currency into another. For example, Andrew has $10000 worth of litecoins but he want to use the coins but he has to convert the currency to another probably bitcoin before he can use it for what he is using it for.

That above example shows what the atomic swap means I.e. the conversion of one currency into another.

What I seek to learn about this from the forum are:
1. How does the atomic swap work technically?
2. What are the major problems of the atomic swap?
3.Is there limit to swapping and is there an applicable swapping fee?

Kindly share your thoughts as usual. Thanks
476  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: STABLECOINS CAN STOP HYPERINFLATION? on: April 15, 2020, 07:42:52 PM
Stable coin doesn't solve hyperinflation at all, because :
1. The stablecoin issuer or creator could add new more stablecoin supply anytime. It happens many times with Tether stablecoin
2. Stablecoin is only as stable as asset/fiat which backed it. If the asset/fiat experience inflation, the stablecoin also got inflated.

Thanks.

We have :
1.commodity pegging such as gold standard
2. Fiat pegging such as US dollar standard.
3. Cryro-pegging such as ethereum or bitcoin standard

What if we use god which is relatively stable to peg stablecoins, won't it be stable or decrease in rate of fluctuations?

While gold is relative stable, it doesn't solve 1st problem i mentioned. Besides, the transparency of token creator/issuer and whether the gold actual exist/not is questionable.

 There are alternatives like DAI that is keeping it's price stable with algorithm. But those stablecoins too have their own problems.

How does that DAI keep its price stable through algorithm without being backed up by things with relative stability.  Pls, kindly explain how that work.
477  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: 5G & Bitcoin Risks? on: April 15, 2020, 03:26:59 PM
for example if I want to pay for my coffee or groceries using bitcoin on my phone connected to 5G then will 5G block the payment leaving me no choice but to use the government centralised digital coins or tokens?

Yeah, it will also scan your body and if they realize you don't have an uptodate chip with your social commitments to the NWO  a drone will be dispatched to...dispatch you

To be fair there's a lot of conflicting information out there.

I'm still not sure whether 5G was created by a Skynet-like AI to brainwash the human population, causes Coronavirus to crash the global economy or merely kills trees in its vincinity.

From my knowledge of 5G (fifth generation technology) is that it will promote AI and IOT technological evolutions. This is simply because the 5G network is faster in speed than other generational network.

So, I don't really know if it'll affect decentralized systems systems BH decrypting encrypting data.
478  Economy / Economics / Re: USD will lose its status of being reserve currency? I am scared. on: April 15, 2020, 03:12:09 PM


I just came to know about this medium article after their daily digest hit my inbox. That article is talking about the economic slow down in America in coming years (fortunately not due to the current corona outbreak). I really scared of another economic world wide slow down. But, not sure how it will be reflecting to bitcoins.

America has its flaws. Countless books examine them, but they often conclude their grim analyses with a chapter on “how to make things better.” Rarely is the feasibility of these proposed solutions considered.
What if the flaws in our principal institutions, from Capitol Hill to the National Security apparatus to the Federal Reserve, are unfixable? What if they exacerbate one another, resulting in an unsolvable nightmare? Is the reality that America has already begun its irreversible decline, after only 250 years, staring us in the face?
All empires fall, after all. It’s just a matter of time before America goes the way of Rome.
In 2014, a study partly funded by NASA warned that global industrial civilization could implode in the near future.
The fall of the Roman Empire, and the equally (if not more) advanced Han, Mauryan, and Gupta Empires, as well as so many advanced Mesopotamian Empires, are all testimony to the fact that advanced, sophisticated, complex, and creative civilizations can be both fragile and impermanent.
Excess resource extraction and unequal wealth distribution were crucial to every civilizational collapse of the past 5,000 years. Privileged elites rapaciously exploited the environment and labor while shielding themselves from the consequences. The lives of commoners ultimately descended into chaos, creating a destructive vacuum that obliterated the foundational pillars of society.
Excess resource extraction. Unequal wealth distribution. Are these not the problems currently plaguing America, and for which there are few proposed solutions? Expecting our notoriously venal politicians or our overworked, heavily distracted citizenry to resolve these issues is absurd. Identity politics, among other things, has stifled our ability to unite and address imminent dangers.
In 2008, Thomas Fingar, former Chairman of the National Intelligence Council, stated that US global leadership will “rapidly deteriorate in political, economic, and arguably cultural arenas.” NIC’s Global Trends 2030 says that in the coming decades the US will be mired in internal crises as a result of low economic growth. Despite the cheery optimism of America’s politicians, the Intelligence community seems certain that ticking debt-bombs and social instability will mightily diminish America’s global standing.

