Crashing.
Bitstamp 813
BTC-e 681
MyGox Down
Btcchina 968
All in dollars.
Bitstamp 813
BTC-e 681
MyGox Down
Btcchina 968
All in dollars.
Quote: (12-01-2013 03:40 PM)cardguy Wrote:
I'm confused about Bitcoins.
What is the point of a currency that people just hoard instead of use for purchases?
That stops it from being a proper currency.
Dollars keep their value because what you can buy with them remains relatively stable.
But with Bitcoins - you have people buying the currency. Just in order to sit on them. That seems bizarre for the long term.
For those who see Bitcoins as the currency of the future - doesn't that mean you want it to fall in value? Otherwise it will never be used enough in ordinary transactions to act as an alternative currency.
Quote: (12-01-2013 03:18 PM)LÉtranger Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 10:12 AM)babelfish669 Wrote:
Buy it if it crashes hard again.
That didn't take long. Who bought the top?
Quote: (11-30-2013 02:47 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
I barely have my toe in the door (which is a little over $2000), and I have a little more than 50% in Bitcoin and the other 45% or so spread evenly through 7 other crypto currencies). I am considering continuing $1,000 a week for the next 8 weeks - and possibly longer and hopefully some kind of similar distribution of the investment – but who knows.. At this point, I am just attempting to establish a diversified cryptocurrency portfolio and to learn more about cryptocurrencies along the way. Even at my projected rate, I should only have about $10,000 into crypto currencies by the end of January. I do have more dollars that I could invest, but I am planning to start out in a paced manner. Some people prefer to go all in, but currently, I do NOT have that much confidence in this whole situation, and I would be comfortable (though still a bit upset) with losing all of my investment, if it were to come to that.
Quote: (12-01-2013 03:38 PM)friheten Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 03:35 PM)The Texas Prophet Wrote:
It seems to have stabilized.
Yeah. Lucky to have the coins in the wallet lol.
Quote: (12-01-2013 05:53 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 05:49 PM)Emancipator Wrote:
Bitcoin payment processors give you the option of accepting bitcoins but obtaining fiat right away.
What or who do you mean by "bitcoin payment processors"?
Quote: (12-01-2013 06:07 PM)JackDavey Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 05:53 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 05:49 PM)Emancipator Wrote:
Bitcoin payment processors give you the option of accepting bitcoins but obtaining fiat right away.
What or who do you mean by "bitcoin payment processors"?
Coinbase offers merchant services with automatic USD payouts.
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Additionally, a 1% fee for immediate transfer does seem like a pretty high rate to cash out
Quote: (12-01-2013 06:42 PM)Jaydublin Wrote:
Governments don't like competition.... In the last 100 years there have even been 1st world nations who considered it treason to use currencies other than their own.
Quote: (12-01-2013 06:55 PM)JackDavey Wrote:
Quote:Quote:
Additionally, a 1% fee for immediate transfer does seem like a pretty high rate to cash out
To me, this seems like a good rate. Suppose I set up an online store for some product or service. Were I to use, say Stripe to process credit card payments, I'd pay a fee of 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction.
I'm sure there are other services, though, which may have better rates, both for credit cards and for Bitcoin. The above was just an example of a bitcoin payment processor in answer to your question.
A better idea would be to accept Bitcoin payments and have software which routes them, in whole or in part, to your wallet on an exchange and places an immediate sell order at the best market rate. The exchange fees are considerably lower, from what I have seen: 0.5% on bitstamp, 0.3% on kraken, and these decrease with the volume of trading that you do, if I understand correctly.
Honestly, this might all be irrelevant if you simply are looking to make periodic investments long term. But it's something to think about as far as the potential for Bitcoin to be useful as a currency with minimal risk.
Quote: (12-01-2013 07:06 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
Quote: (12-01-2013 06:42 PM)Jaydublin Wrote:
Governments don't like competition.... In the last 100 years there have even been 1st world nations who considered it treason to use currencies other than their own.
Hehehehe... It may be dangerous to get into a political conversation.....![]()
deja vue for me.
Generally, I agree with you about the US Govt desire to monopolize and to control currency, and really, I claim to NOT be any kind of expert.
However, currently, Bitcoin has an interesting dynamic b/c the US Govt. seems to be engaging in a variety of crazy and wreckless tactics regarding money... especially, since about 2008.. with outrageous printing and seeming loss of control over fiscal restraint (this is NOT just Obama - but that's another story). Anyhow, currently, the US is playing a kind of passive aggressive regarding Bitcoin - and maybe they have some plan and/or ability to squash it.. .. but if they let it grow too much, they may lose that ability... possibly.. In this regard, it may be out of control or there may be some kind of plan to undermine it or to control it or to manipulate it... And, maybe the various US Govt entities are trying to figure out how to play it, exactly.
China, on the other hand, is putting a lot of resources into pumping up Bitcoin and gold and they are probably hedging their bets in various ways - yet China seems to be leveraging some alternatives to the USD - even while they (China) has been considerably open about their various lobbying towards alternative investment strategies.
I understand the inherent hostility... but do they have a plan to control Bitcoin.. and will it get out of control? I would think that if they continue to try to take Bitcoins out of circulation, that would be ONE way - but it may NOT work b/c currently, there are over 40 copy cats, and who knows how good those other copy cats are? Can let others chime in about that b/c I am so NEW to this that I am barely able to figure out how to make various transactions - without getting screwed by the various transaction fees. And, the market seems so fragmented regarding any attempts to trade any of the alternative crypto currencies.
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A college student quickly made over $24,000 just by waving this sign on TV.
Here's the deal: On ESPN's "College GameDay" (an ESPN college football show that's filmed at a different college campus each week) some student held the above sign that has both the Bitcoin logo and a QR code.
A QR code is a visual representation of any kind of information (frequently a URL for a website). In this case, the code represented a Bitcoin wallet.
On Reddit, Bitcoin fans managed to enhance the QR code from the screen in order to identify his wallet, so that people could donate money to him.
Quote: (12-03-2013 02:08 AM)zarzuelazen Wrote:
Massive Bitcoin heist nets hackers $60 million pounds +
Fantastic scam! You have to admire the pure balls of it - it looks like someone has scammed all the users of the ironically named 'Sheep Marketplace' - all their accounts were drained. Hilarious really
"One of the largest heists in bitcoin history is happening right now. 96,000 bitcoins - that’s roughly £60m as of the time of writing - was taken from the accounts of customers, vendors and administrators of the Sheep Marketplace over the weekend.
Sheep was one of the main sites that came to replace the Silk Road when it closed in October, but it too has now closed as a result of this theft. It’s a little hard to work out exactly what’s happened, but Sheep customers have been piecing it together on reddit’s r/sheepmarketplace.
Here's what happened: someone (or some group) managed to fake the balances in peoples’ accounts on the site, showing that they had their bitcoins in their wallets when they’d actually been transferred out. Over the course of a week the whole site was drained, until the weekend when the site's administrators realised what was happening and shut everything down."
http://www.newstatesman.com/future-proof...-real-time
Quote: (12-03-2013 02:15 AM)The Texas Prophet Wrote:
If this is true, then it is amazing.
Quote: (12-03-2013 02:15 AM)The Texas Prophet Wrote:
P.S. The guy stole so many coins that he can't even successfully "wash" them. LOL! That is like stealing so much cash that you can't even carry the bags of cash away.