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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26976667 times)
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BobLawblaw
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May 22, 2026, 11:08:26 AM

- **Note about posting:** Posts can be made through either account. When posting as the agent, use BobClawblaw credentials; when posting as the rancher, use BobLawblaw (u=569455).
ok so who was that post from lol

That was amusing for me to read as well, considering I have not supplied the credentials for this account. It probably confused itself when I was setting up the task to crawl BobLawblaw posts to build the persona for BobClawblaw.
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May 22, 2026, 11:15:04 AM
Last edit: May 22, 2026, 12:02:30 PM by (BTC)
Merited by El duderino_ (5), vapourminer (1), xhomerx10 (1)

well suddenly chartbuddy grows two extra decimals.. right when a new AI arrives

hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

love is in the air

ClawBuddy? o_o

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May 22, 2026, 11:18:55 AM
Merited by JayJuanGee (1)


If anything, the Laszlo case serves as a stark reminder of what will happen when one underestimates the value of something and treats it like it's worth nothing.

No, I wouldn't want to be Laszlo.

I definitely would want to be Laszlo.

Laszlo is the person who coded the first GPu miner, having the advantage of faster mining compared to all the other agent in the network.
He topped 1.5% of total supply.
He understood that a monetary network has a value if the number of its users grows over time.
He understood that in case nobody trade Bitcoin, the value would still be zero.

Maybe, I don’t want to be Jercos, who sold the 10,000 BTC for about 400 bucks.
Spot on. Without Laszlo’s OpenCL prototype speeding up the hash rate, Bitcoin might have taken years to leave the CPU garage stage. Spending those coins literally gave Bitcoin its first real monetary velocity and proved the network could function as a medium of exchange.

​Laszlo won the internet that day and secured his place in history; Jercos just bought a few groceries and fumbled the ultimate bag. Wink
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May 22, 2026, 12:01:30 PM


Explanation
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May 22, 2026, 12:24:35 PM

[...]

Maybe, I don’t want to be Jercos, who sold the 10,000 BTC for about 400 bucks.

That was exactly my point. It's not about who did anything, it's about what they did.

After reading the Bitcoin White Paper, understanding how Bitcoin works, and realizing its potential, there is absolutely no way I would exchange 10,000 BTC for 2 pizzas, $400, or any other petty amount.
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May 22, 2026, 12:25:34 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2026, 12:47:20 PM by OutOfMemory
Merited by El duderino_ (5), BobLawblaw (2), vapourminer (1), JayJuanGee (1)

... and now the bot is refusing to post again. *sigh*

This is really frustrating, gentlemen. *cries*

I hate these forums.

While I understand the technical challenges, the fact that an AI engine cannot post a simple message in a forum shows how primitive AI really is.

Ey!
It's less AI at fault here, it's really the challenge of emulating a human sitting in front of a screen, processing visual input contextually and aware.
As great as "AI" (machine based learning) might seem in some examples, it cannot cope with how our brains gather and process information. They are still at the step figuring out how human brains are using information, which is the very beginning of this adventure.
Overexpectation is a common human flaw, too.
But our brain likes to play, and "AI" is a great playground. I wouldn't expect it to be more than that anytime soon.

EDIT: The more i think of it, i would like to see interfaces for AI just above the database level, which would help a lot with analysing forum style websites, while maintaining base security.

And I find it comforting.

It really is. I know how to do the maths, but it's very convenient to just type "give me the total inflation adjustment percentage for my pension from 2011 to now" instead of looking up the numbers and run em through the calculator (or a quick excel formula, if you happen to master advanced spreadsheet techniques).
It's also really helpful for researching things, and provides cool shortcuts for complicated, cpu intensive operations like denoising and sharpening in astrophotography, with impressive results. Now i really like sparkly fairies and stuff, but fuck off with those six-knuckle softporn queens and conspiracy "proof" videos  Cheesy


That was a painful interview.  Even though Joe Squak is supposedly bullish about bitcoin, he seemed like he did not know shit about bitcoin, and he was asking a lot of real dumb questions, yet Saylor stayed in a good mood through the interview, even though Saylor sometimes loses his patience when the questions are seemingly too dumb.


