You have to wonder if people are denominating prices in Bitcoin and saying that this loaf of bread is 1,000 satoshis, etc. I have not seen that occurring, but that doesn't mean it's not. With that said, I do know for a fact that physical goods and services are being denominated in Monero because I'm actually one of the people doing so.
It would work much better in a phone with an e-sim instead of a regular SIM card, but I removed the toggle to turn on airplane mode and the toggle to turn off and on mobile data from all of my quick settings. Mind you, if the phone was ever stolen, the person could just pull the SIM card and be good. But with an e-SIM device, not being able to pull the SIM card and not having access to airplane mode and turning off mobile data, would cause them major problems.
had to pull this up on yt bc fountain would not load it
I completely agree. I came into crypto in 2014 and back then, not your keys, not your coins. We really had the chance to learn what crypto was truly about back in those days.
If people were to start using Bitcoin to make purchases, then they would be completely under surveillance at all times from whatever nitwit on social media wanted to find out their financial information. And that's not a great world to live in. Privacy in or on Bitcoin is extremely unlikely to happen and therefore it has failed.
if you keep your crypto on an exchange and it gets hacked or bankrupt you deserved to lose it all. sorry not sorry
Show me one Bitcoiner that has read this paper and doesn't think that Monero price is an absurd anomaly.
Price suppression is real. And Bitcoiners are even celebrating when the state attacks Monero.
https://academic.oup.com/cybersecurity/article/7/1/tyab004/6166133
It makes me incredibly excited that even while the state is attacking Monero, we are still growing in adoption and they are failing.
Show me one Bitcoiner that has read this paper and doesn't think that Monero price is an absurd anomaly.
Price suppression is real. And Bitcoiners are even celebrating when the state attacks Monero.
https://academic.oup.com/cybersecurity/article/7/1/tyab004/6166133
"]. However, Internet access is not necessary to use permissionless DLTs. Some of these network’ users emphasize that ‘the internet is a vulnerability’, continuing, ‘They are using satellites, ham radios, and mesh networks to stay current on the cryptocurrency… For those wary of tracking and censorship, analogue signals—through satellites and land-based radio devices—offer a welcome buffer from central control"
Show me one Bitcoiner that has read this paper and doesn't think that Monero price is an absurd anomaly.
Price suppression is real. And Bitcoiners are even celebrating when the state attacks Monero.
https://academic.oup.com/cybersecurity/article/7/1/tyab004/6166133
"Taking into account the above findings, instead of going after privacy-blockchains communities’ members to punish them, these tools should be, in my opinion, directed against privacy-cryptocurrency that creates ML/FT risks which cannot be overcome using any available approaches. The focus should be on the direct source of risk to public safety, not on the people which create that risk. An analogy to the off-chain world is where enforcement law agencies directly targeted the building constructed in violation of building regulation, and destroyed it rather than—or in addition to—targeting people responsible for the building’s construction. The ultimate aim of new tools in the blockchain space should be to reduce the economic value of the outlawed native cryptocurrency whose value drives the operation of a given platform, in particular by reducing trust in the stability and security of the network. If effective, means that reduce the value of the cryptocurrency will therefore reduce the number of the network’s users and nodes. The decreasing number of users and nodes (and thus the decreasing infrastructural and political decentralization"
Legal tender that monitors everyone's transactions, no matter what. Sounds perfect. /s
This is most definitely not the way. Bitcoin was originally created to give a middle finger to the system and say, we're done with you. And this right here is exactly what Bitcoin was against when it was created by Satoshi.
While it seems that the incoming US administration will be kinder to #Bitcoin than the previous one, we can’t lose sight of the fact that the ability to continue to use #bitcoin privately is far from a guarantee.
Because of this, we must continue to fight for this right.
More in my latest for nostr:npub1t8a7uumfmam38kal4xaakzyjccht4y5jxfs4cmlj0p768pxtwu8skh56yu.
#newstr #regulation #policy
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/takes/dont-lose-sight-of-the-bitcoin-mission
The vision for Bitcoin was lost a long time ago. The only option now is Monero.
Holy fuck, I just started using Dark Reader on Firefox and I don't know why the fuck I haven't been using this thing for years because it's fucking beautiful.
How do you turn a human into a cow?
Military service to their country.
Apparently, this may not actually be a bug. And if that's the case, that is fucking fantastic. Now, the only thing that would be needed would be a timer that said that if the screen had not been unlocked for the past 16 hours or something, it would automatically reboot.
Is it just a simple auto reboot after X amount of time? Or is it like an auto reboot if the screen has not been unlocked for X hours?
I have heard that there is a bug causing iPhones in police possession to reboot and go into an encrypted state and honestly that should be a feature instead of a bug and to disable the feature should require a reboot. That way, if the police try to turn off the feature, they have to reboot the device anyway.
That is 12 D listings, like seriously fucking 12 of them!
2024 has been an absolutely amazing year based on this list, like Holy Hell.