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Robert
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Pleb exploring cyberspace. Working on #Bitcoin #Mining and waste heat for district heating. Mens sana in corpore sano.

Thanks! We think so too 🤓

Replying to Avatar Robert

Great episode nostr:npub1guh5grefa7vkay4ps6udxg8lrqxg2kgr3qh9n4gduxut64nfxq0q9y6hjy! Heat reuse is such a no brained, and is being done at large scale. We at MinersLoop are currently heating over 800 homes with waste heat from bitcoin mimers through district heating in Finland. I'd love to tell you more if you are interested in hearing about our project. https://fountain.fm/episode/MtZOjUFFv8hogbRdXgz2

no-brainer*, miners*

Great episode nostr:npub1guh5grefa7vkay4ps6udxg8lrqxg2kgr3qh9n4gduxut64nfxq0q9y6hjy! Heat reuse is such a no brained, and is being done at large scale. We at MinersLoop are currently heating over 800 homes with waste heat from bitcoin mimers through district heating in Finland. I'd love to tell you more if you are interested in hearing about our project. https://fountain.fm/episode/MtZOjUFFv8hogbRdXgz2

105K ₿ is the new 58k gang

Replying to Avatar Hong Kim

PUBLIC AUDITABILITY and PRIVATE OWNERSHIP can safely coexist with Bitcoin.

This is a unique superpower of Bitcoin.

Bitwise will continue to champion this unique property in our bitcoin ETFs.

To be clear, publishing addresses isn't a panacea. You still need auditors for attestation on the liability side. You need to be mindful of operational business privacy concerns.

But for public investment vehicles like bitcoin ETFs where all of this information (e.g. custodian, daily inflows/outflows, etc) is already public, the bias should be greatly towards publishing your addresses. It increases public confidence for your products and for the network as a whole.

Below is a screenshot of a webpage that mempool dot space (a popular bitcoin block explorer) built for our bitcoin ETF (BITB), completely independent of Bitwise, utilizing our published addresses: bitwise.mempool.space/wallet/BITB

Anyone can verify that the aggregate balance of bitcoin in our addresses on the mempool page match what is disclosed on our site: bitbetf.com

You might think this is trivial. You already trust KPMG (KPMG is our auditor for BITB) so who is this helping? Well, every six months there's a crisis of confidence in bitcoin ETFs with claims that the ETFs don't have the bitcoin. That the ETFs are lending out the bitcoin. All of this is completely unproductive noise that our space would be able to move past if public investment vehicles like bitcoin ETFs took additional steps to publish their addresses. We're 1 year into launch and BITB is still the only US bitcoin ETF that publishes its addresses.

We believe publishing bitcoin addresses for BITB serves the interest of public investors and the Bitcoin network and ecosystem as a whole and we're committed to this practice at Bitwise.

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BITB Disclosures & Prospectus: http://bitbetf.com/welcome. BITB is not an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and is not afforded its protections. BITB is not suitable for all investors. BITB is subject to significant risk and heightened volatility.

GM! ☀️☕

Block 888 888 should be mined any (10) minute(s) now! 🥳

GM ☕ Right!? And it's March as well...! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

I'm taking an ice plunge instead 👌

GM! ☀️☕

What an historic day, taking a step back and realizing that in just a little over 16 years magic internet money has officially been recognized as strategically important for the world's largest economy. Mind blowing!

Here’s my take: El Salvador’s $1.4 billion IMF loan is a quick fix for a country slammed with debt and interest payments, and it looks like Bukele’s been forced into it.

He seems to grasp Bitcoin’s value, seeing it as the way to save the country long term. The IMF (predictably), wants it scrapped as legal tender and to hinder bitcoin adoption as much as possible. On paper he might be complying but his posts and actions show a different story, at least so far.

This feels like a high-risk, high-return bet. Taking the loan to patch up short-term problems while quietly betting big on Bitcoin to pay it all back down the line. Time will tell...

GM! ☀️☕

The early bird catches the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

Replying to Avatar Robertrobert

Learn from history. Like experience it’s the best teacher.

Some Lessons From Andrew Mellon:

Operate from a position of strength. Following his father’s wisdom, Mellon always maintained excess reserves to move quickly and decisively. This allowed him to capitalize on opportunities others couldn’t pursue during the inevitable downturns.

Keep your head, when others are losing theirs. During the 1929 crash—history’s worst financial panic (to that point)—Mellon maintained his composure. He didn’t panic or make emotional decisions, demonstrating that clear thinking during a crisis separates the extraordinary from the ordinary.

Play to win. Panics, crashes, and dislocations allowed the strong to “overwhelm the weak, and such opportunities did not come around often.”

Embrace long-term thinking. Mellon’s patience—built on emotional stability and financial strength—enabled the compounding that created his fortune. He never reached for a deal, instead he patiently waited.

Never go for the last dollar. With the 1930s financial crisis underway, Mellon tried to leverage his strength to extract the last dollar from the Bank of Pittsburgh, putting himself in a position to acquire it for nothing or have a competitor go bankrupt, either way increasing his financial dominance in the city. This win-lose approach generated “bitter local criticism at the time, from which his reputation would never recover, despite the money he was spending on building and the substantial donations he would soon be giving to the unemployed.”

Move in silence. Mellon intentionally stayed out of the headlines, which gave him more flexibility. As my friend Peter D. Kaufmann says, “The whale that surfaces gets harpooned.”

Invest in increments. Mellon often invested a little at the start and rapidly expanded into it once an idea started to work.

Vertical integration. The Mellons were the OGs at integrating. They sold land to people, financed the transaction, then sold them the materials to build their houses, the coal to heat them, etc.

Gain an information advantage. Mellon and his brother sat on well over 30 boards. They had more information AND better information.

Reputation. Leaving your circle of competence can damage your reputation.

Stack Sats and HODL on 🫡

Bitcoiners when #Bitcoin does what Bitcoin does: