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Hey i am new here and i know how to invest in bitcoin and where ...? link me the websites... ![Kiss](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/kiss.gif) From the sound of your name i guess you are from Pakistan. Me being from the same region would recommend localbitcoin.com. I started bitcoin trading from that website and it is a reliable trading platform. Feel free to ask me if you need any help. Thanks bro
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Hey i am new here and i know how to invest in bitcoin and where ...? link me the websites... ![Kiss](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/kiss.gif)
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It’s also difficult to regulate Bitcoin when, in actual fact, regulations vary from country to country. The only similarity may very well be those countries where cryptocurrency is banned or restricted. The issue of how it is classified also comes up again when looking at a global view of Bitcoin. ![Kiss](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/kiss.gif) In an Investopedia article, a roundup of countries illustrates some of the varied regulations related to cryptocurrency. Here are some examples of the different regulations: ![Cool](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cool.gif) Australia wants to tax cryptocurrency like other commercial transactions but is also cautious after security concerns from losses in 2013. ![Cry](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cry.gif) Brazil has enacted a law about electronic currencies and payment systems, leading the way in evolving its regulations. ![Roll Eyes](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/rolleyes.gif) Canada would like to tax Bitcoin but it is currently not recognized as legal tender so as no legal recognition. China restricts its use and does allow financial institutions to conduct any transactions using Bitcoin. The European Union has spent time debating the issue and has found some ways to tie a legal basis for Bitcoin to its existing laws, but the European Banking Authority is still against it until it becomes regulated. Finland has created specific instructions on how it can be used. It also has made any gains from these transactions subject to capital gains tax. India has shut down the country’s largest Bitcoin trading platform and currently has no regulatory framework for cryptocurrency. Russia restricts the use of Bitcoin and is concerned over its potential for use in money laundering or terrorist activities.
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No bro, No one can destory bitcoin. because bitcoin is very popular in very country of the world. When the whole world Internet is shutdown then the Bitcoin is Destroy. ![Undecided](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/undecided.gif) and that is impossible the whole world internet is shutdown. no one can destroy the all internet of the world. So it is not possible No one can destroy the Bitcoin Thank you very much ![Kiss](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/kiss.gif)
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Bitcoin is decentralised, borderless currency. It's based on a newly invented technology called blockchain. This is most significant invention after internet. This will do the same to money what internet did for information.. Dut to its promising future ahead and Price speculation.and unique financial technology . It's becoming popular. It's attracted some of the famous entrepreneurs attention as an avenue for investment. Bitcoin’s most important characteristic, and the thing that makes it different to conventional money, is that it is decentralized. No single institution controls the bitcoin network. This puts some people at ease, because it means that a large bank can’t control their money. The reason of Bitcoin becoming so popular are mostly because of its’ characteristics.
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Bitcoin is a cyrptocurrency. In the future the bitcoin has our own ATM...and Bitcoin is very popular in very country of the whole world for daily shopping etc...Bitcoin is digital and decentralized – With Bitcoin people get the liberty to exchange value without intermediaries which translate to greater control of funds and lower fees. It’s faster, cheaper, more secure and immutable. Cash is controlled by banks while bitcoin has owners.
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The following are some of the major advantages of using Bitcoin versus other currency systems: No Third-Party Seizure Since there are multiple redundant copies of the transactions database, no one can seize bitcoins. The most someone can do is force the user, by other means, to send the the bitcoins to someone else. This means that governments can’t freeze someone’s wealth, and thus users of Bitcoins will have complete freedom to do anything they want with their money. No Taxes There is no way for a third party to intercept transactions of Bitcoins, and therefore there is no viable way to implement a Bitcoin taxation system. The only way to pay a tax would be, if someone voluntarily sends a percentage of the amount being sent as tax. No Risk of “Charge-backs” Once Bitcoins are sent, the transaction cannot be reversed. Since the ownership address of Bitcoins will be changed to the new owner, once it is changed, it is impossible to revert. Since only the new owner has the associated private key, only he/she can change ownership of the coins. This ensures that there is no risk involved when receiving Bitcoins.
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No don,t Wait Invest on bitcoin. it is a right place to invest and you are get a good profit on bitcoin because these days the bitcoin price is very high and in the coming days the price of bitcoin is more double then now... So dont Wait go and invest on bitcoin. i am personily invest on bitcoin and get good profit... Thank you very much. ![Tongue](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/tongue.gif)
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It is safe to say that not everybody knows about bitcoins and so the better way to spread the word is through television advertisements! It sounds very interesting but we know that when people are watching shows and the commercial is on, it’s time for them to also go to the bathroom, get more popcorn, everything else and what not. No matter how wonderful the ad may be, if people would not pay attention to it, it’s useless. If commercials feature some of your favorite personalities, would you listen to them talk about bitcoins?
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In September 2014, PayPal announced it would accept Bitcoin via integration with Braintree, and the same month announced partnerships with Coinbase, BitPay and GoCoin. Via the PayPal Payment’s Hub merchants could use customizable APIs to integrate Bitcoin into their shops for digital goods. At the time, it released a video hinting at Bitcoin integration. Whether or not PayPal will pursue a more aggressive Bitcoin policy has yet to be seen. In 2014, weighing in already on Bitcoin currency regulations, the company told the Australian Senate:
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Bitcoin, the Internet currency beloved by computer scientists, libertarians, and criminals, is no longer invulnerable. As recently as 3 years ago, it seemed that anyone could buy or sell anything with Bitcoin and never be tracked, let alone busted if they broke the law. “It’s totally anonymous,” was how one commenter put it in Bitcoin's forums in June 2013. “The FBI does not have a prayer of a chance of finding out who is who. ![Cry](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cry.gif) The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other law enforcement begged to differ. Ross Ulbricht, the 31-year-old American who created Silk Road, a Bitcoin market facilitating the sale of $1 billion in illegal drugs, was sentenced to life in prison in February 2015. In March, the assets of 28-year-old Czech national Tomáš Jiříkovský were seized; he’s suspected of laundering $40 million in stolen Bitcoins. Two more fell in September 2015: 33-year-old American Trendon Shavers pleaded guilty to running a $150 million Ponzi scheme—the first Bitcoin securities fraud case—and 30-year-old Frenchman Mark Karpelès was arrested and charged with fraud and embezzlement of $390 million from the now shuttered Bitcoin currency exchange Mt. Gox. ![Undecided](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/undecided.gif) The majority of Bitcoin users are law-abiding people motivated by privacy concerns or just curiosity. But Bitcoin’s anonymity is also a powerful tool for financing crime: The virtual money can keep shady transactions secret. The paradox of cryptocurrency is that its associated data create a forensic trail that can suddenly make your entire financial history public information. ![Embarrassed](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/embarrassed.gif)
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No, I highly doubt it. ![Shocked](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/shocked.gif) Bitcoin is a system that aims to facilitate transactions without the need for a bank. People tend to overlook the fact that anywhere where one transacts value in different forms inevitably forms an economy. There shall be tools and factors that influence this economy to cultivate it. ![Roll Eyes](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/rolleyes.gif) Banks are just one of the factors that influence economy. Banks run within a different kind of economy. Banks are designed to safeguard people’s money, lend the same money to people that need them to collect interest and eventually have the money rotated within to generate maximum value per rotation. Bitcoin’s economic model differs from that of a bank. ![Kiss](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/kiss.gif) Cryptocurrencies (bitcoin) might solve a problem that banks do too, ![Cool](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cool.gif)
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