Dohnjoe wrote: » I was hoping it would flat/fall today (and for a few days at least), if it keeps climbing like this without a decent pause could trigger a bit of a panic drop.
jmlad2020 wrote: » I've just logged in via the Coinbase website and after answering a few simple questions such as stating my Nationality.. I'm back. I can trade fully again. LTC is on a tear, I might sell for the time being and buy back in.
Addison Fancy Macrame wrote: » It could drop $5000 and still close the weekly candle green. Bought some more today at $24,500, you get feck all for your fiat money now.
Lex Luthor wrote: » I think its very likely
new2tri19 wrote: » Apologies to all the Bitcoin experts I'm reading and trying to understand it I'm tempted to invest I go on coinbase and I see all these coins loads of them , are they all competing to be the main digital gold or have we digital gold / silver etc ? I'm tempted to move some savings to Bitcoin and hold for 10-20 years , I suppose the fear I have is this seems like a huge gamble the technology behind it is exciting but it could be surpassed by something better in the next few years. I'm not interested in trading it, do most people here buy to trade or is anyone sticking a portion of savings in long term as an investment?
new2tri19 wrote: » I see all these coins loads of them , are they all competing to be the main digital gold or have we digital gold / silver etc ?
Lex Luthor wrote: » for anyone who has not yet got themselves a crypto reward card if you live in your typical family home, 2+2 and have an approx outgoings of €2k/month that you could afford to spend up front without the need for a credit card, you will get €40/month in rewards from a card offering 2% If you have €20k in a typical bank savings scheme that is currently offering 0.01% per annum, it would probably take 20 years to get the same amount in interest Think about that for a second €2k - 1 month = €40 €20k - 20 years = €40 That gap will widen next year when the banks start charging you for keeping your money I tried to explain this to someone on Friday night and I needed to take a couple of nurofen after it was that challenging
Lex Luthor wrote: » $DOGE popping off its usually a leading indicator for altcoin season
makeorbrake wrote: » A knee-jerk to Elon's tweets
LedgerSuck wrote: » Haven't been on boards in a while but said I'd create an account to share this for anyone else whose personal information was compromised as a result of the Ledger hack: twitter DOT com/_IntelligenceX/status/1340737717211115524 ^ can't post links as a new user, can someone please sort it and post it There are 8 different buyers folders you'll need to search for your info So Ledger had said only a few thousand people had info such as personal addresses leaked in the hack, but that seems like bull**** now. Names, addresses, emails and phone numbers leaked for loads of people, and if you search 'Ireland' you'll see there's plenty of Irish amongst them. Absolute disgrace, this is fairly worrying
Addison Fancy Macrame wrote: » Had a look through it, a massive fcuk up that not a lot can be done about. I suppose in one sense most people would know where high net worth individuals may live in their town / village anyway. A good chance if you break into a house on Ailsbury Road you’re going to get away with some valuables. No doubt ledger will do / can do not much to address this. I’m positively shocked how many Irish people actually own a ledger.
Lex Luthor wrote: » a ledger is useless in anyones hands unless you have the phrases
Bob24 wrote: » Well if you have the device in hands, all you need to access the funds is the 4/8 digits PIN (not even the seed phrase). The question is, if someone shows up at your address courtesy of Ledger’s data breach (since postal addresses are exposed online, every criminal in the world can now search for a list of targets in their local area), and physically threatens you to hand them your device and input the PIN, what do you do?
Addison Fancy Macrame wrote: » You give them your ledger which has 12 XRP on it
Bob24 wrote: » Would be difficult as the minimum balance on an XRP wallet is 20 ;-)
grindle wrote: » US debt is currently @ $82.2k per capita, in a country that treats the wealthiest businesses as the most favoured charities. Up from $20.2k per head in the year 2000. It's an obscenity, a very obvious ticking timebomb but somehow not something that's talked about (edit: in any serious manner)
td2008 wrote: » Anyone have a link to that ledger list or is it gone? Had started getting phishing emails recently for it which I thought was strange
unkel wrote: » I always had grave concerns about those ledgers. Not only from a security point of view, but also from a reliability point of view. Solid state media is extremely vulnerable to failure. That's why I never bought one. And no, I don't leave substantial balances on exchanges either