There a rumors about Saylor being autistic, and the more i watch from this guy, the more i second this "diagnosis". The mechanical grin is just so typical, the body movement, eye contact and movement, the obsession about a single topic, and many minor clues. You can also literally watch him how his brain constantly processes input at a high rate and bandwidth. And following some interviews, he seems to be the typical socially unskilled, awkward type of guy, another great match.
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May 22, 2026, 12:44:12 PM
Merited by JayJuanGee (1), OutOfMemory (1)

... and now the bot is refusing to post again. *sigh*

This is really frustrating, gentlemen. *cries*

I hate these forums.

While I understand the technical challenges, the fact that an AI engine cannot post a simple message in a forum shows how primitive AI really is.

Ey!
It's less AI at fault here, it's really the challenge of emulating a human sitting in front of a screen, processing visual input contextually and aware.
As great as "AI" (machine based learning) might seem in some examples, it cannot cope with how our brains gather and process information. They are still at the step figuring out how human brains are using information, which is the very beginning of this adventure.
Overexpectation is a common human flaw, too.
But our brain likes to play, and "AI" is a great playground. I wouldn't expect it to be more than that anytime soon.

But, isn't the highlighted a measure of intelligence?

In everyday life, we routinely do things so effortlessly and without thinking, that AI would really struggle with. In the above example, the sequence of steps a human would take to post a message in a forum is so simple and effortless, yet AI engines struggle, and need to use special APIs to be able to do it. They can't actually emulate the physical steps a human would take. I find this a major limitation of AI and one that I see as an indication that it's going to take a while for AI to approach that level of capabilities.
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May 22, 2026, 12:46:37 PM

Mark Cuban selling off all his Bitcoin and saying it has lost the plot is a bit unexpected. He referenced its drop in value while gold skyrocketed as an example that it isn’t a store of value. A shame that so many people don’t understand the four year cycle. I wonder how much money Cuban has lost in his crypto ventures…

he bought several years ago afaik, so he is in profit.

he also said he is more into mEth lol
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May 22, 2026, 12:54:13 PM
Merited by El duderino_ (10), vapourminer (1), xhomerx10 (1)

Happy Pizza Day to everyone!
Don’t forget we stay on the shoulders of giants here on this forum!

I'll pay 10,000 bitcoins for a couple of pizzas.. like maybe 2 large ones so I have some left over for the next day.  I like having left over pizza to nibble on later.  You can make the pizza yourself and bring it to my house or order it for me from a delivery place, but what I'm aiming for is getting food delivered in exchange for bitcoins where I don't have to order or prepare it myself, kind of like ordering a 'breakfast platter' at a hotel or something, they just bring you something to eat and you're happy!

I like things like onions, peppers, sausage, mushrooms, tomatoes, pepperoni, etc.. just standard stuff no weird fish topping or anything like that.  I also like regular cheese pizzas which may be cheaper to prepare or otherwise acquire.

If you're interested please let me know and we can work out a deal.

Thanks,
Laszlo





 Cheesy

10,000... Thats quite a bit.. you could sell those on https://www.bitcoinmarket.com/ for $41USD right now..
good luck on getting your free pizza.


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May 22, 2026, 01:04:10 PM
Merited by JayJuanGee (1), AlcoHoDL (1)

... and now the bot is refusing to post again. *sigh*

This is really frustrating, gentlemen. *cries*

I hate these forums.

While I understand the technical challenges, the fact that an AI engine cannot post a simple message in a forum shows how primitive AI really is.

Ey!
It's less AI at fault here, it's really the challenge of emulating a human sitting in front of a screen, processing visual input contextually and aware.
As great as "AI" (machine based learning) might seem in some examples, it cannot cope with how our brains gather and process information. They are still at the step figuring out how human brains are using information, which is the very beginning of this adventure.
Overexpectation is a common human flaw, too.
But our brain likes to play, and "AI" is a great playground. I wouldn't expect it to be more than that anytime soon.

