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Bitcoins Rally to $90K+ Took a Detour but Appears Back on Track – Yahoo Finance

A month ago, see here, I showed the Bullish Elliott Waves (EWP) option for Bitcoin (BTC) looking for a rally to inittally low- to mid-$40Ks assuming a -what is called in EWP terms- 1,2,1,2 setup. Instead, it appears most likely, BTC formed an irregular flat (red) wave-ii (see Figure 1 below), completed wave-iii and is now in red (intermediate) wave-iv. Thus, IMHO, BTC took a detour but is still on track for $90K+ as long as can hold above $35495 on the current pullback. Allow me to explain.

Figure 1. Bitcoin daily chart with detailed EWP count and technical indicators.

What I originally viewed as a wave-i, ii, 1, 2, setup morphed IMHO into a wave-i, ii, a, b setup and the recent low on July 20th at $29320 was (green) minor wave-c of (red) wave-ii. Since that low, BTC rallied for ten consecutive days: wave-iii, which also subdivided nicely into five smaller (green) minor waves. A feat not seen since correction started mid-April. Besides, as you can see in Figure 1, BTC also rallied back above all its moving averages (10d, 20d, 50d) except the 200d SMA.

Moreover, the crypto currency was also able to rally back above its (green-red colored) Ichimoku Cloud. Lastly, the daily RSI5 and Money Flow Indicator (MFI14) have not been this overbought since Mid-April either. The latter is rather important as it shows BTC is experiencing genuine buying. All in all, since July 20th BTC has accomplished many good things, not seen since the entirty of the correction that started mid-April.

Because one can always find a bullish or bearish data point to support ones biased view, it is the weight of the evidence approach that allows for a much more objective interpretation. In this case it is rather obvious the weight of the evidence is predominantly bullish. All BTC now needs to do is reclaim its 200d SMA. I have outlined in Figure 1 the preferred illustrative-only path BTC now should follow based on the preferred EWP count shown, as well as the technical indicators, i.e., the RSI and MFI are often max overbought at 3rd waves because those are the strongest waves, just as BTC experienced recently.

Story continues

Bottom line: If BTC can hold above $35495 going forward (the red wave-i high made on June 24) and rally towards its 200d SMA from around current levels, then the chart shows a very good setup for five waves higher since the June 22nd low. That would then greatly increase the odds for a pullback, wave-2, before a strong rally to ideally new all time highs; wave-3. Ultimately, the triple bottoms around $30K made over the past three months must hold to prevent a bigger slide to potentially $20K. Based on the weight of the evidence I now prefer to look higher and maintain the Bullish perspective I already had a month ago.

For a look at all of todays economic events, check out our economic calendar.

This article was originally posted on FX Empire

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Bitcoin Analyst Says Young BTC Is on the Move Heres What It Could Mean for the Markets – The Daily Hodl

On-chain analyst Willy Woo says that Bitcoin (BTC) has entered a period of maximum noobishness.

Woo tells Scott Melker in a new interview that BTC is now in a zone where the smart money has essentially stopped selling.

The coins that are currently moving among investors are young assets that were recently acquired, says Woo.

The analyst relies on a metric called cumulative value-days destroyed (CVDD), also known as destruction. According to Woo, destruction is a ratio that expresses the duration of a held assetto the age of the market.

Woo says that he sees bullish signs when destruction bottoms and young coins are rampant.

You can look at the age of the coins moving per volume, moving between investors. And whenever it reaches a low of destruction, meaning those coins that are moving between investors are young, that means the sellers are newbs.

Were at maximum noobishness and whenever that bottoms, thats a time to buy. And its just bottomed in this last week. Were at max noob selling and the OGs are not selling. Theyre buying.

The analyst also points to Bitcoins massive network growth as a potential sign of strength.

If you wind back the clock to 2018 to now, the network growth in terms of users you can see on the blockchain its gone parabolic.

Im talking about parabolic on a log chart like were used to. Normally it grows and then the growth rate starts to taper off. For the last three years the growth rate has been going parabolic. Never been seen before.

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China’s attempt to kill Bitcoin failed Here are 3 reasons why – Cointelegraph

Bitcoin (BTC) might have suffered its largest coordinated attack over the last couple of months, but in this instance, the investor community did not capitulate.China outright banned mining in most regionsafter giving BTC miners a two-week notice, and this caused the single largest mining difficulty adjustment after the network hash rate dropped 50%.

