Originally posted by Hobosapien
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Reply to: Is Crypto the new contracting?
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Previously on "Is Crypto the new contracting?"
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Originally posted by vadhert View PostThe monkey with the hammer may be meeting his death on 31st March is the rumor.
NK leader, Trump, some other 'monkey'?
Edit: Wouldn't be surprised if the March budget has a new tax for cryocoin gains. May be too soon for them to react but for sure they'll be seeing all the money piling in and want more control than hoping people declare the CGT on a self assessment. If the clampdown on crypto started in earnest with major world leading countries, then a rush from crypto to gold may be likely.Last edited by Hobosapien; 5 January 2018, 10:14.
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The monkey with the hammer may be meeting his death on 31st March is the rumor.
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostWhy March 31st? Japanese related? Will gold go up or down?
If it's something else then come on scooterscot, spill the beans.
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostTreasury crackdown on Bitcoin over concerns it is used to launder money and dodge tax
There are no legitimate companies paying their employees in Bitcoins, and there is no b2b market for legit companies in Bitcoin, this is essentially being driven by money launderers, tax evaders, wannacray exortion racketeers, left and rightwing anarchists and N.Korean hackers.
It does mean of course that there is a billion dollar market underwriting Bitcoin and allowing some geeks to speculate.
Remember how you weren't cool in school? The lads got the girls and you became academic? That's what's happening now in crypto. The lads are getting involved while you reserved chaps stand on the edge of the dance floor waiting for the sensible girls to turn up.Last edited by Tonymustwearbriefs; 4 January 2018, 20:49.
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Originally posted by BR14 View Postthat made me laugh
a colleague of mine in NL some years ago was going on about bitcoin.
i have no reasoned dislike of it as an investment, - it just doesn't smell right.
i can feel it in my water, if you like
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostTreasury crackdown on Bitcoin over concerns it is used to launder money and dodge tax
There are no legitimate companies paying their employees in Bitcoins, and there is no b2b market for legit companies in Bitcoin, this is essentially being driven by money launderers, tax evaders, wannacray exortion racketeers, left and rightwing anarchists and N.Korean hackers.
It does mean of course that there is a billion dollar market underwriting Bitcoin and allowing some geeks to speculate.
a colleague of mine in NL some years ago was going on about bitcoin.
i have no reasoned dislike of it as an investment, - it just doesn't smell right.
i can feel it in my water, if you like
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostTreasury crackdown on Bitcoin over concerns it is used to launder money and dodge tax
There are no legitimate companies paying their employees in Bitcoins, and there is no b2b market for legit companies in Bitcoin, this is essentially being driven by money launderers, tax evaders, wannacray exortion racketeers, left and rightwing anarchists and N.Korean hackers.
It does mean of course that there is a billion dollar market underwriting Bitcoin and allowing some geeks to speculate.
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Originally posted by Jog On View PostWhere did you read that? And where do you get your information on market cap and how it affects price?
There are no legitimate companies paying their employees in Bitcoins, and there is no b2b market for legit companies in Bitcoin, this is essentially being driven by money launderers, tax evaders, wannacray exortion racketeers, left and rightwing anarchists and N.Korean hackers.
It does mean of course that there is a billion dollar market underwriting Bitcoin and allowing some geeks to speculate.
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostSo why use those as opposed to paypal? And suppose paypal issues paypalcoin?
I have seen articles suggesting that blockchain is now 10 years old and done nothing except assist criminals.
Thoughts?
Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostThe complexity of the technology masks the lack of intrinsic economic value.
https://steemkr.com/cryptocurrency/@...ption-rolls-on
https://oracletimes.com/amazon-ripple-xrp-2018/
https://www.coindesk.com/ibms-stella...payments-rail/
These crypto bashing threads just keep going round and round with the same old tired arguments.
If you don't like it or trust it or want to get involved - then don't. Simples!
I'm up £2k today so whatever
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And here I am with my nerves shot, flying down to try and find a wallet that I created for the XRP giveaways on the 31/07/13, 01/06/2013 and 11/05/2013 and a lot more that I added when I had missed out on bitcoin. Lost interest and forgot about it.
