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1176
 
 
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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/knifter on 2023-12-27 21:24:57+00:00.


I got 0.00001 SOL randomly from 2E5WbSc5TUEmgspryBW4Xyc5dXtvRr622VVyoHbG8PLY couple of months ago with a memo saying: "56] 🥳 Visit the site to use your whitelist right now. ✅ ". But there is no further info or site.

I get that it is a scam of some sort but how does that work?

Tried to decipher the contract info/logs/code from the transaction logs at but could not find code or what it should do or how it should work.

Why is someone sending this to everyone, how does the scam work? Thanks!

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Electrical_Tension on 2023-12-27 18:10:16+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Petursinn on 2023-12-27 21:20:38+00:00.


About a year ago, I wrote a single comment, praising Polkadot, and the moderators at r/Bitcoin decided that I was a "shitcoin shiller" and they banned me. To this day, can still not comment on any of the posts on that reddit, so it was a permanent ban. I am not in the business of creating multiple accounts to somehow circumvent the "rules" like they almost expect me to do so now I am stuck in this situation. I am effectivly removed from any discussion at the r/Bitcoin board. What happened to our shared values of free speech, and exchange of ideas, that we who love bitcoin and other crypto technologies hold dear. These values are being stomped in the reddit that should be our main place of discussion.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/weblist on 2023-12-27 20:24:58+00:00.


Recently I had a balance stuck on a network and it couldn't bridge. I posted a message on the network's telegram channel and was contacted by a council member who offered help. This time strangely I didn't suspect the person may be a scammer...I had been vigilant about people who DM me and offered help on social media for years.

Long story short, the scammer said that my wallet didn't sync and that the tech support was on it and meanwhile my only solution is to sync my wallet using wappbridge-sync dot live. I checked the website and github and found that it is open source and thought it it is legit. It asks my PV or recovery phrase to connect my wallet. This raised suspicion but part of me thought that maybe in order for the wallet to sync, I really need to grant permission for "database backend" the scammer said. I now feel I was under-spelled! So I used an empty wallet to test it out. The scam site couldn't even validate (meaning syncing) and gave me an error! The scammer said because I didn't have enough liquidity in my wallet. I asked what liquidity is. The scammer said I need to add tokens into my wallet. It then became clear to me that this may be a scam but I didn't pursue to find out more as by then the scammer gave up. Only this morning when I visited my telegram account and saw that the person's account I thought legit has changed their name to MuesliSwap DEX Cardano.

I didn't lose anything...it makes me think that this is not a one person operation but a more organized crime.

Please help spread the warning and if you guys know how to have the site taken down by law enforcement please help do that!

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Electrical_Tension on 2023-12-27 18:01:35+00:00.

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This is an automated archive.

The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/weblist on 2023-12-27 20:24:58+00:00.


Recently I had a balance stuck on a network and it couldn't bridge. I posted a message on the network's telegram channel and was contacted by a council member who offered help. This time strangely I didn't suspect the person may be a scammer...I had been vigilant about people who DM me and offered help on social media for years.

Long story short, the scammer said that my wallet didn't sync and that the tech support was on it and meanwhile my only solution is to sync my wallet using wappbridge-sync dot live. I checked the website and github and found that it is open source and thought it it is legit. It asks my PV or recovery phrase to connect my wallet. This raised suspicion but part of me thought that maybe in order for the wallet to sync, I really need to grant permission for "database backend" the scammer said. I now feel I was under-spelled! So I used an empty wallet to test it out. The scam site couldn't even validate (meaning syncing) and gave me an error! The scammer said because I didn't have enough liquidity in my wallet. I asked what liquidity is. The scammer said I need to add tokens into my wallet. It then became clear to me that this may be a scam but I didn't pursue to find out more as by then the scammer gave up. Only this morning when I visited my telegram account and saw that the person's account I thought legit has changed their name to MuesliSwap DEX Cardano.

I didn't lose anything...it makes me think that this is not a one person operation but a more organized crime.

Please help spread the warning and if you guys know how to have the site taken down by law enforcement please help do that!

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/rorowhat on 2023-12-27 19:33:02+00:00.


So i've been in crypto for a very long time(~2016) and have been trying to use crypto, but for most of my time it was been trading, staking and some Defi and NFTs. Basically your main use cases, till today.

I wanted to use a VPN service to access some content from a different country, and I have been keeping on eye on a project called dVPN. Its a L1 chain on Cosmos that allows you to use their token to buy VPN services that implement their token. Currently there are quite a few that support it. The one I ended up using was Meile(but there are many more) and it worked great! I tried Germany/Japan and Portugal, all worked with no issues and setup was a breeze. I created a wallet inside the dApp and moved some tokens over and started picking my providers.

If you want to start using crypto on your daily lives, check out dVPN. This is a perfect use case for crypto, and supports the decentralized dApps that are being build on this project. You can also be a provider or VPN if you'd want, and you get paid in the dVPN token in return. Last but not least, you can stake it and get ~20%. So the way I see it I can have "free" VPN service for just using the staking rewards. Win-win!

Curious to hear about other people's real live uses, aside from the speculative use cases we are all used to.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/John_Sknow on 2023-12-27 18:28:33+00:00.

Original Title: Why I just went ALL-IN with Litecoin and hodling all the way to the moon. We're about to test a major trendline for the 4th or 5th time. Ratio has double-bottomed and broke a significant trendline today. Content with my bag and don't want to miss out! And for many other reasons below...


Disclaimer: This is just my take, please do you're own research! I'm going all in despite believing there could be a major BTC pullback at any time now. I am always wrong with my trades and I don't want to be wrong anymore! Hodling is the way right now. I just don't want to miss out this time. If there is a major pull back it will be a relatively quick and it'll bounce right back up and headed for a new ATH - imo.

The Psychology of Price:When BTC becomes legitimized by the world financial powers, the price of Bitcoin will be well above $100K and at these higher price tags per coin, people will be more hesitant to buy an item with such a high price. This is why there are stock splits to bring down the price while retaining market value to lure people back in. We've all seen it happen with Applee, Google, Amazon etc... One can argue that at 42k BTC many people are already saying it's too expensive to buy and they can't split BTC like they do stocks. Yes fractions of Bitcoin are called SAT's but my point is you'll always be buying fractions of Bitcoins with the BTC ticker. I can't see exchanges exchanging that. The market makers will transition it's attention to something else, this is where LTC will be marketed as the silver to Bitcoin's gold.

The search for the next Bitcoin - a cheaper and more usable alternative: LitecoinOnce BTC becomes legitimized and high price draws less investors in, the search for the next Bitcoin will begin. The powers that be will then start to push Litecon into the lime lite.Litecon is often referred to as the "silver to Bitcoin's gold" due to its similarities to Bitcoin. Like Bitcoin, Litecoin operates on a decentralized network using blockchain technology.- It's faster per block generation 2.5 minutes vs about every 10 minutes for Bitcoin- It's much cheaper per transaction.- 4 times the supply at 84 million coins- 100% uptime since inception in 2011, that's 12 years of reliability and dependability on par with Bitcoin- Accessible on pretty much all exchanges and crypto ATM's around the world- The CFTC recognizes Litecoin as digital commodity

Right now we're either at point 3 or 4 on the downward trendline from the previous ATH. I don't want to be wrong and miss the breakout on the 5th approach which should break through the trendline towards the top of the next cycle. We could be only at point 3 and sell-off just like it did before the BTC halving like last cycle as seen in chart but I'm content with my bag and hodling through it. Our next ATH I expect to be in the purple shade between October 2024 to May 2025 at above 400 to possibly $2000

Starting to look like a repeat from June!

Something is brewing, up over 700% this year and a recent spike in the past month coinciding with a bottoming of the LTC/BTC ratio.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/fan_of_hakiksexydays on 2023-12-27 15:36:43+00:00.

