Page 2,078«..1020..2,0772,0782,0792,080..2,0902,100..»

Bitcoin stands apart from other crypto, and what that means for US public policy – Cointelegraph

United States President Joe Bidens executive order on digital assets has kickstarted an interagency mission to support financial innovation while protecting American consumers and interests. While many industry leaders welcome the constructive tone, some critics hope for a crackdown. We dont blame them.

Many cryptocurrency projects operate behind thin veils of decentralization. In public, theyre sold on the premise that they distribute power. Behind the curtains, leaders pull the strings. In the recent case of Wonderland, a serial scammer and felon directed a $1 billion treasury.

Many projects secretly pay influencers to shill their tokens. The price pumps. Insiders dump. Naive investors lose money. Sometimes, the shillers are celebrities. And, sometimes, those celebrities leak the surprisingly low cost of their integrity.

Related: Year of sponsorships: Celebrities who embraced crypto in 2021

Hundreds of projects suffer technical vulnerabilities. Seemingly every week, hackers exploit hidden software bugs. The third-largest ever occurred in early February, with $326 million gone. And then in late March, another $600 million poof.

Many cryptocurrencies are blatant scams some, proudly pyramid-shaped. Market participants treat these as facts of life, with oft-used terms for exit scams (rug pulls) and pyramid-shaped projects (Ponzis).

To most, cryptocurrencies look the same, like tomatoes pasted in Aisle 9 only tasteless, useless, and more numerous. The cynical see the menu of cryptocurrencies as a proxy most-wanted list. Neither group is entirely wrong.

Yet one item on the menu stands apart. It is arguably one of the more important technological advances since the internet, itself. Buy it or not, we dont care. But we three professors do care to bring one simple message: Bitcoin (BTC) is special. It deserves study and discussion.

Bitcoin is genuinely decentralized. Tens of thousands run nodes all around the world. Operating a node is easy; you could do so within the hour with an internet-connected computer and a few hundred gigabytes of storage. In 2017, these nodes vetoed a controversial change to Bitcoin that would have upped the networks centralization by making it harder for ordinary people to run a node. In doing so, they trumped a majority of Bitcoin miners, exchanges and other powerful legacy players.

Bitcoins decentralization makes it fair. No foundation enjoys a trademark or governs its monetary policy. This contrasts not only with more centralized cryptocurrencies but with the Federal Reserve, itself. In the past year, three Federal Reserve officials have resigned after a series of, lets say, well-timed trades. Bitcoin has never had any officials resign in disgrace it has no such officials. The network automates these jobs away.

Bitcoins decentralization also makes it secure. Most money is digital and sits under the thumb of third parties like banks and payment processors. But innocent Russian and Canadian citizens remind us that third parties can freeze and seize those balances, especially when subject to state pressure. Reliance on third parties jeopardizes funds. Bitcoin participants can hold their own private keys and thereby save and send value without third parties. Bitcoin is in a different league than other cryptocurrencies. In the digital age, Bitcoins unparalleled level of decentralization makes it the safe haven from state and corporate overreach.

Related: The meaningful shift from Bitcoin maximalism to Bitcoin realism

And unlike most other cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin never had a private token sale to venture capitalists or an initial coin offering to enrich insiders. Bitcoin is the most widely distributed digital asset. In an important sense, it has no insiders only early adopters.

The main early adopter, Satoshi Nakamoto, mined about a million Bitcoin (5% of the maximum supply). Satoshis holdings are fully visible, and Satoshi never spent a single dime. With most other cryptocurrencies, the rich get richer, sometimes in hidden ways, and have more say over the network. Not so with Bitcoin.

Whereas some projects move fast and break things, Bitcoin moves slowly but surely. Bugs are rare. Granted, this conservative approach has tradeoffs. Upgrades are as rare as bugs. And Bitcoin lacks the flexibility of other platforms. But in exchange, countries and corporations feel secure with Bitcoin on their balance sheets.

You may have heard of hacks and stolen Bitcoin. These cases dont involve weaknesses in Bitcoin, itself. They illustrate instead the pitfalls of insecure key storage or relying on third-party custodians.

Related: Satoshi may have needed an alias, but can we say the same?

Finally, Bitcoin is no scam. It can certainly be used for scams much like the U.S. dollar, or other digital assets. But the Bitcoin network offers final settlement of its native asset, much like the Federal Reserve System offers final settlement of the U.S. dollar. People do speculate wildly on the Bitcoin price. Such is the way for early stages of innovation. And people worldwide need it even as privileged Westerners speculate.

