KB
Diamond Member
- Nov 8, 1999
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The Winklevoss twins are celebrating right now.
This sarcasm? The Winklevii just lost half thier value in bitcoins, which totals several million.
The Winklevoss twins are celebrating right now.
This sarcasm? The Winklevii just lost half thier value in bitcoins, which totals several million.
This sarcasm? The Winklevii just lost half thier value in bitcoins, which totals several million.
People don't get rich and stay that way by not caring if their investments tank.Cameron Winklevoss: Bitcoin Might Hit $40,000 Per Coin
http://mashable.com/2013/12/16/cameron-winklevoss-bitcoin/
Ya, they are looking to hold for a looooong time.
plus, they are already rich, if bitcoins tanked, they probably don't care much.
People don't get rich and stay that way by not caring if their investments tank.
Rich people have investments tank all the time. Go read statistics on Venture Capitalists.
But they also never put their eggs in one basket. One rule of thumb is to never trade more than 0.5% of your portfolio at a time. I'd be willing to be the amount of money the twins put into BTC is less than 0.5% of their total holdings.
They put in $11M into bit coin, their net worth is not anywhere near $2.2B
Anyone watch Almost Human on Fox? In the last episode people were buying recycled human organs with bitcoin. Thought it was funny.
Doppelbucks are worth almost twice sssnailcoins on the open exchange, and China can't touch them. Government immune! I'm currently selling Doppelbucks for $300 USD and promise to release no more than 10M of them total, ever.You guys should have invested in Sssnailcoins, that shit holds its value.
Absolutely I have seen this. Wired has a hard-on for bitcoin and you'll see the bitcoin zealots come out in full force on the articles there. When you start criticizing bitcoin they start knee-jerking about the federal reserve. The latest fantasy is that amazon will start accepting bitcoin.I'm kinda glad that you can't downvote comments here. It you look at the Crypto forums on Reddit, for example, you'll see a bunch of shills promoting their crypto currency of choice and having those comments upvoted by their buddies. If you dare to say anything negative about their coin of choice, your comment gets downvoted into oblivion.
You end up with forums filled with cheerleaders, with no actual debate or rational discussion.
I believe I understand what it is, although it is confusing at first. I am more convinced every time the price of it skyrockets or tanks that it is dead in the water as a viable currency. Lacking any chance in hell of being a viable currency (currently it is only a very transient exchange--just enough time until the seller of a product can convert to an actual, real form of money), all it is left is an object to be pumped and dumped.There are still a surprisingly high number of people who still have no idea what in the hell Bitcoin is. I just had a tough time explaining how it works to a bunch of programmers where I work, and these guys are pretty bright.
It's going to be awhile until the Average Joe figures it out.
A crash is a crash. Nobody here doesn't wish they had bought a thousand coins when they were worth a dollar. Doesn't change the argument.When I first heard of bitcoin they were trading at about $5 a coin. It's only a crash if you bought them after their most recent bubble.
Well the true zealots will say everything you mention will come with time, the ability to buy anything.If I want to move currency around I have a plethora of options. For trade I can write a check, cashiers check, open a letter of credit, use cash, etc. I know that the value of it will be stable. If I'm dealing with a foreign currency then I will only deal with stable currencies like the USD, Euro, and GBP. As a business I would not deal in something like Turkmenistan or Zimbabwe money. The transaction will be done in dollars. If not then the business is simply not done. They can deal with their own currency problems.
This is the problem with Bitcoin. Nobody is ever going to sell items for bitcoins. That would be insane and people would laugh at you just like if you tried to sell your product using the Zimbabwe Dollar. You might buy something for bitcoins but that's your problem and it holds no benefits. You have no protections and buying something as simple as a loaf of bread is difficult with bitcoins. Yes it's difficult because nobody accepts them but it's also very difficult because bitcoins are volatile. You would be better off buying a loaf of bread with baseball cards.
I feel like bitcoin is reaching it's absurd obvious conclusion. Now people are starting to tout how they're so awesome since only one person can own a bitcoin at a time. As if that is somehow impressive.
Show me how I could do real commerce with a bitcoin.
1. Buy real estate in a foreign country.
2. Transfer money from one country to another. ie how would I use bitcoins to move investment profits from Sweden to the USA and how would this be better than simply using a normal bank and converting SEK to USD. As it stands my investment portfolio has multiple currencies and I can swap them seamlessly for a few percentage points.
3. How do I take my paycheck in USD and buy a Bigscreen TV and how does this benefit me compared to simply paying it with my debit/credit card in USD?
4. How do I use bitcoins to operate an import/expert business where two parties in different countries are opening letters of credit with a bank and only transferring funds upon completion of the order?
Show me how bitcoins have ANY practical applications that will either simplify my life or cost me less money.
I think they're really young. I have seen this several times. The tech bubble is a pretty good mirroring of what bitcoin is today. People buying something that has no value just because they think it's going to keep rising forever and make them rich.
It'll crash. The idiots will lose their money and life will go on. Until the next "get rich scheme".
"Chinese investors are driving the price of the virtual currency worldwide. Bitcoin is a popular way to invest in the country as people have few investment options and see it as a coveted commodity."
"The Chinese lower income and middle class people have extremely limited savings options. There are capital controls and they cannot take their money out of the country. So they can't invest in any foreign assets.
Their local share market is unbelievably corrupt. I have looked at many Chinese stocks listed in Shanghai and corruption levels are similar to Chinese stocks listed in New York. Expect fraud.
What Chinese are left with is bank deposits, life insurance accounts and (maybe) apartments."
"Many come to elude China’s strict limits on the amount of yuan people can take out of the country.
A government official who has embezzled state funds, for example, may arrange to gamble in Macau through a junket. When he arrives, his chips are waiting for him.
When he cashes out, his winnings are paid in Hong Kong dollars, which he can stash in a bank in Hong Kong or take farther afield."