Official BGOL Crypto Currency Thread ★★★★★

if y’all are able to do so successfully...check and see what the withdrawal limits are on new accounts if any

It worked, I was able to register after switching on my VPN (used Toronto, CA).

Is this what you were looking for.. :

Please go to Binance PC website to complete related setting.

account_28.png
Lv.1
Daily Withdrawal Limit:2BTC

account_27.png
Lv.2
Daily Withdrawal Limit:100BTC

account_27.png
Lv.3
Higher Limit
 
It worked, I was able to register after switching on my VPN (used Toronto, CA).

Is this what you were looking for.. :

Please go to Binance PC website to complete related setting.

account_28.png
Lv.1
Daily Withdrawal Limit:2BTC

account_27.png
Lv.2
Daily Withdrawal Limit:100BTC

account_27.png
Lv.3
Higher Limit

cool...thanks...glad you got in...the withdrawal limits look the same as always...I thought they’d change it for new registrants...I’m wondering if they will leave it this way after they officially stop US citizens from trading...you need verification for lvl 2-3...but if lvl 1 stays @ 2 BTC then that’s not bad
 
It worked, I was able to register after switching on my VPN (used Toronto, CA).

Is this what you were looking for.. :

Please go to Binance PC website to complete related setting.

account_28.png
Lv.1
Daily Withdrawal Limit:2BTC

account_27.png
Lv.2
Daily Withdrawal Limit:100BTC

account_27.png
Lv.3
Higher Limit

You only have till September....
They Tweeted they will cut ALL accounts using VPNs after that
 
What's going on fellas? My BTC is back on a uprush to what it was when i paid for it 1 year ago plus a little extra, all my coins have gained !! What yall doing ? Letting it sit , withdraw some ?
 
What's going on fellas? My BTC is back on a uprush to what it was when i paid for it 1 year ago plus a little extra, all my coins have gained !! What yall doing ? Letting it sit , withdraw some ?

I’ve heard a few ppl who bought into BTC late in 2017 state they’d withdraw once they broke even...there’s a great chance they’ll regret it a few months later when it crushes its ATH...it can’t be anymore clear @ this point that BTC is battle-tested several times over and is not a scam/fad of some sort...some ppl might need that $$$ back now but if not let it sit...they’ve been sitting on it for this long...why not get something out of it
 
I’ve heard a few ppl who bought into BTC late in 2017 state they’d withdraw once they broke even...there’s a great chance they’ll regret it a few months later when it crushes its ATH...it can’t be anymore clear @ this point that BTC is battle-tested several times over and is not a scam/fad of some sort...some ppl might need that $$$ back now but if not let it sit...they’ve been sitting on it for this long...why not get something out of it

Exactly. All of this is “market” driven. As I have stated before, Wealth will come with trends, not individual coins (that will come later in a more stable market).

First, whales accumulated BTC when prices were driven down (and not to sell at higher prices). Hint: quite a few miners were driven out by the price drop.

Next, the BTC market will be driven up, but the market will only begin to take shape at 20-25k. Why? Because that is when all BTC investors become “whole” again. Some will want to break even and dip, some will make a quick profit and dip, and (here is the key) MOST will reinvest. The question is, what will they re-invest in? The IRS and the Custodians of BTC do not want that liquidity leaving their hands. Now is the time to take positions where the average investor will be directed. This is the first of many “wealth transfer” opportunities.

Man I’m dropping gems on y’all. Mainly because BGOL put me on this and helped me make my first grip off of Crypto. Ironically, if I had followed the board more closely, I would be a billionaire right now, so I have some making up to do....
 
Exactly. All of this is “market” driven. As I have stated before, Wealth will come with trends, not individual coins (that will come later in a more stable market).

First, whales accumulated BTC when prices were driven down (and not to sell at higher prices). Hint: quite a few miners were driven out by the price drop.

