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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: maceng2 who wrote (178965)9/28/2021 8:07:25 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217688
 
The <<channel>> is worth it. Day after day after day of educational as well as topical stuff, all done in a fun, conversational way, and at times feature debates.

Re China crypto, Xi is in favor of blockchain, but against crypto ‘money’ and ‘trading’. Am not sure how ‘they’ are going to bridge that, except maybe ban bitcoin and ethereum trading, and deploy China-specific blockchain which has to talk to global version of same blockchain, and if so, that blockchain can easily be … (drum roll) …

Not-Ethereum, because Ethereum is neither scalable (in current format) nor environmentally-friendly as PoW network, and besides it is dangerous for enterprises, with developers using dead-end proprietary languages, tools, and and and, and why, with Casper, with its built-in weighted-key threshold / execution management, upgradable modules, etc etc etc, is so much better, and

Given Casper does private, hybrid, and public network deployments, is particularly useful to corporates who wish to use blockchain in-house, as well as selectively able to deploy to public space, and

Particular to China China China, how useful is a blockchain logistics / inventory / etc etc management system of any company outside of China to be based on a blockchain that is not explicitly approved in China China China?

Any which blockchain(s) allows for nation-specific validation / node deployment?

bloomberg.com

Crypto Exchange Pays $24 Million in Transaction Fees for $100,000

Justina Lee
September 28, 2021, 1:43 AM GMT+8

Bitfinex, one of the crypto world’s most controversial exchanges, paid $23.7 million in transaction fees to deposit $100,000 on the blockchain in what appears to be a fat-finger trade for the history books.

Bitfinex was moving that amount in Tether, the stablecoin pegged to the dollar, to the decentralized exchange DeversiFi at 7:10 a.m. New York time Monday, records on blockchain tracker Etherscan show.

Anyone transacting on the Ethereum blockchain pays miners what is known as gas fees in exchange for incorporating their trades onto the digital ledger -- an amount that can vary depending on supply and demand for computing power at any time. While erratic and pricey fees have been a common gripe in that world amid this year’s decentralized-finance boom, the $24 million price tag appeared to be a mistake, with DeversiFi calling it “erroneously high” in a tweet.

While fat-finger errors have also been known to spark inexplicably sharp swings in traditional markets, they are uniquely problematic in the crypto world since blockchain transactions are supposedly irreversible.

“In transactions such as these, the fees are shouldered by third party integrations with Bitfinex,” a spokesperson for British Virgin Islands-based Bitfinex said in an email. “This has also been confirmed by DeversiFi in their recent statement. We look forward to DeversiFi’s investigation and to their having this matter sorted on their side.”

Tether and Bitfinex share common owners and executives, while DeversiFi and Bitfinex are also closely linked. The three co-founders of DeversiFi worked at Bitfinex, and the firms Thursday announced a link between them to enable cheap transfer of Tether tokens.

“No customer funds on DeversiFi are at risk and this is an internal issue for DeversiFi to resolve,” it said in a tweet. “Operations are unaffected.”



Source: DeversiFi’s Twitter

Tether and Bitfinex aren’t strangers to controversy, with the exchange settling a probe with the New York Attorney General earlier this year and executives behind the stablecoin facing a criminal investigation. Customer funds has been stolen or lost in the past.

On Ethereum, the user fills in how much they want to pay in gas, usually depending on how large their trade is and how eager they are for the transaction to be completed soon. The Block reported the fees earlier.

Back in 2019, the firm behind Tether more than doubled the supply in circulation by mistake due to a confusion over the token decimals, fueling a plunge in Bitcoin. Individuals also occasionally complain on social media about accidentally entering exorbitant gas fees.

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To: maceng2 who wrote (178965)9/28/2021 8:18:54 AM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Follies
maceng2

  Respond to of 217688
 
Never mind the finance sections

The crypto section alone is worth the bother, as accompaniment to coffee, as background noise to admin drudgery, and as just fun of keeping up.

Should we fail to keep up, wherever it all goes shall later appear to us as magic, and we miss out on yet another Bitcoin or Facebook or Amazon or … magic






To: maceng2 who wrote (178965)10/1/2021 7:37:59 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217688
 
We like these, Rise & Fall stuff ...

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