Monday, December 27, 2021

Bitcoin just dipped to 48k 😱😱😱 what do u thinks gonna happen??

The live Bitcoin price today is $49,009.23 USD with a 24-hour trading volume of $27,211,956,736 USD. We update our BTC to USD price in real-time. Bitcoin is down 3.89% in the last 24 hours. The current CoinMarketCap ranking is #1, with a live market cap of $926,908,110,786 USD. It has a circulating supply of 18,912,931 BTC coins and a max. supply of 21,000,000 BTC coins.

If you would like to know where to buy Bitcoin, the top cryptocurrency exchanges for trading in Bitcoin stock are currently Binance, OKEx, CoinTiger, CoinFLEX, and FTX. You can find others listed on our crypto exchanges page.

What Is Bitcoin (BTC)?

Bitcoin is a decentralized cryptocurrency originally described in a 2008 whitepaper by a person, or group of people, using the alias Satoshi Nakamoto. It was launched soon after, in January 2009.

Bitcoin is a peer-to-peer online currency, meaning that all transactions happen directly between equal, independent network participants, without the need for any intermediary to permit or facilitate them. Bitcoin was created, according to Nakamoto’s own words, to allow “online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution.”

Some concepts for a similar type of a decentralized electronic currency precede BTC, but Bitcoin holds the distinction of being the first-ever cryptocurrency to come into actual use.

Who Are the Founders of Bitcoin?

Bitcoin’s original inventor is known under a pseudonym, Satoshi Nakamoto. As of 2021, the true identity of the person — or organization — that is behind the alias remains unknown.

On October 31, 2008, Nakamoto published Bitcoin’s whitepaper, which described in detail how a peer-to-peer, online currency could be implemented. They proposed to use a decentralized ledger of transactions packaged in batches (called “blocks”) and secured by cryptographic algorithms — the whole system would later be dubbed “blockchain.”

Just two months later, on January 3, 2009, Nakamoto mined the first block on the Bitcoin network, known as the genesis block, thus launching the world’s first cryptocurrency. Bitcoin price was $0 when first introduced, and most Bitcoins were obtained via mining, which only required moderately powerful devices (e.g. PCs) and mining software. The first known Bitcoin commercial transaction occurred on May 22, 2010, when programmer Laszlo Hanyecz traded 10,000 Bitcoins for two pizzas. At Bitcoin price today in mid-September 2021, those pizzas would be worth an astonishing $478 million. This event is now known as “Bitcoin Pizza Day.” In July 2010, Bitcoin first started trading, with the Bitcoin price ranging from $0.0008 to $0.08 at that time.

However, while Nakamoto was the original inventor of Bitcoin, as well as the author of its very first implementation, he handed the network alert key and control of the code repository to Gavin Andresen, who later became lead developer at the Bitcoin Foundation. Over the years a large number of people have contributed to improving the cryptocurrency’s software by patching vulnerabilities and adding new features.

Bitcoin’s source code repository on GitHub lists more than 750 contributors, with some of the key ones being Wladimir J. van der Laan, Marco Falke, Pieter Wuille, Gavin Andresen, Jonas Schnelli and others.

What Makes Bitcoin Unique?

Bitcoin’s most unique advantage comes from the fact that it was the very first cryptocurrency to appear on the market.

It has managed to create a global community and give birth to an entirely new industry of millions of enthusiasts who create, invest in, trade and use Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies in their everyday lives. The emergence of the first cryptocurrency has created a conceptual and technological basis that subsequently inspired the development of thousands of competing projects.

The entire cryptocurrency market — now worth more than $2 trillion — is based on the idea realized by Bitcoin: money that can be sent and received by anyone, anywhere in the world without reliance on trusted intermediaries, such as banks and financial services companies.