Original Title: I've gone through a decade of crypto cycles, I'm still amazed at how cycles continue to repeat like clockwork, despite many things that should derail them, despite everyone knowing about them. Here's why they remain strong, what's causing them, and why they won't go away any time soon.


I'm sure some people out there still believe that "this time it will be different".

That has been the most unreliable phrase in crypto.

We are already seeing crypto ignore macros and traditional markets, and going right back to its cycles. Even on this sub, you see the same cycle of posts and comments.

Can anything derail the cycles?

We've seen war, recession, inflation, economic crises, threats of nuclear war, threats of of war with China, collapsing crypto banks, a pandemic, etc...

Yet none of that was able to derail Bitcoin's cycles. In fact, Bitcoin was already entering its bear market unfazed before all that stuff started, when stocks were climbing to new highs.

If anything, a combination of bad macros should have made the last bear cycles even worse, but it didn't even managed to do that. It was the mildest bear cycle, with Bitcoin's lowest percentage drop.

It doesn't seem like there's anything that can derail Bitcoin's cycles.

Even during the previous bull market, we had the India government ban talk and China banning Bitcoin mining. Neither was able to stop the cycle. Even Elon Musk was only able to briefly make the market dip, before it bounced back to new highs.

Why are these cycles remaining so strong, despite every wrench being thrown at them?

1- Algorithm

Part of it is how deeply ingrained the core causes are in an actual algorithm, and into the mining that's at the root of the tokenomics that affect such a big part of the market.

Something we've never had in a market before, or any other asset, because we've never had an asset that followed an algorithm at its core.

As long as Bitcoin dominates such a big part of the market, those tokenomics and that algorithm will also dominate the effect on the market more than anything else.

2- Human psychology and volatility

A lot of the psychological reactions also seems like clockwork. It really feels like each cycle people's memories are erased, and they repeat all the same mistakes.

I think part of it is because most people still don't understand what they buy, much less do any real research.

Also, it's a market that burns a lot of traders during bear cycles, and gets a batch with a lot of new people each new cycle.

More importantly, in the world of finance people still tend to be more emotional in their trades than really do that much learning.

Especially when there's a lot of volatility.

The volatile nature of this market pushes people's emotions to the brink, and allows for emotions to be much more dominating. With bear markets being incredible agony, and bull markets making incredible gain pushing people's emotions into ecstasy.

We already know about these cycles, so surely the next cycles should already be priced in?

We've been aware of these cycles for many years. And it hasn't stopped anything, and we haven't been able to price in all future cycles.

I remember when the theory of the cycles first became popularized during the 2017 bullrun. And by 2019, it became widely known and tested.

Before the 2021 bull market, there were some "experts" saying that we weren't gonna have a big rally this time, it would be different, because now everyone was expecting a huge rally, everyone knew about the cycles. It had to be priced in already.

Despite that, we still had a major bullrun like clockwork.

I've been through many cycles. It's still crazy how repetitive and cyclical this market has remained, despite everything. You can see this new cycle already starting like Groundhog Day. It's been the gift that keeps on giving. Here's what makes it so cyclical, and why it's not about to change.

What can end those cycles and finally make it "different"?

There's a few things that can end these cycles.

The most radical one is end crypto. The way it's still holding up despite everything thrown at it, still growing after all these years, still developing, I don't think it will go away anytime soon.

Something less radical and maybe more realistic, is the end of Bitcoin's vast dominance. If Bitcoin's tokenomics are no longer such a big share of the market, it will have a reduced effect on the market.

It doesn't even have to be taken over by something like Ethereum, just have a much smaller gap.

But that might not happen for a while.

Or simply time.

If you look at the effect of the cycles, it becomes less intense each cycle. If you look at a graph, you see the effect starts to taper off. Eventually, it should in theory become less volatile and stabilize a little more.

All things that are unlikely to happen anytime soon.

Conclusion/TL;DR:

These market cycles are the gifts that keep on giving.