Next, the BTC market will be driven up, but the market will only begin to take shape at 20-25k. Why? Because that is when all BTC investors become “whole” again. Some will want to break even and dip, some will make a quick profit and dip, and (here is the key) MOST will reinvest. The question is, what will they re-invest in? The IRS and the Custodians of BTC do not want that liquidity leaving their hands. Now is the time to take positions where the average investor will be directed. This is the first of many “wealth transfer” opportunities.

Man I’m dropping gems on y’all. Mainly because BGOL put me on this and helped me make my first grip off of Crypto. Ironically, if I had followed the board more closely, I would be a billionaire right now, so I have some making up to do....

ya the “where” is what has me antsy...in late 2017 the alt game was wide open so it was a no-brainer...now not as much...imo it seems clear w/ the government blocking us from a majority of the alts they want crypto-investors to funnel their $$$ into BTC...just keeping my eye open for a more “defined” opportunity or where in the market will smart $$$ put their profits when BTC cools down...and yes ppl still underestimate the opportunities that existed in 2017...I wasn’t experienced then but w/ the help of a few brothers here I learned fast and benefitted from a bit of regular luck (preparation/opportunity) plus some blind luck didn’t hurt either...if I had been experienced enough to recognize what this was earlier in the year...I could’ve realistically made 8/9 figures off this
 
ya the “where” is what has me antsy...in late 2017 the alt game was wide open so it was a no-brainer...now not as much...imo it seems clear w/ the government blocking us from a majority of the alts they want crypto-investors to funnel their $$$ into BTC...just keeping my eye open for a more “defined” opportunity or where in the market will smart $$$ put their profits when BTC cools down...and yes ppl still underestimate the opportunities that existed in 2017...I wasn’t experienced then but w/ the help of a few brothers here I learned fast and benefitted from a bit of regular luck (preparation/opportunity) plus some blind luck didn’t hurt either...if I had been experienced enough to recognize what this was earlier in the year...I could’ve realistically made 8/9 figures off this

Don’t worry Bruh....I have figured this ish out. I do have plans to roll out a training program much more extensive than palm beach or dollar vigilante can ever create. For that reason I can’t expose everything. However, always DYOR. My biggest hint is to research markets and trends, not coins.

The coins that will be suggested by Custodians? The ones they can maintain....but also consider this: what coin has the highest use case other than Bitcoin? There are a few answers but pick the cheapest and risk what you can...
 
What's going on fellas? My BTC is back on a uprush to what it was when i paid for it 1 year ago plus a little extra, all my coins have gained !! What yall doing ? Letting it sit , withdraw some ?

again my good fella,

it all depends on what YO game is... you tryin to flip shit or you in it for the long haul...

if you in it for the long haul, put yo shit on your own personal hardware wallet.. and forget it for ten years..

if you want to flip.. then as soon as you got over ten percent... you set your sell stop...

rinse and repeat buyin low and sellin high..

but like atl was sayin.. there is a science to this and a sure fire way to make money if you are willing to do the homework...

Im just not that ambitious but thats just me...
 
Stoopid ass question, but: I've been holding my XRP in a Gatehub wallet for a while, but noticed that Coinbase appears to have the same now. Is there any difference between the 2 "wallets"?

..if not, might just transfer the XRP to Coinbase just to have all my coins in the same place..
 
Stoopid ass question, but: I've been holding my XRP in a Gatehub wallet for a while, but noticed that Coinbase appears to have the same now. Is there any difference between the 2 "wallets"?

..if not, might just transfer the XRP to Coinbase just to have all my coins in the same place..

The best place to store your coins is off of any exchange. You could get a hardware wallet like a trezor or ledger wallet. Just don't buy one from eBay, Amazon, etc. get it directly from the manufacturer.
 
Stoopid ass question, but: I've been holding my XRP in a Gatehub wallet for a while, but noticed that Coinbase appears to have the same now. Is there any difference between the 2 "wallets"?

..if not, might just transfer the XRP to Coinbase just to have all my coins in the same place..
Why not just get an EXODUS wallet and hold it yourself? The EXODUS wallet is free and gives you live updates as you are looking at it.
 
