Bitcoin está a punto de caer por el precipicio, "se avecina la gran tormenta"
11-dic-2017 10:49
#453
| El mayor troll de FC. Seguro que lo hace para que no compremos BTC asi sube menos el precio y el puede comprar mas jajaja |
11-dic-2017 10:59
#455
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"No hay que olvidar que Bitcoin es simplemente humo sin ningún tipo de valor real, no realiza economía real y productiva, no es un producto financiero, no tiene respaldo gubernamental ni institucional que lo sustente."
Yo creo que lo único que tiene un valor real es el oro. |
11-dic-2017 11:07
#457
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Pero si se pasa al Proof of Stake valida las transacciones el/los que tengan la cartera más grande. Al final van a hacer el papel de un banco: ellos deciden lo que vale y lo que no y controlan el precio a base de comprar y vender. Yo creo que al final no es oro todo lo que reluce y que las cryptos si siguen el camino que se tiene pensado al final tienen unas virtudes un poco engañizas. |
11-dic-2017 11:07
#458
| Precisamente por eso, como en todas las crisis, echale un vistazo a los anuncios de inmobiliarias, rumasa, nueva rumasa... Se llama ley del sentimiento contrario. |
11-dic-2017 11:41
#459
| Aunque caiga, ya vendi por valor de la inversión original. Y hoy me he levantado con 300€ más en bitcoin, gracias Maverick, eres como una brujula que apunta al sur. |
11-dic-2017 11:46
#460
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@Maverik1984: Cuando se inventó el fuego ahí había un Maverick diciendo que eso no valía para nada y que no te mía valor real... |
11-dic-2017 12:27
#462
| Menos mal que has editao porque habias soltao una frase del cuñao del mes del bar xD |
11-dic-2017 12:28
#463
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Valor real porque lo dices tu no? Te voy a decir lo que vale ahora mismo realmente: 16.400$
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11-dic-2017 12:29
#465
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A los que nos pasamos el dia mirando indicadores (RSI, Bollinger, MACD, Stocasticos....) y lineas de tendencia.. Que perdida de tiempo shurs!! Si tenemos en el foro el indicador más infalible posible. Si abre hilo @Maverik1984 augurando caidas, es punto de entrada a saco, con todo, sin miramientos. Inexorablemente la cotización del bitcoin se irá máximos. Si hubiesemos comprado ayer, según se abrió este hilo, mas de un 10% pal chaleco y camino de romper maximos. |
11-dic-2017 12:32
#468
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No te bajas de la burra macho. Llevas diciendo que el Bitcoin se va a hundir como 6 o 7 años. Sigue diciendolo que algún día pasará algo parecido y podrás decir que nos lo advertiste a todos. |
11-dic-2017 12:45
#469
| Va diciendo esto para que el bitcoin baje y así pueda comprar el cabrón, no sabe ni ná. Me lo imagino en mil foros ingleses diciendo lo mismo. |
11-dic-2017 12:54
#471
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5 preguntas que los bitcoineros no responden (subrayo lo que considero más relevante): -- Will Bitcoin Actually Replace Traditional Currencies? "No one believes in the merits of a global cryptocurrency, except bitcoin zealots. The notion that central banks will give up monetary control of their fiat currencies for a global cryptocurrency, especially bitcoin, is just not happening, so we should stop talking about it. Even economists who never agree on anything, agree on that. Besides, a currency that swings between $1,000 and $5,000 over the course of two years, and between $3,000 and $5,000 in the course of a few weeks, isn’t exactly a good basis for operating a strong and stable foundation for a global financial system." -- Is Bitcoin A Legitimate Exchange Of Value? "Bitcoin has only two proven use cases after eight years: criminal activity and speculation. I honestly don’t understand why this continues to be dismissed in the face of mountains of evidence to the contrary. In the eight years since bitcoin has been a currency, transaction volume in the support of legitimate commerce is virtually nil." -- Is Bitcoin Really Free? "Bitcoin is anything but free. Miners now expect a fee for their work and won’t process transactions for which they are not paid. That means that those costs are passed down the ecosystem to end users. There’s no such thing as a free lunch, even in the land of bitcoin." -- Is Bitcoin Immune From Hacking And Fraud? "The rising value of bitcoin has made exchanges prime targets for hacking, and thus has made hacks there quite lucrative. The Mt. Gox hack netted $500 million, Bitfinex $72 million, Bitcoinica $460,000, Bitfloor $250,000 and Bitstamp $5.2 million. South Korea’s Bithumb hack last summer — the exchange that serves 75 percent of the South Korean market for bitcoin — resulted in tens of millions of dollars lost for the 30,000 customers affected. Even the wallets that store bitcoin are vulnerable. The FBI reports that some $28 million in losses were reported to them in 2016, triple what they saw in 2015. But that’s only what’s reported. It’s hard