The market sentiment surrounding Bitcoin was already damaged after Elon Musk announced that Tesla would no longer accept Bitcoin payments due to the environmental impact of the mining process. It remains unknown whether Chinas decision was influenced or related to Musks remarks, but undoubtedly those events had a negative effect.

A couple of weeks later, on June 16, China blocked cryptocurrency exchanges from web search results. Meanwhile, derivatives exchangeHuobi started to restrict leverage trading and blocked new users from China.

Finally, on June 21, the Peoples Bank of China (PBoC) instructed banks to shut down the bank accounts of over-the-counter desks, and even their social networks accounts were banned. OTC desks essentially act as a fiat gateway in the region, so without them, it would be difficult to exchange Bitcoin for stablecoins.

As these events unfolded, some analysts were inclined to describe the tactics as nothing other than meaningless FUD fear, uncertainty and doubt but in hindsight, it appears that China launched a very well-planned and executed attack on the Bitcoin network and mining industry.

The short-term impact could be considered a moderate success due to the collapse in Bitcoin price and the rising concerns that a 51% hash rate attack could occur.

Despite the maneuvers, China's attack ultimately failed, and here are the main reasons why.

After peaking at 186 million TH/s on May 12, the Bitcoin network hash rate, an estimate of the total mining power, started to plunge. The first couple of weeks were due to restrictions to coal-powered areas, estimated at 25% of the mining capacity.

However, as the ban extended to other regions, the indicator bottomed at 85 million TH/s, its lowest level in two years.

As the data above indicates, the Bitcoin network's processing power recovered to 100 million TH/s in less than three weeks. Some miners had successfullymoved their equipment to Kazakhstan, whileothers shifted to Canada and the United States

Even though the companies involved in crypto transactions have been banned from the country, individuals continued to act as intermediaries some of these recorded over 10,000 successful peer-to-peer transactions, according to data from the exchanges own ranking system.

Both Huobi and Binance offer a similar marketplace where users can trade multiple cryptocurrencies, including Tether (USDT). After converting their fiat to stablecoin, transacting on a regular or derivatives exchange becomes possible.

A complete crackdown on trading from Chinese entities would likely be reflected in the exchanges previously based in the region, like Binance, OKEx and Huobi. However, looking at the recent volume data, there hadnt been a meaningful impact.

Take notice of how the three "Asia-based" exchanges remain dominant, while Coinbase, Kraken and Bitfinex are nowhere near their trading activities.

China's ban on Bitcoin mining and transactions may have led to some temporary hiccups and a negative impact on BTC price, but both the network and the price have recovered in a way that is better than many expected.

Currently, there is no way to measure the OTC transactions where larger blocks are traded, but it is just a matter of time until these intermediaries find new gateways and payment routes.

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

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Crypto Provision In Infrastructure Bill May Force Bitcoin Miners And Blockchain Companies To Flee U.S. – Forbes

Check in, Airport Departure & Arrival information board sign taken in 2015.

A relatively hidden provision in the $1 trillion bill plans to help pay for new roads and bridges by making the tax collection of crypto activities more efficient. However, it is inadvertently casting to wide a net over the industry, threatening its very livelihood in the U.S. A group of senators is pushing back on the language to make it more precise, but hurdles remain.

In this report, I break down what to expect in the coming days and break down what lawyers and industry participants need to know and decisions they must make.

I currently providelegal consulting to cryptocurrency and fintech companies. Prior to consulting, I spent years as Regulatory Counsel for various companies in the

I currently providelegal consulting to cryptocurrency and fintech companies. Prior to consulting, I spent years as Regulatory Counsel for various companies in the cryptocurrency space including Silvergate Bank, bitFlyer and Coinbase. I also previously served as Secretary of the Virtual Commodity Association.

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Institutional Money Exiting Bitcoin and Ethereum As Crypto Investment Products See Inflows: CoinShares – The Daily Hodl

Institutional investors continue to move their money away from Bitcoin and Ethereum despite the recentboost in the crypto markets, according to the digital asset manager CoinShares.

However, institutions are buying multi-asset investment products. While digital asset investment products saw $19.5 million in overall outflows last week, multi-asset investment products had $7.5 million in inflows, CoinShares reports.

Overall, digital asset investment products had their fourth consecutive week of outflows, which CoinShares says were triggered by negative price action starting in mid-May. Bitcoin had outflows worth nearly $20 million, though BTC inflows year-to-date remain at $4.1 billion.

Ethereum had $9.5 million in outflows but also remains positive over the year, with $957 million year-to-date. CoinShares notes ETH investors have been more forgiving of the bearish price movement, only seeing outflows in six of the past 12 weeks, compared to 10 for Bitcoin.

Like multi-asset investment products, XRP, Cardano, and Polkadot alsowent against the overall trend, each seeing small inflows over the past week. XRP had inflows of $1.1 million, bringing it to a total of $45 million in inflows on the year. Cardano saw $0.5 million in inflows last week, bringing ADA to a yearly total of $37 million. And Polkadot had a weekly inflow of $0.4 million, bringing DOTs yearly total to $62 million.

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Definition Of A Cryptocurrency Broker Significantly Narrowed In Senate Amendment – Forbes

Today Senators Ron Wyden, D-Ore.; Pat Toomey, R-Pa.; and Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo. introduced an amendment to the latest version of the Senate infrastructure bill that would significantly limit those who are considered to be brokers and must adhere to information reporting requirements related to cryptocurrency transactions. The original definition of a broker who is required to prepare and file information reporting forms detailing cryptocurrency transactions under the proposed infrastructure bill introduced Sunday night was so broad as to potentially include any individual or entity who earned consideration in any way connected with cryptocurrency. The proposed amendment seeks to narrow that definition and limit who must file the information reporting forms.

A gold plated souvenir Bitcoin coin is arranged for a photograph on a smart phone displaying current ... [+] value of a single bitcoin, and options to buy or sell, on an app for the digital asset broker, Coinbase, in London on November 20, 2017. - Bitcoin, a type of cryptocurrency, uses peer-to-peer technology to operate with no central authority or banks. Bitcoin's recent rise and booming investor interest is forcing the regulatory and stock market authorities to formulate an official position on bitcoin and other virtual currencies, which are controversial not only because of their speculative nature, but are also seen as vehicles for illegal activities. (Photo by Justin TALLIS / AFP) (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images)

The Senates latest infrastructure proposal released on Sunday created a new information reporting requirement that, if enacted, would require any person who (for consideration) is responsible for regularly providing any service effectuating transfers of digital assets on behalf of another person to file information reporting returns that provide key information about the cryptocurrency transaction to the Internal Revenue Service. As I explained in a prior article, information reporting requirements are quite onerous, and the penalties for the failure to comply with those requirements are incredibly stiff.

The proposed amendment released today does not redefine who is a broker, but expressly excludes any person who solely:

(A) validates distributed ledger transactions;

(B) sells hardware or software for which the sole function is to permit a person to control private keys which are used for accessing digital assets on a distributed ledger; or

(C) developing digital assets or their corresponding protocols for any use by other persons, provided that such other persons are not customers of the person developing such assets or protocols.

What is are these limitations getting at? According to the press release announcing the amendment, the amendment seeks to clarify that brokers mean only those persons who conduct transactions on exchanges where consumers buy, sell and tradedigital assets, and does not require information reporting from persons who engage in mining or staking, selling hardware or software that an individual may use to control a private key, or developing digital assets or their corresponding protocols for use by other persons if such other persons are not customers.

Senator Toomey shed light on limiting who must file the proposed information reporting, While Congress works to better understand and legislate on issues surrounding the development and transaction of cryptocurrencies, it should be wary of imposing burdensome regulations that may stifle innovation. By clarifying the definition of broker, our amendment will ensure non-financial intermediaries like miners, network validators, and other service providersmany of whom dont even have the personal-identifying information needed to file a 1099 with the IRSare not subject to the reporting requirements specified in the bipartisan infrastructure package.

What should those who are unsure of their requirements do?

If the proposed legislation is passed, with or without the proposed amendment, individuals and entities who receive funds connected with cryptocurrency transactions will have necessarily questions about whether their conduct arises to the threshold for information reporting. Because information reporting penalties are so high, and taxpayers must pay them in full in order to contest them in court, taxpayers may err on the side of reporting rather than risk the information reporting penalties applicable for reporting shortfalls.