The best place to store your coins is off of any exchange. You could get a hardware wallet like a trezor or ledger wallet. Just don't buy one from eBay, Amazon, etc. get it directly from the manufacturer.

This is good too! Probably better to be honest so you can hold your coins "offline"
 
I’ve heard a few ppl who bought into BTC late in 2017 state they’d withdraw once they broke even...there’s a great chance they’ll regret it a few months later when it crushes its ATH...it can’t be anymore clear @ this point that BTC is battle-tested several times over and is not a scam/fad of some sort...some ppl might need that $$$ back now but if not let it sit...they’ve been sitting on it for this long...why not get something out of it

again my good fella,

it all depends on what YO game is... you tryin to flip shit or you in it for the long haul...

if you in it for the long haul, put yo shit on your own personal hardware wallet.. and forget it for ten years..

if you want to flip.. then as soon as you got over ten percent... you set your sell stop...

rinse and repeat buyin low and sellin high..

but like atl was sayin.. there is a science to this and a sure fire way to make money if you are willing to do the homework...

Im just not that ambitious but thats just me...

thanx bruhs ! i was just thinking if i can skim ff the top until i get bak my initial investment, then id be more at ease becos then id have gotten back my intial investment, im just worried the shit is gonna sink again and yo-yo back up to eternity ! haha
 
The best place to store your coins is off of any exchange. You could get a hardware wallet like a trezor or ledger wallet. Just don't buy one from eBay, Amazon, etc. get it directly from the manufacturer.
i got the ledger and havent even used it , all my things is in my app on coinbase, i need to do this tho
 
thanx bruhs ! i was just thinking if i can skim ff the top until i get bak my initial investment, then id be more at ease becos then id have gotten back my intial investment, im just worried the shit is gonna sink again and yo-yo back up to eternity ! haha

that might actually be the most logical play and if it brings you peace of mind even better!
 
No, but if it is available, who is going to manage it?

Also, what about the DEX coins? Which ones are worth holding outside of $BNB?

BitcoinIRA.com is the website. I guess that's who's managing it. I don't know about DEX coins. I want to know too!
 
thanx bruhs ! i was just thinking if i can skim ff the top until i get bak my initial investment, then id be more at ease becos then id have gotten back my intial investment, im just worried the shit is gonna sink again and yo-yo back up to eternity ! haha

think of it this way.

Suppose you started making monthly contributions to an S&P index fund back in 2004. By September 2008 your entire investment would have dropped by over 30%. However, if kept your money in and kept making your contributions you would have made the money back along with a tidy profit by 2012.

Bitcoin is similar. The biggest difference is that the highs and lows are quicker and more extreme.
 
Lol

We told u kniggas to put your seatbelts on...

Yea with that Libra coin shit is about to get crazy

https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/18/libra-analytica/

Everyone’s worried about Mark Zuckerberg controlling the next currency, but I’m more concerned about a crypto Cambridge Analytica.

Today Facebook announced Libra, its forthcoming stablecoin designed to let you shop and send money overseas with almost zero transaction fees. Immediately, critics started harping about the dangers of centralizing control of tomorrow’s money in the hands of a company with a poor track record of privacy and security.

Facebook anticipated this, though, and created a subsidiary called Calibra to run its crypto dealings and keep all transaction data separate from your social data. Facebook shares control of Libra with 27 other Libra Association founding members, and as many as 100 total when the token launches in the first half of 2020. Each member gets just one vote on the Libra council, so Facebook can’t hijack the token’s governance even though it invented it.

With privacy fears and centralized control issues at least somewhat addressed, there’s always the issue of security. Facebook naturally has a huge target on its back for hackers. Not just because Libra could hold so much value to steal, but because plenty of trolls would get off on screwing up Facebook’s currency. That’s why Facebook open-sourced the Libra Blockchain and is offering a prototype in a pre-launch testnet. This developer beta plus a bug bounty program run in partnership with HackerOne is meant to surface all the flaws and vulnerabilities before Libra goes live with real money connected.