Are we closer to Rome than we think?
Morris Berman’s trilogy on the American Empire and William Ophuls’ Immoderate Greatness: Why Civilizations Fail offer astute analyses on why America’s problems are irreparable and reminiscent of past empires. I’ll briefly explain why America is “down for the count” for those unwilling to read the books.
1) The era of U.S. Dollar hegemony is coming to an end
In 1944, the Allied Powers constructed the post-war monetary order at the Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire. Because America had cemented itself as the world’s preeminent superpower, it was agreed that the U.S Dollar would officially be the global reserve currency (it had unofficially held this status since 1925). The bulk of international transactions would now be conducted in U.S. Dollars. The world’s central banks would also hold massive quantities of USD. As of today, the U.S. Dollar constitutes 60% of global reserves and 80% of global payments.
According to Global Trends 2030:
Historically, US dominance has been buttressed by the dollar’s role as the global reserve currency. The fall of the dollar as the global reserve currency…would be one of the sharpest indications of a loss of US global economic position, equivalent to the sterling’s demise as the world’s currency, contributing to the end of the British Empire in the post-World War II period.
Simply put, the current monetary system allows America to pay for goods and services with printed dollars. If other countries printed giant sums of their money to buy imports, their currency’s value would crash on the foreign exchange market. Because the USD’s reserve currency status creates an unlimited demand for dollars, America has been merrily churning the printing presses to bolster its military and buy foreign goods.
All of the “Made in _______” goods being sold at American retailers, as well as American made products using imported materials, should be 2–5x more expensive than they are now. The US runs trade deficits with virtually every country in the world. Other countries give us goods and we give them printed money. That the U.S has spent the past century debasing its currency is obvious; the prices of everyday goods are more expensive than in the 1950’s by several orders of magnitude.
The US Dollar is not the world’s first reserve currency, nor will it be the last.

The average reserve currency length is 95 years. That the U.S dollar will lose its status as the global reserve currency is unavoidable. This will lead to Americans paying much higher prices for imports. The federal government will downsize drastically. No longer will massive yearly deficits be run.
When we can no longer pay our deficits with printed dollars, the 1 in 5 Americans who receive federal aid will see giant reductions in their benefits. Government employees will be fired en masse. Pensioners will receive a fraction of what they’re owed. This, of course, will be happening as our currency is plummeting on the foreign exchange market. Chaos will erupt in the streets. This day is rapidly approaching because…
2) The U.S. is only a few years away from another financial crisis
In 1998, Wall Street bailed out a hedge fund called Long-Term Capital Management to prevent a meltdown of the global financial system. In 2008, the world’s central banks bailed out Wall Street. What’s going to happen when central banks need to be bailed out?
Since 2008, they have printed over 12 trillion dollars to prop up the financial system. They’ve engendered monstrous speculative bubbles in stocks, bonds, and real estate. Donald Trump’s presidency, Brexit, and the rise of the European Far-Right are, in part, responses to Western nations buoying our broken monetary system at the expense of the general public.
James Rickards’ The Road to Ruin: The Global Elites’ Secret Plan for the Next Financial Crisis details how the international monetary system is more unstable and disaster-prone than ever. Unprecedented levels of risk and criminality exist within it. The world’s governments, corporations, and citizens have never been this indebted. Once the global economy slows and debt-bombs begin exploding, the world’s Central Banks will be printing obscene amounts of money in an attempt to mitigate the damage. Their efforts will prove futile as citizens rush to hard assets to preserve their wealth.
Out of necessity, the global monetary system will be reconstructed. The International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Right (SDR) will supplant the U.S Dollar as the world’s reserve currency.
3) America no longer even remotely resembles what the founders envisioned
It’s remarkable how prescient our Founding Fathers were about America’s current predicament. They were keenly aware of man’s tyrannical impulses and the usurious nature of banks. They knew once the American public favored idols and indulgences over liberty, prudence, and goodwill, their leaders would follow suit. It’s shocking how far the country has deviated from what it originally was.
Whereas America used to embrace self-sufficiency and limited Federal governance, it is now a profligate, warmongering police state. Those who have suffered at the hands of our imperialistic wrath are still seething. In 2010, a military-grade, Russian attack virus was found in the NASDAQ operating system. Admiral Michael S. Rogers, head of the NSA, recently stated, “It’s only a matter of [time when] you are going to see a nation state, a group, or an actor engage in destructive behavior against critical infrastructure of the United States.”
Retaliation against our militarism abroad will soon destroy the nation.
The splintering of a civilization doesn’t happen overnight; it’s a gradual process. By now, it should be clear that we’re in this process, but the U.S. propaganda juggernaut has duped Americans into believing, “Once candidate X gets elected, everything will be OK!”
Often, it’s the vastness and complexity of empires that conspire against them. Resources are exhausted managing novel crises. Once the elites realize the structural problems are intractable, they pillage the society before others are aware of its inevitable dissolution.
From now on, please consider that America’s problems are of a civilizational nature. Circumstances here will likely get much worse until the country self-destructs.

Code: (Link to article)
https://medium.com/vandal-press/3-reasons-why-america-is-about-to-end-138b1e18bcf4

Great analysis.
The downfall of one is the uprising of others. Well, I see the People Republic of China taking that first economic position due to the friction being created by coronavirus disruption.
479  Economy / Economics / Re: Pandemic Coronvirus Impact On Global economy on: April 15, 2020, 02:49:31 PM
People have no choice other than trusting their government at this situation so this is not the real decentralization but economically it can be a way for people to realize about upcoming pandemic situation and move on the decentralized economy.

The. government runs on centralization mechanism while the market can be either planned or market mechanism.

But, this pandemic has make us to know that in terms of economy capitalism is not enough, but I miss of capitalism and socialism will be just fine.

When it comes to currency, crypto trend to be self sustaining than fiat.
480  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: BitcoinTalk Profile Guide on: April 15, 2020, 10:29:39 AM
Is it possible to edit one's username and email used during registration?
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