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Rigly
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Rigly is a Bitcoin hashrate marketplace. Bid on hashrate and start mining bitcoin today. ⛏️ We're Nostr's 1st Bitcoin Mining #BlockParty! 🎉 The party is @Upendo! Follow us for Bitcoin mining education. If you're obsessed with hashrate and group solo mining, this is the spot. 📍

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This is real innovation in fiat world.

Also I look forward to not walk around garbage every day.

Great story!

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Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Financial privacy isn’t always about the government or corporations. Sometimes it’s simply about peers. Here’s an anecdote.

In Egypt, people born into lower socioeconomic statuses often don’t have a lot of flexibility for their life path. It’s often largely set by family and tradition, especially for women. And so, it’s kind of the luck of the draw how constructive their family is.

In certain social circles, a girl is generally considered the responsibility of her father. If she dates, has sex, doesn’t wear hijab, etc, then it is considered to reflect badly on him.

Once she marries, responsibility over her is transferred to her husband. He will usually control the main income, he will often control the family finances even if she does have an income, and he will often control most major decisions. And divorce is structured in favor of men here. Initiating a divorce as a woman comes with more limitations and consequences.

Many fathers push their daughters to marry pretty early so that they can relieve themselves of responsibility for her, even if she’s not thrilled about the prospective husband. She can be pressured socially, economically, and sometimes even physically. And at that socioeconomic level, she likely isn’t fluent in other languages, likely has not been exposed to outside ideas very much, is likely surrounded by people who would take her father’s side against her, and so the direction and pressure from her family is mainly how she contextualizes her role in the world.

So in many cases, someone goes from a girl with little power to a wife with little power at a young age, and with limited economic, social, or legal recourse if it ends up not being a good path. A decent percentage of fathers and husbands are abusive, unfortunately. In theory there are safeguards against this, but in practice it’s easy to fall through the cracks.

I know a family that owns an apartment building in Cairo, and they employ a husband and wife as live-in assistants to oversee the property and their family, like a casual butler and maid basically. He cleans, runs errands, and provides security, while she cleans and cooks. The husband and wife come from a low socioeconomic background, and have both been working for the family for 15 years, and are heavily trusted. They make like $4k/year USD equivalent combined, plus receive free basic shelter and a used car.

The husband and wife do not have bank accounts, so they just save in physical Egyptian cash that quickly devalues. Inflation in Egypt hurts people like them the most. With their extended family, they also own a unit for themselves in an apartment building in a poor neighborhood. It’s an unfinished raw brick building that they don’t live in. Their extended family all contribute to the shared building structure and underlying small land lot, and they own their unit within the structure and can choose to invest in finishing it with electricity and plumbing and flooring and furniture to live in, or just leave it as an empty brick hull. Many remain unfinished like that indefinitely throughout Cairo; it’s basically treated as illiquid savings and optionality.

Anyway, one day when the wife was getting a raise from the family that employs her, she asked that her raise be kept private from her husband. She wanted to have autonomy over that portion; their combined income is otherwise mainly under his control. Her husband is by all accounts a nice guy, but that is the common way of doing things in their socioeconomic circle. A private raise would let her keep a tiny bit of pocket cash in her own control. One of the things she wanted to do with some of her own money was send a tiny bit each month to a family member that needed help. So the family agreed to keep her raise private.

As her pocket cash eventually grew a bit, the next challenge arose: how to keep it safe and secret while living in a 250 square foot living area with her husband and daughter. She went back to her employer and asked if she could keep her private savings with them as an informal bank. They agreed to do that for her as well.

As is the case for many people like her, even though she doesn’t have a bank account, she does have a smartphone. Over time, certain types of mobile wallets and their widespread adoption could improve her ability to save privately and in less debase-able ways, and that don’t rely on the particular helpfulness of her employer. And if not her, then maybe her daughter one day.

A shoutout to all the devs working on such wallets and their ease of use; there are certainly plenty of people in the world who could benefit from them!

Great story, thank you for sharing it

Saturday #bitcoin story corner

What's your bitcoin story?

- How did you first learn about bitcoin?

- What was your rabbit hole journey like?

- How are you different now than before you found bitcoin?

Reply in this thread and I'll zap 1,000 sats to each story.

Best story gets 3 days of free #bitcoin mining on Rigly.io

Congrats to winning bidder Ed 66 ⛏️

Ed won this morning's 150 TH/s auction and shared his bitcoin story.

Read more:

https://rigly.io/auctions/midwest-usa-mining-7-days-68125035

#bitcoin #mining

New hashrate auctions for July 4th ⛏️

Celebrate independent money and do your part to secure the network.

We are still working on that! Bidding is live for now but when instant hash buys are live, we will let you know.

We're back today! New auction live on the site now.

Network #Hashrate creeping back up after a ~5% dip post halving.

Back to ATH's?

GM Epoch 5

Post-halving #hashrate predictions?

May 11, 2020 marks previous halving...

RIGLY UPDATE:

As Rigly works through some maintenance to get our platform back up and running, we wanted to provide an update on what we have been working on, why these changes were necessary, and what the changes will allow us to do.

Since we started as a hashrate marketplace, we have used stratu.ms as our proxy server to forward hashrate from the mining rig to our customer and their mining pool account. Forwarding hashrate this way is a key differentiator between Rigly and cloud miners: your bitcoin is held in escrow. Miners are paid once they deliver the hashrate to you.

Unfortunately, stratu.ms shut down their operation giving us only a small window to find (or build) a new solution. There are a few other proxy servers available on the market, but they need to be run locally and are mostly meant for mining farms.

So we decided to build our own. Over the past few months we have built a simple, efficient hashrate proxy in python.

By building our own proxy, we will be able to scale and deliver much more hashrate to customers. We have some big things coming in 2024, including the launch of our “over the counter” hashrate trading platform, and our proxy will allow us to service our higher volume customers as well as our customers buying hashrate from our daily auctions.

Looking ahead, we intend to open source our hashrate proxy. By open sourcing the proxy, customers who want a little extra anonymity can run it themselves to forward their hashrate, and anyone can verify its functionality by reading the source code.

I don't know who needs to hear this but:

-Kilohash per second: 1,000 hashes per second

-Megahash per second: 1 million hashes per second (typically a single GPU or CPU).

-Gigahash per second: 1 billion hashes per second (mining pool or cluster of GPUs).

-Terahash per second: 1 trillion hashes per second (typically a single ASIC or large mining pool).

-Petahash per second: 1 quadrillion hashes per second (large mining pool).

-Exahash per second: 1 quintillion hashes per second (typically a huge mining pool or entire network).

-Zettahash per second: 1 sextillion hashes per second (soon).

GM☕

486 blocks...

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GM 🔆