Yet that leaves one giant vector for abuse of Libra: the developer platform.

“Essential to the spirit of Libra . . . the Libra Blockchain will be open to everyone: any consumer, developer, or business can use the Libra network, build products on top of it, and add value through their services. Open access ensures low barriers to entry and innovation and encourages healthy competition that benefits consumers,” Facebook explained in its white paper and Libra launch documents. It’s even building a whole coding language called Move for making Libra apps.

Apparently Facebook has already forgotten how allowing anyone to build on the Facebook app platform and its low barriers to “innovation” are exactly what opened the door for Cambridge Analytica to hijack 87 million people’s personal data and use it for political ad targeting.

But in this case, it won’t be users’ interests and birthdays that get grabbed. It could be hundreds or thousands of dollars’ worth of Libra currency that’s stolen. A shady developer could build a wallet that just cleans out a user’s account or funnels their coins to the wrong recipient, mines their purchase history for marketing data or uses them to launder money. Digital risks become a lot less abstract when real-world assets are at stake.

In the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook raced to lock down its app platform, restrict APIs, more heavily vet new developers and audit ones that look shady. So you’d imagine the Libra Association would be planning to thoroughly scrutinize any developer trying to build a Libra wallet, exchange or other related app, right? “There are no plans for the Libra Association to take a role in actively vetting [developers],” Calibra’s head of product Kevin Weil surprisingly told me. “The minute that you start limiting it is the minute you start walking back to the system you have today with a closed ecosystem and a smaller number of competitors, and you start to see fees rise.”

That translates to “the minute we start responsibly verifying Libra app developers, things start to get expensive, complicated or agitating to cryptocurrency purists. That might hurt growth and adoption.” You know what will hurt growth of Libra a lot worse? A sob story about some migrant family or a small business getting all their Libra stolen. And that blame is going to land squarely on Facebook, not some amorphous Libra Association.

Inevitably, some unsavvy users won’t understand the difference between Facebook’s own wallet app Calibra and any other app built for the currency. “Libra is Facebook’s cryptocurrency. They wouldn’t let me get robbed,” some will surely say. And on Calibra they’d be right. It’s a custodial wallet that will refund you if your Libra are stolen and it offers 24/7 customer support via chat to help you regain access to your account.

Yet the Libra Blockchain itself is irreversible. Outside of custodial wallets like Calibra, there’s no getting your stolen or mis-sent money back. There’s likely no customer support. And there are plenty of crooked crypto developers happy to prey on the inexperienced. Indeed, $1.7 billion in cryptocurrency was stolen last year alone, according to CypherTrace via CNBC. “As with anything, there’s fraud and there are scams in the existing financial ecosystem today . . . that’s going to be true of Libra too. There’s nothing special or magical that prevents that,” says Weil, who concluded “I think those pros massively outweigh the cons.”

Until now, the blockchain world was mostly inhabited by technologists, except for when skyrocketing values convinced average citizens to invest in Bitcoin just before prices crashed. Now Facebook wants to bring its family of apps’ 2.7 billion users into the world of cryptocurrency. That’s deeply worrisome.

Regulators are already bristling, but perhaps for the wrong reasons. Democrat Senator Sherrod Browntweeted that “We cannot allow Facebook to run a risky new cryptocurrency out of a Swiss bank account without oversight.” And French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told Europe 1 radio that Libra can’t be allowed to “become a sovereign currency.”

Most harshly, Rep. Maxine Waters issued a statement saying, “Given the company’s troubled past, I am requesting that Facebook agree to a moratorium on any movement forward on developing a cryptocurrency until Congress and regulators have the opportunity to examine these issues and take action.”

Yet Facebook has just one vote in controlling the currency, and the Libra Association preempted these criticisms, writing, “We welcome public inquiry and accountability. We are committed to a dialogue with regulators and policymakers. We share policymakers’ interest in the ongoing stability of national currencies.”

