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621  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-18] Bitcoin price surged up to $82,000 for a brief moment on Binance on: November 19, 2020, 07:23:14 PM
I guess that if somebody types 82000 instead of 18000 kinda deserves his fate. I mean, when one works with money, he should double check.
Well, after such a costly trade, I am sure that next time he will... if there will be a next time.


It doesn't appear that is what happened, it appears that someone wanted to buy 29 BTC pair "at market".  The market dried up at 16000, then 18000, then 20k, 30k, 40k, 50k, 60k, 70k until it was finally fully filled at 82000.

Seemingly the Binance market didn't have a lot of depth and only 29 were for sale between 16000 (or whatever exactly it was) and around 82000.

If Warren Buffet came in anywhere and said "I'd like 500,000 bitcoin at market" the fiat price would go through the roof.  He wouldn't be as naive as whomever this was who did this trade.   :-)  He'd just buy 1 at a time or 10 at a time, or just put a limit buy order at 18000 and buy from anyone who wanted to sell at that price.
622  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-18] Bitcoin price surged up to $82,000 for a brief moment on Binance on: November 19, 2020, 07:20:32 PM
Whoever had orders set up that high made a lot of money, but let's be honest, who does that? Who knowing the price is at 16 thousand sets an order at 80?

There are people who have 1% of their all trading money set to extremes to catch such surges and flash crashes but you have to be very lucky to catch something like that because these events are extremely rare.

Congratulations to the winners. Wink


If you have 1 bitcoin, and are willing to sell it at 82000 but not below, that is who sets a limit sell order at 82000.

As for who would buy it at that, no one did.  It seems they placed a "market order" without understanding what that meant.
623  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-18]Mexico’s 2nd Richest Man Reveals 10% of His Liquid Assets Are in BTC on: November 18, 2020, 07:36:34 PM
Remember the dissapointment of the first day with volume of several bitcoins? Well, this escalated quite fast to the levels of the biggest exchanges! And this is still unnoticed among the other 'hot' news about defi and microshares. Defi is having currently around 100 000BTC locked into smart contracts and rising of course. More and more serious investors and companies are accumulating bitcoins causing a shortage on the spot exchanges. Good times are coming and the bears know it! Of course they will fight desperately between 10K and 20K to be able to buy cheap coins as long as possible. But when the ATH is breached, the real FOMO will start. Then the SEC morons like Jay Clayton will realise that invetstors do not need their approval to invest in Bitcoin. The obstacles they've built are not applied for Bitcoin.

...
“Bitcoin protects the citizen from government expropriation,” Pliego added as he recommended “El Patron Bitcoin” – a book that is “the best and most important to understand #Bitcoin.”
...

He hit the nail on the head...protection from government expropriation is one of a large number of uses. 
624  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-15] What We’re Getting Wrong About Druckenmiller and Bitcoin on: November 17, 2020, 01:10:42 PM
I agree with most of all your remarks about Druckenmiller's position and the article in general. My only comment goes in this direction: we should never forget CoinDesk's audience: they have slowly made their way into the likes of WSJ, Business Insider, Forbes etc.
I think they have a very clear agenda and we can expect more articles like this one.
stomachgrowls, I see your point but Bitcoin is not about its community anymore. The kid is becoming a man too rapidly.
cr1776 and DooMAD, you guys are always spot on

I think you are right except perhaps more click-baity than WSJ/Forbes etc.  lol.  I always hope that they improve with time as they improve their situation and increase readership.  There may always be hope for it.  :-)

625  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-15] What We’re Getting Wrong About Druckenmiller and Bitcoin on: November 16, 2020, 06:24:53 PM
Adding his sonorous voice to the chorus of renowned investors talking about bitcoin recently, hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller stated on a CNBC interview this week that he believed bitcoin could perform better than gold.
“I own many, many more times gold than I own bitcoin, but frankly if the gold bet works, the bitcoin bet will probably work better because it’s thinner and more illiquid and has a lot more beta to it.“
This is worth diving into a bit, because the statement is good news for the industry, but it is not the bullish affirmation that it initially seems.
This is not Druckenmiller saying that bitcoin has a better value proposition than gold, or that it has a harder cap or that decentralization is the way to go.
No, this is Druckenmiller saying that bitcoin has more upside because of its market inefficiencies. Let that sink in: The very characteristics that many investors have cited as barriers to investment are what a renowned investor believes will award bitcoin a better performance.