Then if I find it I have the following challenge:
Encrypted DMG of Encrypted Filesystem with a Stickynote on the desktop containing the key.
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Originally posted by Jog On View PostThink of it as being st the same stage as the Internet in 1995 - few tech savvy early adopters but too complex for the mainstream. It's a complicated minefield that non-tech savvy can't comprehend let alone use. I was transferring some crypto between wallet and exchange the other day and did something wrong and the error took me to a page of code with some 'nonce error'. There is no way in hell a standard user let alone an 80 year old granny will be using that any time soon.
But they will - it may take 5-10 years for total adoption and easy 'paypal' type interface with transaction time and fees that outperform traditional payment methods - but it will happen. Every transaction will be logged (and taxed) transparently with no anonymity (except maybe with outlawed cryptos on the dark web - and something in place for the Panama papers club).
Also expect there to be far less coins/tokens than there are now with interledger (Ripple - XRP) type technology connecting the different blockchains in use. Right now there are about 2000 coins and ICOs coming out every day - we don't need a coin for every industry and several 'me too' versions doing the same thing.
Good place to start learning is here.
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Originally posted by Jog On View PostBut they will - it may take 5-10 years for total adoption and easy 'paypal' type interface with transaction time and fees that outperform traditional payment methods - but it will happen. Every transaction will be logged (and taxed) transparently with no anonymity
I have seen articles suggesting that blockchain is now 10 years old and done nothing except assist criminals.
Thoughts?
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Originally posted by BlasterBates View PostThere are exchanges where you can cash in your bitcoins, so they have value, i.e. you can sell them. It's a really weird phenomenon, but based on the fact that there is a limited pool of it. For example you couldn't do this with a word document with a text saying "Word currency" because the supply would be infinite. Anything in the real world also has value such as stones, dirt water or even air, so it it shouldn't be surprising that bitcoins do have value. The danger I see is inflation in that although the number of crypto currency "coins" are limited, I don't see a limit to the number of different currencies, so if the number of crypto currencies goes out of control so that they become in effect unlimited, then it will crash. Essentially the bitcoin is underwritten by money launderers who depend on it to hide their criminal activities, but how big is that market ?
I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole because you can't measure how much a bit coin is worth especially given that there are potentially an unlimited number of crypto currencies.
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Originally posted by BoggyMcCBoggyFace View PostI looked at Crypto currency BITcoins etc but I didn't really fully understand it, all these other Crypto currencies mentioned I didn't even know about until I read this thread and the other one.
So coming from a dummy what I don't get is how these crypto currencies have such a value if the currencies can't easily be used I can't go Argos and buy something with BITcoins etc. Further to this if I struggle understanding them and I have a IT degree and am pretty switched on how can these crypto currencies be understood and utilised by the general population ? Is the increasing value of these crypto currencies based on them going 'mainstream' usage in a simple / easy to understand format at some point ?
I wish I had a dabble and made some £ on them but I didn't because I didn't really understand them and I had a perception that I couldn't actually easily spend these crypto currencies so how could they have a value.
Please enlighten me as I am genuinely interested.
Think of it as being st the same stage as the Internet in 1995 - few tech savvy early adopters but too complex for the mainstream. It's a complicated minefield that non-tech savvy can't comprehend let alone use. I was transferring some crypto between wallet and exchange the other day and did something wrong and the error took me to a page of code with some 'nonce error'. There is no way in hell a standard user let alone an 80 year old granny will be using that any time soon.
But they will - it may take 5-10 years for total adoption and easy 'paypal' type interface with transaction time and fees that outperform traditional payment methods - but it will happen. Every transaction will be logged (and taxed) transparently with no anonymity (except maybe with outlawed cryptos on the dark web - and something in place for the Panama papers club).
Also expect there to be far less coins/tokens than there are now with interledger (Ripple - XRP) type technology connecting the different blockchains in use. Right now there are about 2000 coins and ICOs coming out every day - we don't need a coin for every industry and several 'me too' versions doing the same thing.
Good place to start learning is here.
Leave a comment:
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