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Question: When will BTC get back above $70K:
7/14 - 0 (0%)
7/21 - 1 (0.8%)
7/28 - 11 (8.9%)
8/4 - 16 (12.9%)
8/11 - 8 (6.5%)
8/18 - 6 (4.8%)
8/25 - 8 (6.5%)
After August - 74 (59.7%)
Total Voters: 124

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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26489941 times)
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (174 posts by 3 users with 9 merit deleted.)
empowering
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February 25, 2015, 05:27:14 PM

Looks like some people here still use the fact that bitcoin recovered from a almost complete retrace crash in 2011/2012 when marketcap was more than 100 times smaller than today (and the whole landscape was completely different) as an argument that it will do the same now.

*sigh*

and some people seem to make the argument that it can never retrace to a price, that it was at just a year ago (and pass that even) despite everything that is happening in the space, which is light  years ahead of where it was in 11/12, which they keep trying to say means nothing.

*sigh*

and all the while the truthiest truth is that non of us have a crystal ball....




empowering
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February 25, 2015, 05:28:17 PM

http://www.coindesk.com/cyberinsurance-pioneer-bitgo-insurance/

Insurance will soon be commonplace, for most/all Bitcoin related business.

Get used to it.
Like Coinbase and Circle pseudo-insurance?

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=960437.msg10517604#msg10517604

No... like insurance veterans getting into the Bitcoin space and providing insurance.

If I had meant coinbase and circle, I would have posted that.  Cheesy
Wandererfromthenorth
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February 25, 2015, 05:40:31 PM

Looks like some people here still use the fact that bitcoin recovered from a almost complete retrace crash in 2011/2012 when marketcap was more than 100 times smaller than today (and the whole landscape was completely different) as an argument that it will do the same now.

*sigh*

and some people seem to make the argument that it can never retrace to a price, that it was at just a year ago (and pass that even) despite everything that is happening in the space, which is light  years ahead of where it was in 11/12, which they keep trying to say means nothing.

*sigh*

and all the while the truthiest truth is that non of us have a crystal ball....





Light years ahead? What happened? A few big or small merchants and companies "accepting" bitcoin while *NOT* accepting bitcoin? Exchanges going bust? Plenty of scams that burned a lot of noobs? A few ATMs? The development of potentially better technologies (not talking about shitcoins lol)?
I don't see real improvement.

Also, "light years ahead than 2011/2012", that's the point, you buy for cheap when nobody is talking about it (2011-2012), not when noobs start screaming "moon, guaranteed!" and rambling about bitcoin world domination because "infrastructure". That's when you consider dumping if what you see around doesn't convince you.


I mean read that Fed "bullish on the technology" article and tell me if it's not the most bearish thing ever for bitcoin itself.
What they say it's pretty clear.
Wandererfromthenorth
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February 25, 2015, 05:46:12 PM

http://www.coindesk.com/cyberinsurance-pioneer-bitgo-insurance/

Insurance will soon be commonplace, for most/all Bitcoin related business.

Get used to it.
Like Coinbase and Circle pseudo-insurance?

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=960437.msg10517604#msg10517604

No... like insurance veterans getting into the Bitcoin space and providing insurance.

If I had meant coinbase and circle, I would have posted that.  Cheesy
What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.
oda.krell
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February 25, 2015, 05:49:35 PM

Looks like some people here still use the fact that bitcoin recovered from a almost complete retrace crash in 2011/2012 when marketcap was more than 100 times smaller than today (and the whole landscape was completely different) as an argument that it will do the same now.

*sigh*

Hardly anyone I take serious does that.

What it can be used as is the following argument: just because there's a severe correction / bear market going on, doesn't necessarily mean price will never recover again (which some in here are absolutely sure about, and make statements to that effect).

Catch the difference?

