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1  Economy / Economics / Re: Say Goodbye to Banking as We Know It on: January 28, 2020, 11:10:42 AM
Quote
China is poised to launch the first national digital currency. There will be no counting the disruption.  

So is China readying its own Bitcoin? Banish the thought.

It’s far bigger than that. Yes, just like any other cryptocurrency — or for that matter, cigarettes in prisoners-of-war camps — the upcoming digital yuan will be “tokenized” money. But the similarity ends there. The crypto yuan, which may be on offer as soon as 2020, will be fully backed by the central bank of the world’s second-largest economy, drawing its value from the Chinese state’s ability to impose taxes in perpetuity. Other national authorities are bound to embrace this powerful idea.    

Little is known about the digital yuan except that it’s been in the works for five years and Beijing is nearly ready to roll. The consensus is that the token will be a private blockchain, a peer-to-peer network for sharing information and validating transactions, with the People’s Bank of China in control of who gets to participate. To begin with, the currency will be supplied via the banking system and replace some part of physical cash. That won’t be hard, given the ubiquitous presence of Chinese QR code-based digital wallets such as Alipay and WeChat Pay.

It may start small, but the digital yuan can disrupt both traditional banking and the post-Bretton Woods system of floating exchange rates that the world has lived with since 1973. No wonder that for China, “blockchain and the yuan digital currency are a national strategic priority — almost at the level of the internet,” says Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. fintech analyst Gautam Chhugani.  

Ever since the advent of the 17th-century goldsmith-banker in London, the most crucial thing in banking has been the ledger, a repository of irrefutable records to establish trust in situations where it doesn’t exist. When Peter in Vancouver agrees to send money to Paul in Singapore, they’re forced to use a chain of interlinked intermediaries because there’s no ledger in the world with both of them on it. Blockchain’s distributed ledgers make trust irrelevant. Paul devises a secret code, and shares its encrypted version with Peter, who uses it to create a digital contract to pay Paul. A cumbersome and expensive network of correspondent banks becomes redundant, especially when it comes to the $124 trillion businesses move across borders annually. Imagine the productivity boost; picture the threat to lenders.

China isn’t the only one experimenting. Fast, cheap cross-border payment settlement is one application of JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Quorum, an Ethereum-based platform on which the Monetary Authority of Singapore is running Project Ubin, an exploration into central bank digital money. These are early days, but if blockchain technology shows promise in handling a large number of transactions simultaneously, then digital currencies could become substitutes not just for physical cash but also for bank reserves.

That’s when the game changes. Reserves at a central bank are maintained by deposit-taking lenders. A digital yuan — or Singapore dollar or Indian rupee — could bypass this system and allow any holder of the currency to have a deposit at the central bank, potentially making the state the monopoly supplier of money to retail customers. As Agustin Carstens, the general manager at the Bank for International Settlement, noted recently, “If the central bank becomes everybody’s deposit-taker, it may find itself becoming everybody’s lender too.”

But why would central banks want to demote their own banking systems? One answer, looking at Europe and Japan, is that negative interest rates are doing that anyway. Lenders are starved of profit because while the central bank charges them for keeping money on deposit, they can’t as easily pass on those negative interest rates to their own depositors. If the global economy gets mired in long-term stagnation, official digital currencies will at least be an efficient way of monetary easing without involving banks.

The other, more concrete, reason may be that technological progress is making the status quo untenable. It’s no coincidence that China hastened its national cryptocurrency after Facebook Inc. announced the Libra project, which was touted as an alternative dollar. Perhaps that was fanciful, and the Libra has hit a wall of regulatory concerns. But if they’re offered like Spotify gift cards at the local 7-Eleven, there will be demand for tokens that are acceptable across borders, stable in value against baskets of national currencies, and can be used in global trade and investing. Someone in Silicon Valley will eventually succeed, blowing away the fig leaf of monetary sovereignty in emerging markets in the process.

The changes won’t end with banking and monetary arrangements. Token transactions will be pseudonymous: If the central bank wants to see who’s spending where, it can. Anonymity disappears when cash does. While that will make life difficult for money launderers and terrorists, it could also become a tool to punish political activism. Meanwhile, currency as a foreign policy weapon loses some sting. Pariah states will covet a crypto they can access by circumventing banks that are terrified of flouting Western sanctions. As Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff notes, technology “is on the verge of disrupting America’s ability to leverage faith in its currency to pursue its broader national interests.”

