The World of Crypto

That's the year I was introduced to the market. My son called me from college pretty excited about it during the bullrun. I wasn't the type to get into that kind of stuff but I went in with a bit of money that I could afford to lose, and blew my mind with all the opportunities available. I thought it would last forever, but I only had a month in retrospect. Came out even in the end, but I've been waiting patiently for more runs as they come with real strategies.

I think it was @ 3k
I hear stuff like that all the time. I heard of one guy who threw out his computer only to remember soon after that he left millions in bitcoins within it ( it was actually just his bitcoin address and password which could just as easily have been written down on paper). He bought the dump and has been digging for it since.
 
I have an earlier story too. I’m a tech guy by schooling. In the early 2000 I got involved with XtremeSystems. So in my case I did some crunching and overclocking of hardware. By the end of the 2ooo’s I had a decision to make, btc was just starting to be something but it didn’t have the hype. I liked crunching but really liked overclocking and had a few early records. I had my early chance but chose overclocking, later after overclocking was corrupted by money and sponsors, I chose crunching. But it’s my decision so I have responsibility but it’s still a doh moment.
Off to work…

/steve
 
You never REALLY know when the next bull run will begin (something seems to be brewing though). But one thing is for sure, when the bull run does hit, opening accounts at that time can be difficult to get done because of the FOMO demand
yeah but it's safe to say BTC will only go up. Sure it'll come down again, but it'll be over 100K around 2025-2026. Halving is coming.
I made good money with Bond, Multi and BLZ. But then I leveraged and got stupid :D Never change a winning strategy.
 
"Crypto and gold are two completely separate tools for completely separate purposes. There’s no sense in debating crypto vs. gold. To me the answer is both."

Settling the Gold Versus Crypto Debate​


In 1972, while excavating to build a factory on the Black Sea coast of Bulgaria, a backhoe operator noticed gold objects glimmering in the bucket of his machine.
The construction worker had accidentally discovered the Varna Necropolis.

Dating back to around 4500 BC, the jewelry found in this ancient burial site is the earliest evidence of the use of gold by humans, and archeologists believe that they were considered a status symbol in ancient burial rituals.
Thousands of years ago, gold was likely collected from the earth’s surface in the form of nuggets or river dust.
It wasn’t until about 3500 BC, on a hilltop located in the modern-day country of Georgia, that a group of people from the prehistoric Kura-Araxes dug the oldest known gold mine.
Known as Sakdrisi-Kachagiani, the gold mine predates Ancient Egypt and even Mesopotamia.
By around 2000 BC, commercial transactions involving gold were being recorded on cuneiform tablets in modern-day Turkey. Materials like tin and textiles were traded for a particular weight of gold, because the first known gold coins weren’t minted until around the 6th Century BC.
King Croesus of Lydia in modern-day Turkey, used these coins to standardize the weight and purity of gold.
After that, gold coins were used directly in commerce for thousands of years, until the United Kingdom formally adopted the gold standard in the early 1800s. This was the first monetary system where a country’s paper money had a value directly linked to gold.

And even today, over 50 years since the US abandoned its own gold standard, central banks around the world still hold vast quantities of gold as a reserve to store value.
Individuals and large financial institutions do the same. And gold jewelry is still extremely valuable.
That’s quite a track record. For over 6,000 years, humans have valued gold.
Fifteen years ago, Bitcoin was created. And today there are countless millions of people who believe crypto has value too.
Now, gold and crypto are completely different and seldom belong in the same sentence. But for some reason there are often heated debates between proponents of each who argue bitterly over whether Gold or crypto is better.
No other asset classes attract such conflict or controversy. You don’t see passionate oil investors engaging in riotous debates with natural gas speculators. There is no heated argument over wheat vs. soybeans.
But gold and crypto are sometimes positioned as diametrically opposed, and this is just silly. Each asset has its function.

Gold has an enormous amount of value— and I have actually argued that it is still undervalued, even at its all-time high.
I’ve written extensively about the US government’s financial woes; the national debt is closing in on $35 trillion, and that figure is set to grow by $20+ trillion over the next decade according to the government’s own financial forecasts.
In addition to the new debt, the amount of debt the US government has to refinance over the next 5-7 years is staggering— literally tens of trillions of dollars. And all of it will be refinanced at a higher interest rate.
This means that interest payments on the national debt will keep growing like a malignant tumor.
In fact this year the amount of interest paid on the national debt will exceed defense spending for the first time in US history. And it will only keep rising.
Gold will most likely do very well in that scenario. But more importantly, foreign governments will likely move away from the US dollar as the global reserve currency over the next 5-10 years… and gold is the most likely asset to replace the dollar.
Central banks are already buying more gold as a reserve. And when the dollar loses its dominant global reserve status, countries are likely to turn to gold as a stable alternative that they can trust… because they already own it.

