I am free rolling something on this
Thx tine. PM'd
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26.60 ---> 27.36
I love you man
I riffed earlier about BOL binaries. It was locked up at 26.60 and Tine says tech shaninigans and sell orders getting quashed.
Woulda posted but its a sportsbook and unusual action spells cancelled bet
I place big bet at 26.60 and wait for the numbers to catch up.
Worst case it stays flat past expirey and I push.
Otherwise it's a gimme.
Smashed it.
Some of the more conspiracy minded individuals are claiming someone has stacked up 300k+ eth for sale while shutting down exchanges until they unload.
was fucking around last night watching shit on youtube and I when I went to make a new pop-up I get a newsfeed and one of the top articles was CNBC talking about bitcoin hitting $3K/coin...I never saw it tick to the $3K level on coinbase...
im sure sanlmar will agree with me...CNBC is the fucking nut low...like watching a bunch of fucking monkey dance for the good ol' goldman book...
oh its just chatbox bullshit thats raising eyebrows, its by no means actionable intelligence unless you see anything to back it up. was merely chiming in with it because whats going on like literally right now is unprecedented and taking place immediately after a $400 price point bink, 2 elements which cant be ignored when assessing the validity of any rumor like that.
in other, much more hilarious news, literally 24 hours ago:
https://news.bitcoin.com/hedge-funds-investing-bitcoin/
http://i.imgur.com/83ty5mT.jpg
lol if you are a reputable hedgie how the fuck can you invest directly in crypto?
so you buy a few hundred thousand/a few million bucks of BTC/ETH and what happens when there's a hack or something....................
:anditsgone
what do you say to your investors? whoopsie sorry for that? ive met some dumb motherfuckers on wall street, but didn't think that there were any this dumb...
I get it you can protect yourself and all that stuff, but at the end of the day if you lose them somehow it's not like there's anywhere you can go and say, 'yup I owned X BTC/ETH, I would like them back please'...
I miss my bullion days, the old saying was simple "if you don't physically hold it, you don't own it". That and stacking it over and over for fun lol
coinbase is officially experiencing a catastrophic outage in every literal interpretation of the phrase.
its very interesting to me that BTC has failed to recover from the bath of blood this morning but eth basically has completely.
It will be interesting by weeks end how this is digested.
we also didnt actually hit the $3k sell order queue im guessing, so things could definitely go sideways still... wonder what the fuck really happened this morning
Id love to see a site with real time break downs of BTC markets globally, perhaps it is hard because most are privately held yet ironically the ledger is visible by all so in theory if you could tie address to exchanges and oh forget it, lots of work. Maybe this exists and we can say oh look in X this is happening and XX that ?
Within 60 cents of 3k. I almost bet someone a serious wager that it would get above 3k over the weekend. For once being non-commital pays off.
lol. just read the first few pages of this thread from 2013. Everyone on here calling it donkdown for 4+ years now but it just keeps going up.
Gonna throw some money into bitcoin. When PFA says south, go north son.
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sonatine, drake
are you going to murder amanda bynes vagina or what
Bitcoin’s value surging, but local acceptance of the currency remains sluggish
https://vegasinc.lasvegassun.com/bus...ptance-of-the/
https://photos.lasvegassun.com/media...8a41b9b1684c1a
Not sure how Dutch Boyd is involved in Bitcoin but he can go back to drinking his own puss.Quote:
Outside a 76 station on West Charleston Boulevard on a recent Friday afternoon, John Syntax takes a drag off of a Parliament cigarette and waits … and waits ... for five $100 bills to emerge at the bitcoin ATM, or BTM, inside. He’s been here nearly an hour.
A network that supposedly cranked up its processing speed in 2015, when it was seven transactions per second, still operates in the bike lane. Visa, by contrast, zips along at a Formula One-like 24,000-plus TPS. Syntax nods toward the yellow vehicle in the lot and says, “The worst part is my taxi (meter) is running.”
Such delays are the best part for 61-year-old manager Orlando Tolentino, who gets $300 a month from Coinsource (the largest bitcoin ATM network in the U.S. with 90 machines in nine states) to have its narrow white machine in his store and peddles Parliaments for $7.09 a pack. For those who consider digital currency bitcoin to be a niche phenomenon, fool’s gold, this episode evinces its impracticality.