That’s why as lawmakers confer about how to regulate Libra, I hope they remember what triggered the last round of Facebook execs having to appear before Congress and Parliament. A totally open, unvetted Libra developer platform in the name of “innovation” over safety is a ticking time bomb. Governments should insist the Libra Association thoroughly audit developers and maintain the power to ban bad actors. In this strange new crypto world, the public can’t be expected to perfectly protect itself from Cambridge Analytica 2.$.
 
https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/18/libra-analytica/

Everyone’s worried about Mark Zuckerberg controlling the next currency, but I’m more concerned about a crypto Cambridge Analytica.

Today Facebook announced Libra, its forthcoming stablecoin designed to let you shop and send money overseas with almost zero transaction fees. Immediately, critics started harping about the dangers of centralizing control of tomorrow’s money in the hands of a company with a poor track record of privacy and security.

Facebook anticipated this, though, and created a subsidiary called Calibra to run its crypto dealings and keep all transaction data separate from your social data. Facebook shares control of Libra with 27 other Libra Association founding members, and as many as 100 total when the token launches in the first half of 2020. Each member gets just one vote on the Libra council, so Facebook can’t hijack the token’s governance even though it invented it.

With privacy fears and centralized control issues at least somewhat addressed, there’s always the issue of security. Facebook naturally has a huge target on its back for hackers. Not just because Libra could hold so much value to steal, but because plenty of trolls would get off on screwing up Facebook’s currency. That’s why Facebook open-sourced the Libra Blockchain and is offering a prototype in a pre-launch testnet. This developer beta plus a bug bounty program run in partnership with HackerOne is meant to surface all the flaws and vulnerabilities before Libra goes live with real money connected.

Yet that leaves one giant vector for abuse of Libra: the developer platform.

“Essential to the spirit of Libra . . . the Libra Blockchain will be open to everyone: any consumer, developer, or business can use the Libra network, build products on top of it, and add value through their services. Open access ensures low barriers to entry and innovation and encourages healthy competition that benefits consumers,” Facebook explained in its white paper and Libra launch documents. It’s even building a whole coding language called Move for making Libra apps.

Apparently Facebook has already forgotten how allowing anyone to build on the Facebook app platform and its low barriers to “innovation” are exactly what opened the door for Cambridge Analytica to hijack 87 million people’s personal data and use it for political ad targeting.

But in this case, it won’t be users’ interests and birthdays that get grabbed. It could be hundreds or thousands of dollars’ worth of Libra currency that’s stolen. A shady developer could build a wallet that just cleans out a user’s account or funnels their coins to the wrong recipient, mines their purchase history for marketing data or uses them to launder money. Digital risks become a lot less abstract when real-world assets are at stake.

In the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook raced to lock down its app platform, restrict APIs, more heavily vet new developers and audit ones that look shady. So you’d imagine the Libra Association would be planning to thoroughly scrutinize any developer trying to build a Libra wallet, exchange or other related app, right? “There are no plans for the Libra Association to take a role in actively vetting [developers],” Calibra’s head of product Kevin Weil surprisingly told me. “The minute that you start limiting it is the minute you start walking back to the system you have today with a closed ecosystem and a smaller number of competitors, and you start to see fees rise.”

That translates to “the minute we start responsibly verifying Libra app developers, things start to get expensive, complicated or agitating to cryptocurrency purists. That might hurt growth and adoption.” You know what will hurt growth of Libra a lot worse? A sob story about some migrant family or a small business getting all their Libra stolen. And that blame is going to land squarely on Facebook, not some amorphous Libra Association.

Inevitably, some unsavvy users won’t understand the difference between Facebook’s own wallet app Calibra and any other app built for the currency. “Libra is Facebook’s cryptocurrency. They wouldn’t let me get robbed,” some will surely say. And on Calibra they’d be right. It’s a custodial wallet that will refund you if your Libra are stolen and it offers 24/7 customer support via chat to help you regain access to your account.

