What do you guys think about buying bitcoin before the halving event?
Saturday, May 9, 2020
Any VR meetings coming up?
Looking for maybe a halving party in VR. I know there have been some other bitcoin meetings in the past, I just don't know where to go to look up events and times. Any help?
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Hardware wallets reviews (Ledger, Trezor, etc.)
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10 Tips to Keep Your Bitcoin Wallet Safe
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Coinbase Suffers Brief Outage as Bitcoin Tumbles 10% in 30 Minutes (current BTC/USD price is $8,604.29)
Latest Bitcoin News:
Coinbase Suffers Brief Outage as Bitcoin Tumbles 10% in 30 Minutes
Other Related Bitcoin Topics:
Bitcoin Price | Bitcoin Mining | Blockchain
The latest Bitcoin news has been sourced from the CoinSalad.com Bitcoin Price and News Events page. CoinSalad is a web service that provides real-time Bitcoin market info, charts, data and tools.
[Daily Discussion] Sunday, May 10, 2020
Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
- General discussion related to the day's events
- Technical analysis, trading ideas & strategies
- Quick questions that do not warrant a separate post
Thread guidelines:
- Be excellent to each other.
- Do not make posts outside of the daily thread for the topics mentioned above.
Other ways to interact:
- Get an invite to live chat on our Slack group
- Set your flair to trade pretend money in the Flair Game
- Weekly threads: Newbie Mondays and Fundamentals Fridays
- Altcoins Discussion: Altcoin Discussion
[Altcoin Discussion] Sunday, May 10, 2020
Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
- Discussion related to recent events
- Technical analysis, trading ideas & strategies
- General questions about altcoins
Thread guidelines:
- Be excellent to each other.
- All regular rules for this subreddit apply, except for number 2. This, and only this, thread is exempt from the requirement that all discussion must relate to bitcoin trading.
- This is for high quality discussion of altcoins. All shilling or obvious pumping/dumping behavior will result in an immediate one day ban. This is your only warning.
- No discussion about specific ICOs. Established coins only.
If you're not sure what kind of discussion belongs in this thread, here are some example posts. News, TA, and sentiment analysis are great, too.
Other ways to interact:
- Get an invite to live chat on our Slack group and check out the #altcoins channel
- Daily Discussion for bitcoin only: Daily Discussion
- Prior Altcoin Discussion: Altcoin Discussion
Bitcoin Price Tumbles Below $8000 Just Two Days Before The 2020 Halving Event
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Craig Wright provably defrauded the court when he claimed that a bonded courier had showed up with a list of public addresses asserting what Bitcoin he owned in the Tulip Trust. Andreas Antonopoulos' report explains the proof. Steve Shadders HAS to realise he's been fooled at this point.
Background: Craig has been ordered to submit a list of all the Bitcoin addresses he owned several times now. The first time he was given a hard deadline by Magistrate Judge Reinhart and simply ignored it. Then, in a last ditch effort to escape contempt of court and/or sanctions Craig Wright asked the CTO of his company nChain, Steve Shadders to spend 2 weeks putting together a list of Bitcoin he thinks belongs to Satoshi, based on statistical criteria that just happened to match the well-known Patoshi pattern analysis. While replicating existing Blockchain research over a space of two weeks as his top-priority, nChain CTO Steve Shadders managed to include a bug that resulted in 1749 addresses that don't match the Patoshi pattern. This is going to be important later, so keep it in mind.
The court wasn't happy with this last ditch, buggy, probabilistic attempt at producing the addresses he was commanded to produce, but they were especially unhappy with the litany of provable forgeries, perjurious statements, and evasive and dishonest testimonies from Wright that was impeding discovery and Judge Reinhart administered case-ending sanctions against Mr. Wright in response.
Judge Bloom overturned Reinhart's sanctions, though she explicitly agreed with Reinhart's credibility findings regarding Wright. She offered Craig a poisoned chalice:
In light of the Defendant's representations that the bonded courier is scheduled to arrive in January 2020, the Court will permit the Defendant through and including February 3, 2020, to file a notice with the court indicating whether or not this mysterious figure has appeared from the shadows and whether the Defendant now has access to the last key slice needed to unlock the encrypted file. In the event this occurs, and further if the Defendant produces his list of Bitcoin Holdings as ordered by the Magistrate Judge, then this Court will not impose any additional sanctions other than the ones discussed above.
