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Author Topic: Was the China news truly a sham?  (Read 3154 times)
guybrushthreepwood
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December 20, 2013, 12:14:54 PM
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Still none the wiser. What is "true trading". These aren't terms that appear in investopedia you know Wink

False trading could be selling to yourself to fake volume. Since there was no transaction fee, this did not cost anything.

Thank you. That makes sense. But any website could do that anyway, regardless of transaction fees or not, just by "internal accounting" methods.


Oh yeah, didn't think of that. Just look what happened to the manipulation of the price of Dogecoin recently.
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smoothrunnings
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December 20, 2013, 12:57:42 PM
 #22

My friend gave me a link to this:  http://www.btc38.com/btc/btc_market/476.html

and this

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1t2mec/youve_been_duped_china_may_not_be_a_paragon_of/

which stated that basically this latest regulatory "update" was a sham.

I wish I could read Chinese. What is the Chinese article saying?




I did a google translate of the page and if the translation is correct it reads:
Quote
"Xiao Bian open central bank "payment and settlement company," the page (http://www.pbc.gov.cn/publish/zhifujiesuansi/394/index.html), did not [publish] this news. Rumor has no visible acting in order to do their utmost.

Because in all kinds of superposition, the market began to panic, and some players began selling virtual currency, eventually causing an avalanche effect."

It wasn't a sham. The western world media has never been good a reporting the news from outside their own country, they always make it sound a lot worse than it really is. It's likely because they don't and most of use North American's understand the cultural differences between us and other countries outside our land mass.

Things are fine in China. It's true the government wants to keep a division of some sort between the bitcoin and banking markets, simply because pour fiat money into any digital currency causes problems for them and you would have to fully understand what happens to fiat moneys when you put them into your bank where they go and how they are used by the bank and the local government. Bitcoin takes that away from them, which is a good but bad thing too, bad for them. So the banks won't go down without a fight! Smiley

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December 21, 2013, 03:17:44 AM
 #23

My friend gave me a link to this:  http://www.btc38.com/btc/btc_market/476.html

and this

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1t2mec/youve_been_duped_china_may_not_be_a_paragon_of/

which stated that basically this latest regulatory "update" was a sham.

I wish I could read Chinese. What is the Chinese article saying?




I did a google translate of the page and if the translation is correct it reads:
Quote
"Xiao Bian open central bank "payment and settlement company," the page (http://www.pbc.gov.cn/publish/zhifujiesuansi/394/index.html), did not [publish] this news. Rumor has no visible acting in order to do their utmost.

Because in all kinds of superposition, the market began to panic, and some players began selling virtual currency, eventually causing an avalanche effect."

It wasn't a sham. The western world media has never been good a reporting the news from outside their own country, they always make it sound a lot worse than it really is. It's likely because they don't and most of use North American's understand the cultural differences between us and other countries outside our land mass.

Things are fine in China. It's true the government wants to keep a division of some sort between the bitcoin and banking markets, simply because pour fiat money into any digital currency causes problems for them and you would have to fully understand what happens to fiat moneys when you put them into your bank where they go and how they are used by the bank and the local government. Bitcoin takes that away from them, which is a good but bad thing too, bad for them. So the banks won't go down without a fight! Smiley



Things are fine in China re: bitcoin? You really believe that?
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