I personally would not trust such a new website with crypto-to-fiat transfers considering there are much better and more reputable services for such conversions like Bitpay (though there are mixed reviews for Bitpay's debit card). I'd much rather trade P2P for fiat with some person on this forum or a P2P exchange/regular exchange like Localbitcoins or Paxful before considering such a service.
PayGlobal's limited to people in the EU and a select few other countries as is typical with these debit cards if anyone here hasn't noticed yet as well.
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I don’t use hidden orders personally, but I assume they’re used primarily so that large orders don’t influence price movements in the short term. A wall of coins can have a pretty significant impact on short-term price movements, and so some whales like to keep their trades hidden. They can also be used to nudge the price of a coin or token up or down without there being a visible wall on the orderbooks as a result.
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Depends how long you’ve been trading and what sort of timeframe you’re used to trading with. Trading under pressure’s extremely difficult to do for most people and the first step you should be taking is simply relaxing and planning ahead. If you haven’t traded for profit on shorter timeframes before, just tr ade how you were trading before and try to earn as much as you can with your older techniques. If you’re focusing on making a profit, now’s not the time to be experimenting with new things.
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I don’t know a lot about the site and I haven’t been able to find any information on the site besides a Trustpilot page for the site with favorable reviews (though Trustpilot reviews can easily be faked). The fact that the owner has his name supposedly on the site doesn’t matter in the slightest. Did a quick whois lookup for the site though, and it seems the site was created late last year. I would not be putting my money into such a new site that has no legitimate feedback. Domain Name: bitcofly.com Registry Domain ID: 2312216782_DOMAIN_COM-VRSN Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.godaddy.com Registrar URL: http://www.godaddy.com Updated Date: 2018-09-20T14:38:55Z Creation Date: 2018-09-20T14:38:55Z Registrar Registration Expiration Date: 2019-09-20T14:38:55Z Registrar: GoDaddy.com, LLC Registrar IANA ID: 146
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Recognizing the fact that you might lose more money if you continue to gamble's a great place mindset to be in, as you've successfully stopped gambling (at least for the moment). There's a couple things you can do from here, but the most responsible thing to do IMO is to just straight up stop gambling right now. If you've already got a history of gambling addiction, gambling really just might not be the thing for you.
What I'm about to say next might be easier said than done, but try to find other things you like to do and keep your mind off gambling temporarily. There's got to be something else you enjoy doing out there; if not, you just haven't found it yet. Give other things a shot and you'll find other enjoyable things to do in no time.
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Services ( click for link) is another valid section to post such a thread in IMO considering I've seen plenty of such threads paying users for testing and reviewing things like mixers there, though such a topic could also be placed in Games and Rounds as it is related to gambling after all. Either works in the end in my eyes.
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Don't want to turn this into some sort of trading thread, but I too don't see LTC going too far above $100 unless BTC's also dragged upwards and other cryptos as well. BTC's been lagging behind alts like ETH and LTC big time recently, though I expect LTC continuing its run upwards from the mid-$50s will likely have BTC going up to some degree too.
LTC could still go much higher than where it's at right now and the L3+s could drop below the 80s for maintenance again, but difficulty will catch up again and those things'll once again be unprofitable.
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I personally keep the majority of my funds on hardware wallet(s) and paper wallets, with my desktop and mobile wallet holding a few hot funds that I use for daily transactions. I don’t trust my main PC too much as I feel there’s a moderate chance that it’s infected with some sort of malware already and I actually keep a bit more on my phone than my desktop as I can scan QR codes with my phone for payment. As for the software I use for storage on my desktop, I use the Electrum light wallet and I have my wallet file encrypted for a bit extra security.
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Binance’s app is pretty good and it’s also the only mobile trading app I use. I don’t trade often on my mobile though as I have a laptop that’s much easier to work with that has a much bigger screen than my 5” phone. There’s only so much you can fit on a phone screen, and things are typically too big and clunky or too small on mobile trading apps.
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I typically go through a P2P exchange service like Paxful or LBC for a fiat-to-crypto transfer without KYC (though you'll likely pay a premium for this on certain payment methods), and I use Binance for trading crypto-to-crypto without KYC. There's plenty of smaller exchanges out there that also don't require KYC for operation, but volume is typically pretty low on them and I would much rather trade with a more established exchange than a smaller and newer one.