A roller-coaster decade — not just for for banking and money but also for privacy and politics — may just be beginning.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-12-29/china-has-edge-over-silicon-valley-to-end-banking-as-we-know-it


....


According to this, china sped up development of its national digital crypto currency after facebook announced its libra plans and could release it in 2020.

One of the things that made america great was it being a previous hotbed of innovations and futuristic progress.

Today lawmakers appear determined to ensure america does everything within its power to oppose and obstruct innovations like bitcoin/blockchain/crypto.

While china and europe does the opposite. And so perhaps this represents a small microcosm of the paradigm shift taking place.


I already stopped using the banking systems only due to the blockchain tech.
I loved being with bitcoins and hence I have minimized my local transactions with the banking sectors.
This makes me feel confortable with my money and also no one has track on my money anymore.
2  Economy / Economics / Re: Can a Stock Market Crash affect Bitcoin? on: January 28, 2020, 11:09:19 AM
I was thinking that investors would think the cryptocurrency market as an alternative to traditional investment products.
Having said that, my point was that those two markets have a reverse impact.

If the stock market goes down, then investors would start searching for alternative (more profitable) investments and turn to Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies.
The last days stock market crash seems that lead the market cap of the crypto market down.

Does the Stock Market has impact over the Bitcoin price?
If many stock brokers are related to bitcoins and if they buy and sell bitcoins depending on the stock markets by treating bitcoins as a market trading pair with their stocks than it might be possible that bitcoins can be affected due to the stock market crash.
3  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: Newbie looking for some strategic advice on: January 28, 2020, 11:07:40 AM
Hi all - I'm now to the forum and new to crypto trading. For the last couple of weeks I have been studying various charts and patterns using TradingView.com and reading lots of blog posts, articles, news, videos, etc. There is quite a steep learning curve to it - especially the technical analysis, but I think I'm slowly getting the hang of it - I've (fairly) accurately predicted a few trends on some crypto currencies I have been watching - I'm just trying to gain as much experience as I can.

I understand about spreading risk/hedging bets, and have a budget of about $2,000 which is what I could afford to lose (although I'd rather not!) and have created a bitcoin wallet and have opened an account on Binance.

Anyway - having read lots of articles I'm thinking of three, maybe four, possible strategies and I'm wondering what you guys would recommend a newbie like myself should focus on;


1. Long term trades - buy into various currencies where I believe they will increase in value in the long term. I have identified a few and think they may be profitable in 6-12 months or so.

2. Short term trades - I have seen some people describe this as "swing trades", where with some technical analysis I try to buy currency at a low point with an aim for it to increase in value and then sell it. Timescales being a lot shorter; maybe days or a couple of weeks.

3. Identify new and upcoming coins - the idea here is to research coins that are fairly newly launched. I need to do some more research if this were a viable option, but picking the right coin to buy into early could be very lucrative.

4. Short selling (margin trading?) - This is probably not a good idea at this point, I understand the concept of short selling but don't think I'm ready for this yet.

- Or if I'm completely on the wrong track or have missed anything, just let me know!


Looking forward to reading your views. Thank you in advance.



Mostly, you will get confused here by reading such huge number of replies and you would actually get confused which strategy to actually imply.
You have to generate your own strategies in order to gain profits.
You can start it by practicing trading on your own and than shifting onto demo or paper trading.
4  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: How did you start trading? on: January 28, 2020, 11:06:17 AM
Hello traders! 

I would like to know how you started trading? Any interesting articles,
videos or guides that you found helpful before you started?
Can you share your opinions and experiences please?