Source https://www.coindesk.com/druckenmiller-bitcoin-what-he-really-said


The premise that "this is Druckenmiller saying that bitcoin has more upside because of its market inefficiencies" is completely a bogus one from an author who isn't well enough informed to write on the topic intelligently.  I don't see him saying there are market inefficiencies.  Don't waste your time on the original article.

1. A "thin market" is not a market inefficiency, it is just a lack of supply at a particular price.  That is how markets work.  Eventually, say at $7,000,000/bitcoin, there will be an equalization of supply and demand.

2. Ditto for being "illiquid".  Bitcoin's bid/ask spread is similar (or better) than gold's.

3. A high beta does not indicate an inefficient market, it is merely related to volatility.

In short, the premise is wrong as is the conclusion.
626  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-10] Ex-Microsoft Dev Gets 9 Years in Prison Over $10M Theft on: November 15, 2020, 12:04:02 PM
What a loser! It is not at all clear to me how people are employed in such large companies given that they have (at least in this case) a very low IQ. First he stole something using his data, and then he mixed Bitcoin in hopes that it would protect him, really ingenious Roll Eyes

I think 9 years is an appropriate sentence in this case, provided it is served in full. Although when you look at how intelligent this guy is, I’d bet this isn’t his last trip to jail.

There are so many idiots everywhere, think about the people running Walmart, target, Macy's, Neiman Marcus, Kmart etc. I always assumed they had a brain, but they had nearly 20 years before they decided to try to build their online presence to compete with Amazon.  Look at IBM, not thinking about a Sun or Apollo coming along, and then Sun and Apollo not thinking about PCs or the PC manufacturers not being ready for smart phones and tablets. Either they were all blind or stupid.

I worked at a big tech company (20-25k people) right out of grad school in the early/mid 1990s and the number of idiots was staggering.

Look at the number of idiot voters who admit but their actions that they are so stupid they need someone to rule them and control them yet they believe they are smart enough to vote others in to control everyone else too.  Too dumb to make their own decisions but not to dumb to pick someone to rule them.
627  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-12]A Bitcoin Mining Pool Is Deliberately Censoring Transactions on: November 14, 2020, 01:53:13 PM
In addition to what others have said, it is also useful to remember that there aren't any exponential hash leaps available.  The ones from CPU to GPU to FPGA to ASIC mining each obsoleted previous generations reasonably quickly.  Now chips may go from 10nm to 5 or something but while that will increase the hash rate, it won't increase it by a factor of 10 or 100 or more as it did previously.

To me that means that it will make it much more likely that while mining farms do have economies of scale and power deals, this makes it more likely that someone with solar or hydro power might buy a miner and pick a pool that does not censor.  Distribution of hash power like it was with CPU, GPU, FPGA, and even early ASIC miners is key so that mining pools that do not operating with the primary goal of maximizing profits will lose miners to pools that do.

p2pool, despite a few issues, was an important pool at the time.  Who knows, perhaps sometime in the future too.
628  Economy / Reputation / Re: [Interviews] with Bitcointalk members on: November 09, 2020, 05:51:54 PM
Thanks for the invite.  Interesting to see some of these.

Questions and answers:

1. When and why did you become interested in cryptocurrencies?
Sunday, July 11, 2010 in the evening. I read the white paper and realized that (despite what people who either hadn’t read the paper or hadn’t understood it said) bitcoin was an important step and was useful as it related to the Byzantine Generals Problem.  There were a bunch of idiots around (and still are) making ridiculous arguments like “I’ll just duplicate my hard drive and have double the coins.”  “Bitcoin will fail.”

The biggest interest is that bitcoin takes power from the statist authoritarians and keep people free.  Bitcoin gives people the power over the products of their own lives. You make money by spending the hours of your life to earn it and you should control it.  You aren’t at the mercy of someone who wants power over you.   Did you live in Cyprus when there are capital controls and have bitcoin?  Screw the politicians, and leave.  Live in Venezuela and need to flee the authoritarians?  With bitcoins, no problem.  With everything else, they’ll probably steal/confiscate it at the border.  Stuck in Hong Kong with the communists restricting freedom?  Use bitcoin to get your assets out before they are stolen.  Or at least convert some assets into bitcoin so they aren’t locked down like other assets in China.  Tools like bitcoin protect liberty from people who are willing to sacrifice you to their own “needs.”  Protect yourself from nonsense like that: buy some bitcoin.  South Korea has capital controls, lots of places do.  Protect yourself.

