Cryptocurrency Daily Discussion - June 5, 2020 (GMT+0) |
- Daily Discussion - June 5, 2020 (GMT+0)
- The Nano Build-off competition submission period has ended bringing a chunk of new fresh services that will now be judged and awarded a total of $75,000
- Don't buy George Floyd Token or FLYD...
- Greyscale Bitcoin Trust has bought up every Bitcoin mined since the halving (and more).
- Grayscale bought 9,502 BTC in the last 8 days, for reference only ~7,200 were mined in that period
- The Truth about Warren Buffett?
- Both NXT and Algorand Claim to Have Developed First Proof-of-Stake Chain
- Thought this was interesting:
- Remote Access Hack - Binance Cleaned Out
- 150+ list of useful crypto tools & sites (trading + investing + tax, etc)
- Crypto Derivatives Volume Reaches Record High in May
- Crypto-lending is on the rise with Celsius Network surpassing $1 billion
- BSI's Soultions Built on OriginTrail: Walmart, Costco, Disney/ Servicing 1.25T in sales / ODN Jobs!
- Reddit is being polluted with cryptocurrency spam accounts.
- Rising Ethereum Sun [Desktop Background 1920x1080]
- Discussion of the Day: KuCoin Shares KCS
- UTRUST (UTK) has announced partnership with the e-commerce platform Magento ($155 billion in merchandise), part of the ADOBE company.
- The importance of Fungibility, your future = your choice.
- Deflationary Tokens
- Crypto Tax Strategies (LEGAL)
- Hex - The First Time-Locked CD in the Crypto Space or a Ruthless Scam?
- Tether and Bitfinex denounce baseless lawsuit designed to undermine the cryptocurrency community
- People are constantly wondering about Binance's location, but I found this job posting based in Taiwan...
- The most popular Steem dapp just migrated to rival network Hive
- Bitcoin nears $10k - which way will it break?
Daily Discussion - June 5, 2020 (GMT+0) Posted: 04 Jun 2020 05:14 PM PDT Welcome to the Daily Discussion. Please read the disclaimer, guidelines, and rules before participating. Disclaimer: Though karma rules still apply, moderation is less stringent on this thread than on the rest of the sub. Therefore, consider all information posted here with several liberal heaps of salt, and always cross check any information you may read on this thread with known sources. Any trade information posted in this open thread may be highly misleading, and could be an attempt to manipulate new readers by known "pump and dump (PnD) groups" for their own profit. BEWARE of such practices and exercise utmost caution before acting on any trade tip mentioned here. Rules:
To see prior Skeptics Discussions, click here. [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Jun 2020 01:54 AM PDT | ||
Don't buy George Floyd Token or FLYD... Posted: 04 Jun 2020 04:53 AM PDT
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Greyscale Bitcoin Trust has bought up every Bitcoin mined since the halving (and more). Posted: 04 Jun 2020 04:26 PM PDT
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Grayscale bought 9,502 BTC in the last 8 days, for reference only ~7,200 were mined in that period Posted: 04 Jun 2020 01:46 PM PDT
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The Truth about Warren Buffett? Posted: 05 Jun 2020 12:35 AM PDT The Oracle of Omaha has a reputation as the gentle GOAT, but is there more to this than meets the eye? Is there something that is often overlooked? Or is this reputation warranted? (get it...warren, warranted?) Anyway...Let's begin... The story begins in 1942, when Warren Buffet bought his first shares at the age of just 11. This is same year that his father Howard Buffett ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in the Nebraska district. He won, and became a member of Congress in 1943. Before this, Howard worked at a small stock brokerage firm. He was reelected twice. However, in 1952, he decided against seeking another term and returned to his investment business in Omaha, Buffett-Falk & Co., where he worked until shortly before his death in 1964. But what about Warren Buffett? In 1951, after graduating from Columbia, where he was taught by Benjamin Graham, Buffett worked for three years at his father's firm as an investment salesman. In 1954, Buffett accepted a job at Benjamin Graham's partnership, working as a securities analyst. His starting salary was $12,000 a year - the equivalent of $114,000 today. However, just two years later, Graham retired and Buffett started his own investment partnership. He went to his father's acquaintances to raise Capital for his first fund. These were prominent families in Nebraska with big businesses and political connections. For example, across the street was the family whose son became the CEO of Coca Cola - that family gave him $10,000 (in the 50′s). In 2012, the STOCK Act or The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act was signed into law. The law prohibits the use of non-public information for private profit, including insider trading by members of Congress and other government employees. Remember, Buffett's father used to be in Congress. The only people who