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Most of the people I know that are successful with affiliate programs have high numbers of referrals and don't have very many highrollers referred; I only remember asking about how much those people made total through referral programs, though I expect if one were to be earning a consistent 0.01BTC per week or something of the sort it's likely from a high number of referrals gambling rather than one or two highrollers. Still very impressive considering I've only managed to get a fraction of that per month with refs.
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Obelisk does disclose some preliminary specifications for the GRN1 with a rough figure of 100GPS @ 800w, though the site does also say more detailed specifications for the GRN1 should be coming out sometime during this month. Innosilicon only states their miner should be less than 500W.
Interestingly enough you can also prebuy the GRN1 at $3000 USD and get $2000 USD of your purchase back before their sales close with no questions asked. Innosilicon seems to be trying to offer something similar with their lower-wattage miner with a $2k refundable deposit that's refundable within 2 weeks of the true specs being announced for the miner. Will be interesting to see which manufacturer comes out on top in terms of efficiency and how that compares with a good GPU mining Grin.
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You don't always have to go long in trading, either. There's some people out there that aren't aware of the fact that you can short crypto assets (though this is still risky and is essentially gambling if you don't know what you're doing and stops, etc), which is possible on crypto exchanges like Bitfinex or Kraken. Bear markets are also times of learning and changing mindsets. There's still people stuck in the wrong mentality lingering from the bull market of 2017 out there losing trades.
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No idea what velocity is that you're talking about (volume?), but it is indeed true that volume's risen since BTC nosedived off $6k and failed to make a quick recovery in late November. There's been plenty of volume on exchanges recently, more than before we dropped from $6k though there've still been some days where volume has slumped a bit like Mar 2 for example.
Alts also seem to be leading BTC upwards recently and just might be what leads BTC towards and past $4000 soon. LTC's back at Feb 22 prices and is trying to break $55 (Finex price) yet again, perhaps successfully this time, and ETH also helped lead us up and out of the low $3000s we were in earlier in February. Pretty interesting considering BTC was mostly leading alt price movements until recently when things seem to have flipped.
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If you do choose to create a site for advertising your referral link(s), you'll need to either be good at writing or find good writers yourself for whatever topic you're writing about that connects to your reflink. The services board on this forum ( click for link) is a pretty good place to look for writers in my experience. Writing about topics closely related to gambling like gambling reviews, house edge and such will help you gather an audience that is already interested in crypto gambling and will help you get more referrals as well.
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Can you use tor or a vpn to get around this? It's the whole of the US afaik.
I think it is just limited to the US though and I can access it normally.
It is likely the entire United States indeed. I get the same trying from the state of Pennsylvania and Ohio, though I don’t think Hashnest will disallow deposits from other IP locations through a VPN like other services; don't think they'll do something like Bitmex where they force withdraw on an IP located in the US though.
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What even are the standard fees for an account if one were to trade $1 Million on the platform, and what sort of savings could one expect to see by paying for the fee-free offer?
I also don’t expect many people will sign up for your competition considering there’s no escrow and your account’s very new to these parts. Plenty of organizations around here offer similar types of promotions and exit before paying out participants, unfortunately.
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I have accounts on several exchanges that are all verified and ready to go in case I ever need to sell off any of the coins I hold, and I also never plan on selling all the BTC and alts I hold, though I will and currently do sell off a little bit for personal needs and when prices rise towards an ATH like what happened in 2017.
P2P trading's always an option as well, though you won't get market price with most methods of payment on a P2P exchange like Paxful or Localbitcoins. I've never tried selling crypto for cash in person, though I do know some people that do.
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I don't see how this answers OP's question at all considering there is nowhere in the quiz you linked that asks what payment sort of payment gateways you prefer to use in a casino. Still a pretty neat site nevertheless. Second, there aren't any casinos using Coinpayments at all AFAIK considering Coinpayments is oriented towards goods and services transactions, and most casinos just give you a deposit address instead of a specific page like Coinpayments gives you. Most crypto casinos do accept major altcoins directly, though.
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You could always start gambling with a certain goal (doubling or tripling your initial deposit, etc) in mind and stop after achieving that goal or losing all your money. No need to form such a complex agreeement and such if you're capable of doing this after a bit of 'practice'- that is, start trying this out the next time you gamble with a smaller amount than normal and put a bit more in every next time you gamble 'till you're up to your normal gambling amount.
Alternatively, if you really can't seem to stop excitement from overwhelming you, gambling might not be the best form of entertainment for you. There's plenty of other things to do elsewhere too; you just haven't found many of those things yet.
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