Anyone who will vote their own liberty away is bad enough, but voting everyone else’s away for their own greed is worse. What does it say about their character and their lack of caring for their family, let alone other people, to do that?  Not much, but there are a surprising number of people who want someone else to pay for their choices.  Bitcoin can help now, but as adoption increases, more so.

Bailouts for banks mean bailouts for people - depositors, shareholders, employees etc.  Do you want to be forced into bailing out someone else's bad choices or should you have the freedom to decide for yourself who you help?  Bitcoin gives you the power and responsibility to decide how you want to respond.  Someone can't just come in and give your "account" a "haircut" or inflate the value away (a hidden tax on everyone).  Follow the money, who is helped by the polices.

The article on slashdot on July 11, 2010 exposed a lot of people to bitcoin, lots of people had the chance to be involved.  Lots of people missed it. I ran the 0.3.x version for a very long time.


2. When and why did you buy your first bitcoin?
I didn’t.  I just started mining around July 2010.  Actually, I take that back, I think I bought a few hundred dollars worth in 2019 to pay someone since it was easier than accessing cold storage.

3. How did you get on the forum?
I found it on google in July/August 2010 and I had been reading the forum for more than a year before finally registering.  I was getting 3 more new GPU cards going and thought I might have some questions about it.  Turns out, I got things set and it took a while until I actually joined in the conversation.

4.1. What prevents mass adoption of cryptocurrencies?
- Ease of use.  
- Lack of US ETF to enable more investment directly from a brokerage account.
- Lack of full anonymity.  
- Security of computer and mobile operating systems.  When you have OSs that are insecure, will people be willing to trust that their coins are secure?  Everything - backup included - needs to be end-to-end encrypted using on device keys so that a hack somewhere doesn’t open everyone’s devices up.  Have a private key on your device?  At least there is another layer of encryption if it is encrypted on-device.  Of course, that messes up the plans of those who want to control everyone and everything in the world since they can’t crack them (yet).  If your bitcoins are on your computer and you get a virus, you may be screwed.  Ditto on your mobile device.  In many ways the irreversibility of bitcoin is a great thing except if your computer is insecure.  All the CPU manufacturers have had serious bugs, all the OS venders have too.  Device security is critical.

Remember that any politician or bureaucrat who is trying to sell you on a backdoor, does not have your interests at heart.  They have one goal: power.  Don’t buy the siren song of backdoors being necessary. Backdoors in hardware or software are evil.  They may be put their with good intentions, but they will be compromised, it is a just a question of when and then anyone who relies on them for security (bitcoin or otherwise) will be screwed.  

- Uncensorability.  Do you want Facebook, Twitter, Google, PayPal or anyone else to be able to freeze your assets because you don’t toe the politically correct, authoritarian line?  Do you want to be “cancel cultured” if you don’t bow down to the mob?  Bitcoin helps you keep your freedom.  Do you want them to control your money?  


4.2. How do you think mass advertising of gambling projects has a positive effect on the development of the forum or harms the community?

I just ignore the ads, and don’t gamble since I know the odds are always in the house’s favor - unless you are counting cards and there is no CSM.  Unless you *are* the house, gambling is a fools errand.  Does it harm the forum?  In the sense of getting a lot of nonsense, low content, high noise posts, yes it does harm it.  If people get involved for the ads and then truly get involved after seeing the benefits, then it is a positive.  I don’t know the ratio of the number of people who just spam post and then leave vs the ones who stay for real reasons.

4.3. How do you consider whether 2-3 years of experience in cryptocurrency is enough to successfully invest or does an investor need to receive special education?

Five minutes, maybe 60 minutes, experience is enough time to invest.  Go to someplace (coinbase, square, many other places) and buy some.  Don’t sell.  Anyone who has done that at any point with the exception of a few weeks at the end of 2017 has done quite well.  If you are trading, well, there is a huge amount of luck there and you are just trying to out smart hundreds of other people to sell before a drop and know when the bottom is in.  Trading isn’t investing.  Some people will do well, a lot won’t.  One needs to not be afraid to cut losses (if any).  This isn't rocket science that requires a lot of education or experience.