With the not so subtle implication being that Bloom did not believe Craig's invocations of a "mysterious bonded courier" and that if he failed to satisfy this burden additional sanctions would be forthcoming.
Mr. Wright apparently took this as a forgery challenge, only one where he didn't have much respect for the intellect of his adversaries.
In his report Andreas Antonopoulos labels four separate files of Bitcoin lists, Shadders List, CW, DK, and CSW Filed.
Shadders List: The list of Wright's Bitcoin Shadders produced with a bug he disclosed that caused the least significant byte of some of the nonces for the Coinbases to fall outside of the range 0-58 (the Patoshi pattern that's been used to identify Satoshi's Bitcoin), referred to as the Shadders Bug (this bug is discussed more here).
CW List: A list of Wright's Bitcoin the Trust produced during settlement negotiations
DK List: A list of Dave Kleiman's Bitcoin the trust produced during settlement negotiations.
CW Filed List: The list of Wright's Bitcoin Craig allegedly receive from the bonded courier and then filed with the court in time to attempt to escape sanctions.
Bullet points:
- None of the lists include multiple Bitcoin addresses that were known to belong to Satoshi (the Hal Finney transaction address, the Dustin Trammel transaction address, the Mike Hearn Transaction address, etc)
- All lists of Bitcoins are subsets of the list Shadders provided initially.
- The CW List and the CW Filed List are exactly the same, except the CW Filed List omits Bitcoin that was spent on dates between August 6, 2017 and June 27, 2019. As it should, these coins were supposedly locked up in a trust, and inaccessible to the world. On the theory that Wright is not a total fraud it is inexplicable that the Tulip Trust should have provided a list containing coins that were clearly still accessible while they were supposed to be locked up.
- 3 of the addresses in CSW Filed, the document produced by CSW to avoid contempt of court, allegedly after having received it from the mysterious bonded courier, and which again are supposed to reflect coins he cannot access because they're locked in the Tulip Trust, have been moved since June 27, 2019.
- Both the CW Filed List and the CSW Filed List fail to omit every single address (and there were 1749) that was erroneously identified in Shadders' list as belonging to Satoshi due to an overflow bug in his code. This means, that in order for the bonded courier to have delivered an accurate list of Satoshi's Bitcoin, through sheer serendipity an overflow bug accidentally present in the code Shadders used to scrape the Blockchain--which he acknowledged as a bug in his sworn testimony and which he has made excuses about here on Reddit--has to have, through sheer serendipity, just happened to capture Satoshi's real addresses. Or, that Wright sloppily forged the list from Shadders' source list to avoid contempt of court.
Impossible says I am possible!
I recently got into bitcoin but haven't bought any as I still am sceptical in light of the recent hype about the whole reward halving event. So, did some analysis on the chart to find out the technicals. Saw that there was a trend with upper and lower bounds on the daily chart. The price has been on the top of the trend as you can see in the chart.
I expected it to go down to at least the midline before starting the anticipated rally. And also expected that it would visit the lower bound over a few days.
But the surprise. Oh boy. It went from almost top to bottom in 30 minutes xD. I think it is a good time to buy. But it might go back down to surprise even further!
Coinbase down and got you down? Try the Crypto.com exchange and app
Full disclosure: I hold both MCO and CRO
The exchange , as far as I saw, didn’t have any downtime and worked as expected during the BTC fall.
Also there’s an upcoming Crypto.com exchange Syndicate event for the Bitcoin halving coming up where you can purchase BTC at a discount with CRO (crypto.com exchange token). Mind you, without staking CRO you probably won’t be able to purchase much since all past events have been pretty oversubscribed. The more you stake, the more BTC you can buy at 50% off
Also if you’re in the market to purchase BTC, the crypto.com app powered by their MCO token is a pretty damn good way to buy BTC with fiat and debit/credit card (they waved the 3.5% fee for now).
Also also, if you want a $50 USD referral code, DM me :)
Need ideas for making a wall street bets version of drug wars game
For those who didn't play it, drugwars is a simple text game where the character starts with like $5000 debt to a loan shark, $2000 cash, space for 100 drugs in his pocket, and 30 days to pay off the loan shark and try to make a huge profit ($50,000,000 is considered perfect).