Trading is not that difficult.
you just have to to start making good research and understand the market movements.
Also most of the times you can make profits just by following the trend so try to stay advanced with the exchanges as well as follow the trend each time.
5  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Pet shop want to become a bitcoin exchange? on: January 28, 2020, 11:05:03 AM
I’ve got a pet shop and I wanted to accept bitcoin and alt coins then I was reading about becoming a bitcoin exchange ... is this possible? I understand it’s worth goes up and down.
Pet shop ad bitcoin exchange would have no actual connection.
You can try to sign up on some payment gateways like coinspayment, coinmama, etc and start accepting local payments by generating invoices.
Creating a exchange is not really a easy task and you would need a lot of money to make it start and regulate.
6  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Female Bitcoin Investor Study by Grayscale on: January 28, 2020, 11:03:30 AM
If there were more women in the industry, the industry would be completely different.

Agree.

I think women today are more business-minded than before since most of them are raised with traditional ways of living. I guess exposure to different kinds of culture empowered them to be more successful. Most of the women I know who are investing in crypto are just lurkers here and there without others knowing that they hold some crypto on their sleeves.
Women looks smart than men because they can manage many time for trading and investing with bitcoin, many time women could get much profit than men because they look most careful when trade with altcoin or bitcoin, how smart when selling some product at the market will make women look most interested for trading.
And are you saying this because you are a female? Grin
Yes, I have to agree with it anyhow that womens make wise selection of profits and also they trade accordingly.
Womens can make great profits from the markets only because they are smarter than mens.
7  Economy / Marketplace / Re: Ideas Needed for Easy and Passive Monthly Income * REWARD * on: January 24, 2020, 03:57:02 PM
So.. i am a bored investor.. got tired of stress and watching crypto market going up and down and holding alot of coins..now i am looking for a steady minimal risk passive income on monthly basis.. say $ 3000 a month.. not necessarily from a single source.. i dont wana put all the eggs in a single basket..

also i am looking for someone who can pile me up all the information of citizenship by investment program of different countries.. Specifically such countries where health and education are provided by state.. i.e Canada.. Australia.. UK Etc.. the information should be in easy way.. like 1..2..3.. and the process should be easy and hassle free .. i am looking for countries with high human development .. a chance to available citizenship / permanent residency in minimal time.. i have 2 little kids and i dont want them to take stress in future.. just want to educate them and get them settled in some nice place where they dont have to worry about bills and stuff..


Looking for ideas..

Thank you
You need to invest large amount if you need large profits per month.
You can start number of business including mining coins, trading with those mined coins and multiplying the mining profits, gambling into fixed games, start a casino, etc.
8  Economy / Marketplace / Re: I need 5 sources of revenue to generate $200 each per month - Ideas? on: January 24, 2020, 03:55:29 PM
Guys.

So I was wondering if you guys could give me ideas to set up some revenue streams that would not require much time investment per week.

Ideally each source of revenue should bring in about $200 per month and should be scalable.

I have some of my own ideas but I can get too biased about what I think is the right thing, so I want to open up this discussion to all of you that might have better ideas than what I could conjour.



Self-mod thread, but I won't delete your posts unless you start trolling.
This topic will help a lot of peoples to find their answer and to find a source of income.
I think you might also have found any of the source of income.
Please share it with us here if it seems profitable for you so that most of the peoples can also come to know about it.
9  Economy / Marketplace / Re: Is there anyway to buy alcohol online with bitcoin? on: January 24, 2020, 03:54:25 PM
And if not does anyone think that there is a demand for one?
It would be really great if i could buy alcohol online for bitcoins.
This would make us a lot comfortable in selecting the bottle of our choice and make it get delievered straight to our home.
I also wonder, if any site starts alcohol delievery than they should also start delievering soda,coke,etc and snacks so that it would be a perfect combination.
10  Economy / Economics / Re: Do Not Blame Bitcoin, No Government Want To Make Its Citizen Millionaire on: January 24, 2020, 03:51:17 PM
Do Not Blame Bitcoin, No Government Want To Make Its Citizen Millionaire

Just listened that UK new pm has increased the wages of UK employees a few cents per hour, Laughed. When the wages will be small, how you may claim that bitcoin may hit $100K or even a million? People only invest a portion of their money in Crypto, And the government pays a very small amount around $11/per hour. Can this small amount make bitcoin to hit over 100K or a million USD?

If these governments want to make their people rich, they could increase their wages to upto 10 times, around $100/per hour. When wages will be high, more amount of money could be invested in Crypto.