The unusual nature of having an asset so deeply rooted in an algorithm for its core tokenomics, has made for an unusually cyclical market, where there is a unique force not controlled by humans but by an algorithm.

The volatile nature of this market has also pushed for a much more emotional market, making people repeat the usual expected market psychology, amplifying the cyclical effect of this market.

This is why we see the same mistakes repeated.

This is why this market has managed to stay so cyclical despite all the wrenches thrown at it, everything from mining bans, nearly monthly FUD, economic crises, war, and pandemic.

Even the market knowledge and expectations of these cycles, hasn't been able to "price in" these cycles or stop them.

Considering what's required to end these cycles, it's very unlikely to end or be that different anytime soon.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Electrical_Tension on 2023-12-27 18:01:35+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/TheTalkingFred on 2023-12-27 15:16:16+00:00.


Ideal ELI5 for sharing as an introduction to CKB. Please like, share, comment etc 🙂

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/cdnkevin on 2023-12-27 14:48:07+00:00.


I don’t know how it could have already priced it in when there’s been delay and rejection for ambiguous reasons for months.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Perfect_Ability_1190 on 2023-12-27 12:50:50+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/TCr0wn on 2023-12-27 17:30:55+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/jwinterm on 2023-12-27 17:18:38+00:00.


Here is the thread for Firo discussion:

And the thread from the Zcash community:

It is not really surprising that many users seem to value a listing on Binance more than maintaining the raison d'etre of their network, but maybe a little disappointing. It will be interesting to see how long Binance gives these coins/companies to come into compliance. I can't seem to find the thread from the Monero community...

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/stayyfr0styy on 2023-12-27 16:54:58+00:00.


A great thing about Bitcoin is its ability to send payment to anyone in the world quickly and without permission. The problem with this is when a buyer wants to purchase a good or service from someone over the internet. Bitcoin is a proof based system, yet the buyer must trust the seller that they will send the item as advertised.

Presently, in watchexchange subreddits or other collectible goods for sale on Reddit, a standard of payment is PayPal goods and services. Even besides that, using a credit card for friends and family payments also supplies some buyer protection from the credit card company.

It’s not a perfect system, and members of the communities often prefer to do business with others who have a track record of successful exchanges and swaps. But if something goes wrong, the buyer or seller can reach out to PayPal and have them mediate a resolution. And even the community engages in looking at the evidence and making a verdict. Again, it’s not a perfect system, but people sell Rolex watches and many valuable things in these communities, so there is a fairly high level of faith in this system.

If a smart contract was made with a GPT model who can act as a mediator for conflict resolution, then it would make p2p payments with escrow and customer support possible. It may not be a perfect system, but it may be better than the current system.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/flowers_at_dusk on 2023-12-27 16:48:52+00:00.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/Medium-Brilliant-270 on 2023-12-27 15:32:08+00:00.


Here’s a hypothetical question, please put on your tin foil hats.

SBF is due to be sentenced in March (which falls before the halvening) for upto 100 years. His legal team have requested that sentencing be moved to June (after the halvening when crypto markets traditionally explode) which was denied.

What if, the crazy pumps seen in SOL (all whilst the Total Value Locked in SOL is declining) are linked to SBF / Alemeda in an attempt to get a reduced sentence for SBF by having potentially lower losses to investors at the time of sentencing?

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/pixieshit on 2023-12-27 12:40:16+00:00.


All money is debt in fiat systems.

I can hear you muttering: "Money is not debt. Money is money. Debt is debt. Invest in a dictionary."

Do something for me. Take out a crisp $100 note. Hold it in the light. What's it worth? Is it worth $100? What if I told you it is technically not worth anything more than the material it's printed on?

It's worth $100 because we all agreed on it. The money we use is backed purely by our collective faith in it. This is called "fiat money". It is government-issued, has no tie to hard assets, and can be printed without restriction.