To do this, you go around five boroughs and buy and sell from a selection of like 8 drugs including cocaine (usually about $20,000), heroin (about $9000), weed (about $800) and so on. When you go to a different city, drug prices change slightly. However, a special event occurs as well including stuff like "a pharmacy was raided. Ecstasy is being sold for really cheap!" or "a cocaine bust occurred. Prices have skyrocketed!" (Which means ecstasy can fall from $1000 to like $300 or cocaine goes from $20,000 to $90,000 for example). There's opportunities to find drugs on dead people when you're going between cities, and sometimes officer hard ass attacks you - if he catches you, you lose all your drugs and pay a fine. You can try running or shooting him.
So basically here's what I need your help with. I wanna make a stocks based game which is based on that game. It'll be a Robinhood trader trying to take advantage of illegal shit ("4chan hacks Robinhood. Berkshire Hathaway stocks are being temporarily sold at a steep discount!" or "insider trading has occurred. A pump and dump has made Facebook stocks worth a lot more than normal!").
The problem is I need ideas on what stocks to use for the game. The cheapest of my stocks will just be a generic thing called "penny stocks". Since it'll be about doing electronic stocks, what would I use in place of going city to city? I'm thinking website to website might work, but it's still not a perfect plan.
Instead of officer hardass, the SEC will go after you. You can try to "run" by attempting to use legal loopholes. If you succeed, the SEC backs down for that day. If you fail, they steal all your stocks (and levy a fine). If you can afford it, you can buy a lawyer and have the lawyer fight back, but this makes the SEC mad and they do damage (damage can be represented by "evidence", and if you take 100 evidence worth of damage, you lose because you're jailed).
So basically, what stocks should I use? I need ideas on illegal events that occur that can raise or lower the prices of stocks. Random events where I find a Bitcoin (and make free money) or get phished (and lose stocks). And I need an idea for why I can only hold 100 stocks (pockets won't work since it's digital). Thanks.
Nakamoto Dundee provably defrauded the court and a Federal Judge on the matter of the Tulip Trust and his Buttcoin holdings therein, immediately after she lifted his sanctions for repeatedly defrauding a Magistrate Judge on that same matter.
Background: Craig has been ordered to submit a list of all the Bitcoin addresses he owned several times now. The first time he was given a hard deadline by Magistrate Judge Reinhart and simply ignored it. Then, in a last ditch effort to escape contempt of court and/or sanctions Craig Wright asked the CTO of his company nChain, Steve Shadders to spend 2 weeks putting together a list of Bitcoin he thinks belongs to Satoshi, based on statistical criteria Craig gave him that just happened to match the well-known Patoshi pattern analysis. While replicating existing Blockchain research over a space of two weeks as his top-priority, nChain CTO Steve Shadders managed to include a bug that resulted in 1749 addresses that don't match the Patoshi pattern. This is going to be important later, so keep it in mind.
The court wasn't happy with this last ditch, buggy, probabilistic attempt at producing the addresses he was commanded to produce, but they were especially unhappy with the litany of provable forgeries, perjurious statements, and evasive and dishonest testimonies from Wright that was impeding discovery and Judge Reinhart administered case-ending sanctions against Mr. Wright in response.
Judge Bloom overturned Reinhart's sanctions, though she explicitly agreed with Reinhart's credibility findings regarding Wright. She offered Craig a poisoned chalice:
In light of the Defendant's representations that the bonded courier is scheduled to arrive in January 2020, the Court will permit the Defendant through and including February 3, 2020, to file a notice with the court indicating whether or not this mysterious figure has appeared from the shadows and whether the Defendant now has access to the last key slice needed to unlock the encrypted file. In the event this occurs, and further if the Defendant produces his list of Bitcoin Holdings as ordered by the Magistrate Judge, then this Court will not impose any additional sanctions other than the ones discussed above.
With the not so subtle implication being that Bloom did not believe Craig's invocations of a "mysterious bonded courier" and that if he failed to satisfy this burden additional sanctions would be forthcoming.
Mr. Wright apparently took this as a forgery challenge, only one where he didn't have much respect for the intellect of his adversaries.
In his report Andreas Antonopoulos labels four separate files of Bitcoin lists, Shadders List, CW, DK, and CSW Filed.
Shadders List: The list of Wright's Bitcoin Shadders produced with a bug he disclosed that caused the least significant byte of some of the nonces for the Coinbases to fall outside of the range 0-58 (the Patoshi pattern that's been used to identify Satoshi's Bitcoin), referred to as the Shadders Bug (this bug is discussed more here).