were, before 2012, allowed to trade on insider information without having criminal charges brought against them were congressmen. Remember, Buffett's father was a stock market broker prior to being elected and going to Congress, hence he had a comprehensive knowledge of the stock market and clearly had an interest in it. After all, it was his father who taught Buffett the ropes early on and had him buy his first shares as an eleven year old. Imagine you are Warren Buffett, and you can: 1). Get insider information to trade on it; 2). Get a six-figure position after College; 3). After a few years, set up your own fund, getting money from wealthy family friends; 4). Pay no dividends to investors and only put a hundred bucks of your own money into the fund; 5). Let the mathematics of compounding work its magic as you bring in more institutional money; 6). Become so connected Politically and connected on Wall Street that you can get special deals, which have practically no risk as you know bailouts are coming. For example, in the 2008 crisis, Berkshire owned stock valued at more than $13 billion in the top recipients of the TARP funds, and Berkshire had at least twice as much dependence on bailed-out banks as any other large investor; 7). Have billions of dollars on hand, remember you ain't paying any dividends to investors, ready for the inevitable economic recession to hit so that you can sweep up cheap assets; 8). Be holier-than-thou (i.e. calling derivatives "financial weapons of mass destruction" when, during the height of the 2008 crisis, Berkshire sold more than $2.5 billion worth of credit default swaps. OR what about Buffett's reputation as the saviour in the Great Recession when Berkshire is the majority owner of Moody's, who played a key role in inflating the crisis in 2008 - via their questionable debt and derivative ratings which inflated the mortgage and subprime market). What about Buffett's status as the GOAT? Jim Simons has a far superior track record. Billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya has even stated that Jeff Bezos is the best investor of our generation, not Warren Buffett. Buffett has missed out on an entire raft of tech and Berkshire has underperformed the S&P 500 in recent years. Berkshire's best years are found overwhelmingly in the period before the tech era. Also, he has been critical of Bitcoin, describing it as "rat poison squared" Ultimately, Buffett is worth $73 billion, he doesn't need to have an in-depth understanding of new age tech. Moreover, Buffett has a huge stake in Finance 1.0, why would he give props to Finance 2.0? Bitcoin as a savings vehicle is misaligned with Berkshire's don't-save-money-invest-it-in-us or consume more of the products of the businesses that Berkshire has a huge stake in, and is also misaligned with Berkshire's Cantillon insider advantages. It's worth noting that Howard Buffett strongly supported the gold standard because he believed it would limit the ability of government to inflate the money supply and spend beyond its means. Here is a direct quote from Howard: "I warn you that politicians of both parties will oppose the restoration of gold, although they may outwardly seemingly favor it, unless you are willing to surrender your children and your country to galloping inflation, war and slavery then this cause demands your support. For if human liberty is to survive in America, we must win the battle to restore honest money. There is no more important challenge facing us than this issue -- the restoration of your freedom to secure gold in exchange for the fruits of your labors." His son Warren, however, hates gold. See the Cantillon Effect as to why. Some have even argued that Buffett's success can be summarised by the following: First Deals = Insider Information Last Deals = Cantillon Effect What are your thoughts? Is it true... or false? [link] [comments] | ||
Both NXT and Algorand Claim to Have Developed First Proof-of-Stake Chain Posted: 04 Jun 2020 11:55 PM PDT
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Posted: 04 Jun 2020 11:45 AM PDT
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Remote Access Hack - Binance Cleaned Out Posted: 04 Jun 2020 03:48 PM PDT About 6 weeks ago I installed a ledger chrome extension that turned out to be bogus - it was caught in my virus scan and removed pretty quickly but the incident had scared me so I have been running regular full (not quick) virus scans, with usually all clear or just minor things turning up. On 20 May I installed the software for the Estonia eresidency program which includes software for a card reader. I'm not suggesting that has anything to do with what occured but it does explain why i didnt shut the laptop down and wipe everything sooner. That same evening or possibly the next morning, there was a strange program I didn't recognise open - I took a screenshot. Here it is: Imgur Obviously somewhat freaked, I shut it down and disconnected from the internet and ran a full scan on Windows Defender. It came back all clear, no issues. After a lot of