Because our currency is not backed by a hard asset, it has no intrinsic value. And since it has no intrinsically-valuable commodity backing it, it is a form of credit - a claim on purchasing power that we promise to pay back. All fiat money is debt.

If you're still confused, stick with me. Let's think about debt from first principles. Imagine I borrow money from you. This money becomes an asset for you, and a liability for me. It's a liability for me because I need to eventually pay that money back to you. Now in our current system, all financial assets are liabilities that need to be paid back. The money we have is an asset for us but a liability for our bank. Our bank's assets are a liability of the central bank. The central bank's assets are a liability of the government. And government assets are liabilities for taxpayers like you and me. And the cycle repeats. It's an infinite regress of liabilities. There is no hard asset at the core of our financial system - only claims upon claims upon claims.

Now contrast this to a hard financial asset like Bitcoin. When I own Bitcoin, it is an asset to me and a liability to no one else.

You can read the rest here, I wrote a long ass blog. I talk about why I think we have a housing crisis, how fiat systems are fuelling it (and perhaps what we could do about it), and how we need to channel liquidity into hard assets like cryptocurrencies.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/iamnobody331 on 2023-12-27 14:10:33+00:00.


Just curious, a lot actually, it used to be one of the premier crypto to invest in with a lot of promising projects on its parachains and a promising governance as well as auctions.

Seems like in the last bear market a lot of people got burned, including me. There also doesn't seem to be much action in the price either, while most other promising projects like matic and avalanch have recovered a lot, DOT is still far behind, but maybe that is blessing in disguise?

I am curious as for the general sentiment around DOT in the sub as well as any news on it that may indicate a better future for its technologies. Still holding the bag though. Any insights are greatly appreciated.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/investmox on 2023-12-27 13:59:30+00:00.


I'm in crypto now few years and DEX's have always amazed me. I've been a user of UNISWAP, Thorchain, Osmosis, etc..

DEX's have come a long way since 2016... but today I still don't know a DEX that has all checkmarks.

Does anybody know a DEX that has following properties or is planning to build them out:

  • Multichain not just Ethereum based - crosschain cappabilities to any chain without bridges
  • Derivatives
  • Decentralised
  • Token burning mechanism
  • Decentralised orderbooks
  • self custodial --> trading directly from your own ledger
  • Perpetuals/Leverage/margin
  • lending
  • Decentralised trades have roughly same cost as CEX (around 0,2% - 0,5%)

From my experiance following DEX's have most of check marks but not all: Thorchain, GMX, Osmosis

I'm curious if someone knows an interestings project that fits most of my checkmarks? Projects I've mentioned have most checkmarks but not all.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/complexmessiah7 on 2023-12-27 13:53:35+00:00.


Hi, I've been looking at ETH's next 'upgrade'. It's almost Q1 of 2024, and still all I see are generic statements like "It will improve tx fees, simplify rollups, and have generic housekeeping updates".

As someone who's genuinely interested but likely unable to follow the dev livestreams, could someone help me understand the deets?

How would the upgrade improve fees? Are there any interesting mechanistic changes? If gas comes down, by how much? What is going to change that makes rollups easier?

To be clear, I'm not expecting an eli5..... You can assume I am familiar with most crypto-related terminology and concepts. It's just that I am stuck at a limbo level between the highly technical dev discussions and the low effort vagaries of news articles. I wonder if there are others in the same boat.

Thanks in advance to any kind folk who take the time to help me.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/kirtash93 on 2023-12-27 13:42:41+00:00.


Confirmed: Dump incoming

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/nomorebonks on 2023-12-27 12:46:10+00:00.


The tokenization of physical gold on our platform is facilitated by the ORIGYN protocol, an RWA certifier. First, we collect all the biometric data of the physical gold, including technical details, images and serial numbers. This data is then registered inside each ORIGYN NFT. The final step is third-party verification to confirm that the physical gold is securely stored.

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The original was posted on /r/cryptocurrency by /u/powerdick on 2023-12-27 12:45:46+00:00.

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