Bitcoins design involves tradeoffs, to be sure. Its public ledger makes privacy difficult, though not impossible. It requires energy for its security. And its fixed supply engenders price volatility. But for all that, Bitcoin has become something remarkable: a neutral monetary system beyond the control of autocrats. Ideologues will balk as they seek that perfect but perfectly elusive monetary system. Wise and pragmatic policymakers, by contrast, will instead seek to use Bitcoin to improve the world.

First, we must not assume that cryptocurrencies share more in common than they, in fact, do. Bitcoin leads them all precisely because no one leads it. The policy must begin here from a place of understanding not of cryptocurrency, in general, but of Bitcoin, in particular. As President Bidens executive order conveys, digital assets are here to stay. The general category isnt going anywhere precisely because Bitcoin, itself, isnt going anywhere. We owe it special attention. Not Bitcoin only, but Bitcoin first.

Second, Bitcoin is credibly neutral since the network remains leaderless. Consequently, the U.S. can use and support Bitcoin without picking winners and losers. Bitcoin has, in fact, already won as a globally neutral monetary network. Nurturing the Bitcoin network, using Bitcoin as a reserve asset, or making payments over Bitcoin would be analogous to deploying gold within the monetary system only digital, more portable, more divisible, and easier to audit and verify.

We commend President Biden for recognizing that digital assets deserve attention. Well need all hands on deck from computer scientists, economists, philosophers, lawyers, political scientists, and more to spur innovation and nurture whats already here.

This article was co-authored by Andrew M. Bailey, Bradley Rettler and Craig Warmke.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Andrew M. Bailey, Bradley Rettler and Craig Warmke are fellows with the Bitcoin Policy Institute and the Resistance Money Bitcoin research collective and teach, respectively, at Yale-NUS College, the University of Wyoming and Northern Illinois University. Warmke is also a writer for Atomic.Finance.

Continued here:
Bitcoin stands apart from other crypto, and what that means for US public policy - Cointelegraph

Read More..

Missed Out on Bitcoin? Buy This Cryptocurrency Now – The Motley Fool

Given recent events in the cryptocurrency space, I believe it's fair for investors to question whether anything will ever turn out as good as Bitcoin (BTC 2.87%). In a moment, we'll examine why certain cryptocurrency investing theses have legitimately been dismantled recently. This underscores the need for caution when approaching this space.

Bitcoin may be down more than 50% from its high. But its market capitalization is still north of $500 billion. Therefore, many investors understandably believe it's too late to enjoy life-changing gains from buying Bitcoin today, and are looking elsewhere. If that's you, then one cryptocurrency to consider is Theta (THETA 3.22%).

Image source: Getty Images.

In recent years, developers have tried boatloads of new ideas in the cryptocurrency space. And right now, we're rudely awakening to the shortcomings of most.

Take stablecoins, for example. TerraUSD and Luna were developed to maintain stablecoin price parity with the U.S. dollar while taking fiat reserves completely out of the equation. This algorithmic system worked for a while, but a fundamental flaw was exposed and crashed the whole thing. Now other stablecoins without reserves are similarly being exploited. In my opinion, the entire concept of stablecoins is breaking down.

Consider cryptocurrency bridges as another example. Layer-1 blockchains like Ethereum and Solana speak different languages. Yet users frequently interact with multiple blockchains. Bridges are translators, going from one blockchain to another. However, hundreds of millions in value has been stolen by finding and exposing bridge flaws.

It's amazing that after a decade of innovation, we're finding that (despite its shortcomings)Bitcoin still works better than almost anything else that's been tried so far. Many novel ideas in the cryptocurrency space simply aren't working, and this should give investors pause when buying anything new right now.

Theta was created to solve a growing problem. The metaverse, synchronous livestream gaming, and higher-resolution videos all strain our internet infrastructure. And it'll likely only worsen. This is why content-delivery networks (CDNs) have growing businesses -- they speed up the internet by bringing it closer to the end consumer.

Theta could be faster than traditional CDNs because nodes are even closer to end consumers than traditional CDN infrastructure. And Theta intends to be a cheaper option as well -- traditional CDNs can be pricey.