googling I came to the conclusion that it was background software for the Estonian eresidency, which includes a smart card reader that would require some remote access. To be safe, I invested in the paid full version of Malware Bytes, ran that, all clear again so I carried on. I set it to scan regularly from that period on. Skip to the morning of 02 June, around 10am and the machine is making a lot of weird noise and is fucking slow. I start another full scan but the scan plus the lag that was there already is making the laptop unworkable, so I pause the scan and do what I can and then finish up for the day. That night before going to bed I opened the laptop again and loaded up to do the full scan overnight. It was connected to the wifi for this. I screen locked it and left it running there. When I woke up in the morning and checked it, the scan was all clear but I noticed it was set to 'Quick Scan' when I was sure I ran 'Full Scan'. Everything seemed to be working at normal speed again anyway so I started working for the day, but i did notice that when I locked the screen now, Windows wasn't asking for my password. The password prompt was gone, it just said 'Sign In' and you clicked it and were in my profile. I set a new password, still nothing on the virus scanners. I then got an email from Kraken - "Kraken Alert: Username request" - the email states that someone has requested the username for my account. So they obviously have my email. The kraken email provides the requesters IP and it is in the same country as me, but its a VPN server. I logged onto Kraken quickly, no issues, and decided to move what I had there over to Binance. Logged on to Binance and in a hurry got the deposit address and made the transfer. Then checked my spot wallet on binance and realised it was empty, totally cleaned out. At this point I panicked and diabled Binance immediately and reported it to support (in hindsight the first thing to do was to cancel the transfer from kraken but as I said I was now panicking). I was pretty confused about how this was happening, because: 1) All my passwords are unique and kept secure in KeypassX 2) I have 2FA on everything, and all exchanges 3) I got no email notifications from Binance or anyone else until that Kraken email Over the next few hours then, things start to unravel a bit. I checked the Trash in my gmail and it was totally empty, which would be unusual as I don't empty it out by habit. Then I checked my other, old gmail that I don't really use anymore. Nothing there but then I checked the Trash folder and was greeted with this: At this stage I'm pretty much freaking and it's clear that someone has all my passwords, and is in my emails. There is not a whole lot you can do in this situation, the horse has bolted. Assess and try and damage control: --------------------------- KuCoin - they could not withdraw due to withdrawal pin Kraken - they could not get in due to not having username. I think it's still getting hammered, I have a video call with their support tomorrow. I have told them to disable account until they see me on video, which they have done. Binance - cleaned out everything without issue. They traded all my tokens for USDT and withdrew the USDT and ETH to an ERC20 address. It was there for about 12 hours then was sent on and broken down. https://etherscan.io/tx/0xf61787976c886c9bece826a8fcff4229c10f70a6214958958dd043f6109ee045 https://etherscan.io/tx/0x882c9f6dde7b6604d9e5eb7d2fce386b9c1ea76d004e170c184b190e925ffe82 and there was also BNB, which hasnt moved yet from the wallet it was withdrawn to: https://explorer.binance.org/tx/D286AD625151A22BF78F5B1C0104C847BBBC64B04A8CEC353427A5A2E2408FF6 Binance support have replied once, saying that they did email me. Which of course they did. I'm still hoping something can be done with the BNB if it's a Binance wallet or goes back onto Binance at some point but support aren't helping too much there. Binfinex, it looks like they got access but the balance was very low and they just didn't bother. HitBTC and anywhere else the hacker looked would have been empty. I have spent the last 36 hours or so getting a new laptop, changing every password, changing every 2FA, shutting account down, contacting support all over, etc. It's a fucking nightmare. Now how did it happen - I believe that I was remotely accessed from some point in May, on or before 20 May. The hacker watched and waited and would have seen me using KeypassX. They would have probably put a keylogger on as my password for KeypassX is only in my head, although I'm not sure why the virus scanners wouldnt find the keylogger, but they somehow definitely cracked by KeypassX. As well as then having all my passwords, I had some seeds for 2FA (not all but some) in there. Binance was one, this would explain them having my 2FA. I actually think I was using Binance that day and possibly it did not log out as Binance seems to not auto-logout, but they still should have had to use 2FA on the withdrawal. As the hacker has access to the my laptop and is doing everthing