Simultaneously, crypto also has a lot of benefits. If you hold 100% of your savings in the financial system— whether at a bank, brokerage, etc., you might be surprised to find how easily it is to lose access to your funds.
Government agencies can seize your account (without due process) even by mistake. Banks can fail. They can freeze your account and force you to prove that you’re not doing anything wrong.
Plus even the most mundane bank transfers these days are heavily scrutinized. I had an exasperating conversation with a bank not long ago when I tried to send money to my sister… and they required all sorts of paperwork and justification to send my own money to my family.
Crypto is a great way to bypass that mess… to simply send money from point A to point B directly, without any middleman whatsoever.
Crypto exists digitally, so it can be moved across borders easily and at no cost. And if you know what you’re doing, you can hold it yourself, without any third party or even special security equipment… and this is an incredibly unique feature.
The idea behind a Plan B is to figure out what you want to accomplish and figure out which tools are available to help you achieve your goals.
Well, it’s a pretty smart goal to want to have protection against the declining currency of the world’s most heavily indebted nation. It’s also a reasonable goal to want to some assets that are completely beyond the financial system.
Crypto and gold are two completely separate tools for completely separate purposes. There’s no sense in debating crypto vs. gold. To me the answer is both.

* I printed it to bypass all the click shit. Go here if you need to. Credit goes to:
 
But you can't do with gold what you can do with crypto. You can daytrade crypto and buy your groceries with a VISA with it. Can't do this with gold or stockings.
You trade any crypto to a stable coin, USDT or USDC and you link those stable coins to your VISA account, brokers supply these.
In your futures account you can go short or long, bearish bullish trends are sweeping all over the place. I know this dude, he knows jack shit about the coins he is trading in, but he looks at the graphs and gets about 10 dollar within seconds to minuts out of 100 dollar. He does this several times a day and buys his groceries and all other stuff with it. But he doesn't have a life and his life is dominated by computerscreens.
Crazy world the world of crypto, money everywhere so it seems.
 
I'm sure there was controversy when the Templars introduced the banking system back in their day. Banknotes for gold, so you didn't have to lug it around and risk getting it stolen.

I went to the bank yesterdat to take out $3200 to buy a homemade shed from a guy. The teller was asking a ton of questions about what the money was for, because she's supposed to :rolleyes:

Now, I don't endorse coin base (stupid crazy fees imo), but this commercial spells out today's banking system quite well

 
Crypto currency is decentralized money and it solves a huge problem: We have to trust banks. But what happens if there is a war, a bank scandal like with Martin Pucher? With crypto you actually own your money and don't have to carry cash. If you are halfway tech-savvy, you can easily protect your money with enough backups, running it on an isolated OS to avoid viruses or getting phished (with a wrong wallet for example).
As an investment it can be good, I think people will still throw money into it. But currently, most people actually don't use it, but just put their money into it. And at some point it will crash but still exist, a bit like the Dotcom bubble when everything with Internet gave returns for some time. A lot of bad projects crashed, but the internet is still there.

And XMR is by far the best currency, but it doesn't perform good as an "investment". And I don't think that all those people that own BTC use it as payment. If I buy seeds with crypto I either use XMR or if not available LTC. Lower fees, faster transactions. Why should I use BTC instead?

I still carry some money in BTC, ETH and SOL as some kind money storage, even though I rather use XMR when I actually use it. But not because I think BTC and ETH are the best project, but because people just throw there money into it and you can profit from it.
 
Monero (XMR) is a great privacy blockchain, and there's no reason why it wouldn't at least reach it's all time high the next altcoin bullrun. Different coins have different uses or functions, that's part of the learning curve once you get into the scene. I certainly don't use Bitcoin or Eth to make payments with. Solana is pretty fast and cheap as far as fees go. My fave is XRP :)
 
Crypto currency is decentralized money and it solves a huge problem: We have to trust banks. But what happens if there is a war, a bank scandal like with Martin Pucher? With crypto you actually own your money and don't have to carry cash. If you are halfway tech-savvy, you can easily protect your money with enough backups, running it on an isolated OS to avoid viruses or getting phished (with a wrong wallet for example).
As an investment it can be good, I think people will still throw money into it. But currently, most people actually don't use it, but just put their money into it. And at some point it will crash but still exist, a bit like the Dotcom bubble when everything with Internet gave returns for some time. A lot of bad projects crashed, but the internet is still there.

And XMR is by far the best currency, but it doesn't perform good as an "investment". And I don't think that all those people that own BTC use it as payment. If I buy seeds with crypto I either use XMR or if not available LTC. Lower fees, faster transactions. Why should I use BTC instead?

I still carry some money in BTC, ETH and SOL as some kind money storage, even though I rather use XMR when I actually use it. But not because I think BTC and ETH are the best project, but because people just throw there money into it and you can profit from it.
Crypto can easily be hacked and some brokers are suspicious of doing it themselves. Like Ledger for instance, and that were mostly accounts with a hardware wallet. A former employee was responsible for this. It's not as safe as money in the bank, ... yet.