CW List: A list of Wright's Bitcoin the Trust produced during settlement negotiations
DK List: A list of Dave Kleiman's Bitcoin the trust produced during settlement negotiations.
CW Filed List: The list of Wright's Bitcoin Craig allegedly receive from the bonded courier and then filed with the court in time to attempt to escape sanctions.
Bullet points:
- None of the lists include multiple Bitcoin addresses that were known to belong to Satoshi (the Hal Finney transaction address, the Dustin Trammel transaction address, the Mike Hearn Transaction address, etc)
- All lists of Bitcoins are subsets of the list Shadders provided initially.
- The CW List and the CW Filed List are exactly the same, except the CW Filed List omits Bitcoin that was spent on dates between August 6, 2017 and June 27, 2019. As it should, these coins were supposedly locked up in a trust, and inaccessible to the world. On the theory that Wright is not a total fraud it is inexplicable that the Tulip Trust should have provided a list containing coins that were clearly still accessible while they were supposed to be locked up.
- 3 of the addresses in CSW Filed, the document produced by CSW to avoid contempt of court, allegedly after having received it from the mysterious bonded courier, and which again are supposed to reflect coins he cannot access because they're locked in the Tulip Trust, have been moved since June 27, 2019.
- Both the CW Filed List and the CSW Filed List fail to omit every single address (and there were 1749) that was erroneously identified in Shadders' list as belonging to Satoshi due to an overflow bug in his code. This means, that in order for the bonded courier to have delivered an accurate list of Satoshi's Bitcoin, through sheer serendipity an overflow bug accidentally present in the code Shadders used to scrape the Blockchain--which he acknowledged as a bug in his sworn testimony and which he has made excuses about here on Reddit--has to have, through sheer serendipity, just happened to capture Satoshi's real addresses. So we can believe that, or that Wright sloppily forged the list from Shadders' source list to avoid contempt of court.
TKEYSPACE — blockchain in your mobile
Someone says that the blockchain in the phone is marketing. This is possible for most applications, but not for Tkeycoin. Today we will talk about how the blockchain works in the TkeySpace app.
Who else is not in the topic, TkeySpace is a financial application for decentralized and efficient management of various cryptocurrencies, based on a distributed architecture without using a client-server.
In simple words, it is a blockchain in the user’s mobile device that excludes hacking and hacker attacks, and all data is encrypted using modern cryptographic methods.
Blockchain
Let’s start with the most important thing — the blockchain works on the principles of P2P networks, when there is no central server and each device is both a server and a client, such an organization allows you to maintain the network performance with any number and any combination of available nodes.
For example, there are 12 machines in the network, and anyone can contact anyone. As a client (resource consumer), each of these machines can send requests for the provision of some resources to other machines within this network and receive them. As a server, each machine must process requests from other machines in the network, send what was requested, and perform some auxiliary and administrative functions.
With traditional client-server systems, we can get a completely disabled social network, messenger, or another service, given that we rely on a centralized infrastructure — we have a very specific number of points of failure. If the main data center is damaged due to an earthquake or any other event, access to information will be slowed down or completely disabled.
With a P2P solution, the failure of one network member does not affect the network operation in any way. P2P networks can easily switch to offline mode when the channel is broken — in which it will exist completely independently and without any interaction.
Instead of storing information in a single central point, as traditional recording methods do, multiple copies of the same data are stored in different locations and on different devices on the network, such as computers or mobile devices.
https://i.redd.it/2c4sv7rnrtx41.gif
This means that even if one storage point is damaged or lost, multiple copies remain secure in other locations. Similarly, if one part of the information is changed without the consent of the rightful owners, there are many other copies where the information is correct, which makes the false record invalid.
The information recorded in the blockchain can take any form, whether it is a transfer of money, ownership, transaction, someone’s identity, an agreement between two parties, or even how much electricity a light bulb used.
However, this requires confirmation from multiple devices, such as nodes in the network. Once an agreement, otherwise known as consensus, is reached between these devices to store something on the blockchain — it can’t be challenged, deleted, or changed.
The technology also allows you to perform a truly huge amount of computing in a relatively short time, which even on supercomputers would require, depending on the complexity of the task, many years or even centuries of work. This performance is achieved because a certain global task is divided into a large number of blocks, which are simultaneously performed by hundreds of thousands of devices participating in the project.
P2P messaging and syncing in TkeySpace
TkeySpace is a node of the TKEY network and other supported networks. when you launch the app, your mobile node connects to an extensive network of supported blockchains, syncs with full nodes to validate transactions and incoming information between nodes, so the nodes organize a graph of connections between them.