Cryptocurrency proponents, enthusiasts of blockchain (a public ledger in which transactions made using cryptocurrency are recorded) and enemies of centralized fiat currency, however, believe bitcoin is more than golden, especially since its price surpassed the precious metal several weeks ago.
In “Digital Gold,” Nathaniel Popper details bitcoin developers’ ultimate mission to circumvent the restrictions, charges, fees and sundry whims of centralized banking institutions.
Syntax fervently supports the bitcoin approach. “My alias,” says Syntax, smirking, of his nom de guerre. He discusses associates who possess a thousand illicit credit cards, despise the banking system and relish anarchy.
Creating an alias might be in vogue, too, to emulate Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous crypto-legend who launched bitcoin in January 2009, having gleaned keen counsel in the online community Cypherpunk.
The digital currency’s alleged anonymity made it ideal for trade in drugs, weapons and prostitution. That cash dollars are the most commonly used currency for dope deals and money laundering, though, was not lost on the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network in a 2013 hearing before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. While noting reasons to remain vigilant, witnesses overall were positive about the innovation and legitimate uses in the hearing, which The Washington Post dubbed a “bitcoin lovefest.”
Locally, Derek and Greg Stevens confer Sin City legitimacy on bitcoin. The brothers have since early 2014 accepted it for room reservations at their downtown properties The D — whose curved Fremont Street marquee features a bitcoin logo — and Golden Gate.
At the end of every business day, the virtual take is tallied and transferred, via a BitPay processor, into U.S. dollars. As Derek Stevens had speculated, daily bitcoin fluctuations “come out in the wash,” or even out in the long run.
Today, gold might be the less-attractive proposition. On April 26, bitcoin ($1,275.85) overtook an ounce of gold ($1,269.15). On May 20, it broke two grand. As this is being written, it’s at $2,818.28 and growing. Many factors, however, drive the relative volatility of bitcoin compared to other currencies.
The Securities and Exchange Commission, mulling a bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF), injected some optimism and fuel for bitcoin, as has China’s continued exuberance, acceptance in Japan and Palestinian officials considering it for their national currency.
“Communities around the world are seeking alternatives to the dollar and traditional fiat currencies,” James Rickards wrote in his 2014 book “The Death of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System.”
“It’s just gonna keep going up,” Syntax said. “Hackers are after bitcoin like it’s heroin. I see the good, bad and ugly in it. But whether you like it or not, it’s the future.”
It has weathered some uppercuts — the closure of online market Silk Road, best known as a platform to sell illegal drugs, for example — only to spawn offshoots, like Ethereum and Litecoin. The first quarter of 2017, when cryptocurrency’s combined market capitalization appreciated from $17.5 billion to $25.2 billion, could have portended this bullish second quarter. The market cap of bitcoin, the altcoin king, has zoomed to $37.88 billion.
None of which surprises 36-year-old pro poker player Russell “Dutch” Boyd. He comprehends DAOs, ASICs and GPUs like few laymen. He foresees a bitcoin worth $500,000, since only 21 million will be produced, the last in 2040. To date, about 16.34 million have been won, or “mined,” by the solving of a complex computer algorithm every 10 minutes.
“Bitcoin has the potential to completely eliminate that (financial) industry,” Boyd said. “They’re going to do what they need to do to make sure that never happens, but I’m not so sure they can. That’s the beauty of this. The fundamentals of bitcoin are way more solid than the fundamentals of the U.S. dollar, or any paper money. That’s what I love about bitcoin.”
Las Vegas seems lukewarm to it. Brooklyn Bagel, billed as bitcoin-friendly, no longer exists. Country Club Auto Spa has a BTM on the premises, but does not accept bitcoin for services rendered.
At CTR Investments, Tom Rein-
gruber takes it but nobody has paid him in bitcoin — “It’s too valuable,” he said. Likewise, Yoshiko Akiyama, who manages the law offices of Garrett T. Ogata, has had no takers. Jacki Cameron, owner of Hair by Jacki, beams about her bitcoin business.
A manager at The D’s American Coney Island Chili Dogs describes a simple transaction process, but he employs it only every five or six months. The woman behind the gift shop counter bemoans an arduous system but thankfully deals with bitcoin just a few times a year.