Here's how it works: People can become network nodes by providing bandwidth and staking Theta tokens. For this service, they earn Theta Fuel (TFUEL 3.52%). Nodes sell this Theta Fuel to video platforms (like Theta.tv and Samsung VR). Video platforms pay Theta Fuel as videos are hosted and streamed. Some Theta Fuel is burned in the transaction.Some goes to end users to incentivize them to watch videos.

There are different levels for nodes, the most exclusive of which is the Enterprise Validator Node. Theta has some big players at this level, including Alphabet's Google, Sony, and Samsung. These companies are dreaming up big ideas. But these ideas will be bandwidth hogs. Therefore, it's clear why they're interested in Theta.

By the way, these tech giants might be tempted to develop their own solution to the faster-internet problem. But Theta's idea is patented, which might be why they're choosing partnership instead.

Theta's primary use case right now is video streaming. But the project intends to launch the fourth iteration of its main net before the end of the year. This new version is intended to open up new use cases for Theta, including web hosting.However, different applications have different blockchain needs, which is partly why we have so many layer-1 blockchains to begin with. Different chains solve different problems.

Theta plans to allow greater developer flexibility with subchains. Developers can build what they need. But all subchains are going to speak Theta's language, and will all use Theta Fuel as a standardized gas token. This eliminates the need for potentially problematic bridges.

Image source: Getty Images.

Theta is certainly a big idea that could be extremely valuable. But don't think I'm some crypto clairvoyant predicting life-changing gains in Theta -- as recently as last month, I believed Terra's Luna was a good buy. And it went to zero.

However, even if I'm a blind squirrel, I might still find an acorn occasionally by accident. Therefore, Theta skeptics here should focus on shortcomings in the message, not the messenger. And indeed, there's reason to approach Theta with caution.

I fear Theta's success is being driven by the wrong things so far. For this project to be viable long term, it doesn't matter which players are involved at the top. To the contrary, end consumers need to actually beusing it -- watching videos, etc. However, there isn't much content available for streaming now. And the connection can be spotty, despite its mission to improve delivery speeds.

Weak user adoption could be because of node incentives. While Google and Sony are at the Enterprise Validator level, the network needs thousands more edge nodes to truly be better than traditional CDNs for everyone. Edge nodes earn Theta Fuel. But this token is down about 90% from its all-time high. Simply put, the incentive to provide edge-node services may be too weak. And weak incentives keep new nodes on the sidelines, and leave connection speeds wanting.

That said, maybe a simpler explanation is it's still very early with Theta, and user adoption will come.

To close, I consider cryptocurrency to be a speculative investment, worthy of only a very small percentage of a diversified investment portfolio. Within that small portion of the portfolio, I diversify my crypto holdings, but recognize many of the more obscure projects will likely fail. Theta could be one of those failures, which is why one shouldn't buy much here. However, I do like Theta more than most cryptocurrencies because of its potential and progress to date.

See the article here:
Missed Out on Bitcoin? Buy This Cryptocurrency Now - The Motley Fool

Read More..

The Performance Cycle Of Public Bitcoin Miners – Bitcoin Magazine

The below is a full, free article from a recent edition of Bitcoin Magazine Pro, Bitcoin Magazine's premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, subscribe now.

The purpose of this release in specific will be twofold; the first will be to update readers on the latest updates for publicly-traded miner hash rate, production, and bitcoin holdings. The second will be to present a framework for how to approach investing in bitcoin miners, with a focus on the publicly-traded sector in particular.

With the end of the month near, we will have another round of public miner production updates for all of May 2022 in a couple weeks. With the latest monthly production releases, April 2022 was yet another month of growing hash rate and held bitcoin, despite a slightly lower production month. The group of public miners were tracking below now make up roughly 18% of total network hash rate using their April numbers of 37.91 EH/s and the latest decline in total network hashrate to 209.91 EH/s.

Bitcoin holdings across miners are now up to 46,132 bitcoin worth over $1.3 billion at a $29,000 price. Thats roughly a 7% monthly increase when including miners with reported data for both March and April. All of this data is pre bitcoins market fall from $40,000 so the next month of data updates will be key to see if top public miners are scaling down their bitcoin holdings or hash rate in response.

Hash rate of public mining companies

Hash rate of public mining companies March 2021 to April 2022

Bitcoin holdings of public mining companies

Monthly bitcoin production of public mining companies

Investing in publicly-traded bitcoin miners carries risks that buying bitcoin itself does not, due to the operational risk as well as the reality that public equities trade at multiples of future expected earnings. During environments where treasury yields rise significantly, this causes earnings multiples to fall, which is why equities as a whole have performed poorly over the course of 2022.