Yet the Libra Blockchain itself is irreversible. Outside of custodial wallets like Calibra, there’s no getting your stolen or mis-sent money back. There’s likely no customer support. And there are plenty of crooked crypto developers happy to prey on the inexperienced. Indeed, $1.7 billion in cryptocurrency was stolen last year alone, according to CypherTrace via CNBC. “As with anything, there’s fraud and there are scams in the existing financial ecosystem today . . . that’s going to be true of Libra too. There’s nothing special or magical that prevents that,” says Weil, who concluded “I think those pros massively outweigh the cons.”

Until now, the blockchain world was mostly inhabited by technologists, except for when skyrocketing values convinced average citizens to invest in Bitcoin just before prices crashed. Now Facebook wants to bring its family of apps’ 2.7 billion users into the world of cryptocurrency. That’s deeply worrisome.

Regulators are already bristling, but perhaps for the wrong reasons. Democrat Senator Sherrod Browntweeted that “We cannot allow Facebook to run a risky new cryptocurrency out of a Swiss bank account without oversight.” And French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told Europe 1 radio that Libra can’t be allowed to “become a sovereign currency.”

Most harshly, Rep. Maxine Waters issued a statement saying, “Given the company’s troubled past, I am requesting that Facebook agree to a moratorium on any movement forward on developing a cryptocurrency until Congress and regulators have the opportunity to examine these issues and take action.”

Yet Facebook has just one vote in controlling the currency, and the Libra Association preempted these criticisms, writing, “We welcome public inquiry and accountability. We are committed to a dialogue with regulators and policymakers. We share policymakers’ interest in the ongoing stability of national currencies.”

That’s why as lawmakers confer about how to regulate Libra, I hope they remember what triggered the last round of Facebook execs having to appear before Congress and Parliament. A totally open, unvetted Libra developer platform in the name of “innovation” over safety is a ticking time bomb. Governments should insist the Libra Association thoroughly audit developers and maintain the power to ban bad actors. In this strange new crypto world, the public can’t be expected to perfectly protect itself from Cambridge Analytica 2.$.

while Im not really keen on this libra coin, this article is total fear mongering....

the fact is, what facebook is doing by going hard in the crypto game is tellin its 2.1 billion users, on some lowkey shit that crypto is the currency of the future and we are tryin to be ahead of the game...

like bruh was sayin in the video monsterman posted, its about steering millions into crypto currency...

its not about libra or bitcoin its about what other coin with they make the next bitcoin..

if you ask me personally libra a quick flip...but if you smart you would grab some..with extra money of course..

flip half of it, and just hold the other half to see what it do..

in other words in a nutshell... the whole libra thing is new money sayin fuck you to old money..

next twenty years lots of sliver spoon muthafuckas gonna be greeters in dept stores...

and those children of the service class, gonna know what its like to pay dockin fees for their yachts...

yea the big wealth transfer is coming... many are gonna be in the mix..

many are just gonna stand by and watch
 
while Im not really keen on this libra coin, this article is total fear mongering....

the fact is, what facebook is doing by going hard in the crypto game is tellin its 2.1 billion users, on some lowkey shit that crypto is the currency of the future and we are tryin to be ahead of the game...

like bruh was sayin in the video monsterman posted, its about steering millions into crypto currency...

its not about libra or bitcoin its about what other coin with they make the next bitcoin..

if you ask me personally libra a quick flip...but if you smart you would grab some..with extra money of course..

flip half of it, and just hold the other half to see what it do..

in other words in a nutshell... the whole libra thing is new money sayin fuck you to old money..

next twenty years lots of sliver spoon muthafuckas gonna be greeters in dept stores...

and those children of the service class, gonna know what its like to pay dockin fees for their yachts...

yea the big wealth transfer is coming... many are gonna be in the mix..

many are just gonna stand by and watch

I thought libra was a stable coin. If so, there is no reason to buy it as far as investing/trading.
 
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