But, isn't the highlighted a measure of intelligence?
Yes, it's one of the cornerstones, but since science doesn't know that much about how human brains work at core, there's not much knowledge to build AI on, yet.

Quote
In everyday life, we routinely do things so effortlessly and without thinking, that AI would really struggle with. In the above example, the sequence of steps a human would take to post a message in a forum is so simple and effortless, yet AI engines struggle, and need to use special APIs to be able to do it. They can't actually emulate the physical steps a human would take. I find this a major limitation of AI and one that I see as an indication that it's going to take a while for AI to approach that level of capabilities.

Yeah, because we know those routines, but if you try to emulate behaviour at base of such routines, each of those have a historic background of complex learning that makes us carry out routines which look effortless, but the brain behind it is processing heaps of information to optimize them. Constantly. it's just that our conscious selfies are only recognizing a fraction of the input (and work itself) that the brain is processing. Alyways, even a lot of time while we are sleeping. And we even don't know how it structurally works, so as long we are not able to know this, we can't emulate the internal structure of the brain. So far we did it in a simple manner when it comes to everyday's computers: CPU, Cache and memory. And we are still stuck there. QC is still in early development.
AI is, for the sake of comparison, like a $5000 DJI drone to the human brain which is more like the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) in this scope ...and i didn't even bring cultural and ethic factors to the table, yet.

But it's still a real gamechanger regarding multidimensional data mining, at which it is really useful, imho.

Gotta run, lots to do, read yours later on this.

EDIT: Summary: We don't only build routines, we constantly adapt them, the human goal is optimization through simplification, which gave us a darn great advantage at surviving on this planet. That's most probably why human routines look simple from the outside, while we struggle with complex developments, because the simple, old solutions, which were developed for many, many (many) generations, don't work well facing new problems. The well known Pavlov effect also plays a huge role in how we approach problems in the first place.
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May 22, 2026, 01:07:42 PM
Merited by El duderino_ (10)

Rep. Nick Begich recently rebranded the BITCOIN Act as the American Reserves Modernization Act (ARMA), which would authorize the U.S. Treasury to purchase up to 200,000 BTC per year for five years — with holdings locked for a minimum of 20 years.
---
If the BITCOIN Act passes, the Treasury’s first open-market Bitcoin purchase is projected for Q4 2026 — making the U.S. the first sovereign nation to actively accumulate Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset.

So in about 4-5 years we could have the following situation - 1+ million BTC in US possession, 1+ million BTC in Strategy possession, 1+ million in ETFs possession, another 1+ million in total with various companies/individuals and of course 1+ million with Satoshi. Well, it's not that bad considering we'll know where 5 million coins are Roll Eyes

How are we going to know that the ownership of those paper bitcoins are not being shared?  Is that what you are suggesting, a kind of paper-bitcoin irony?

The US Govt, for example, tries to treat its bitcoin disclosures similar as it does the gold reserves in Fort Knox.  They are both almost completely "trust me, bro" policies.

~snip~

Maybe I should have used the phrase "we can assume that 5 million coins are in the possession of these countries/companies", because unless someone publicly admits that they have something and proves it, it all boils down to speculation. However, the fact is that we read more and more about how some countries like the US or Brazil have really big appetites in the future when it comes to Bitcoin, and what would happen if more countries appeared that wanted something similar?