Congress could provide further clarification in this emerging area by directing the IRS to make the private letter ruling procedure available to taxpayers seeking clarification on whether they must adhere to the information reporting requirements. A Private Letter Ruling, or PLR, is a written statement issued from the IRS to a taxpayer that interprets or applies tax laws to the taxpayers set of facts. Private letter rulings cant be relied on by any other taxpayer, but can be an important tool to understand how the IRS might interpret a set of facts. PLRs can provide taxpayers with much-needed clarity on a tax item in dispute without having to go through an IRS examination.

The IRS publishes a list of no ruling topics each year, topics that the IRS will not issue a private letter ruling on. For 2021, for example, the IRS included Whether a taxpayer recognizes gain or loss on the transfer of virtual currency in exchange for a contractual obligation that requires the return of identical virtual currency to the taxpayer or on the transfer of identical virtual currency to the taxpayer in satisfaction of the contractual obligation on the list of no-ruling topics.

The IRSs mission is to Provide Americas taxpayers top-quality service by helping them understand and meet their tax responsibilities and enforce the law with integrity and fairness to all. There may be no area of taxation in which taxpayers need more assistance understanding and meeting their obligations than in the area of cryptocurrency.

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The Cryptocurrency Surveillance Provision Buried in the Infrastructure Bill is a Disaster for Digital Privacy – EFF

The forthcoming Senate draft of Biden's infrastructure billa 2,000+ page bill designed to update the United States roads, highways, and digital infrastructurecontains a poorly crafted provision that could create new surveillance requirements for many within the blockchain ecosystem. This could include developers and others who do not control digital assets on behalf of users.

While the language is still evolving, the proposal would seek to expand the definition of broker under section 6045(c)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to include anyone who is responsible for and regularly providing any service effectuating transfers of digital assets on behalf of another person. These newly defined brokers would be required to comply with IRS reporting requirements for brokers, including filing form 1099s with the IRS. That means they would have to collect user data, including users names and addresses.

The broad, confusing language leaves open a door for almost any entity within the cryptocurrency ecosystem to be considered a brokerincluding software developers and cryptocurrency startupsthat arent custodying or controlling assets on behalf of their users. It could even potentially implicate miners, those who confirm and verify blockchain transactions. The mandate to collect names, addresses, and transactions of customers means almost every company even tangentially related to cryptocurrency may suddenly be forced to surveil their users.

How this would work in practice is still very much an open question. Indeed, perhaps this extremely broad interpretation was not even the intent of the drafters of this language. But given the rapid timeline for the bills likely passage, those answers may not be resolved before it hits the Senate floor for a vote.

Some may wonder why an infrastructure bill primarily focused on topics like highways is even attempting to address as complex and evolving a topic as digital privacy and cryptocurrency. This provision is actually buried in the section of the bill relevant to covering the costs of the other proposals. In general, bills that seek to offer new government services must explain how the government will pay for those services. This can be done through increasing taxes or by somehow improving tax compliance. The cryptocurrency provision in this bill is attempting to do the latter. The argument is that by engaging in more rigorous surveillance of the cryptocurrency community, the Biden administration will see more tax revenue flow in from this community without actually increasing taxes, and thus be able to cover $28 billion of its $2 trillion infrastructure plan. Basically, its presuming that huge swaths of cryptocurrency users are engaged in mass tax avoidance, without providing any evidence of that.

Make no mistake: there is a clear and substantial harm in ratcheting up financial surveillance and forcing more actors within the blockchain ecosystem to gather data on users. Including this provision in the infrastructure bill will:

Furthermore, it is impossible for miners and developers to comply with these reporting requirements; these parties have no way to gather that type of information.

The bill could also create uncertainty about the ability to conduct cryptocurrency transactions directly with others, via open source code (e.g. smart contracts and decentralized exchanges), while remaining anonymous. The ability to transact directly with others anonymously is fundamental to civil liberties, as financial records provide an intimate window into a person's life.

This poor drafting appears to be yet another example of lawmakers failing to understand the underlying technology used by cryptocurrencies. EFF has long advocated for Congress to protect consumers by focusing on malicious actors engaged in fraudulent practices within the cryptocurrency space. However, overbroad and technologically disconnected cryptocurrency regulation could do more harm than good. Blockchain projects should serve the interests and needs of users, and we hope to see a diverse and competitive ecosystem where values such as individual privacy, censorship-resistance, and interoperability are designed into blockchain projects from the ground up. Smart cryptocurrency regulation will foster this innovation and uphold consumer privacy, not surveil users while failing to do anything meaningful to combat fraud.

