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    Tuesday, March 9, 2021

    BTC I am Bitcoin Man - My Plan To Bring BCH To Millions

    BTC I am Bitcoin Man - My Plan To Bring BCH To Millions


    I am Bitcoin Man - My Plan To Bring BCH To Millions

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 11:13 PM PST

    YouTuber with 500k subscribers launches FLIPSTARTER

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 12:57 AM PST

    Just wanna say how convinient and fast bitcoin Cash is

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 07:04 PM PST

    Congratulations to the people who made it and the people who has it!

    I started trading to kill boredom so whenever i make profit i just simply trade my profit to bch and send it to my app (newton) from there i can turn my bch into cash. With such low fees why would someone move around bitcoin or etherium

    submitted by /u/kamikazee_0828
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    Moeing Chain White paper

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 12:24 AM PST

    https://github.com/moeing-chain/docs/blob/main/whitepaper/MoeingChainWhitepaper-en.md

    Moeing chain provides an EVM&Web3-compatible sidechain for Bitcoin Cash, staking its hash power while utilizing BCH as gas. What's more, by incorporating hardware-friendly components, scalability is unlocked. We believe that it will provide the same benefits of ETH2.0 in a much shorter while, achieving the block gas limit of one billion.

    submitted by /u/lyf208617
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    Created A Pay Sheet For My Wife's Photography Business That Now Accepts BCH! Freelancers are going to be big in this space if we continue to hire and transact with each other both locally and globally! Baby steps!

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 05:49 PM PST

    User Experience is Everything with Josh Ellithorpe

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 02:49 PM PST

    A word on pools and mining FUD and some PoW vs PoS thoughts

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 12:32 AM PST

    Hardware owners are not pools. Hardware owners are many, and they can change pools at a moment's notice. There's no way to tell how many distinct hardware owners there are. Saying a pool "centralizes" is just FUD IMO. We don't know how centralized actual mining hardware is and we'll never know because mining is anonymous by design. If that scares people, I don't know what to say but that this security model worked without failure since 2009.

    By design, miners are married to the algo they bought hardware for. They can't stop mining, ever because the ASIC hardware can't be repurposed and you have to return that CAPEX. As a consequence success of ALL coins with the algo is in their best interest, because it's the TOTAL block reward from all coins with a given algo that pays them. Not just 1. The revenue maximization means you allocate your hash-power proportional to the market value of block rewards. If you "attack" any coin, it would reduce the total block reward so what's to gain? Even if a single miner would be stupid to try it for some ideological reason, other miners know where the money comes from and they could re-allocate the hashpower sub-optimally in order to defend that coin ie a future income stream (they'd likely still be making money defending the coin, just less of it than in the optimal allocation).

    Someone will say something like "but PoS is the savior!". Every bull market some new PoS shamans appear. PoS is really not a hard stake, you can dump it at will and exit the business at the expense of whatever bagholders you sell to. With PoW you'd dump your hardware always at a loss because it depreciates in value and the expense would be yours. Miners are committed to continue to mine especially with ASIC hardware which can't be repurposed -- they have no choice but to do it to return the capital investment. And unlike PoS those who own PoW hardware can't control the supply, "anyone" can make their own hardware. With PoS you can't get in unless someone's willing to sell you their stake, and if the value appreciates nobody will be willing to sell the entire stake.

    With PoW there's always someone trying to dump old hardware and if you have access to cheap/free electricity it could be worth it. It's same like gold mining. Someone owning a goldmine can't stop you from finding some other mountain and starting digging, you can use a shovel or you can use machinery -- it's up to you, you're free to access it using whatever means available. With PoS there's only the one mountain of the coin supply and a fence of current holders around it.

    submitted by /u/bitcoincashautist
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    So this is a little unsettling...

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 09:17 PM PST

    This sub appears to be dominated by Bitcoin Cash, why?

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 06:37 PM PST

    Can someone explain how and why this is the case? BCH being a fork why does it seem to dominate the BTC sub? I know there's a BCH sub already. Just curious more than anything.

    submitted by /u/Fidgitt
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    Juungle - Marketplace for SLP-based NFTs

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 02:27 PM PST

    Why Bitcoin Cash over another coin with less fees/ faster confirmation time?

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 05:57 PM PST

    Nano is the most obvious coin that comes to mind so why BCH over nano or coins like it? I don't know much about BCH which is why I am asking.

    submitted by /u/mybed54
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    Let's get BCH on Binance P2P so local adoption efforts have more options to flourish

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 10:20 AM PST

    My first buy on Binance

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 07:15 PM PST

    Andrew Torba: ''Operation Chokepoint is back under Biden. 4 banks and 1 credit card shut down Gab in the past month alone. We have spoken to other alt tech platforms who are experiencing the same"

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 08:42 PM PST

    Investing in bitcoin, BCH, and ADA?

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 01:38 AM PST

    Are these okay to put some money into? I'm not rich but right now I have most of my money in ADA and just bought some BCH. I'm new to this and trying to put away money instead of spending it on crap or letting it sit in my checking account

    submitted by /u/bonesbrigade619
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    Seven Reasons You Should Be Excited for Moeing Chain

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 06:06 AM PST

    It is monday my dudes, and you know what that means?