I also love (sarcasm) how some people term buying and holding “hoarding”.  That is a nonsense term that people use to add a negative connotation to people who believe in bitcoin and were/are willing to take a risk.  What is the real agenda of people who say it is “hoarding”?  Probably to weaken bitcoin.  Ditto for bitcoin “expiring after X years of not moving” and then being “redistributed.”  A bunch of nonsense by statist toadies who want to weaken bitcoin to increase their own power.  

A nice thing about an ETF or private wealth coming in is that it isn't traders, but investors so they are in for the long haul, not minutes, hours, days, or weeks. It provides more stability to the fiat price, less volatility and better price discovery.  And more demand, obviously.

5. What do you think of the current Merit system and signature campaigns?  Do they harm the forum?
Signature campaigns are fine. Do they add much?  Not really.  Does anyone pay attention to them?  With all the scams that have happened in the past, I am skeptical of anything that is sig advertised.  The Merit system is okay, I don’t pay much attention to it.


6. The most useful forum topic? Most helpful users?
I always like the technical and development sections and read those, but don’t do much replying in there recently (e.g. the last 3-4 years) - too much other stuff going on.  Kids and the like.

7. 3 things you would implement on the forum?
On the forum?  Not much.  I haven’t given it much thought.  Perhaps a way to be truly anonymous given the hacks of the database over the years - e.g. no email address needed.  Of course, that cat is out of the bag now.  

8. Do you trade on exchanges or invest in projects?
No.  I’ll invest time in projects.  I invest in my own projects.

9. Tell a story about your big profit or big loss?
Start mining in 2010.  Don’t sell.  Cool story bro.  There isn’t much to tell though.  If I’d had a crystal ball, I would’ve sold everything in December 2017 and repurchased in March 2020. Or just delivered a pizza. (Funny story there, but that's for another time).  Of course, no one knows the future.

10. What do you think about the DEFI ecosystem?
The more legitimate projects and the more use cases, the better.  This is a nice use.

11. Is your anonymity a vital necessity or precaution?
Anonymity is always a good thing.  It protects freedom of speech, it protects people from bad actors, and it is critical to the future success of the world.  Not just bitcoin, or cryptocurrency, but the freedom of the world.

Just ask Thomas Paine, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, Patrick Henry and others about the importance of free, anonymous speech.  Anyone who believes that anonymity is unimportant or shouldn’t be permitted wants to stop people from speaking freely in order to stop criticism of things.  Anyone who believes that people should not be able to fund others who are speaking anonymous, also wants to stop criticism of themselves and stop freedom of speech in the world.  Anyone who thinks that “hate speech” is real intends to stop all speech they don’t like.  Subjective definitions like that are useful for totalitarians to control people.

Anonymity for money is just as important.  Anonymous speech is useless without an audience or without the ability to get the message out.  Consequently one of the most important areas in bitcoin is true anonymity of transactions. The powerful governments and entities (like Facebook, Google and others) won’t like it because of “think of the children”, “terrorism”, and other tropes.  

Anyone who is against anonymity wants control.  Control of you and everyone else.  Control over what you say, to whom you say it, and everyone else who sees it.  They want you to self-censor.  Just ask anyone who won’t toe the line on Twitter how that works.  Do you want to have your money banned, shadow-banned, or censored so no one else can get it/see it?

Without the freedom to be anonymous and uncensored, you can't be free.



12. The last cryptocurrency book you read?
I haven’t unless you count things like Snow Crash which isn’t technically cryptocurrency related. Much of the stuff is just so basic that it isn't worth the time.
 I’ll read very technical stuff on the engineering and programming side of things, but cryptocurrencies in general? Not a lot.  Projects built on top of bitcoin are important for their uncensorability and decentralization.  Both built on top of the bitcoin coin, and using forks of the bitcoin codebase.  e.g. things like Twister. So I’ll look at them and their code and documentation.

13. Advise 3 cryptocurrencies/tokens for investment in the next 1-2 years?
Bitcoin.  Everything else is quite derivative.  Ethereum is about the only interesting one, but it is very centralized in many ways, is (from what I’ve seen) much more difficult to get a node up and synched, and consequently not in the same league as bitcoin.

The huge value of the bitcoin ecosystem helps to provide the security of the network.  It is a virtuous circle.  None of the alts have that.

14. How much will Bitcoin cost at the end of 2020?


Perhaps a better question is what will be the cost to you and your family if you DO NOT have some bitcoin as an inflation hedge, insurance against bad governments and the like.  What will the opportunity cost be for not having some even in relatively normal circumstances. What would the opportunity cost be of being in a Cyprus, Venezuela, or Hong Kong-like situation wishing you had owned some to protect yourself?  So what will not owning bitcoin cost you at the end of 2020 and onwards?

