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D Phil wrote:Crypto progress is measured in adoption not price
https://www.rt.com/business/419419-pdvs ... ro-maduro/
instantfrugality wrote:when this thing collapse gpu prices will plummet and oodles of used and abused cards will flood ebay and amazon. locally as well.
instantfrugality wrote:when this thing collapse gpu prices will plummet and oodles of used and abused cards will flood ebay and amazon. locally as well.
instantfrugality wrote:man i was really hoping to get 2 rx 580's on the cheap, guess no more crossfire then.
pugboy wrote:what ever happened to the local ICO ?
Last year was without a doubt the Year of Bitcoin, as exploding interest in cryptocurrency fueled a massive market runup. As if that wasn’t enough excitement, some speculators took the further leap to investing in cryptocurrency projects through a lightly regulated process called an “ICO,” or initial coin offering, in which a startup sells its own crypto token to raise money.
We here at Fortune have cast a curious but frequently skeptical eye on ICOs, which from the get-go were ripe for scams. It turns out that skepticism was well warranted: cryptocurrency news site Bitcoin.com has surveyed last year’s ICOs and found that of 902 tracked by TokenData, 142 failed before raising funding, and another 276 failed after fundraising.
That’s a 46% failure rate — but wait, there’s more. Bitcoin.com found another 113 projects that it calls “semi-failed,” because their teams have gone off the radar or their community has withered away. Add those, and the failure rate jumps to 59%. Bitcoin.com says the total funding of failed projects from 2017 was $233 million
Nikhilesh De
Mar 7, 2018 at 19:30 UTC | Updated Mar 8, 2018 at 13:46 UTC
UPDATE (7, March 23:55 UTC): In another update, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao announced that all irregular trades have been reversed, saying the hackers actually lost some funds as a result.
UPDATE (7, March 20:10 UTC): Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao tweeted that the irregular trades have been identified, and will be reversed. He also warned users to learn how to secure their accounts against future phishing attacks.
Binance has reassured customers that their money is still in their accounts following hours of speculation that the cryptocurrency exchange had been hacked.
"All funds are safe," Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao tweeted Wednesday afternoon.
Rumors that Binance has been hacked spread that morning after social media users reported seeing their balances at the exchange drained, sold at market rates and converted to viacoin. However, the exchange said its platform was not breached.
All funds are safe. There were irregularities in trading activity, automatic alarms triggered. Some accounts may have been compromised by phishing from before. We are still investigating. All funds are safe.
— CZ (not giving crypto away) (@cz_binance) March 7, 2018
In its initial statement on Reddit, Binance said it was investigating these reports, announcing all withdrawals had been suspended but pushing back against claims that the platform was hacked.
"As of this moment, the only confirmed victims have registered API keys (to use with trading bots or otherwise). There is no evidence of the Binance platform being compromised," the post said. "Please remain patient and we will provide an update as quickly as possible."
Discussion on Reddit indicated that investors using trading bots may have fallen victim to stolen API keys, but it is unclear how widespread the issue was.
Viacoin became one of the few cryptocurrencies to rise on the day, jumping more than 40 percent to $3.53, according to data site CoinMarketCap. Similarly, it saw a tenfold spike in trading volume on the day, beginning at roughly the same time as the hack rumors.
Meanwhile, bitcoin has recovered from its intraday low of less than $9,500 to about $9,675 as of press time, and prices appear to have stabilized according to CoinDesk's Bitcoin Price Index (BPI).
Editor's note: This article has been updated with new information.
Safe image via Shutterstock
richardxsingh wrote:Anyone knows of an exchange that you can set to buy at a certain USD value (as opposed to BTC/ETH value)? The account itself would have to be able to hold USD I assume unless it charges added credit card automatically.
The_Honourable wrote:If anyone here is selling bitcoins, let me know.
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