Historic precedence --> Guaranteed to happen again! (bad)

Historic precedence --> Possibility for it to happen again exists. (good)
silverfuture
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February 25, 2015, 05:52:23 PM
Last edit: February 25, 2015, 06:04:24 PM by silverfuture


Quote from: silverfuture


...
I'm not even a nice guy.  I'm not concerned about teh n00bs, but rather how their goofy self-mutilation affects Bitcoin as a whole, and how this public perception affects the value of my investment.  I don't even particularly care if stupid n00bs lose money, as long as they do it discretely, quietly, not center-stage under the spotlight.

I'm not a moralfag, I'm looking out for myself.  Just like a guy quietly moving serious weight wouldn't let a punkass crack dealer set up on his stoop to push bunk.  Hint: it's not because he's a nice guy worried about crackheads not getting their due bang for the buck.


TL;DR: Enlightened self-interest.
If some noobs get schooled in the process?  Gravy!



Typical trollbear  Huh

Not sure why you keep quoting that.  Yeah, educating you (the [not so] great [but definitely] unwashed) coincides with my self-interest.  You should be dropping to your knees and thanking me.
Why didn't ur moms teach you manners, Bitcoiners?

I keep posting it because it reveals your true objectives and personality, morality or ethics be damned, while you profess everywhere that your scammy behavior is just you trying to uncover scams or pedo or whatever and filling your scuzzy pockets with pocket lint cheap coinz. You are just protecting your "investment" in fiat and the central bank enabling war machines.

What agency do you work for?  Undecided

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Qv5PuPtuRA

empowering
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February 25, 2015, 05:52:40 PM

Looks like some people here still use the fact that bitcoin recovered from a almost complete retrace crash in 2011/2012 when marketcap was more than 100 times smaller than today (and the whole landscape was completely different) as an argument that it will do the same now.

*sigh*

and some people seem to make the argument that it can never retrace to a price, that it was at just a year ago (and pass that even) despite everything that is happening in the space, which is light  years ahead of where it was in 11/12, which they keep trying to say means nothing.

*sigh*

and all the while the truthiest truth is that non of us have a crystal ball....





Light years ahead? What happened? A few big or small merchants and companies "accepting" bitcoin while *NOT* accepting bitcoin? Few exchanges going bust? Plenty of scams that burned a lot of noobs? A few ATMs? The development of potentially better technologies (not talking about shitcoins lol)?
I don't see real improvement.

Also, "light years ahead than 2011/2012", that's the point, you buy for cheap when nobody is talking about it (2011-2012), not when noobs start screaming "moon, guaranteed!" and rambling about bitcoin world domination because "infrastructure". That's when you consider dumping if what you see around doesn't convince you.


I mean read that Fed "bullish on the technology" article and tell me if it's not the most bearish thing ever for bitcoin itself.
What they say it's pretty clear.


I am not here to convince you.

I am not a noob, and I am not talking about "world domination"

However if you cannot see the significance of the developments in the space since 11/12 (which continue as I type) then there is little point in me pointing them out to you, as the situation is self evident in my opinion.




 
NotLambchop
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February 25, 2015, 05:55:31 PM

...
What agency do you work for?  Undecided

...
How is it that EVERY Bitcoiner is both paranoid (thinks that those warning against running with scissors are driven by evol ulterior motives), and deliriously self-important (thinks that IRL people give enough of a fuck about this nickel sideshow to bother with it)?  Paranoid schizophrenia does go hand-in-hand with delusions of grandeur, but you guys all seem to be cast from the same mould...
RD965
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February 25, 2015, 05:56:02 PM

Since were braking up from here, if bull volume fails were probably ending up in 160$ around double bottom
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ


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February 25, 2015, 05:59:33 PM

Coin
Explanation
Andre#
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February 25, 2015, 06:00:02 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

If I let my computer get hacked, and the thieves empty my fiat bank account, I'm screwed, too. No difference.

One of my neighbours had her bank card stolen after she went to an ATM. The thieves had seen her typing in her code. She got nothing from the bank.