As far as the fiat price in US dollars will be between 0 and 1,000,000. :-)  Everything else is just a guess, there are so many variables.  Given the uses of bitcoin to protect one’s assets from statist authoritarians (fascist, socialist, communist, totalitarian etc), given the uses of bitcoin to facilitate commerce (e.g. cross border, or gambling - as I said, I don’t do it, but lots of people exercise their freedom to do so), given the smart contract features, given the inflation protection, and given all the other proposed uses, the future looks bright. Will an ETF happen before then?  Probably not.  (Will one happen in the next 4 years (given the potential now much more statist president), probably not - but who knows.)

With the resurgence of statist authoritarians around the world, more people will realize the advantages of owning bitcoin.  Will many more realize the need in the next 2 months?  Some, but who knows how many.  The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and it just takes a step at a time to get there.  Voting away freedom one step at a time isn't any worse than doing it all at once.  It is merely a slower trip.  Everyone should protect some of their assets.  Be on the right side of history and protect yourself, your family, and your freedom.  Bitcoin is an off ramp on the road to hell where you can protect yourself from the arbitrary whims of the statists.

Remember that “free" bread for one means slavery for someone else.  All the people wanting the "free" bread don't realize that they're going to be the ones providing the bread for someone large number of others - at the point of a gun while the politicians in the centralized capitals take their vig. They think they're only going to be receiving it. And that is bad enough that they believe their needs entitle them to use the force of government to take it from someone else, but voting everyone else into that immoral view is worse. Disposing of the hours and minutes of someone else's life merely because they "need" something (a cell phone or whatever) is evil. What's worse is that the people who don't (or aren't able to) think about it trumpet a socialist/communist type platform as something virtuous, not something evil and immoral. It isn't charity if it's at the point of a gun and it isn't moral or charitable if it's somebody else's money.   Bitcoin stops people from taking your money.  Obviously you pay taxes, but a Marx, Lenin, Stalin, Chavez, Castro, Mao, Xi, Hitler, won’t be able to come in and take your assets if you leave the country.  And with anonymity, won’t know you have them.

So the value of bitcoin depends on the value that many individuals put on the hours and minutes of their lives and the degree to which they intend to protect themselves from people who want to take the products of their lives.  Long answer: no one knows the price, but over longer periods - years - the trend is very likely much higher.


15. P.S. (Optional) - since there was no question, I wrote what I wanted
10 years ago, I would’ve been quite clear that bitcoin was an experiment and could fail.  That is still true today, but it has a decade under its belt and is much less likely to fail.  The future for bitcoin in particular, and even crypto in general, is bright.  Not the scam coins and others that offer little value.  Concentrated mining right now is one worry, particularly in a communist regime.  Just ask Hong Kong how being under the thumb of a communist regime is working out.  Just ask the people of Taiwan how it is to live in fear of China.  How many time over the last 10+ years now have people said things like “Bitcoin will never hit $1.  Bitcoin will never maintain dollar parity.  Bitcoin will never hit $10 or $100 or $1000 or $20000.”  Too many to count.  The doubters have been proven wrong for more than a decade.  The people who understood the import of the project and were willing to wait have been greatly rewarded.

My main concerns and areas that are critical right now are:
- Concentration - mining concentration is a fear.
- Hash rate decrease - unlikely to happen, but you never know if miners are concentrated and a government tries to take them down.
- Freedom - bitcoin and similar decentralized, pseudonymous projects are critical to protect everyone from statists.  This is why bitcoin and its ilk are so important.
- Responsibility:  How many people keep their phones or computers updated?  Lots do not and you end up with infections on your PC and mobile device.  Then you end up with people saying “bitcoin is not secure” when the device itself is hacked.  Ditto for when exchanges get hacked or when there are exit scams.  People always look to blame someone else.  Bitcoin requires responsibility since there isn’t a credit card company to call and say “my card is stolen.”  

