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- Aug 7, 2016
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Interesting bit of trivia concerning bitcoins....https://www.wired.com/2013/12/fbi_wallet/
I was thinking of waiting for a crash, then place it in cold storage.No, they won't have to be mined. They will just spawn from the existing BTC, just like BCC (Bitcoin Cash) did in August. Well, in theory, we're not sure exactly what will happen until it happens.
That's for 25th of October. Later in November, there is another fork happening that may spawn B2X coins.
The safest bet is to change your BTC to USD (or other fiat currency of your choosing) and wait it out. The second safest bet is to park your BTC in a safe wallet (one for which your control the private keys) and wait for the forks to happen. A few weeks later, there should be safe ways to cash in the new coins.
In the mean time, the price of BTC may drop a bit. But it will surely bounce back.
that part of the conversation was a few pages back Anglian...Didn’t the Chinese government say they would no longer trade in bit coins, I’m not really following this thread as I haven’t any bit coins and aren’t getting any, but will it all end in tears
The fact that banks hate it, governments hate it are all testament to its success. BTC is trying to equalize wealth by making it available for the chap in the street to buy in & get mining... BUT because it was successful mining "farms" set up where some of the big boys got together and pooled resources making them stronger players in the mining arena. Effectively cutting the lil guy out (again) ... so these forks are (allegedly) to try and get the equilibrium back to what it was in the early days... critics will say it is forking to create a market for new software sales to potential miners... (i am foggy on that bit, still learning).
At first glance, Indonesia possesses the unique conditions that make it well-poised for bitcoin adoption. As the world’s fourth most populous country, it’s home to a largely cash-based and offline community, and huge swaths of the population—up to 80%— remain unbanked.
Part of the reason for bitcoin’s slow uptake is that for the average consumer, its use cases— which include store value and remittance services— are still not clearly defined. Cryptocurrency is a difficult subject for the average consumer to wrap their head around, according to Timo Lehes, a partner and venture capitalist at Swarm Fund.
“Currently cryptocurrency is not clearly defined whether it is treated as a currency or a commodity. It is indeed a bit difficult for us to comply with any existing regulations especially if we don’t exactly know how to treat this cryptocurrency in the perspective of law,” he says. “I think our regulators have many other things to prioritize at the moment.”