through my device, the exchanges security did not trigger for a new foreign IP. The accessing IP that made the withdrawals was my own (I beleive), and this then obviously creates a huge issue with support, as there is no sign of a hack. As they were in my email too, they were able to delete almost all of the notifications. This happened at 3am, I didn't even know about it until nearly 3pm. So.. there you go. A disaster. I'm not even sure what can be learnt from this - do not keep 2FA seeds on the device at all even behind a vault. Do not rely on Windows Defender or Malware Bytes, they didnt help here and still even now are giving the all clear. I'm getting a professional outfit to analyse the laptop, and/or police. Funds not always safu. [link] [comments] | ||
150+ list of useful crypto tools & sites (trading + investing + tax, etc) Posted: 05 Jun 2020 02:21 AM PDT
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Crypto Derivatives Volume Reaches Record High in May Posted: 05 Jun 2020 12:01 AM PDT
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Crypto-lending is on the rise with Celsius Network surpassing $1 billion Posted: 05 Jun 2020 03:02 AM PDT
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BSI's Soultions Built on OriginTrail: Walmart, Costco, Disney/ Servicing 1.25T in sales / ODN Jobs! Posted: 04 Jun 2020 08:36 PM PDT
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Reddit is being polluted with cryptocurrency spam accounts. Posted: 04 Jun 2020 11:27 AM PDT What is with the sudden surge in brand new accounts with profile pictures of actual people trying to get you to buy into cryptocurrency? I hardly have even used this sub, yet I get dozens of messages in the past few weeks from people trying to get me to sign up for things. Is anyone else experiencing this on Reddit? [link] [comments] | ||
Rising Ethereum Sun [Desktop Background 1920x1080] Posted: 04 Jun 2020 10:58 PM PDT
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Discussion of the Day: KuCoin Shares KCS Posted: 04 Jun 2020 04:09 PM PDT -Today's Crypto of the Day is KuCoin Shares KCS, and it's current price is $0.9858. DUE TO SOME PERSONAL ISSUES, I AM TEMPORARILY BEHIND ON FOLLOW UP POSTS. I WILL EVENTUALLY CATCH UP AND POST MY OPINIONS ON ALL OF THEM. I AM NOT TRYING TO MAKE LOW EFFORT POSTS AND WILL DO MY BEST TO POST A NEW DISCUSSION DAILY FOR A WHILE. THANK YOU FOR YOUR UNDERSTANDING. -Since 2/18/20, I have posted a crypto/asset of the day for discussion. I typically begin by posting the current price, as well as the brief CoinMarketCap summary. If there is a video featuring it on Coin Bureau, I also post that. After a week or so, I usually post replies to some of the posts, and I also add an overall summary of my thoughts, if I plan to hold any, and is so how much. -I strongly encourage everyone to follow up on past discussions and you can still make comments on them. There is a lot of valuable information on many of these posts, so please check them out as you have time. You may learn a lot regarding some of these projects. I know I certainly did! https://www.reddit.com/r/CryptoCurrency/search?q=author%3Ajoenorwood77&restrict_sr=on -My first month or so I featured projects listed on some of the main exchanges. Now I plan to focus on the top 100 on CoinMarketCap. After that I expect to broaden to the top 200, and then some random moonshots. I will eventually create a post looking for any projects I should feature before I eventually close this project. -Just because I feature a project does not mean I like it. I feel discussion on bad projects are just as important as the good ones. It is useful to hear pros and cons about every project, even if you are simply playing devils advocate. -I would say a perfect reply would include at least one pro and at least one con for the project. However, I still feel it is acceptable if you post only pros or cons. If your post does not have any substance to it, "this coin is a scam", "avoid this shitcoin", "this coin will moon to $1000 by the end of 2020", then I will just assume you are posting for personal gain rather than helping the community. If you simply downvote the post without any comments, the only thing you accomplish is having less people view the post. I do not care about Reddit Karma, but if a post drops to zero early on, it can be extremely difficult for people to even find these discussions (which I assume is your intention). -These posts are not meant to be financial advice, but instead to be an educational discussion. Everyone is responsible for doing their own research. For each project, I am interested in learning if you have any investment in it, and if so, about what percentage of your portfolio does it carry. Most importantly, what should we all know; good, bad, and indifferent, about this project? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Jun 2020 03:32 AM PDT Utrust wants to make digital currency payments not only a mainstream choice, but the go-to choice for as many people as possible, and this partnership will make much easier to achieve their goal. 12% of all e-commerce in existence will now be able to accept payments with Utrust. Magento is the popular e-Commerce solution used by well-known brands such as Ford, Helly Hansen or Nespresso.Magento was recently acquired by American multinational software company Adobe, which means that their partnership programs will be revamped and expanded. Utrust will have the unique opportunity to integrate the Adobe Exchange Partner Program. As an Innovate Partner, Utrust will also be listed on Magento Marketplace, the next-generation application store, making our plugin available to all Magento users, and providing developers with the tools required to integrate cryptocurrency payment solutions into their business offerings seamlessly and with ease. https://medium.com/utrust/wherever-you-need-us-we-will-be-c52212755bd7 [link] [comments] | ||
The importance of Fungibility, your future = your choice. Posted: 04 Jun 2020 03:00 PM PDT I took notice that there are more and more people interested in crypto and I would like to make them realize that this is a technology that can save us all or enslave us all. Or at least make some people think about fungibility and it's importance in this "new world" they are being introduced to. Short example posted above TLDR First off, what is fungibility? Taken from https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/fungibility.asp If Person A lends Person B a $50 bill, it does not matter to Person A if he is repaid with a different $50 bill, as it is mutually substitutable. In the same sense, Person A can be repaid with two $20 bills and one $10 bill and still be satisfied, since the total equals $50. Conversely, as an example of non-fungibility, if Person A lends Person B his car, it is not acceptable for Person B to return a different car, even if it is the same make and model as the original car lent by Person A. Cars are not fungible with respect to ownership, but the gasoline that powers the cars is fungible. Hypothetical question: You have money to buy one Bitcoin and are confronted with two options: Immediately you are faced with two fundamental problems: We see this already today, addresses that hold coins related to criminal activities are closely being monitored. When they move, it gets noticed and all eyes are on them. https://news.bitcoin.com/bitcoin-worth-282k-from-the-2016-bitfinex-hack-on-the-move/ If you buy OTC or through DEXes how will you know that your BTC is clean? This is not a post to tell you criminals should get away with their activities because they shouldn't, i'm trying to explain that you should never be in any position where your money can be confiscated because it suddenly gets tied to those activities. Your money being confiscated could actually be the least of your problems in such a situation anyway. Think about how easy it becomes to imprison someone that your government doesn't like. I'm sure the governments would love to fade out regular cash though, because obviously they can just block your account and take away your basic rights. It happens already to people all over the world who use digital money services like PayPall for instance. https://www.elliott.org/blog/banned-from-palpal-account-limitations/ For people like Snowden, or for Wikileaks bitcoin was their solution at that time. Today, there are better alternatives and everyone should think carefully about what world they want to live in. To bitcoins defense, there are certain things you can do to make your transactions more private. Bitcoin mixing is a thing. Bitcoin's Lightning Network is expected to give users the option to make transactions that will not be recorded on the blockchain. Optional privacy raises eyebrows though, authorities could be knocking on your door asking you why you made an optional private transaction. Privacy by default is what we need in the future we see in front of us. You can find tons of information about deanonymization. This is something that China can "easily" accomplish. This is taken from here https://blockchain.princeton.edu/papers/2018-10-ben-kaiser.pdf Deanonymization: Bitcoin is designed to preserve the pseudonymity of its users, meaning that their real-world identity cannot be linked to a Bitcoin address they have used to transact. However, in practice there are complications that make deanonymization attacks possible. China might seek to deanonymize users for two reasons. First, they may wish to enforce laws and regulations; for example, enforcing capital flight restrictions by identifying users purchasing foreign goods or exchanging Bitcoin into foreign currencies. They might also use a deanonymization attack for ideological (or political) ends: to publicly reveal malfeasance by subversives or political opponents or simply to demonstrate the superiority of centralized control as an ideology and discourage enthusiasm for decentralized systems. We identify four attacks that China could use to deanonymize specific users. First, they could use known research techniques to (a) heuristically cluster