EFF has a few key concepts weve urged Congress to adopt when developing cryptocurrency regulation, specifically that any regulation:

The poorly drafted provision in Bidens infrastructure bill fails our criteria across the board.

The Senate should act swiftly to modify or remove this dangerous provision. Getting cryptocurrency regulation right means ensuring an opportunity for public engagement and nuanceand the breakneck timeline of the infrastructure bill leaves no chance for either.

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Cryptocurrency Jargons Explained All the Terms You Need to Know – Gadgets 360

Cryptocurrency is a hugely popular investment, particularly for younger people, but for newcomers a lot of the jargon can be intimidating and off-putting. If you don't know what gas is, or who is a whale, or what the difference is between Bitcoin and blockchain, then it can be a little scary to get started with crypto.

A familiarity with the terms frequently used in this world makes this a lot easier. Whether you're interested in buying cryptocurrency now or later, knowing the lingo is a good first step. To ensure you are not left out in the cold, here's beginners guide to launch you into the world of cryptocurrency.

Sometimes, this term creates a little confusion. It appears as if the coins are produced by blasting mountains. They are not. Mining is the process to create new crypto tokens and put them into circulation. It requires powerful computers to solve complex mathematical equations. Once users do that successfully, they earn coins as a result. They can then trade the coins with their peers directly or through online exchanges.

Of course, most investors don't actually mine, or generate new tokens. Instead, you can buy and sell tokens from other people, just like you would any other asset in your investment portfolio.

Those accounts that hold a large amount of a coin and have the capacity to influence the market single-handedly are called whale accounts. Most of the well-known and popular cryptocurrencies have a bunch of whales that can really throw their "weight" around.

In fact, there are even popular sites that track the activity of whales, so that there is more transparency in the cryptocurrency market.

Many whale accounts are early investors, or large funds, and tracking what they're doing is actually a smart way of trying to figure out how the cryptocurrency market is going to be moving.

You store all your cryptocurrency coins in a wallet. It is secured by cryptography and if you ever forget your password you lose all access to your wallet. Cryptocurrency is based on the idea of decentralised distribution, so the only way to do so is by making people responsible for their passwords.

There are two main types of wallets hot and cold. While a hot wallet is connected to the Internet and makes online trades convenient, a cold wallet is like an offline safe, where you keep your wealth under tight security.

The cryptocurrency trade is largely based on a peer-to-peer network. Blockchain is the digital ledger that stores the details of each cryptocurrency transaction. Since there is no central database and everyone can access the blockchain details from anywhere, there is no threat that a hacker could get access and corrupt the information stored on it.

It's the fee you pay to make a cryptocurrency transaction. The fee covers the cost of paying a "miner" (the one who successfully solved the equation and earned a coin) to search and receive crypto for you. Its size depends on how quickly you want the transaction to be done.

The specific destination where cryptocurrency is sent. It's similar to a bank account but holds the only cryptocurrency. Each address, comprising a set of alphanumeric characters, is used only once to hold crypto assets for high security. This address also helps a recipient prove their ownership of the cryptocurrency sent to them.

Mostly, this term is used to compare cryptocurrency to the traditional currency (fiat), which is backed and issued by the government. It gives central banks better control over the economy. Currencies, like the US dollar and the Indian rupee, are fiat money.

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More from Fed’s Kashkari – says cryptocurrency market is akin to the "wild west", is "full of nonsense" – ForexLive

HIGH RISK WARNING: Foreign exchange trading carries a high level of risk that may not be suitable for all investors. Leverage creates additional risk and loss exposure. Before you decide to trade foreign exchange, carefully consider your investment objectives, experience level, and risk tolerance. You could lose some or all of your initial investment; do not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. Educate yourself on the risks associated with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial or tax advisor if you have any questions.