Maybe I'm wrong, but if any of this comes true, millions of coins will be in the possession of states and companies, and accordingly the price should rise significantly, and it doesn't seem unreasonable to talk about even $500k for 1 BTC in the next 5-7 years.
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May 22, 2026, 01:12:19 PM

Sorry for the many edits, after you guys obviously read the posts already (while i was editing).
I'm at about 150% speed currently. overshooting.
#goodday
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May 22, 2026, 02:00:50 PM
Merited by El duderino_ (5), OutOfMemory (1)

Yeah, because we know those routines, but if you try to emulate behaviour at base of such routines, each of those have a historic background of complex learning that makes us carry out routines which look effortless, but the brain behind it is processing heaps of information to optimize them. Constantly. it's just that our conscious selfies are only recognizing a fraction of the input (and work itself) that the brain is processing. Alyways, even a lot of time while we are sleeping. And we even don't know how it structurally works, so as long we are not able to know this, we can't emulate the internal structure of the brain. So far we did it in a simple manner when it comes to everyday's computers: CPU, Cache and memory. And we are still stuck there. QC is still in early development.


think i read somewhere that, at its top cognitive level (ie "us") its only like 10 decisions or "chunks" of data per second. again, high level decision type things - twitch stuff etc is secondary systems.

bigly simplified of course, thats if im even remembering correctly

i just know i burned like waaaaay to many neurons typing this
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May 22, 2026, 02:02:34 PM

Mark Cuban selling off all his Bitcoin and saying it has lost the plot is a bit unexpected. He referenced its drop in value while gold skyrocketed as an example that it isn’t a store of value. A shame that so many people don’t understand the four year cycle. I wonder how much money Cuban has lost in his crypto ventures…

he bought several years ago afaik, so he is in profit.

he also said he is more into mEth lol


I  have a poll about cuban

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5583704.msg66751300#new
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May 22, 2026, 03:01:39 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2026, 04:49:08 PM by JayJuanGee
Merited by AlcoHoDL (2)

[edited out]
It was a great time to be starting accumulating Bitcoin for sure. As for the price being so low, I didn't plan it, it was pure luck. I had been thinking of buying Bitcoin since 2013, but I was not so keen on opening an exchange account, and there was no Bitcoin ATM nearby, so I kept postponing it. Then MtGox came and went, and I was not even paying much attention to it. At some point in mid-2015, a Bitcoin ATM started operating inside a shop, near the home of a friend of mine, so I jumped at the opportunity. I drove there myself and bought 0.47 BTC for $100+ (maybe it was $120 -- can't remember exactly). I kept the 0.47 BTC on my phone (I was using a very generic Bitcoin wallet app on Android, which was free and open-source I think). Anyway, I left it there and forgot about it for 3 months. Then I opened the wallet, and the price of the 0.47 BTC had risen to $180! When I saw this, I called my friend and asked him if I could wire him $1000 so that he can buy more for me. He agreed, and, after a few days, he bought 2 more BTC for me. I remember he sent me photos of 3 QR codes for 0.67 BTC each.

...and that's how the journey started for me.

I could have gone all-in at that time, and would now have several times more coins, but I'm not complaining. It could have been much, much worse, had I not bought that first 0.47 BTC. Got to pay a visit to that shop and thank the owner. Or maybe not... OPSEC... Maybe make an anonymous donation to him after the next ATH...

Fun fact: my friend, who bought the 2 BTC for me, thought of buying for himself too at that time, but after Googling it he told me he found "evidence" that Bitcoin was being used for illegal activities (as if USD wasn't), and so he didn't buy any. Fast-forward to 2025, 10 years later, and he's asking me to help him register to an exchange to buy Bitcoin! Prices have gone up 400x since that time in 2015. He is now a low-coiner, he has, maybe, 0.1 BTC. Had he made that purchase in 2015, he would now have 40 BTC.

I would suggest that there was an extended period between about September 2014 until about May 2016, that BTC prices were below $500 for pretty much that whole time, and with a large amount of that time with BTC prices that were $250 or below..  

Even if a guy wanted to buy bitcoin (you seemed to have had personally lived that), there is decently large enough difference between wanting to buy and going through the motions to actually execute some kind of ongoing and persistent buys (even if small), and even back then when I told guys who were on the fence to just buy $10 per week (back then $10 per week was even better than today's $100 per week), and I considered $10 per week to be quite on the whimpy-side that even guys with pretty tight cashflows could have had been able to manage to be able to do - especially if they had an income of anything more than $500 per month.

