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btcschellingpt
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Bitcoiner Rational optimist #AUStrich OpenSats Bitcoin Brisbane bitcoinbushbash@nostrplebs.com Honeybadger Noob Day Working on https://primal.net/EscapeHatch
Replying to Avatar BTCPay Server

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MATT IS ONE OF THE EARLIEST ADVOCATES AND SUPPORTERS OF THE BTCPAY SERVER. HE IS A MANAGING PARTNER AT TEN31. COFOUNDER OF OPENSATS AND BITCOIN PARK!

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Do you need assistance configuring your Lightning wallet? 🤣

Sweet time to clean up

Consolidate UTXO’s

Organise wallets

Separate stacks

Why “KYC” is so toxic:

You’re an anon in Australia

.. equally Asia/Europe etc

You want to shitpost so you join Twitter; or you want to buy shitcoins so you join Coinbase

Your hand your ID to the platforms

They share with “auth” services

All this for “your safety”

Now your ID docs are in the US

Now your ID docs are in Israel

..and now they’re globally available 😞

Yet Twitter or Coinbase or AU10TIX will NOT be held to account and held liable for the harm caused

Information cannot be recalled

Don’t use these toxic services

All of it will be hacked or leaked

Just a question of time ..

nostr:note10qg0a5ge42l00dhne0njez54apwhlaf9ledf5qukaacl66fgk4wqv8lwem

Have a read first .. then:

Where do your comms rank?

Level up .. even one step is good

nostr:note1hysrmtlj30t7yygxpcvzjfs264ddk562v8knw3rtvu60965hdldqeq84ay

More dip .. more crackers

Stack the gift!

nostr:note1yh5fpezskmn8dg57ctxy63fetx6syqecw8sl4nlnj2uwj6vvy38qdpas9r

This!!!!

The *minimum* historical gain over four years, looking at the entire price history of bitcoin, is 135%

If your timeframe is shorter than 4 years then maybe you need to rethink

Here ya go!!

A few crackers to go with the dip all your champs bought last night 🧡

Happy 4th July 🇺🇸

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

GM.

There are many different subcultures in Egypt, and waves of religious and cultural changes over time.

Most well-known is the fact that alongside the majority Sunni Muslim population, there is a significant Coptic Christian population in Egypt. Some of the oldest still-standing churches in the world, dating back to the third century, are located in Cairo.

But in addition, among the Muslim majority there are different types of Muslim conservatism vs modernism. There is a traditional conservatism that is rather ubiquitous in the Egyptian rural areas and stretches back very far, and there is a more recent religious fundamentalist conservatism (Wahhabism, and more broadly Salafism) that came from Saudi Arabia into Egypt over the past few decades that affects both the rural areas and the urban areas.

My Muslim grandparent inlaws, when you look at their pictures back in the 1950s, are not wearing any hijab head coverings, and neither were their adult children in the 1970s. It was less common to do so in the urbanite middle and wealthy classes back then. Rural traditionalists generally wore hijab head coverings back then and in the present, and have more conservative views. But as Wahhabism/Salafism spread through Egypt, even those wealthier and more cosmopolitan urbanites became more outwardly religious and conservative within the same generation. Many people who didn’t previously wear head coverings began to do so. Niqabs (full head and face coverings) also grew in popularity as well, alongside hijabs, but have always been a much smaller minority.

My in-laws came from the urbanite upper-middle class. So over time in the past, they went from no hijab head coverings to wearing hijab head coverings (grandparent and parent in laws) with the adoption of Wahhabism/Salafism in Egypt during that era. And then some of the younger ones (now in their 30s), who were raised with hijab head coverings from the start, began to take them off about a decade ago. They grew up being told it was wrong for women to dance or swim or show almost any skin or hair in public, but eventually shifted their views away from that, even as their parents still adhere to it. They are still Muslim, but interpret things more like their grandparents once did. Meanwhile among the traditional rural class there is no such retracement.

As a result of all this, there is a big spectrum of conservatism/modernism and religiosity across the country, and even within extended families.

In Greater Cairo’s 20+ million population, there is also a west vs east divide. Upper-middle classes in West Cairo are generally more cosmopolitan, whereas similar economic groups in East Cairo lean more conservative on average. Outside of Cairo, Alexandria, and coastal resorts, the rural areas and smaller cities all lean pretty conservative. And again, there are some differences between traditional blended cultural/religious conservatism which is generally correlated to socioeconomic class, and the separate wave of Wahhabism/Salafism religious conservatism that is more class-independent.