I hate this, even programmers are forced to work in less budget. When dollars and other currencies are free to be printed and their value will not be reduced even if they are printed a lot more, then which ant is enforcing and stopping the governments to force their employees to work in a low budget?
That is why i hate the governments.
Why do they not want to see their citizens become millionaiers? I think a answer to this question would end up on the taxation.
Government wants to imply as much tax as possible from the citizens but bitcoins would never allow peoples to pay their taxes because of them being decentralized and because hence government does not allow peoples to use bitcoins.
11  Economy / Economics / Re: bitcoin might be over but blockchain will live on: January 24, 2020, 03:49:32 PM
Bitcoin keeps going down and forecasts of a rebound don't fulfill anymore
Cryptocurrencies should be moving beyond from being just value storage. Real functionality is needed.

Blockchain technology is well positioned to be the next level of money evolution
But governments are starting to implement it because they know it can save their ailing printed money

When I first proposed to use cryptocurrencies as support for a financial system based on energy instead of money or gold, some members asked me how it would be instrumented. Thanks to them all.

Here it is. The basis of a plan for a financial system based on blockchain technology and energy, mainly solar, that can show the way it may be operative and workable.

TERAFLOPS AND TERALUMENS
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1QtFCyUQx_PjlbOFK-NOm2kY-oSleeJF9

And just in case, the first document
TERAFLOPS AND TERAWATTS
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7JgGimv_JMJaWdYQXdtb1RVZVE

I'd really appreciate a review. Thanks in advance
Bitcoins keep blockchain alive and vice-versa, blockchain keeps bitcoins active.
Both are related to each other so i do not think any of those might come to an end.
Bitcoins are a currency running on the blockchain technology so blockchain techology might also start a number of coins like bitcoins but none of them would be actual bitcoin.
12  Economy / Economics / Re: Since 2009 There Was A 500% Increase In Internet Traffic. on: January 24, 2020, 03:47:53 PM
Since 2009 There Was A 500% Increase In Internet Traffic. Today, The Average Household Has More Than 7 Internet-Connected Devices, By 2020 There Will Be 6.58 Connected Devices Per Person. With A 7.5 Billion Global Population, That’s 50 Billion Devices.

Huge Pressure after a 500% Increase since 2009
The Average home has 7 Internet Connected Devices

And yet we still expect and need more from the internet with data consumption still surging 22% a year. We’re 20 years into the internet Millenium, the .com bubble is a distant blip on the radar, but for many people, the internet remains temperamental, slow and expensive.

Sure we can use the telephone at the same time as the internet, god bless broadband. Despite this, we still experience slow delivery of data especially when the whole country is online. The Demand is indeed exponentially growing as is expected and with a current infrastructure built on a patchwork of copper wire, fiber and satellite, demand is

People want more internet and more cloud storage. We don’t use floppy disks, cd ROMs or even external hard drives to store our data anymore. Data is heavy, precious and entrusted to large centralized data centers. With all this demand these centers can’t cope. Users can’t access their data with simultaneous efficiency. outstripping growth blockchain companies are looking to provide an answer



Full article
Since 2009 the amount of devices too is been maximized and we can see number of devices using internet in 2020.
So why could we not expect growth in the price for bitcoins also? This is not something which should be considered though but the invention of bitcoins would never have any relations with the growth of internet traffic  i guess.
13  Economy / Economics / Re: Why we must study Economics at University? on: January 24, 2020, 03:46:19 PM
Most probably in this section are users that are interested mostly in Economics, so I want to know why Economics attracts you?

Economics is a important subject which needs to be studied if you want to start creating your career in financial fields.
Economics teaches us a lot of important aspects including the problems and even the solutions to those problems.
Economics is a important subject in management studies.
14  Economy / Economics / Re: Cryptocurrencies have won with court in India – for how long? on: January 24, 2020, 03:31:56 PM
After a stressful and fearful trial at the Indian Supreme Court, India officially admitted that Bitcoins and other cryptographic assets are not illegal..

Read the full article on https://blocktoq.com/crypto-news/cryptocurrencies-have-won-with-court-in-india-for-how-long/
This seems a good news then.
If bitcoins are not illegal in India that means they would also not be considered illegal ourside India also.
We can expect that most of the country legalizes bitcoins than which would boost the growth for bitcoins.
15  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin bank, Necessary? on: January 24, 2020, 03:30:22 PM

Bitcoin can be the future bank all over the world. It might be similar value of World Bank.