However, the dynamics involved with evaluating publicly-traded bitcoin miners is a bit different. Unlike other commodity producers, bitcoin miners often attempt to retain as much bitcoin on their balance sheet as possible. Relatedly, the future supply issuance of bitcoin is known into the future with near 100% certainty.

With this information, if an investor values these equites in bitcoin terms, significant outperformance against bitcoin itself is achievable if investors allocate during the correct time during the market cycle using a data-driven approach.

An extremely simple framework for investors is:

Hash price bull market = Bitcoin miners outperform bitcoin

Hash price bear market = Bitcoin miners underperform bitcoin

Hash price divides miner revenue by hash rate (daily miner revenue per 1 TH/s, as first coined by the team at Luxor).

While there are certainly other variables involved in valuing these companies, including the operational risks and the competence of the management team to just name a couple, this is a simple framework for investors to internalize and utilize going forward.

To start, lets display hash rate since the start of 2020, which hash price is partially derived from.

Average bitcoin hash rate

Below is the hash price (daily miner revenue per TH/s) in both USD and BTC.

Hash price in USD and BTC terms

Currently, hash price is $0.118, which is above the 2020 low of $0.074 but falling rapidly as hash rate (and subsequently miner difficulty) continue to increase as price falls/consolidates.

Lets take a look at the latest hash price bull and bear cycles and how the publicly-traded miners performed benchmarked not against dollars, but instead bitcoin (as this should be the entire purpose of investing in a mining operation).

Below is the hash price from its 2020 low to its 2021 high and the performance of a few publicly-traded miners ($MARA, $RIOT, $HUT) benchmarked to bitcoin. During the hash price bull market (where price rises faster than hash rate), these three names outperformed bitcoin by 318%, 207%, and 62% respectively.

Bitcoin hash price and public mining stocks priced in bitcoin

Following the hash price top in October at $0.4222 dating all the way to today where hash price is $0.1182, these same names have returned the following against bitcoin:

Hash price and public mining company stocks priced in bitcoin

While bitcoin itself has obviously drawn down significantly since its highs made in the fall of 2021 (down 57%), these publicly-traded miners have declined in value by significantly more with most down over 70%.

Public miner stocks percent drawdown from all-time high

Bitcoin public miner market capitalization

Bitcoin public miner stocks priced in bitcoin

The point of this article is to dissect the cyclicality of the mining industry, and how to think of these securities when navigating the bitcoin market cycle.

Another important fact of the bitcoin market is that hash rate has continued to rise in an exponential manner over the course of its history, which in turn means hash price is in a secular downtrend in both USD and BTC terms.

To circle back to a point made earlier, the entire purpose of investing into a mining operation should be to get a return on investment in bitcoin terms. If you cannot achieve a positive ROI in BTC terms, it was likely not a good investment in the first place.

Thus, because of the diminishing block reward and rising hash rate, hash price in BTC terms is falling in lockstep in programmatic fashion with each subsequent positive difficulty adjustment and halving event.

Bitcoin hash price

In simple terms, this means that it is becoming increasingly more challenging to produce a marginal unit of bitcoin with a unit of hash, which is also why nailing the timing of investing in publicly-traded miners as well as the ASIC rigs themselves can be so lucrative.

While nothing is ever certain, using a data-driven approach, it is possible to achieve significant return on investment in bitcoin terms with bitcoin miners, in both the public and private sectors.

While achieving advantageous levels of relative performance requires a fair share of analysis (and luck) regarding both the bitcoin hash rate, the bitcoin price action, and increasingly the macroeconomic backdrop, we expect the opportunity to once again arise for mining investors to outperform in the not-so-distant future.

While that day may not be here today, our mission is to put forward transparent analysis around the bitcoin ecosystem, with an aim to help individuals and institutions alike make informed decisions regarding their savings/investments.

If you enjoyed the content/analysis in todays free issue, make sure to give this post a like, share with a friend, and consider subscribing to our paid research tier

The Bitcoin Magazine Pro Team

Read more here:
The Performance Cycle Of Public Bitcoin Miners - Bitcoin Magazine

Read More..