We also pay 50% taxes in our country on trading. Not on small trades and holding crypto is tax free.

But easy money it is. Cream went from 15 dollar to 20 dollars, several times. Bond from 3,9 to 4,5 even up to 5. I used this system several times (months ago). Buying 100 to 1000 coins that make you 50 to 100 dollarrs a day is quite an easy investment. Not sure how these coins/tokens are doing today. I've lost a lot of money with a leverage and stopped with crypto. Now I regret it of course, but there's something about a golden calf that keeps me very careful and suspicious.
 
Crypto can easily be hacked and some brokers are suspicious of doing it themselves. Like Ledger for instance, and that were mostly accounts with a hardware wallet. A former employee was responsible for this. It's not as safe as money in the bank, ... yet.
No, crypto can not easily be hacked if you run an isolated OS like I have said. How would you hack my isolated short term XMR feather wallets, mid term storage Electrum BTC wallet and my LUKS encrypted Solana passphrase from my Tails OS?
"If you are halfway tech-savvy, you can easily protect your money" like I have said above.
If somebody buys an infected hardware wallet, or a hardware wallet in general, it is one's own fault.
Open Source Linux and responsibility is the key.
I have only lost money once due to retyping the password twice incorrectly, but since I know most of the password, I could even crack it with JohnTheRipper, but since it is just a three digit amount, so it is not worth the effort. And this was my own fault for not closing the wallet and reopening it, now I always do this.
 
Then why are there so many wallets hacked? This never happens to a bank and if it does happen, it is insured. Don't know how to hack it, but I know it happens frequently. While your OS is offline, you are save yes. But to trade, buy or sell coins you need an internet connection. Then it happens I guess. Supply chain attacks.

I asked chatGPT how it could be hacked. ^^

  1. Social Engineering: Even with strong technical defenses, attackers might attempt to manipulate you or someone close to you to gain access to your systems or information. This could involve phishing emails, phone calls, or other methods of tricking you into revealing sensitive information.
  2. Physical Access: If someone gains physical access to your hardware wallets or storage devices, they might attempt to extract the private keys through various means, such as hardware tampering or sophisticated attacks.
  3. Exploiting Software Vulnerabilities: While running isolated operating systems like Tails OS and using open-source software can reduce the risk of software vulnerabilities, no software is entirely free from bugs or vulnerabilities. Attackers might attempt to exploit undiscovered vulnerabilities in the software you're using to gain unauthorized access to your system.
  4. Network Attacks: Even though you're running an isolated operating system, there's still the potential for network-based attacks if your system connects to the internet, even temporarily. Attackers might attempt to intercept network traffic, launch denial-of-service attacks, or exploit vulnerabilities in network protocols to gain access to your system.
  5. Brute Force or Password Guessing: While you mentioned using strong passwords, there's still a risk of attackers attempting to brute force or guess your passwords, especially if they have access to your encrypted data or know other personal information about you.
 
Then why are there so many wallets hacked?
Because those users are not mature enough to own their own money, so they have to rely on others to keep it for them. That's the users' fault not the crypto currencies'. And if you have dirty money the police cannot seize it unlike with cash laying around under your bed. I know of people getting busted for selling drugs and large sums of money getting seized. Wouldn't have happened with crypto and proper OpSec.

The answers from ChatGPT are too general, can be easily avoided and are not worth to be replied to. I suggest reading some crypto currency white papers, especially the BTC and XMR ones, if you want to understand decentralized money better.
 
Because those users are not mature enough to own their own money, so they have to rely on others to keep it for them. That's the users' fault not the crypto currencies'. And if you have dirty money the police cannot seize it unlike with cash laying around under your bed. I know of people getting busted for selling drugs and large sums of money getting seized. Wouldn't have happened with crypto and proper OpSec.

The answers from ChatGPT are too general, can be easily avoided and are not worth to be replied to. I suggest reading some crypto currency white papers, especially the BTC and XMR ones, if you want to understand decentralized money better.
I traded at Pionex and Coinbase. There were accounts hacked, luckily never mine cause I'm a shrimp and not a whale :D

I trust you have skills not to get hacked, but I don't trust myself and others not to be hacked. Not that it stopped me, but I was aware of the risk.
 
I traded at Pionex and Coinbase. There were accounts hacked, luckily never mine cause I'm a shrimp and not a whale :D

I trust you have skills not to get hacked, but I don't trust myself and others not to be hacked. Not that it stopped me, but I was aware of the risk.
When you leave your coins in an exchange, if they get hacked, you lose your coins. If you keep them yourself offline, you are safe and you are in control of them, banking for the bankless. Exchanges like Coinbase should only be used for making purchases and exchanges in this case.

Just stumbled across this interview, kinda funny, kinda sad

 
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