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 12:23 AM PST

    Anyone has an idea how litecoin's mimblewimble compares to BCH cash fusion?

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 08:42 PM PST

    They are saying its being deployed in 1 week! Not 2 weeks!

    submitted by /u/xoinsotron
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    Now earn BCH for shopping at over 250 merchants - Buy8

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 10:19 AM PST

    Update - Bitcoin Cash is now supported as rewards when you shop at Buy8 (https://buy8.co)

    https://twitter.com/_buy8/status/1368988436170895361

    What is Buy8?

    Buy8 allows people to earn automatic rewards when they or their friends shop at over 250+ online stores such as BestBuy, ebay, Microsoft, Namecheap, NordVPN etc (https://buy8.co/merchants).

    Buy8 works in a simplistic manner, whenever a user visits a merchant through Buy8, the user purchase is tracked using cookies and we send the user cash/crypto reward based on the reward rate specified by the merchant. We use Stellar for internal transactions and we use multiple crypto for processing rewards payments.

    We don't have token, we pay rewards directly in cryptocurrency.

    Website - https://buy8.co

    submitted by /u/Astrik1x
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    Chinese Meitu App Buys $40 Million In Bitcoin And Ethereum

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 12:03 AM PST

    What to do with BCH?

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 10:51 AM PST

    Hey guys still learning about about BCH. Bought and sold small amounts of other cryptos and settled on BCH and Cardano which today comprise 50% and 35% of my total crypto stash, respectively.

    Other than sending money to family and friends what are you guys using it for?

    I'm planning to stake Cardano or something along those lines.

    I will also move so it's good for transferring funds to different countries (no transfer fees ... For example Canadian to British crypto exchange)

    submitted by /u/voltMoe
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    How would Dijkstra's Algorithm even be applicable to Lightning?

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 10:34 AM PST

    I would just like to start this off by saying I don't know a lot about this topic, which is why I have come to ask this question. When it comes to the topic of Lightning, I've often seen people voice their concerns over the issue of routing payments. This is obviously a known issue because for a payment itself to route, there needs to be a path that:

    1. exists
    2. has sufficient liquidity
    3. doesn't potentially change before the payment can be successfully routed

    These are obviously legitimate issues, and I've seen them dismissed by many people who are in support of the Core roadmap by yelling out their cool buzzword's like "Djikstra's Algorithm", when discussing how a path can be found. When searching up the issue concerning routing of Bitcoins in LN, it seems even people who are knowledgeable on Bitcoin and Lightning Network agrees that pathfinding can be solved this way.

    I was interested in Dijkstra's algorithm, so I did a little wikipedia search on the topic to gain a better understanding of how pathfinding would work. From what I understand, the entire process of Dijkstra's algorithm for a network of nodes is:

    1. Start at an individual vertex/node (A)
    2. Assume all other nodes have an infinite weight (or don't)
    3. Mark the weight for the adjacent nodes/vertices as the weight of the direct path from node A to all of the adjacent nodes
    4. Move to one of the adjacent nodes
    5. If the new node connects to one of the nodes that was adjacent to the previous node, evaluate the weight of the path to that node, and update the weight of said node accordingly, to get the lowest possible weight for the given node

    Basically, it's repeating this entire process for the entire network of nodes to finally find the shortest path from the start to the finish. I've heard that what makes it so great at optimization is also the time complexity is logarithmic, meaning that computing the potential path isn't an issue. There are only a few *big* problems I can find when trying to apply this in the context of Lightning:

    1. The 'map' of the network, and the weight of all nodes is known at the time that the algorithm starts to find a path. This 'map' doesn't change, so the route itself can predictably be guaranteed.
    2. It is known that a path exists from the first node to the end node, and all paths will undoubtedly work, but they'll just be less efficient if they aren't the optimal one. Not all paths in Lightning are guaranteed to work because a path could exist, but also not have sufficient liquidity.
    3. When a path is made with Dijkstra's algorithm, it won't change. The path itself remains constant. With Lightning, it technically is possible for the path you were working on finding becoming invalid.

    I'm not a computer scientist, or someone with extensive knowledge in Bitcoin. I'm just a regular person, so I could be wrong in my reasoning, but how would something like Dijkstra's algorithm work when the assumptions being made directly go against the nature of the Lightning Network? I'm genuinely interested because as I gain more knowledge over time, I'm interested in simulating the Lightning Network itself (once I get the skills necessary to do so).

    submitted by /u/1MightBeAPenguin
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    Biden's $2 Trillion Relief Package the Largest Stimulus Payments to-Date, Plan Showers Money on the Bureaucracy

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 03:46 PM PST

    Yet another thread from a user that are trying to transact with BTC..

    Posted: 08 Mar 2021 05:27 AM PST

    Last time I saw this, 1-2 days later ETH almost doubled! Lets goooo!

    Posted: 09 Mar 2021 01:10 AM PST

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