The Giving Block Launches First-Ever Bitcoin, Crypto Donations Fund For Miami Nonprofits – Bitcoin Magazine

The Giving Block, a bitcoin and cryptocurrency fundraising platform for nonprofits, announced the Miami Impact Index Fund, allows donors to provide funds to all participating Miami area nonprofits with a single donation, according to a press release sent to Bitcoin Magazine.

When donors provide donations to the fund, each participating nonprofit will receive an equal share of the donation. Donations will also be doubled due to The Giving Block partnering with Shift4, a payment processor, in a program called Caring With Crypto.

The partnership between the two companies will see Shift4 CEO Jared Isaacman personally match any donation up to the first $10 million donated to the program. This effectively doubles any donation made to all of the causes in a single transaction.

The release explains that it is more common for high net-worth individuals to donate property than it is to donate cash, as donating cryptocurrency like bitcoin directly to a 501c3 nonprofit is more tax efficient than a standard cash donation since the IRS classifies cryptocurrency as property.

When a donor donates bitcoin to one of the previously mentioned nonprofits, they receive a tax deduction equal to the fair market value of the bitcoin and they avoid paying the capital gains tax normally incurred by selling bitcoin, meaning that donors would have less access to donatable cash after paying the taxes to receive cash for selling the bitcoin. In short, donors can give more and deduct more from their taxes, which sometimes makes up to a 30% difference, according to the release.

Participants of the fund include but are not limited to: Nicklaus Childrens Health System, NU Deco Ensemble Inc., Third Wave Volunteers Inc, Chapman Partnership, Jackson Health Foundation, Legal Services of Greater Miami, and United Way Miami.

Read more from the original source:
The Giving Block Launches First-Ever Bitcoin, Crypto Donations Fund For Miami Nonprofits - Bitcoin Magazine

Read More..

SEVA announces bitcoin mining partnership to help advance the development of SunPark – WV News

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

Original post:
SEVA announces bitcoin mining partnership to help advance the development of SunPark - WV News

Read More..

Bitcoin ends week on the edge as S&P 500 officially enters bear market – Cointelegraph

Bitcoin (BTC) struggled to recover its latest losses on May 21 after Wall Street trading provided zero respite.

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingViewshowed BTC/USD trading dipping below $28,700 into the weekend, subsequently adding around $500.

Down 4.7% from the previous days $30,700 highs, the pair looked firmly rangebound at the time of writing after United States stocks indexes saw a volatile final trading day of the week.

The S&P 500, managing to reverse after initially falling at the open, nonetheless confirmed bear market tendencies, trading at 20% below its highs from last year.

Another wacky day in the stock market. Dow Jones -500 early in the day, then recovers it all and closes +8, popular Twitter account Blockchain Backers commented about broader U.S. market performance:

As Cointelegraph previouslyreported, various sources had called for Bitcoin to fall once again in a manner similar to last weeks capitulation event.

Continuing the conservative macro outlook, fellow Twitter commentator PlanC argued that external shifts could still bring Bitcoin down significantly from current levels.

If the Crypto market was in a bubble I would say 25k to 27.5k is the Bitcoin bottom, but there is a decent probability that macro factors drag us down to 22-24k. Significant black swan, 15-20k becomes a possibility, part of a tweet on the day read.

Beyond stocks, the U.S. dollar index (DXY) was consolidating after a strong retracement from twenty-year highs.

With ten days left until the end of the month, BTC/USD risked May 2022 being the worst in terms of returns in its history.

Related:Bitcoin must defend these price levels to avoid 'much deeper' fall: Analysis

Data from on-chain analytics resource Coinglass showed month-to-date returns currently totaling -22% for Bitcoin, the largest retreat of any year except 2021s -35%.

2022, the collective figures confirmed, was also the worst-performing first five months of the year for Bitcoin since 2018.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Read the original post:
Bitcoin ends week on the edge as S&P 500 officially enters bear market - Cointelegraph

Read More..

Your 401(k) and the bitcoin boogie – Star Tribune

Opinion editor's note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.

Bitcoin had a very bad day a few weeks ago, its price crashing along with those of other cryptocurrencies, adding a dollop of misery for those who put money into the asset class without snatching it right back out. The crypto market is notoriously volatile, and the trouble this time was the collapse of part of it known as stablecoins. Go figure.

We refer to the recent misery as an added "dollop" because things did, well, stabilize for crypto, which trades around the clock. Even so, the most prominent cryptocurrencies of which bitcoin is the mostest are down by half since November.