Bitcoin isn’t perfect, but is reasonably uncensorable (mining concentration is the worry there).  Anonymity isn’t great, but great strides are being made in that direction.  Lightning and similar projects, all are helping.


p.p.s.  Just from personal curiosity,  I’d like to hear from two people although it seems very unlikely they are around:
Atlas - from a long time ago, long ago banned for a lot of reasons - I think all discussed here and elsewhere online.  Hopefully he matured, got his act together, and didn’t sell his bitcoin.  (Started this thread:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=12156.4620 ).
Zeroday - hasn’t been on in years.  I’d be interested in hearing how he has recovered from the Cyprus fiasco ( https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=83045 ).  He protected himself and got himself away from the control freaks.


A quote worth remembering: “There is only an up or down. Up to man's age-old dream-the maximum of individual freedom consistent with order or down to the ant heap of totalitarianism. Regardless of their sincerity, their humanitarian motives, those who would sacrifice freedom for security have embarked on this downward path. Plutarch warned, "The real destroyer of the liberties of the people is he who spreads among them bounties, donations and benefits."  

Bitcoin puts you in charge of who you give "bounties, donations and benefits" to.



Cheers.



* Slashdot article:
https://news.slashdot.org/story/10/07/11/1747245/bitcoin-releases-version-03
629  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-06] CRA requested data on all clients Coinsquare on: November 07, 2020, 04:52:20 PM
...
In other words, the CRA wants to check whether all customers have paid taxes and whether cryptocurrencies have been used to hide assets. It is assumed that this will be done on the basis of tax returns for previous years.
...

The authoritarians don't just want to know everything about you - cash, bitcoin etc is bad since it can't be tracked - the want your soul too.

Who knew that in Canada you were required to submit a list of assets and value every year.
630  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-03]Bitcoin whales tread water and hodl despite recent BTC price drop on: November 05, 2020, 03:18:36 PM
Two key on-chain indicators show that whales and retail investors, in general, are not actively selling Bitcoin. First, the BTC estimated leverage ratio shows that trades in the derivatives market are not decreasing. This shows that investors are not proactively closing their positions or trades amid the uncertainty around the U.S. presidential election.
However, after the election results come out, the high BTC estimated leverage ratio poses a risk of increased volatility. Ki Young Ju, CEO of CryptoQuant, told Cointelegraph: “The BTC Estimated Leverage Ratio on derivative exchanges is increasing till the election day. It might cause high volatility on BTC price due to cascade liquidations.”
Ju explained: “Whales in US spot exchanges are not active for now. Spot Exchanges’ Inflow Mean is the average amount of bitcoin deposited on the spot exchanges, including US exchanges such as Coinbase Pro, Gemini, Bittrex, and others. It’s helpful to see the short-term dumping risk of whales.”

More here https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitcoin-whales-tread-water-and-hodl-despite-recent-btc-price-drop

I think the smart investors are using it as a hedge for possible inflation under Biden (assuming his lead holds) and as security for their assets assuming he wins and if in 2 years his party was to take the Senate.  Smart people are preparing for any authoritarian takeover in the US - or elsewhere like Hong Kong etc. :-)
631  Other / Politics & Society / Re: I want to congratulate President Trump ON HIS RE-ELECTION. on: November 04, 2020, 04:22:25 PM
Maybe I was wrong and had a premature election result last night. Grin

Trump could still pull it out, BUT the time to prepare for the statist authoritarians (socialists/fascists/communists etc) is now.  Buy bitcoin.

Bitcoin can protect you from any form of authoritarian statist who might take power.  It can protect you because you can flee with it, protect you from the ravages of inflation, or just have something that the mob can't seize.  Plus all the other uses.

Remember when the government controls (or can control) everything, everything becomes political.  Everything becomes a political fight to the death: one side wanting power and control, the other wanting liberty and live and let live.  When one side can take everything because someone else "needs it" no one's life or property is safe.

People who are willing to trade freedom for "free" stuff are selling themselves, their progeny and everyone else into slavery. 

Free bread for one implies slavery for someone else.
632  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-10-21] Paypal to allow Bitcoin buying and selling on: November 04, 2020, 04:06:31 PM
paypal wallet is the  most popular in the world and i think they should have to give the permission to buy and sell bitcoin  
because i have heard a news that we can withdraw bitcoin in paypal account but the users should use it legally so that the paypal team will also support them.

"Legally" where?   Who's laws apply?  Who decides?  What happens when China or Russia or someone in the EU or the US pressures PayPal to lock someone's account?