Among rural Egyptians, there are different subcultures north of Cairo (in the Nile delta farmland region) and south of Cairo (following the Nile down south to Sudan). A significant percentage of southern Egyptian families have a vendetta culture, similar in some regards to old-school Sicilians, which is not really present to any similar degree among rural northern Egyptians.

Nationwide Egyptian politics over the past 50 years have largely been defined by the conflict between secular military rule (who are usually in power) vs religious theocratic rule (who were only in power briefly). The secular military view is still Muslim and is conservative by western standards, but leaves most religious choices to individuals and families. They focus on economic matters, and want Egypt to be a place for global tourism and business. The religious theocratic view instead wants a more theocratic society, either through political means or in some cases through violent means and terrorism. The military secularists then become empowered by the broad public toward more authoritarian tendencies by being seen as the force that can stop the extremists and keep things safe and stable.

I appreciate learning more about a place and region I’ve spent little time in 🙏

Replying to Avatar Toshi

My Experience with nostr:npub1ex7mdykw786qxvmtuls208uyxmn0hse95rfwsarvfde5yg6wy7jq6qvyt9

**TL;DR Strike is garbage.**

I started using Strike in the middle of March this year.

My first impression was that it was a great app. It had Lightning integrated, on-chain withdrawals were free, and the setup was pretty easy, even though I had to do a full KYC. After all, they are regulated and that is to be expected.

I began using Strike to send and receive BTC and buy gift cards directly within the app. I was pretty amazed at how easy everything worked. I loved the app. I even recommended it as an onboarding app for pre-coiner friends. Well, not anymore.

One day in May, about two months later, I wanted to send some BTC to an exchange or buy a gift card (which was basically all I did with the app in those previous two months). However, the app denied access to my BTC. All I got was a cartoon lightning bolt saying, “We need to review your account. Contact support.”

At first, I was shocked. I didn't have my life savings in the app, but it wasn’t a trivial amount of sats either. So, there it was, right in my face for the first time: Not your keys, not your coins. I got angry with myself and with Strike too.

I contacted support.

Support wrote that to comply with regulations, they needed additional information (remember, I already did full KYC), like a pay stub, signed employee agreement, or tax statement.

This was my response:

Hey, the Bitcoin with which I funded my Strike account are savings from the past. I don't work currently, and I also have no tax statement because I just moved to Brazil last year. What exactly is the problem? I didn't do anything illegal or wrong. I expect this issue to be resolved immediately or you will lose a customer. I already regret using your service. I'm very disappointed.

Yeah, I was really pissed because I couldn’t access my sats. They locked me out. Just like that.

Strike answered:

Dear User,

Upon careful review, we have determined that your account has engaged in prohibited use. We regret to inform you that we can no longer provide you with access to our service.

At this time, your account has been permanently disabled. Please withdraw all remaining assets from your account within one week from receiving this message, and confirm with us when the withdrawal has been completed. After this timeframe, the account will be closed permanently. Please be advised that this decision is final.

Best regards,

The Strike Team

Okay… So now Strike accused me of “prohibited use” of their app.

I asked them to be kind and specify what prohibited use I engaged in. Because obviously, I don’t want to get in trouble or do anything illegal.

Their answer:

This decision is based on an assessment of different qualifications. Our customer support team can only confirm that we sent this message and assist with technical issues only. Support cannot reverse this decision, nor can they share any more details related to this matter.

Thank you for that great answer. I can really see you care about your customers and their experience. But I guess at that point, I wasn’t their customer anymore anyway.

Still, I sent them another message and asked who I could talk to. If there was anybody who could clarify what I did wrong. Remember, all I did was send and receive BTC and buy gift cards.

Their answer? Well, they never answered again. Just like that. That was it.

After this beautiful experience, I posted about it on Nostr.

And guess what? nostr:npub1cn4t4cd78nm900qc2hhqte5aa8c9njm6qkfzw95tszufwcwtcnsq7g3vle answered.

Woohooo!

He said I should send him a DM and he would happily look into the issue.

Cool! Now that’s what I call customer service.

So, I did. No answer.

I sent him another one. Again, no answer.

I sent another one or two. Still no answer.

This was 5 weeks ago.

I guess he is very busy.

What a joke Strike is.

Sad to hear but not surprising; avoid US “regulated” services if at all possible - so many better alternatives

Learn the tools

Use the tools

Teach the tools

Godmode: write the guide 🧡

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