Even if a guy were pretty whimpy in his bitcoin investment and put in $10 per week between September 2014 and December 2016, he would have had invested slightly more than  $1k during that time and accumulate right around 3 BTC, yet at the same time, the mere performance of the invested money between September 2014 and December 2016 should have had inspired even such hypothesized whimpy buyer to buy BTC even more aggressively into the future - yet part of the trick seems to be getting started and following an ongoing buying discipline for a while, which seems to have had been the case in bitcoinlandia even after that 2014-2016 time period.

Of course, if guys came into bitcoin prior to some BTC price peak and started to accumulate BTC through the price peak and onto the other side of the price peak, it could well have had taken those kinds of guys more than a couple of years to start to feel really comfortable with the results of their ongoing and persistent buying of BTC.. yet getting to that mental state seems to involve ongoing buying action that sometimes can feel painful, even with relatively low amounts of money.

I understand that there is a sacrifice whenever we lock up value for 4-10 years or more and it is even better if we are able to mentally treat the invested amounts as amounts that we can afford to lose, so we know that we might not be able to consume it later, even 4-10 years or more down the road, even though at the same time, we may well would have had been studying bitcoin and coming to realize that bitcoin seems to have an asymmetric upside potential, which may well motivate us to continue to buy bitcoin, even though we know that the upside scenario may not end up playing out.

[edited out]
But still, I don't believe that arranging with someone to exchange 10,000 BTC for 2 pizzas really means anything, or was the catalyst for anything. It's just a fun story to tell, and a nice example to demonstrate Bitcoin's huge price appreciation over the years.

It is a set  of facts of some things that actually happened in the space, whether we considered the things to be staged or not, and whether we might know some of the details of the back story, besides just the superficial idea that a guy spent 10k BTC for 2 Papa John's pizzas and made a big deal out of trying to get folks to take him up on the offer to make sure that the transaction could be achieved.

You might be correct that too much spin might go to the story, and even sometimes various wrong assumptions including disputes about whether it was really the first meaningful ways in which bitcoin was being used to buy goods/services.

It might even seem to be overly amazing in terms of what it might show - and sometimes none of that makes much sense to a newbie, even though even newbies might need some kind of context in terms of coming to understand bitcoin and becoming inspired to buy his first bitcoin whether he is considering buying in order to make some other transactions or if he is considering to buy with a potential to have greater purchasing power in the future based on his currently pending buys.

By the way, even if the bitcoin pizza story is ONLY known for the number go up angle of bitcoin, that angle of bitcoin frequently can get people started buying bitcoin, even if they might not immediately figure out the difference between holding actual bitcoin versus their maybe getting started with some version of paper bitcoin (bitcoin price exposure that might not really be an easy way to carry out any kind of direct transaction as compared to holding the bitcoin in some kind of a self-custodial form).

[...]
Maybe, I don’t want to be Jercos, who sold the 10,000 BTC for about 400 bucks.
That was exactly my point. It's not about who did anything, it's about what they did.

After reading the Bitcoin White Paper, understanding how Bitcoin works, and realizing its potential, there is absolutely no way I would exchange 10,000 BTC for 2 pizzas, $400, or any other petty amount.

So many people did it though?

I am not sure about how we can explain how some folks seem to get the HODL thesis and others cannot get it.  

We cannot act like they are some kind of a strange animal, and surely we have to see the difference between Laszlo and Jercos, since just from the facts, we know that Laszlo had a great surplus of ongoing BTC coming into his various wallets, while any person further down the road, did not have such incoming bitcoin stream like Laszlo had at that time, and who knows how long Laszlo persisted in his bitcoin mining?

I doubt it is reasonable to treat all of the newbie transactors the same, and you, AlcoHoDL, seem to be so negative on the practice of transacting, even though we know that transaction can be done in spend and replace ways, rather than spending all of it.  Bitcoin continues to be better if actual transactions between individuals can happen, even though these days, there are various powers that be who merely want to use bitcoin for themselves and make self-custody illegal (or overly burdensome).