A centralized company to a decentralized currency is a recipe for disaster for anyone who decides they want to do something that the powers that be don't like:  want to spend $10 gambling?  Locked.  What to receive $10 from your friend who won it gambling?  Locked.  What to support a web site that isn't in the pocket of a giant media company?  Oops, locked.  Look at how Twitter, Facebook etc are censoring different views.  Just wait until they can lock your wallet if you dare to disagree.

Until PayPal allows people to withdraw bitcoin, it is not a lot of use.

There was no news or announcement that Paypal would allow cryptocoin withdrawals.

Also, Paypal would never allow cryptocoin withdrawals. They would be open to the liability that criminals and terrorist organizations would be moving funds through them.

Exactly, being locked in to PayPal is a huge problem if you ever want to have more than a credit on paypal's books without having to sell and realize a taxable event (gain hopefully).

It is better than nothing, but only a half-way method of doing it.
633  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-02]Facebook is banning the Bitcoin hashtag on: November 04, 2020, 04:04:30 PM
We can't blame Facebook for this ban...
after all, it's their platform so it's up to them to make any rules. I have not been active on Facebook for a long time and only use Facebook for bounty reports. I am much happy with Twitter which gives freedom to its users, although currently, the issue of vulnerability is still Twitter's homework.

Twitter give freedom to its users?  Seriously?  They may be better compared to facebook, but otherwise they are certainly not giving people freedom. 

634  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-11-02]Bitcoin Is Braced For A U.S. Election Earthquake This Week on: November 03, 2020, 03:35:17 PM
The 2020 U.S. election has put the country on course for its highest turnout in a century—with campaigns and candidates dominating headlines.

The bitcoin price has soared in the run-up to the election, adding a massive 30% through October and riding a raft of positive news to hit highs not seen since early 2018.

Now, with Democratic challenger Joe Biden finding a solid lead in national polls over incumbent Donald Trump, bitcoin traders and investors are braced as candidates head into the last day of campaigning, with global markets already on edge.

More here https://www.forbes.com/sites/billybambrough/2020/11/02/bitcoin-is-braced-for-a-us-election-earthquake-this-week/

I am very curious about how the US election may impact Bitcoin's price activity. It seems markets are waiting for it.

1. If you get an authoritarian socialist/fascist like Kamala and Biden channeling Bernie and AOC, people are going to want bitcoin to protect themselves from the claws of the "free stuff" is better than "freedom" crowd.  If Biden wins, smart people are going to be protecting their assets between now and January 2021 if they haven't already.

2. That said, don't believe the polls. Many are exercises in voter suppression or push polling - they want to dispirit Trump supporters or push people to vote a certain way.
Most of the pollsters are worse than weather people doing the next day forecast.  “30% chance of rain, 75-85 for the high” doesn’t add any useful information. Some polls had Reagan trailing Carter by 8 points in mid-October 1980.  In the Mondale/Reagan race, at one point Mondale had a 53-44 point lead over Reagan and Reagan ended up winning 49 of 50 states.  In July 1988, Dukakis was up over Bush 55-38.  Ditto Trump vs Hillary as you know.

3. Given how when Trump was called as the winner in 2016, markets (e.g. the Dow) dropped 750-1000 points initially, and then began a huge bull-market rebound early the next morning until March 2020 with covid and have pretty much recovered now, the prospects for the market with a Trump win would be good.

If Biden were to win and then put Warren and her ilk in power the impact on US growth and business would be significant.  Would the market go down?  Who knows.  Would it go up less than under a pro-freedom president?  Probably, but no one knows for sure.

Bitcoin can protect you from any form of authoritarian statist who might take power.  It can protect you because you can flee with it, protect you from the ravages of inflation, or just have something that the mob can't seize.  Plus all the other uses.


Remember when the government controls (or can control) everything, everything becomes political.  Everything becomes a political fight to the death: one side wanting power and control, the other wanting liberty and live and let live.  When one side can take everything because someone else "needs it" no one's life or property is safe.


635  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-10-26]First Mover: Bitcoin Steady Over $13K as JPMorgan Has Eureka! Moment on: October 29, 2020, 10:34:48 AM
I didn't know if we'd see JPM change their tune as long as Jamie Dimon was in charge, but it is definitely encouraging. 

Dimon already backpedaled from his Bitcoin hostility way back in 2018, so this isn't really a surprise. They've been looking into crypto for a while.