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How Data Mining Works: A Guide | Tableau

Data mining is the process of understanding data through cleaning raw data, finding patterns, creating models, and testing those models. It includes statistics, machine learning, and database systems. Data mining often includes multiple data projects, so its easy to confuse it with analytics, data governance, and other data processes. This guide will define data mining, share its benefits and challenges, and review how data mining works. Data mining has a long history. It emerged with computing in the 1960s through the 1980s. Historically, data mining was an intensive manual coding process and it still involves coding ability and knowledgeable specialists to clean, process, and interpret data mining results today. Data specialists need statistical knowledge and some programming language knowledge to complete data mining techniques accurately. For instance, here are some examples of how companies have used R to answer their data questions. However, some of the manual processes are now able to be automated with repeatable flows, machine learning (ML), and artificial intelligence (AI) systems.

As discussed, data mining may be confused with other data projects. The data mining process includes projects such as data cleaning and exploratory analysis, but it is not just those practices. Data mining specialists clean and prepare the data, create models, test those models against hypotheses, and publish those models for analytics or business intelligence projects. In other words, analytics and data cleaning are parts of data mining, but they are only parts of the whole.

Data mining is most effective when deployed strategically to serve a business goal, answer business or research questions, or be a part of a solution to a problem. Data mining assists with making accurate predictions, recognizing patterns and outliers, and often informs forecasting. Further, data mining helps organizations identify gaps and errors in processes, like bottlenecks in supply chains or improper data entry.

The first step in data mining is almost always data collection. Todays organizations can collect records, logs, website visitors data, application data, sales data, and more every day. Collecting and mapping data is a good first step in understanding the limits of what can be done with and asked of the data in question. The Cross-Industry Standard Process for Data Mining (CRISP-DM) is an excellent guideline for starting the data mining process. This standard was created decades ago and is still a popular paradigm for organizations that are just starting.

The CRISP-DM comprises a six-phase workflow. It was designed to be flexible; data teams are allowed and encouraged to move back to a previous stage if needed. The model also provides opportunities for software platforms that help perform or augment some of these tasks.

Comprehensive data mining projects start by first identifying project objectives and scope. The business stakeholders will ask a question or state a problem that data mining can answer or solve.

Once the business problem is understood, it is time to collect the data relevant to the question and get a feel for the data set. This data often comes from multiple sources, including structured data and unstructured data. This stage may include some exploratory analysis to uncover some preliminary patterns. At the end of this phase, the data mining team has selected the subset of data for analysis and modeling.

This phase begins with more intensive work. Data preparation involves preparing the final data set, which includes all the relevant data needed to answer the business question. Stakeholders will identify the dimensions and variables to explore and prepare the final data set for model creation.

In this phase, youll select the appropriate modeling techniques for the given data. These techniques can include clustering, predictive models, classification, estimation, or a combination. Front Health used statistical modeling and predictive analytics to decide whether to expand healthcare programs to other populations. You may have to return to the data preparation phase if you select a modeling technique that requires selecting other variables or preparing some different sources.

After creating the models, you need to test them and measure their success at answering the question identified in the first phase. The model may answer facets of things not accounted for, and you may need to edit the model or edit the question. This phase is designed to allow you to look at the progress so far and ensure its on the right track for meeting the business goals. If its not, there might be a need to move backwards to previous steps before a project is ready for the deployment phase.

Finally, once the model is accurate and reliable, it is time to deploy it in the real world. The deployment can take place within the organization, be shared with customers, or be used to generate a report for stakeholders to prove its reliability. The work doesnt end when the last line of code is complete; deployment requires careful thought, a roll-out plan, and a way to make sure the right people are appropriately informed. The data mining team is responsible for the audiences understanding of the project.

Data mining includes multiple techniques for answering the business question or helping solve a problem. This section is just an introduction to two data mining techniques and is not currently comprehensive.

The most common technique is classification. To do this, identify a target variable and then divide that variable into appropriate level of detail categories. For example, the variable occupation level might be split into entry-level, associate, and senior. With other fields such as age and education level, you can train your data model to predict what occupation level a person is more likely to have. You may add an entry for a recent 22-year-old graduate, and the data model could automatically classify that person in an entry-level position. Insurance or financial institutions such as PEMCO Insurance used classification to train their algorithms to flag fraud and to monitor claims.

Clustering is another common technique, grouping records, observations, or cases by similarity. There wont be a target variable like in classification. Instead, clustering just means separating the data set into subgroups. This method can include grouping records of users by geographic area or age group. Typically, clustering the data into subgroups is preparation for analysis. The subgroups become inputs for a different technique.

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