You can always check the node information in the TkeySpace app in the ⚙ Settings — Contact and peer info — App Status;
TkeySpace creates initiating connections to servers registered in the blockchain Protocol as the main ones, from these servers it gets the addresses of nodes to which it can join, in turn, the nodes to which the connection occurred share information about other nodes.
https://i.redd.it/m21pw88srtx41.gif
TkeySpace sends network messages to nodes from supported blockchains in the app to get up-to-date data from the network.
The Protocol uses data structures for communication between nodes, such as block propagation over the network, so before network messages are read, nodes check the “magic number”, check the first bytes, and determine the type of data structure. In the blockchain, the “magic number” is the network ID used to filter messages and block traffic from other p2p networks.
Magic numbers are used in computer science, both for files and protocols. They identify the type of file/data structure. A program that receives such a file/data structure can check the magic number and immediately find out the intended type of this file/data structure.
The first message that your node sends is called a Version Message. In response, the node waits for a Verack message to establish a connection between other peers. The exchange of such messages is called a “handshake”.
After the “handshake” is set, TkeySpace will start connecting to other nodes in the network to determine the last block at the end of the required blockchain. At this point — nodes request information about blocks they know using GetBlock messages — in response, your node receives an inv (Inventory Message) from another node with the information that it has the information that was requested by the TkeySpace node.
In response to the received message, inv — TkeySpace sends a GetData message containing a list of blocks starting immediately after the last known hash.
Loading and storing blocks
After exchanging messages, the block information is loaded and transactions are uploaded to your node. To avoid storing tons of information and optimize hard disk space and data processing speed, we use RDBMS — PostgreSQL in full nodes (local computer wallet).
In the TkeySpace mobile app, we use SQLite, and validation takes place by uploading block headers through the Merkle Tree, using the bloom filter — this allows you to optimize the storage of your mobile device as much as possible.
The block header includes its hash, the hash of the previous block, transaction hashes, and additional service information.
Block headers in the Tkeycoin network=84 bytes due to the extension of parameters to support nChains, which will soon be launched in “combat” mode. The titles of the Bitcoin block, Dash, Litecoin=80 bytes.
And so, let’s continue — application nodes receive information from the blockchain by uploading block headers, all data is synchronized using the Merkle Tree, or rather your node receives and validates information from the Merkle root.
The hash tree was developed in 1979 by Ralph Merkle and named in his honor. The structure of the system has received this name also because it resembles a tree.
The Merkle tree is a complete binary tree with leaf vertexes containing hashes from data blocks, and inner vertexes containing hashes from adding values in child vertexes. The root node of the tree contains a hash from the entire data set, meaning the hash tree is a unidirectional hash function. The Merkle tree is used for the efficient storage of transactions in the cryptocurrency blockchain. It allows you to get a “fingerprint” of all transactions in the block, as well as effectively verify transactions.
Hash trees have an advantage over hash chains or hash functions. When using hash trees, it is much less expensive to prove that a certain block of data belongs to a set. Since different blocks are often independent data, such as transactions or parts of files, we are interested in being able to check only one block without recalculating the hashes for the other nodes in the tree.
https://i.redd.it/f7o3dh7zrtx41.gif
The Merkle Tree scheme allows you to check whether the hash value of a particular transaction is included in Merkle Root, without having all the other transactions in the block. So by having the transaction, block header, and Merkle Branch for that transaction requested from the full node, the digital wallet can make sure that the transaction was confirmed in a specific block.
https://i.redd.it/88sz13w0stx41.gif
The Merkle tree, which is used to prove that a transaction is included in a block, is also very well scaled. Because each new “layer” added to the tree doubles the total number of “leaves” it can represent. You don’t need a deep tree to compactly prove transaction inclusion, even among blocks with millions of transactions.
Statistical constants and nChains
To support the Tkeycoin cryptocurrency, the TkeySpace application uses additional statistical constants to prevent serialization of Merkle tree hashes, which provides an additional layer of security.
Also, for Tkeycoin, support for multi-chains (nChains) is already included in the TkeySpace app, which will allow you to use the app in the future with most of the features of the TKEY Protocol, including instant transactions.
The Bloom Filter
An additional level of privacy is provided by the bloom filter — which is a probabilistic data structure that allows you to check whether an element belongs to a set.