Yeah, but I was speaking about when he initially said it.  It is good they keep adding things. The more positives and users, the better.
636  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-06-04] Bloomberg: “Bitcoin Toward $20,000 in 2020" on: October 28, 2020, 05:06:39 PM
again:



we’re already in November and we’re at $ 12900, so there’s less than 80 days to see $ 20,000, I’m still waiting and funny that when paypal said that it will allow people to buy bitcoin using paypal I keep seeing images of rockets going to the moon and news like this:

Novogratz calls PayPal’s Bitcoin news 'the shot heard around the world on Wall Street’

but why not wait for the first weeks after paypal executes this service to know the real effect it will have on the market? why run to make optimistic forecasts without any solid foundation? and to make matters worse it seems that John McAfee's prediction is already being a standard for some people, let's see:

Bitcoin price rise to $500k is inevitable, Winklevoss twins say

500k is inevitable?

I see this price as something extremely exaggerated, and I thought I wouldn't hear that price again


Let's just face it, Bloomberg is just guessing.  No one knows.  They want clicks and will publish articles to get them using just opinion.

The same type people who are doubting that it will hit $20000 were doubting that it would reach and then even maintain dollar parity. And then $10 and then $30 and then $100 and then $1000 etc. No one knows, but the last decade of experience should have taught people that bitcoin has great benefits and as more and more people realize it, the price will continue to rise.


637  Other / Off-topic / Re: [2020-10-26] France is Racial Country, the reason to suspend from Bitcoin Sites on: October 28, 2020, 05:03:35 PM
...
We're all humans, i can't force you to hate christ or islam, or learn you to hate black or white people. i should respect you whatever you are.
...

And yet you want to force people to behave as you wish.  That isn't freedom, that is totalitarianism.
638  Other / Off-topic / Re: [2020-10-26] France is Racial Country, the reason to suspend from Bitcoin Sites on: October 28, 2020, 05:02:46 PM
I suppose it was because there is no article (where is the link?), and your post really isn't about bitcoin.

i'm talking about website Traffic2Bitcoin.com
it's totally bitcoin site.

and i included other Bitcoin sites.


Yes, but it isn't a link to an article.  Read what this is supposed to be about here:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=76487.0


639  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-10-21] Paypal to allow Bitcoin buying and selling on: October 28, 2020, 05:00:47 PM
paypal wallet is the  most popular in the world and i think they should have to give the permission to buy and sell bitcoin 
because i have heard a news that we can withdraw bitcoin in paypal account but the users should use it legally so that the paypal team will also support them.

"Legally" where?   Who's laws apply?  Who decides?  What happens when China or Russia or someone in the EU or the US pressures PayPal to lock someone's account?

A centralized company to a decentralized currency is a recipe for disaster for anyone who decides they want to do something that the powers that be don't like:  want to spend $10 gambling?  Locked.  What to receive $10 from your friend who won it gambling?  Locked.  What to support a web site that isn't in the pocket of a giant media company?  Oops, locked.  Look at how Twitter, Facebook etc are censoring different views.  Just wait until they can lock your wallet if you dare to disagree.

Until PayPal allows people to withdraw bitcoin, it is not a lot of use.
640  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2020-10-23]PayPal is eyeing a BitGo purchase on: October 27, 2020, 05:06:05 PM
I don't see why people would use PayPal as it is now to purchase bitcoin since it is locked into PayPal.  Hopefully they correct that issue eventually, but if they do, that is when I'd worry about the "frozen account" issue if someone sends it to an unapproved web site directly from PayPal.  e.g. gambling or some site that someone doesn't allow.

Let's hope adoptees don't get their messages mixed. I can well imagine mindless druggists logging into Paypal thinking 'oh wow, no one can stop the bit coin, right?' and then lasting a few seconds before their door is booted in.

Yeah.  If I were a conspiracy theorist, I might think that is the goal given the way that PayPal has restricted it.  Get people in and then turn them off to it.  I know some people aren't that dumb to be fooled, but enough?

On a related note, my cousin (finally) asked me about it a few months ago even though I had initially discussed it with him Thanksgiving of 2010.  He was going to do it "eventually" with Coinbase.  You can lead a horse to water but can't make him drink.  Then when the PayPal news broke he said "So, I guess PayPal is even an easier way to buy bitcoin?"  I had to tell him (a) as of now it isn't transfer it out of there except by selling, and (b) if you don't have the private keys you are merely a creditor.  Coinbase at least he could buy and then transfer out eventually.   

PayPal will be a reasonable option once they allow outbound transfers.  Who knows if/when that will be.
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