Avatar
~finned-palmer
ae3909314fa3e56926ef5cc4434a442440142a107644d11a2e51cbdee728c2a6
interested in decentralized social tech. ~finned-palmer on urbit.

Cool. Yeah, I'd recommend logging into your ship on the web on desktop and installing some apps.

I use it every day and I think it's the most promising p2p tech going right now. What do you want to know?

If BitVM can enable a trustless bridge then a ZK rollup on bitcoin could be the ideal way to get there.

If I've already got Zeus installed via the play store I can't install the beta APK on top of it, correct? Is there a good way to try the beta without having to setup the app again (with my lnd node, etc)?

What's the best nostr web app for desktop these days?

Why don't bitcoiners care about sidechains?

It seems like bitcoiners would rather use a custodial service than a non-custodial smart contract on a sidechain. Why?

https://stacker.news/items/262346

Replying to Avatar Get10101

At 10101 we are preparing for the next big thing. #selfcustodial synthetic #stablecoins powered by #DLC.

It uses derivatives to stabilize #Bitcoin towards another asset of choice, for example the US dollar.

But how does that work?

To achieve a stable position in terms of USD, we utilize a #Bitcoin derivative called a perpetual inverse future.

In this mechanism, users who wish to hold a synthetic #stablecoin take a short position in a perpetual inverse future with a leverage of 1.

A counter party willing to go long takes the other side of the trade with a leverage of 1.

The chart below illustrates how this function looks like.

In the given example it shows how much BTC each party may receive depending on the USD price of BTC.

Let's have a look at an example assuming a bitcoin price of $30.000.

1. Alice wants to hold $30,000 in our synthetic stable coin.

2. She has to put up 1 BTC (≜ $30,000).

3. Bob takes the other side of the trade, and also has to put up 1 BTC (≜ $30,000).

Assuming the price appreciates to $60,000:

1. Alice still holds $30,000 (≜ 0.5 BTC) => $30,000/$60,000 = 0.5 BTC.

2. Bob holds 1.5 BTC (≜ $90,000).

Assuming the price depreciates to $15,000:

1. Alice still holds $30,000 (≜ 2 BTC) => $30,000/$15,000 = 2 BTC.

2. Bob holds 0 BTC (≜ $0).

Assuming the price appreciates to $1,000,000:

1. Alice still holds $30,000 (≜ 0.03 BTC) => $30,000/$1,000,000 = 0.03 BTC.

2. Bob holds 1.97 BTC (≜ $970,000).

If the price drops below $15,000 in this example, the short position's value will fall below the initial $30,000.

Differently said, the long position gets liquidated at $15,000. That means that the position won't be stable anymore as the counter party dropped.

If you got until here, sign up to our waiting list if you want to be one of the first ones to try #selfcustodial stablecoins on #Bitcoin.

http://10101.finance

How will self custody work?

How is image hosting handled on nostr? Are clients just setting up an s3 bucket for all of their users?

The Bitcoin content is cool and all, but what are some good non-bitcoin related accounts to follow on nostr?

Somehow I have over 200 followers? Lol

What's new in nostr world these days?

Wow, amethyst is super nice now.