The bloom filter looks for whether a particular transaction is linked to Alice, not whether Alice has a specific cryptocurrency. In this way, transactions and received IDs are analyzed through a bloom filter. When “Alice wants to know about transaction X”, an ID is requested for transaction X, which is compared with the filled segments in her bloom filter. If “Yes” is received, the node can get the information and verify the transaction.
HD support
The multi-currency wallet TkeySpace is based on HD (or hierarchical determinism), a privacy-oriented method for generating and managing addresses. Each wallet address is generated from an xPub wallet (or extended public key). The app is completely anonymous — and individual address is generated for each transaction to accept a particular cryptocurrency. Even for low-level programming, using the same address is negative for the system, not to mention your privacy. We recommend that you always use a new address for transactions to ensure the necessary level of privacy and security.
The EXT_PUBLIC_KEY and EXT_SECRET_KEY values for DASH, Bitcoin, and Litecoin are completely identical. Tkeycoin uses its values, as well as other methods for storing transactions and blocks (RDBMS), and of course — nChains.
Secret key
Wallets in the blockchain have public and private keys.
Centralized applications usually store users’ private keys on their servers, which makes users’ funds vulnerable to hacker attacks or theft.
A private key is a special combination of characters that provides access to cryptocurrencies stored on the account. Only a person who knows the key can move and spend digital assets.
TkeySpace — stores the encrypted key only on the user’s device and in encrypted form. The encrypted key is displayed as a mnemonic phrase (backup phrase), which is very convenient for users. Unlike complex cryptographic ciphers, the phrase is easy to save or write. A backup keyword provides the maximum level of security.
A mnemonic phrase is 12 or 24 words that are generated using random number entropy. If a phrase consists of 12 words, then the number of possible combinations is 204⁸¹² or 21¹³² — the phrase will have 132 security bits. To restore the wallet, you must enter the mnemonic phrase in strict order, as it was presented after generation.
Result
Now we understand that your application TkeySpace is a node of the blockchain that communicates with other nodes using p2p messages, stores block headers and validate information using the Merkle Tree, verifies transactions, filters information using the bloom filter, and operates completely in a decentralized model. The application code contains all the necessary blockchain settings for communicating with the network, the so-called chain parameters.
TkeySpace is a new generation mobile app. A completely new level of security, easy user-friendly interfaces and all the necessary features that are required to work with cryptocurrency.
Crypto smart Exchange
Hi everyone,
I am from Barter Trade. Barter Trade is a Digital Assets exchange platform and much more.
We have been into Cryptocurrency since 2014 and have been working in and around the crypto space since then.
We have been working on a cryptocurrency exchange since 2018 with a dedication to built a platform that is unique but more importantly has all the advanced tools and features that make trading easy and fun for a trader. We have invested nearly about 400k in building our cryptocurrency exchange. Right before the fall of Bitcoin in mid-2018 our product was ready to be launched in the market. Now it's been more than a year since we have been looking for investors/partners to launch our exchange but the Bear market made it really hard for us to get any investment or maybe we weren’t looking in the right direction. We have attended a number of cryptocurrency events around the globe in the hope to connect with some investors but it was to no avail.
We have lost a lot of money in the process, I'd say mainly due to a lack of knowledge about a few things related to marketing and fundraise and also by not being able to penetrate the market at the right time. People at that time were doing ICO without making any product and scamming people of 100’s of a million which hurt us and like everyone we also got scammed in some ICO’s as well. Hence, we decided to build the product and make it launch-ready before planning or even thinking about doing ICO. This was an ethically sound move but logically, it was a dumb move.
Now we are stuck in this shitty place with a product on hand, a lot of investment from the pocket, and a platform which is 1000 times better than the most out there but we don’t have the resources to launch it into the market.
Now, we are here looking for someone who is interested in this type of project or has plans to work on a similar project. Someone, who can help us bring this product into the market. Our product is 100% launch-ready. We are willing to offer Equity/Partner or whatever it takes to launch our product. If someone can guide us in the right direction then please do contact me and I will share more details regarding the project, arrange a demo, etc.
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Video Guide to the Upcoming Bitcoin Halving Event
Crypto.com referral for Bitcoin halving event! Active from May 2020
Morning!
A referral link if you need a live one.
Use my referral link https://platinum.crypto.com/r/4dawbfegbk to sign up for Crypto.com and we both get $50 USD :)
Cheers!
GB