to imagine a money launderer or terrorist emailing the FBI to let them know they were hacked and lost money. That means that no one actually knows how much money has been lost to hacking, but the anonymity and irrevocability associated with bitcoin transactions means that the money lost is also irrecoverable." -- Is It Too Soon For Crypto Derivatives And Margin Trading? With futures contracts on T-bills and corn, you know exactly what you're buying. The markets are backed up by regulated exchanges that have been around for 100 years or more. But with Bitcoin, are you buying bits of computer code or somebody's wildly irrational idea of what those bits and bytes are worth? “There’s a lot of interest from active traders and investors,” Claus Nielsen, head of markets at Denmark’s Saxo Bank, which has no immediate plans to offer crypto-CFDs, told The Financial Times. “But this is not a liquid trading product yet. It’s premature, and not professional, to offer margin trading on cryptocurrencies to the retail segment yet.” PD: no soy pro ni anti bitcoin, sólo trato de informarme e informar |
11-dic-2017 12:58
#474
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Pues yo creo que tienes razón. No tengo ni puta idea de inversiones ni nada, pero te apoyo |
11-dic-2017 12:59
#475
ojalá caiga de colpe! así podré comprar! hace tiempo que tengo ganas de entrar
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11-dic-2017 13:00
#476
| Lo peor de todo es que muchos no sabíamos de la existencia del bitcoin, pero el tonto de Maverik sabía de su existencia ya en 2013, pudo comprar en 2015 a 170$ (x100 lleva desde ese punto), pudo comprar ethereum, iota y demás. Menudo retard. |
11-dic-2017 13:04
#478
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5 preguntas que los bitcoineros no responden (subrayo lo que considero más relevante):
-- Will Bitcoin Actually Replace Traditional Currencies? "No one believes in the merits of a global cryptocurrency, except bitcoin zealots. The notion that central banks will give up monetary control of their fiat currencies for a global cryptocurrency, especially bitcoin, is just not happening, so we should stop talking about it. Even economists who never agree on anything, agree on that. Besides, a currency that swings between $1,000 and $5,000 over the course of two years, and between $3,000 and $5,000 in the course of a few weeks, isn’t exactly a good basis for operating a strong and stable foundation for a global financial system." -- Is Bitcoin A Legitimate Exchange Of Value? "Bitcoin has only two proven use cases after eight years: criminal activity and speculation. I honestly don’t understand why this continues to be dismissed in the face of mountains of evidence to the contrary. In the eight years since bitcoin has been a currency, transaction volume in the support of legitimate commerce is virtually nil." -- Is Bitcoin Really Free? "Bitcoin is anything but free. Miners now expect a fee for their work and won’t process transactions for which they are not paid. That means that those costs are passed down the ecosystem to end users. There’s no such thing as a free lunch, even in the land of bitcoin." -- Is Bitcoin Immune From Hacking And Fraud? "The rising value of bitcoin has made exchanges prime targets for hacking, and thus has made hacks there quite lucrative. The Mt. Gox hack netted $500 million, Bitfinex $72 million, Bitcoinica $460,000, Bitfloor $250,000 and Bitstamp $5.2 million. South Korea’s Bithumb hack last summer — the exchange that serves 75 percent of the South Korean market for bitcoin — resulted in tens of millions of dollars lost for the 30,000 customers affected. Even the wallets that store bitcoin are vulnerable. The FBI reports that some $28 million in losses were reported to them in 2016, triple what they saw in 2015. But that’s only what’s reported. It’s hard to imagine a money launderer or terrorist emailing the FBI to let them know they were hacked and lost money. That means that no one actually knows how much money has been lost to hacking, but the anonymity and irrevocability associated with bitcoin transactions means that the money lost is also irrecoverable." -- Is It Too Soon For Crypto Derivatives And Margin Trading? With futures contracts on T-bills and corn, you know exactly what you're buying. The markets are backed up by regulated exchanges that have been around for 100 years or more. But with Bitcoin, are you buying bits of computer code or somebody's wildly irrational idea of what those bits and bytes are worth? “There’s a lot of interest from active traders and investors,” Claus Nielsen, head of markets at Denmark’s Saxo Bank, which has no immediate plans to offer crypto-CFDs, told The Financial Times. “But this is not a liquid trading product yet. It’s premature, and not professional, to offer margin trading on cryptocurrencies to the retail segment yet.” PD: no soy pro ni anti bitcoin, sólo trato de informarme e informar ![]()
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11-dic-2017 13:07
#480
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@palamuni
ladrad ladrad