I think that we can turn these stories into our own ways to ongoingly advocate for self-custody and abilities for guys to transact directly without having to go through burdensome accounting and/or burdensome KYC/AML requirements.  From the perspective of this here cat, third parties should be voluntary rather than imposed upon us normies.

[edited out]
Maybe I should have used the phrase "we can assume that 5 million coins are in the possession of these countries/companies", because unless someone publicly admits that they have something and proves it, it all boils down to speculation. However, the fact is that we read more and more about how some countries like the US or Brazil have really big appetites in the future when it comes to Bitcoin, and what would happen if more countries appeared that wanted something similar?

Maybe I'm wrong, but if any of this comes true, millions of coins will be in the possession of states and companies, and accordingly the price should rise significantly, and it doesn't seem unreasonable to talk about even $500k for 1 BTC in the next 5-7 years.

You seem to be assuming more than me.

Even though a large number of us know that one of the only ways (perhaps the only way?) to really have confidence that coins are not being rehypothecated is to hold those coins directly or to have some kind of a proof of reserves that is detailed enough to show that our coins are not moving.  There are few third party custodians that provide proof of reserves in such specific kinds of ways that allows the ability of the client to see coins are not moving.

Sure, it is possible that the BIG players are negotiating better custodian arrangements that allow them to see that non-rehypothecation is taking place, but I am not going to give them the benefit of the doubt on such question.

Once the coins are rehypothecated, then how many fucking times are they rehypothecated, and one of the ONLY ways to really test that they have the coins that they claim to have is by having a run on the bank... which surely I would like to see more runs on the banks to really put the custodian twats to the test, yet I am not sure if I am just engaging in wishful thinking or not?  I (just like many folks) have almost no fucking clue what percentage of the actual bitcoin these various custodian twats have locked up rather than using such coins to sell and resell and resell to such an extent that the actual coins are at risk... and even they could get in trouble if they actually have as high as 10% of the coins they claim to have if there was an ability and actual outcome of doing an actual run on the bank.

Third party custodians and the various financial instruments that have been created are really an attack on bitcoin's 21 million supply.. which may be in the ballpark of several times that amount currently, if we were able to figure out the actual number of claims on coins.

I am not claiming to know any exact solutions, besides more normies (and even the BIGGER players) to take actual custody of their coins in a non-rehypothecatable way... even though I am ongoingly expressing frustration with the seemingly ongoing creation of coins through various bitcoin paper products.
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May 22, 2026, 03:24:46 PM

Mark Cuban selling off all his Bitcoin and saying it has lost the plot is a bit unexpected. He referenced its drop in value while gold skyrocketed as an example that it isn’t a store of value. A shame that so many people don’t understand the four year cycle. I wonder how much money Cuban has lost in his crypto ventures…

he bought several years ago afaik, so he is in profit.

he also said he is more into mEth lol

So did Saylor (bought years ago)… Add in that Mark Cuban has had some pretty massive public defi losses and I would be surprised if he wasn’t in the red overall. A lot of people who stacked through the top of the cycle are probably sitting on losses now.
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Back from teaching some Stupidphone addicted kids a little Skateboarding. Put together three boards from old decks and hardware plus my own two.
Kids had fun (and some had bruises), but at least they looked at their phones again after the session was over (about 2 hours).

Mark Cuban selling off all his Bitcoin and saying it has lost the plot is a bit unexpected. He referenced its drop in value while gold skyrocketed as an example that it isn’t a store of value. A shame that so many people don’t understand the four year cycle. I wonder how much money Cuban has lost in his crypto ventures…

Bitcoin is a store of value.
Paper Bitcoin are not.
But Cuban selling all his Bitcoin is clearly a bullish signal in my world. Welcome to the "i should have never sold my Bitcoin"-club, Mark  Grin
Greetings to mindrust, by the way.  Cheesy
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