So, that'd be a terrible thing to let people muck around with in their retirement accounts, right?

The U.S. Department of Labor thinks so, issuing guidance in March with concerns about the "reliability and accuracy of cryptocurrency valuations" and reminding fiduciaries about their "obligation to ensure the prudence of the options on an ongoing basis." The department isn't necessarily driving a "never crypto" bandwagon, but it's eyeing the reins.

More pointedly, the famed investor Warren Buffett once called cryptocurrency "rat poison squared." More pointedly still, his famed compatriot Charlie Munger recently said bitcoin is "like a venereal disease or something."

And yet.

In April, Fidelity the mostest among the hosts of retirement accounts announced a plan that would put bitcoin on the menu of investment options for 401(k)s. But just bitcoin for now, not the multitude of other cryptocurrencies, and only at levels of no more than 20% of an account, and only for those investors whose employers agree to it.

This isn't necessarily a bad thing, despite any purported resemblance of cryptocurrencies to rodenticides or worse. Even Buffett's and Munger's firm, Berkshire Hathaway, has invested in a bank that focuses on crypto.

Consider this: If you're a buy-and-hold investor of the broad market, which is basically what is recommended for most people for most of their working years, you're also down over the last few months about 20%, as it happens. History suggests that your account will bounce back, but history makes no guarantees about how fast.

Set aside the promises of astronomical long-term gains supporters say are inevitable because of the way some cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin, are designed. While crypto at present can only be described as speculative, there may come a day when it is a reliable alternative to asset classes influenced by central banks. As a nonphysical form of money created using encrypted data (thus the name), the movement of which is managed by decentralized computer networks, not by governments, it could offer investors a way to diversify and potentially steady their accounts.

The Star Tribune Editorial Board wrote last year about signs that crypto was beginning to gain serious traction. The Fidelity plans confirm that. We also wrote that there is room to let the crypto market shake out before deciding how best to regulate it. But that permissiveness can't last forever.

Indeed, there are reasonable questions about Fidelity's plans, and U.S. Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota is among those raising them. Along with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., Smith wrote a letter to Fidelity asking why the company ignored the Labor Department's guidance; how it plans to deal with various crypto risks, including theft, fraud and the reliability of record-keeping, in addition to volatility; what fees it may charge, and whether it has a conflict of interest as a bitcoin miner. A response is pending.

"My job is not to tell people what to invest in," Smith told an editorial writer. "My job is to make sure that they have accurate and fair information."

That sounds right to us.

In any case, having a bitcoin option in retirement accounts doesn't mean investors have to choose it. They certainly shouldn't if they don't understand it, and even those who think they grasp the concept would be wise to limit their risk to less of their account value than Fidelity would allow. One recommendation we read recently was 1%.

In other words, handle it with care, as with any potential poison.

Go here to see the original:
Your 401(k) and the bitcoin boogie - Star Tribune

Read More..

Big tech vs. data privacy: It wasnt meant to be this way – VentureBeat

We are excited to bring Transform 2022 back in-person July 19 and virtually July 20 - 28. Join AI and data leaders for insightful talks and exciting networking opportunities. Register today!

Privacy. You would be hard-pressed to find a word used as frequently or with as much weight in recent years. As the world hurtles towards an increasingly digital future, concerns over data privacy have reached a fever pitch.

From high-profile cases of data breaches to tales of government surveillance, it seems that scarcely a day goes by without another story about how our personal information is being mishandled.

The digital age has brought with it many amazing advances, but it has also created new threats to our privacy. One of the biggest dangers comes from the way that big tech companies collect and use our data.

Most people are now familiar with the term data mining the process by which companies collect large amounts of data about our online activity and use it to target ads and sell products. But data mining is just the tip of the iceberg. Many tech companies are now using sophisticated methods to track our every move, both online and offline.

This tracking is made possible by the proliferation of devices that are connected to the internet. These devices collect a wealth of data about our whereabouts, our behaviors and even our physiology. This data is then used to create detailed profiles of each individual user.

These profiles are extremely valuable to companies, who use them to target ads, sell products and influence our behavior. In other words, they use our personal information to make money.

This business model has come under fire in recent years, as more and more people have become aware of the ways that their personal data is being used without their consent.

So what can be done to protect our privacy in the age of big tech? There are no easy answers, but there are some steps that we can take to help ensure that our privacy is not violated.