So if you lose your access credentials, no matter if it's your passord or PIN code, or your private key, you lose your money. A bank only refunds if the bank made a mistake, and the government only refunds if the bank goes bust.
NotLambchop
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February 25, 2015, 06:01:32 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

If I let my computer get hacked, and the thieves empty my fiat bank account, I'm screwed, too. No difference.

One of my neighbours had her bank card stolen after she went to an ATM. The thieves had seen her typing in her code. She got nothing from the bank.

Sounds like utter bullshit.  What country do you live in?
LewiesMan
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February 25, 2015, 06:03:30 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

If I let my computer get hacked, and the thieves empty my fiat bank account, I'm screwed, too. No difference.

One of my neighbours had her bank card stolen after she went to an ATM. The thieves had seen her typing in her code. She got nothing from the bank.

Sounds like utter bullshit.  What country do you live in?

Entirely possible even in the US.
greenlion
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February 25, 2015, 06:04:34 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

I think you have a very curious idea of what insurance actually is, and you're inventing some weird troll-y fiction to support a completely artificial view of insurance.

If the risks can be reasonably quantified through actuarial analysis, there can be insurance. Stolen cars aren't exactly always reversible.
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February 25, 2015, 06:09:17 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

If I let my computer get hacked, and the thieves empty my fiat bank account, I'm screwed, too. No difference.

One of my neighbours had her bank card stolen after she went to an ATM. The thieves had seen her typing in her code. She got nothing from the bank.

Sounds like utter bullshit.  What country do you live in?

Entirely possible even in the US.

It seems to be pretty discretionary depending on your bank. Some banks are refusing to refund online banking hacks and citing that it's their customer's responsibility to guard their details.
NotLambchop
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February 25, 2015, 06:09:56 PM

What I meant is that "bitcoin insurance" can probably only be what circle and coinbase are offering, basically telling people that "it's all insured" but if your computer/account gets hacked you are screwed and they don't give you a penny.
Considering bitcoin is irreversible and all, good luck with actual consumer protection.

If I let my computer get hacked, and the thieves empty my fiat bank account, I'm screwed, too. No difference.

One of my neighbours had her bank card stolen after she went to an ATM. The thieves had seen her typing in her code. She got nothing from the bank.

Sounds like utter bullshit.  What country do you live in?

Entirely possible even in the US.

Really?  I suppose everything's possible, but that's not really how things work.  Heard plenty of "happened to my neighbor" stories, usually turns out 2b bulshit tho.
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February 25, 2015, 06:13:07 PM

Since were braking up from here, if bull volume fails were probably ending up in 160$ around double bottom
Explain how? I don't see this as a possibility at all.
If the push is not strong enough at this time more sideways action is more likely than a dump.

The way I read the market there is absolutely no incentive to sell coins below $220.
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103 days, 21 hours and 10 minutes.


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February 25, 2015, 06:19:38 PM

Since were braking up from here, if bull volume fails were probably ending up in 160$ around double bottom
Explain how? I don't see this as a possibility at all.
If the push is not strong enough at this time more sideways action is more likely than a dump.

The way I read the market there is absolutely no incentive to sell coins below $220.

Sideways action is usually bearish.

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February 25, 2015, 06:27:37 PM

Since were braking up from here, if bull volume fails were probably ending up in 160$ around double bottom
Explain how? I don't see this as a possibility at all.
If the push is not strong enough at this time more sideways action is more likely than a dump.

The way I read the market there is absolutely no incentive to sell coins below $220.

I don't think price is going below $200 any time soon. It is either sideways or up or beyond.  Wink
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February 25, 2015, 06:30:06 PM

Since were braking up from here, if bull volume fails were probably ending up in 160$ around double bottom
Explain how? I don't see this as a possibility at all.
If the push is not strong enough at this time more sideways action is more likely than a dump.

The way I read the market there is absolutely no incentive to sell coins below $220.

Sideways action is usually bearish.


Depends. Sideways (on falling volume, even) could either lead to a sudden break of resistance like in May, or of support, like in November.





Your guess is as good as mine, although I'm slightly leaning towards upwards, because of the sheer size of the January capitulation.
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