At spirited crypto-conferences, Derek Stevens has heard natives of Venezuela, India and certain African countries, threatened by economic turmoil or warlord overthrow, tell grateful tales of turning lifetime savings into bitcoin.
“We’re small potatoes,” Stevens said. “Bitcoin has value in areas throughout the world that are far more significant and material than what we’re seeing here; it’s something someone else, or governments, can’t take away. I was surprised how important bitcoin is in less-civilized countries.”
In culture’s cradle, as well. Syntax, of Greek heritage, deftly relocated the nest eggs of some relatives and friends in Greece, whose economy has been battered this decade, into bitcoin. Each of the half-dozen transactions, he says, was worth about $2.5 million, and he was rewarded with a $4,000-a-month lifetime stipend.
While his time-consuming BTM experience was unsatisfactory, it is not an anomaly. A Bitcoin Direct Mike Tyson-branded BTM didn’t last 18 months in Off the Strip steakhouse, near the Linq.
Of an estimated 1,195 BTMs in 58 countries — with average transaction fees of 9.71 percent buy, 6.38 percent sell — three-quarters are in the U.S. Las Vegas has 18. Coin Cloud, hatched by poker player Chris McAlary and a partner three years ago, runs seven, with respective 8.2 percent and 5.9 percent rates.
Over two 30-minute spans at The D, four different people eyeball the orange Coin Cloud display with suspicion. One tries, in vain, to locate the slit for his bank card. A young couple approaches it with a $251.55 slot machine voucher.
“Is that the one you need?” she says.
“No,” he says. “It’s bitcoin. … It’s like money.”
https://pokerfraudalert.com/forum/at...3&d=1395871773
Need to buy Pot Coins. Dennis Rodman heading to North Korea and is sponsored by PotCoin.com
Up huge.
I am going to throw this out there, since flipping nearly all btc to eth a few weeks back I am a happy man BUT I believe BOTH BTC and ETH will surpass the naysayers and bull on, Goldman trying to essentially down grade LOL to me its a buy signal ;)
I may be right....I may be crazy but it just may be a bull market I'm lookin for...don't try to save me :)
its hard to predict how btc will respond to the 3k sell orders, id wait and see how that shoe drops, but i agree especially about eth; if eth has bumped $400+, i think that says its got enough inertia and interest to support a fairly long position.
but again, a tech stock bubble butterfly flapping its wings can create crypto coin typhoons down the line, be ready to get your money the fuck out fast.
I think what happened yesterday was that some dude said fuck it and lowered his $3000 limit sell order to $2999 and then someone put $2998 and then another guy $2997 and then it created an avalanche and everyone panic sold. Public participation is still very low, tons of people have never heard of bitcoin.
At this point in trading I believe a few have said it is still quite deceptive to watch the ticker. Either single individuals or groups can easily send prices up or down with their larger trades. So yes, someone must have started dumping for whatever reason and as per the nor, panic.
Not saying the mental blocks of round numbers didn't play into it. At $3k we are starting to talk well above the average persons monthly salary, that is why ETH is still so attractive, get one of those ATM's!
ETH now broke 400, no doubt the small panic and negative press yesterday and this morning on BTC has helped ETH. My finger is itchy but this baby may roll a lil longer. There may be orders in to dump at 4 so... small pull back, may breakthrough this number and push tomorrow.
http://www.coindesk.com/united-natio...um-blockchain/
United Nations Sends Aid to 10,000 Syrian Refugees Using Ethereum Blockchain
so the hot scuttlebutt on reddit is that ethereum has just about dethroned bitcoin as the defacto cryptocoin of value and /r/btc is piiiiiisssssssed
I would imagine the competition is good for both :) maybe gives btc a reason to hold gains.
guess we dont have to worry about that 3k sell point, wow...
BTC dipping hard again indeed.
I missed the boat like many did on ETH. From $40 to over $400 in two months is wild.
I lost 10% of my 80% profit from weeks ago, I am crying but not hard crying more like I made less crying lol
It will bounce, watch! Been watching and sudden bursts of 2% jumps as big players buying dip.
everything is getting smashed in its gook face all day, except ltc, hilariously...
i expect a bounceback but ugh, who knows..
it will it will