The answer is not merely a matter of public policy but an overall paradigm shift in the way we think about privacy. This would of course involve:

This last point goes back to the original intent of the internet. As a matter of fact, the internet was designed to be a decentralized network, where each user could connect to any other user without going through a central server. This design was based on the belief that decentralization would make the internet more resistant to censorship.

Unfortunately, this vision has not been realized. Instead, we have seen the rise of a small number of giant tech companies that now control most of the internet. These companies use their power to censor and manipulate the information that we see, and they collect vast amounts of data about our online activity.

This centralization of power is dangerous for democracy and privacy. It gives these companies too much control over our lives, and it makes it easy for them to violate our rights.

We need to build a new internet that is decentralized and democratized. This new internet should be designed to protect our privacy and promote free speech. It should give power back to the people, and it should be resistant to censorship and control.

The first step in building this new internet is to create decentralized alternatives to the centralized services that we use today. These alternatives will be built on the principles of privacy, security and freedom.

Privacy is a complex issue, and there is no one-size-fits-all solution. But by taking some simple steps to protect our privacy, we can make a difference. We can make sure that our data is not used to violate our rights, and we can help build a new internet that is free from censorship and control.

Daniel Saito is CEO and cofounder of StrongNode.

Welcome to the VentureBeat community!

DataDecisionMakers is where experts, including the technical people doing data work, can share data-related insights and innovation.

If you want to read about cutting-edge ideas and up-to-date information, best practices, and the future of data and data tech, join us at DataDecisionMakers.

You might even considercontributing an articleof your own!

Read More From DataDecisionMakers

Here is the original post:

Big tech vs. data privacy: It wasnt meant to be this way - VentureBeat

Read More..

Dexbrowser Platform Helps Traders Promptly Evaluate the Possible Alternatives and Risks – Digital Journal

SINGAPORE / ACCESSWIRE / May 23, 2022 / Both new and experienced crypto traders are informed about the risks of trading cryptocurrencies. The crypto trading market is well known for its volatility, high-risk and speculative nature.

Recently, several investors experienced dramatic losses when Luna, one of the top 10 crypto tokens, crashed drastically in value, going below the top 150 crypto tokens.

The volatility of the crypto market makes it crucial that investors and traders utilize trading tools that hedge risks. Users of decentralized exchange platforms will benefit from services and tools that make trading profitable and accessible. Exchange platforms that combine products, services, and tools that make trading lucrative and convenient for all traders, regardless of their crypto market mastery, are more favorable.

Beyond a web browser, users gain from decentralized exchange platforms that are intelligent and profit-driven.

Dexbrowser is an intelligent Web3 data aggregator that makes decentralized trading and the staking ecosystem more accessible and productive. The product presents tools that allow multi-chain, smart data tracking. The browser gives users exclusive features like cross-chain revenue optimizer, arbitrage trading, DeFi data acquisition, intelligent farming configuration, analysis, data mining, and an entire network farming pool search engine.

Users can know the transaction rates and speed of public chain networks beforehand. The platform implements real-time assessment, tests the trading network, and intelligently recommends favorable channels to reduce losses and delays. The browser gives users profit-driven data derivatives.

Traders can profit from intelligent arbitrage and mining. Pools on Dexbrowser have synchronized access to advanced search engines, new cross-chain farming pools, and search filters. Pools also have additional automatic features that assist traders in monitoring and distributing their tokens to other pools and give re-investment alternatives.

The intelligent trading search engine furnishes precise analysis of distinctive trading pairs, including big orders and order book displays, asides from OHLC.

The browser also indicates favorable trading paths. More intelligent components for trading on the protocol include K-lines and efficient one-click arbitrage.

With Dexbrowser, users can easily find the costs of diverse trading sets in multi-chain DEXes. The tool provides spread analysis in real-time and facilitates users arbitrage trading. DexBrowser V.2 displays sentiment data, liquidity data, and more comprehensive transaction data and position data for some on-chain tokens and DeFi protocols in real-time.

Using these advanced features on the Dexbrowser platform, traders can promptly evaluate the possible alternatives and risks entailed, which is anticipated to evolve into the central path for investors to verify data on the DeFi chain.

About Dexbrowser

Dexbrowser, the premier Web3 data aggregator, is developing a suite of tools to make decentralized trading more accessible and profitable to all. Decentralized trading, liquidity pools, and staking solutions are widespread yet often difficult to access in the current landscape. Dexbrowser aims to combine all of these aspects under one roof to make them more accessible and help users achieve much higher profitability than before.

