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Author Topic: Bitcoin ETFs - Good or Bad?  (Read 815 times)
BlackHatCoiner
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January 28, 2024, 06:18:41 PM
 #81

And a public ledger is not very... private. My GMail account is more private than Bitcoin because at least there would need to be a valid court order to breach my private email messages. Bitcoin transactions can be triangulated by anybody on the Internet.
Triangulated? Your Bitcoin transactions are as private as your pseudonym under an Internet page, with the exception that transactions don't have an IP address. If you take precautions, it can be pretty private.

If you send an email with GMail that you don't want your spouse to know about, you are safe, for instance. With Bitcoin that is a lot harder, and far out of reach for most consumers.
I'd argue that if you just want to hide yourself from your spouse, both are equally private. (Unless your spouse works for the NSA, lol)

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electronicash
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January 28, 2024, 06:52:08 PM
 #82

ETF has nothing to do with decentralization, stay away.

The question here is rather whether you want to profit from the Bitcoin price, in which case an ETF is the right option for people who are not confident in dealing with physical Bitcoins. But if you see Bitcoin as an alternative to the currency system and are more ideologically motivated to invest in Bitcoin, then I agree with you that an ETF is the wrong option.

people couldn't resist that's why they pushed for that ETF but the negative effect will come in the long term. we\re happy ffor the approval though.
there were posts weeks ago that a pool tried sensor transactions which i wouldn't be surprised if it was the institutions who influenced them to do it since they are also investing in the stocks of these mining companies.

Whitney Webb a renowned journalist has been discussing BlackRock's agenda for BTC for a while and she said it started since the plan to censor the internet.

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legiteum
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January 28, 2024, 07:02:24 PM
 #83

And a public ledger is not very... private. My GMail account is more private than Bitcoin because at least there would need to be a valid court order to breach my private email messages. Bitcoin transactions can be triangulated by anybody on the Internet.
Triangulated? Your Bitcoin transactions are as private as your pseudonym under an Internet page, with the exception that transactions don't have an IP address. If you take precautions, it can be pretty private.

If you send an email with GMail that you don't want your spouse to know about, you are safe, for instance. With Bitcoin that is a lot harder, and far out of reach for most consumers.
I'd argue that if you just want to hide yourself from your spouse, both are equally private. (Unless your spouse works for the NSA, lol)

Yes, if you take precautions you can be safe for some purchases, but if buy, say, a house or a car, which necessarily has your name on it, then people can trace backwards to find you, and then extrapolate other purchases etc.

For GMail, on the hand, you don't have to be careful, you just use it and nobody without a court order is going to be reading your email.

And yeah, I guess if we're talking about one's spouse, that's probably correct, but if we're talking about malign actors e.g. people looking to steal something from you, spending without taking precautions with Bitcoin can get you ripped off, whereas you can email your brains out with GMail and never have to fear such a thing.

For the average user not accustomed to tradecraft, a centralized app from a reputable company is a better bet than Bitcoin or most other cryptos (obviously not the ones specially designed for anonymity like Monero).

And for most people who are not criminals, the kind of anonymity you get from centralized apps is perfectly fine.

Of course if we're talking about credit card purchases (or PayPal et. al.) then it's is a totally different story. Your purchases are practically announced to the whole world with that because they sell non-anonymized marketing data to whomever wants to buy it.

What somebody needs to do is marry these two concepts wherein you can make payments anonymously with a centralized digital currency architecture that doesn't sell your data (and doesn't even know who you are), allowing average consumers to make anonymous payments and yet not be a security threat by allowing criminals a means of extra-legal payment.  Wink





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