Over the past month, $BTC has been weak on weekends.
Usually because the most negative U.S.–Iran headlines hit when US markets are closed. https://t.co/UCQsQ0yZ2F
Over the past month, $BTC has been weak on weekends.
Usually because the most negative U.S.–Iran headlines hit when US markets are closed. https://t.co/UCQsQ0yZ2F
Bitwise's derivatives portfolio management team manages custom SMAs to generate yield for large holders of spot assets.
Delighted to be working for the Nakamoto team. https://t.co/WB04Sp5cxX
Protecting Income over Improving Bitcoin?
@Truthcoin/ Paul Sztorc's case for why Bip 300 being controversial at all is suspicious: it is an opt-in, reversible, ignorable soft fork.
Nodes that don't want to participate don't have to. Nothing changes for anyone who doesn't use it.
OP_CAT was in Satoshi's original client for over a year and is only 13 lines of code.
Neither of these can possibly hurt anyone who ignores them.
Paul's conclusion is that the only people with a rational reason to oppose drive chains are people who are afraid their own layer two would lose in open competition against others.
Bitcoin Takeover S17E21.
Bitcoin (BTC) is a digital asset and a payment system invented by Satoshi Nakamoto who published a related paper in 2008 and released it as open-source software in 2009. The system featured as peer-to-peer; users can transact directly without an intermediary. Transactions are verified by network nodes and recorded in a public distributed ledger called the blockchain. The ledger uses bitcoin as its unit of account. The system works without a central repository or single administrator, which has led the U.S. Treasury to categorize bitcoin as a decentralized virtual currency. Bitcoin is often called the first cryptocurrency, although prior systems existed. Bitcoin is more correctly described as the first decentralized digital currency. It is the largest of its kind in terms of total market value by now.