Want more Dexbrowser? Other resources:

Twitter | Telegram | Website | Product| Reddit| Facebook |LinkedIn

Contact person: ShawnE-mail: [emailprotected]Website: https://www.dexbrowser.com

SOURCE: Dexbrowser

View source version on accesswire.com: https://www.accesswire.com/702262/Dexbrowser-Platform-Helps-Traders-Promptly-Evaluate-the-Possible-Alternatives-and-Risks

More here:

Dexbrowser Platform Helps Traders Promptly Evaluate the Possible Alternatives and Risks - Digital Journal

Read More..

Early Chinese Canadian gold miners remembered for their contribution to B.C.’s Cariboo communities – CBC.ca

For May's Asian Heritage Month in Canada, two historians in B.C.'s Interior are remembering the legacies of two early Chinese Canadian miners.

For more than a decade, Lorna Townsend in Quesnel and Richard Wright in Kamloops have bothstudied the history of Ah Bau and Chew Nam Sing, two of the most well-known pioneers among anestimated 5,000 people who came from Chinato B.C.'sCariboo region in the late 19th century to prospect for gold.

The Cariboo Gold Rush from 1861 to 1867 attracted thousands of prospectors from other parts of Canada, Britain, the United States, Latin America and China. The Royal B.C. Museum says many Chinese prospectors chose to make the Cariboo their new home and ran farms, grocery stores and other businesses to serve local communities.

Townsend, who volunteers with the Quesnel and District Museum and Archives, saidbased on her interpretation of census data, mining records and newspaper articles, Ah Bauwas born around 1840 in China, and started mining in the North Cariboo as early as 1862 in what is known today as the Ahbau Creek watershed between Quesnel and Hixon.

Ahbau Lake, Ahbau Creek Falls and Ahbau Creek Bridge are other places north of Quesnel that are named after the gold miner. There's also Ahbau Street in Prince George, about three kilometres west of the city hall.

Townsend saidshe doesn't know why the Prince George street is named after Ah Bau, but surmises people associate the lake and creek with him solely because he claimed and lived in the isolated 50,000-hectare watershed area for decades.

"There weren't a lot of people living in that area, and he spent 40 years there," she said. "I think the pioneers at the time would have associated that area with the man during those years, and so that was just perpetuated after his death."

Townsend saidAh Bau died in the spring of 1902 at his cabin located near Ahbau Lake. He was in his early60s.

She saidduring his heyday from 1864 to 1876, Ah Bau managed a team of 700 Chinese labourers to extract more than a million ounces of gold from the fields he claimed. She describes him as a "versatile" worker who also trapped for fur in winters, and served as a river pilot, steersman and a chef for merchants in the Peace River region.

Townsend saidAh Bau befriended mostly Indigenous men and those of European descent, who all loved him as a big-hearted, cheerful man.

"He would have died a very wealthy man, if not for his generosity he was always helping other people, and he also had a penchant for poker and whisky, so he often lost a lot of money," she said.

The Quesnel Museum says Chew Nam Sing, born in 1835 in China, spent some time mining gold in California before arriving in B.C. in 1858. Up until the 1870s, he bought up land on both sides of the Fraser River several kilometres north of Quesnel to raise livestock and grow vegetable cropswith his wife and children.

The site, named Nam Sing Ranch, was sold after the Chinese miner died at 75 in 1910. Now the land is divided between the Quesnel airport and a family ranch.

Wright, who made a 12-minute documentaryabout Chew's legacy two years ago with theNew Pathways to Gold Society,says he isn't sure how long Chew prospected in the Cariboo, but he ran a very successful business of freighting products from Quesnel to Barkerville, about 86 kilometres away, where residents suffered a shortage of fresh produce.

Wright says Chew hired many Indigenous people and those of Europeandescent as packers and cowboys.

"He was obviously a driven and determined individual," said Wright.

Besides the places named after Ah Bau and Chew, the B.C. government designated four other places in 2015 as locations of historical significance to Chinese Canadians, including Barlow Avenue in Quesnel.

Daybreak North8:02Early Chinese Canadian gold miners remembered for their contribution to the Cariboo communities

See more here:

Early Chinese Canadian gold miners remembered for their contribution to B.C.'s Cariboo communities - CBC.ca

Read More..