pseudonymous identities (e.g., connect multiple addresses to the same user) [31,44]. The simplest example of such a heuristic is to cluster addresses that appear as multiple inputs to the same transaction, as they presumably belong to the same user. The only required capabilities are access to the blockchain and marginal compute power to run the analytics, so these attacks are not unique to China; virtually anyone could commit them. Where China has an advantage over typical adversaries is in linking these pseudonyms to IP addresses. One approach would be to covertly (b) monitor Bitcoin network traffic and identify which IP addresses transactions originate from [4,27]. Because Bitcoin traffic is unencrypted, this can be done through deep packet inspection (DPI). China could also use (c) coercion or regulation to covertly compel service providers that deal in Bitcoin, such as merchants or exchanges, to identify their users. Further, it has been shown that when Bitcoin is used for online purchases, enough information is leaked to web trackers that they can uniquely identify the transaction on the blockchain and link it to any identifying information provided by the purchaser [21]. China could covertly (d) intercept this tracking information over the Internet (using DPI) to perform the same attack, compel domestic tracking companies to provide the information (also covertly), or inject their own trackers into Internet traffic to collect similar information themselves. Tracker injection could be detected by anyone specifically monitoring Internet traffic for such attacks, so we note that it would be overt. Finally, China could target users directly using (e) coercion or regulation to compel them to deanonymize themselves or their transaction partners. Again, as long as targets are compelled to keep quiet about orders to reveal information, this attack is covert. For fungible coins these deanonymization attacks are probably not impossible but a hell of a lot harder. Just to clarify i am not an expert on the matter. I just feel that to few people are aware about the importance and hope this post maybe sparkle some interesting opinions and conversations along the way. If you made it this far I applaud you :-), now check how much balance this guy has in his wallet and see how much he earns every month :D Example: Imagine you want to buy a CAR, and your friend needs to sell his CAR. You did some digging in the market to find an agreement on the price and proceed with the transfer. It happens OTC because there is no need for a middleman, it's your buddy right?! (For clarity, you both sign a contract to change ownership) You are super excited with your new cool ass CAR, never had one before :-) do some drinking and have an accident. You turn up in the hospital and while you pay for your way out you get arrested. Apparently the CAR was stolen and used in a kidnapping affair. 1st point: A lot of people can buy CARs, and since the CAR owners/transactions are all stored somewhere on a ledger... do you think the authorities will let you keep that CAR when they find out it was stolen or maybe something worse? 2nd point: a CAR is a non fungible asset, meaning that you can trace past owners/origin and could end up with a CAR that should actually be worth A LOT less than what you paid for (because it was obviously dirty) Now go back to the beginning of the example and switch CAR with BTC, then you will know why fungibility matters. TLDR; to fungible or not to fungible, that is the question and the answer will either save us all or enslave us all. Edit: added short example [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 04 Jun 2020 11:18 AM PDT I've been seeing a ton of these being discussed (Statera, H3X, etc...) tons in the last few days. Some of them have pretty interesting mechanisms for trying to add value. I thought Hex was a pnd but it is still around and has done well. Do you guys think these actually have a shot or are they junk? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 05 Jun 2020 12:24 AM PDT What strategies and tricks can you leverage to minimize tax on crypto as someone living in the US -NY/NJ. Is incorporating a feasible strategy? I've tried minimizing capital gains tax by laddering in over the past 3 years. What about while I'm taking profit over the next year or two(hopefully)? I'm open to loop holes and high effort strategies as long as they are legal. [link] [comments] | ||
Hex - The First Time-Locked CD in the Crypto Space or a Ruthless Scam? Posted: 04 Jun 2020 11:34 PM PDT
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Tether and Bitfinex denounce baseless lawsuit designed to undermine the cryptocurrency community Posted: 04 Jun 2020 12:41 PM PDT | ||
Posted: 04 Jun 2020 07:29 PM PDT | ||
The most popular Steem dapp just migrated to rival network Hive Posted: 04 Jun 2020 08:15 AM PDT
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Bitcoin nears $10k - which way will it break? Posted: 04 Jun 2020 10:36 PM PDT
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