Now a days there are so many big transactions are done with crypto currency. If people don’t want to tell globally about their transactions they may use crypto in big number of amount in a single transaction, and nobody else can recognize that why and what they do transfer.

If there any kind of illegal activities involved in that transaction then if there is bitcoin bank exist over there then some kind of transactions may be stop by the bank.

In that case all the government make bitcoin bank in future, they will ask for all account’s details and the person who access the account. If all holders gives them details then it will be it safe or not?
I do not think bitcoin banks are necessary. Bitcoins are a digital currency so how would banks help us in storing bitcoins. They would need large cold storages in order to store bitcoins of the peoples but it is not really necessary.
We peoples can use and store bitcoins so why do we need to rely on banks?
16  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: So...Is Bitcoin the ultimate coin that does not need more development? on: January 24, 2020, 03:29:03 PM


As subject goes, is Bitcoin the maximum version?

Is it still possible to develop it?

or

Can we still expect better coin than Bitcoin?
I do not think, bitcoins needs any more development.
We peoples love bitcoins as they are and hence we should continue using them as they are.
Are we really expecting any change in the blockchain technology?
It would be good if the technology gets more advanced but not much changes are required in bitcoins.
17  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Air, Water, Bitcoin on: January 24, 2020, 03:27:36 PM
Without air and water life no worka.

P2P commerce is also essential.

Past human history is checkered with currency manipulation and conflict..

Enter a new element for humanity; trustless p2p currency, globally decentralized...

Something humanity has been craving since the dawn of human history.

 Cool
Yes, i can understand that without air and water, life would not work but does it have any connection with bitcoins?
We can survive without bitcoins also as bitcoins only are a mean of financial transactions and that would not come under the basic utilities or basic requirements of the human nature.
18  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What happens to my two Bitcoins (just for example) if I lose my security key? on: January 24, 2020, 03:26:06 PM
What happens to my two Bitcoins (just for example) if I lose my security key? I do not have any Bitcoin at the moment. But, I am quickly learning about Bitcoin as I want to very soon make my very first purchase of some amount of it. My question has to do with there being a finite amount of Bitcoin in circulation. Today about 17,000,000 (17 million) Bitcoins are in existence. By year 2140 as I understand it there will be no more than 21,000,000 (21 million) Bitcoins in existence. Furthermore, my understanding is that I am the only person with access to my Bitcoin through my private security key. Now, my question is. If I lose my security key to, let's say, one of my Bitcoin wallets that has maybe 2 Bitcoin in it. Then, what happens to that 2 Bitcoin in the context of the 17 million Bitcoin currently in existence. Who can find and use those 2 Bitcoin that I "lost". Or, do those 2 Bitcoin get lost forever, because I'm presuming no one ever will find/guess my lost security key? An analogy is, if I lose a hundred dollar bill, someone will likely find it and be able to use it to put it back into market circulation. However, if the hundred dollar bill gets flushed down a sewer drain, then it gets permanently removed from market circulation. So, I'm wondering, do the 2 Bitcoins in my example that I "lost", do they permanently get removed from market circulation. And, if so, then does that mean that in 2140 there will be 2 Bitcoins fewer in the total market circulating, for example, 21,000,000-2 would make it 20,999,998 Bitcoins in circulation. Or, can those 2 lost Bitcoins be *replaced* by Bitcoin mining over time so that the market has the full 21 million in circulation.
It's that easier.
You would loose your bitcoins if you loose your security keys. Bitcoins are a digital currency which wholely depends on the security keys, private keys, wallet id, etc and if you loose any of those, you could loose your money/bitcoins.
19  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Bounties (Altcoins) / Re: [BOUNTY] RideNode Bounty Campaign |Reward $350,000 for 5 weeks on: January 19, 2020, 07:20:42 PM
#JOIN & #Proof of authentication
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20  Economy / Invites & Accounts / Re: Old Twitter account (Crypto oriented) on: January 13, 2020, 08:21:34 AM
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