Home (Feature Loop) › Forums › The Sidebar: Anything to Talk About › What Make Bitcoin Don’t want You To Know
Tagged: 12
- This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 1 year, 1 month ago by wwkcyrus584.
-
AuthorPosts
-
October 1, 2023 at 6:58 pm #3634wwkcyrus584Participant
<br> Het is ook mogelijk via de Homepage van Binance op de handelspagina terecht te komen. For more detailed information on how candlesticks work, see Binance Academy, A Beginner’s Guide to Candlestick Charts. Looking for more info about the history of Bitcoin and some of the problems it was designed to solve? So it just makes me wonder, maybe this is impossible and I don’t understand the constraints, 바이낸스 수수료 정보 wouldn’t Bitcoin as a transaction method, as a kind of frictionless transaction be better if it weren’t also a currency or pegged to a currency? What kind of markets might benefit? One of the things as a consequence that’s been missing on the Internet for 20 years is kind of a native concept of money, right? In summary, it’s easy to see why Binance is now one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the industry. All right, so maybe it’s not fair to make fun of Paul Krugman either. What they do is essentially transfer IOUs back and forth to make sure that digital money is not spent twice. And I didn’t transfer it to three other people at the same time, I didn’t lie about the fact that I tran<br>r<br>it.
Now, banks and other financial institutions already have ledgers of their own, which let them transfer funds internally or with other trusted parties. Instead, transacting parties would pay transaction fees to Bitcoin miners only when they decide to close the channel. ANDREESSEN: Well credit card fraud, we actually know basically what credit card fraud costs the economy which is basically most of the credit card fees. The location of miners is a key ingredient to know how dirty or how clean the power is that they are using. Usability is one of Binance’s key strengths. DUBNER: Now, Marc, I think one part of the Bitcoin story that’s confusing for people is that most of the coverage, at least in the past five or six months, has been about the volatility of the currency itself, of Bitcoin as a currency, right? We would have to take another six hours to go through this in detail. Those industries have made fortunes by taking a cut of every transaction, which a virtual, and virtually frictionless currency like Bitcoin, could perform for muc<br>u<br>less.
Now, to avoid this, we’ve relied up ‘til now on a middleman, like a credit card company or Paypal. What then happens is the network basically validates the transaction, and after the transaction is validated, everybody else on the network is able to inspect that transaction and they’re able to confirm that I originally owned that piece of property and now you originally own that piece of property. And basically, everybody can inspect this blockchain any time they want, and they can basically prove through the math of Bitcoin that that transaction actually took place. The blockchain that Andreessen just mentioned is what Susan Athey was describing earlier as a “public ledger.” It is a log of all transactions in the Bitcoin ecosystem. But now, it seems, Bitcoin’s blockchain technology could do this without the middleman, which means faster and cheaper. ATHEY: I think of Bitcoin as really a revolutionary new technology that is in some w<br>w<br>past due.
ATHEY: The beauty of a new currency, which is part of a virtual currency protocol, is that what I’m moving from me to you is just an entry on a secure, public ledger. Instead, if I make a transaction over the virtual currency, it’s just an entry in the ledger. And so Bitcoin basically holds out the promise of being the first solution to establishing trust over an untrusted network. And so, the ability to very easily pay somebody online, the ability to very easily charge for a piece of content, the ability to very easily exchange a digital title, or a digital key, or a digital contract has just been missing because you have no mechanism for establishing trust. So I don’t have to worry about some bank giving me an IOU and then taking that IOU and handing it to another bank. And then you get into this interesting question: If you’re a merchant, would you rather pay the 1 percent, or sub-1 percent to be able to do the exchange, or would you be willing to bear the volatility for a period of time, for example, until you could potentially spend the Bitcoin? That today is running about 1 percent, but you could imagine those fees comin<br>wn fairly quickly. -
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.