Originally posted by Drei
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Cryptocurrency
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Originally posted by AtW View PostAttack points where bittulip is exchanged for real dollars: this is where money laundering going on, proceeds of crime from malware gets cashed out - as soon as those points are closed the "value" of crypto "currency" would drop to zero.
Bitcoin is the single most important factor responsible for growth of ransomware - without ability to accept payments that thing simply would not be attractive to criminals.
The end is nigh for Bitcoin...
Even still you don't have to use an exchange to transfer bitcoin to Fiat. https://bitsquare.io being one example whereby individuals can trade crypto with fiat without the middleman."Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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Originally posted by Drei View PostNot sure about any of these. Bitcoin value going back up, Litecoin steady at around $30, not bad for anyone purchasing it at $4 and under 3 weeks ago.
Long way to go before cryptocurrency will be controlled or shut down by the Government."Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostHow did you buy your coins, what was the payment method?
https://bitsquare.io"Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostHow did you buy your coins, what was the payment method?
I didn't yet but I did register on a few exchanges and installed bitsquare. Trying to follow Scoots advice. With exchanges it can take up to a month before you are fully registered and can start trading but the whole issue is the Wallets. If you use exchanges you keep your money in their wallets, this means they can potentially take it as some did in the past. A few allow you to link your wallets but they also want your secret keys... You might be able to transfer the crypto from exchange to your own wallet but that will cost you a small % of the amount transferred or could be fixed depending on exchange and wallets used.
You can use your CC to buy on some exchanges, mostly it is bank transfers. I tried a CC buy but for some reason it did not go through so I just left it for now. With a CC you can buy a max of £100, great for the lower cost cryptos but not for anything over £20. I think after a month you can use the CC to make higher purchases.Comment
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostBlockchain is a world wide effort between users. No one government can close it down. It is like saying the UK government is going to make Amazon pay corp tax for all sales in the UK. It'll never happen. Isolationist policies are doomed to fail, which Brexit is full of.Comment
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Originally posted by scooterscot View PostBy far the easiest and cheapest method if you are in the UK is using bitsquare. Avoid putting 'bitcoin' in the transaction reference if you believe trading in your jurisdiction is illegal. https://bitsquare.ioComment
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Originally posted by Drei View PostYou can use your CC to buy on some exchanges, mostly it is bank transfers.
a) receiving money from many different sources
b) paying out money to many different sources
"Value" of "cryptocurrency" will drop 100 times very quickly.Comment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostOk, so those avenues will be closed for money laundering reasons - it's particularly easy to ID exchanges because they would be:a
a) receiving money from many different sources
b) paying out money to many different sources
"Value" of "cryptocurrency" will drop 100 times very quickly.
I will let Scoot answer this one but the banks would need to identify the specific accounts this is going to. In addition there are plenty of intermediary services that can bypass bank flags. I believe that Banks have closed some accounts for people that transferred money to specific exchanges.
Plenty of Banks laundering money for their wealthy clients, the issue with the banks is that they don't like cyrptocurrency in general, bypassing their greedy hands.
In principle all you need is one transfer, let's say £10K after which you can purchase any amount of cryptos, the value for those can increase substantially. The end cash-out would be problematic I guess hence why I was asking about it.Comment
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Originally posted by Drei View PostPlenty of Banks laundering money for their wealthy clients, the issue with the banks is that they don't like cyrptocurrency in general, bypassing their greedy hands.
A business account is trivially detectable - too many unique sources of incoming money, normal person would have usually 1, maybe 2-3, not thousands.Comment
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