Thanks to its pioneering nature, BTC remains at the top of this energetic market after over a decade of existence. Even after Bitcoin has lost its undisputed dominance, it remains the largest cryptocurrency, with a market capitalization that surpassed the $1 trillion mark in 2021, after Bitcoin price hit an all-time high of $64,863.10 on April 14, 2021. This is owing in large part to growing institutional interest in Bitcoin, and the ubiquitousness of platforms that provide use-cases for BTC: wallets, exchanges, payment services, online games and more.


The Scope.

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True Decentralization means the total give up of control. Let's think about it...

Deep questions here....

What evidence would convince you that Cardano walks towards decentralization and won't walk back when the d-day arrives?

As much as I love Cardano, sometimes we need to zoom out and get dispassionate for a little and try to poke holes in that which we love, just to check if it deserves our love...

No, I didn't find any problems in the Cardano ecosystem recently. These questions arose long ago and, for no logical reason I decided to post it today. But there is an area where I keep finding serious problems everyday: human psychology. There is one thing humans are consistently the worst in the Universe and it's giving up power.

I said I love Cardano... Well, that's not quite true. I don't really love Cardano. I love decentralization, transparency and scientific rigor and I love those things, not because they are beautiful, but because these are the most powerful mechanisms for keeping away human greed and corruption, the two main forces keeping humanity in the "modern dark ages".

If Cardano, flips Bitcoin threefold, if it turns out to be the world financial system, if ADA becomes the world currency, but with all those things it still fails to achieve true decentralization.... Sorry, I pull my love of it. Without true decentralization, humans in control will find some way of slowly perverting the system, especially when things at stake grow bigger and bigger, and Cardano would be nothing but an unconventional tech company, but a tech company nevertheless.

If you think I may be exaggerating the difficulties of true decentralization, let's just meditate about the current state of the world:

True decentralization has not been achieved by any project whatsoever, be it in the crypto universe or out of it. What has been achieved so far is pseudo-decentralization, or partial-decentralization, or even, in many cases, true marketing. There may be one exception, though: Bitcoin.

I don't think Bitcoin is truly decentralized, but seems to be the most decentralized system so far. But it's important to remember the context in which Bitcoin decentralization came to being, with focus in the humans, not in the tech:

Satoshi "gave up" power during the launching of bitcoin when it was worthless at the time. That was easy. So even though Bitcoin is arguably the most decentralized system to date, this decentralization didn't come at the cost of giving up power while having big things at stake. There was no sacrifice of power and I wonder if that is the reason why Bitcoin succeeded at decentralization.

If Cardano, or any other project achieves true decentralization, this would be probably the first event in human history when people in governance positions consciously give up their power, irrecoverably.

Just think about it...

Cesar Scapella


The first Play2Earn, Open-world, Roleplay videogame on the Sandbox

Hi all,We are a team of +30 qualified developers from all around the world. We have been running for a bit above 2 months and made gigantic progress. We have lease agreements with 26 lands for our game. The main topic will be a mafia roleplay based on the 1940s New York City, but apart from that the server will have many more things like a Casino, NFT art gallery, asset marketplace, virtual real estate, live events like horse racing or boxing, etc. If you want to know more follow mafiaverseofficial on IG or versemafia on Twitter or join the player Discord: https://discord.com/invite/eMaaqtrJ . We will be doing virtual real estate NFT keys giveaways to the first 500 to join the discord, more rewards for inviting other players. Find attached the roadmap from Q4 2021 to the start of Q4 of 2022. Also some of our buildings and assets (almost all assets are created by our team but some are taken from the community). Thank you !!

  1. #NFT #Metaverse #Mafiaverse #p2e #playtoearn #Crypto #Defi #Cryptocurrency #Bitcoin #GameFi #Finance #Wallstreetbets #Matic #Polygon #Sand

https://preview.redd.it/4kga7vqtz5881.jpg?width=795&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=0013e7e63c973b021abf5de2663902ba2833dfb7

https://preview.redd.it/eqyze2rtz5881.jpg?width=1843&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=6f8aebac6fae9576875280fcc990a168c44a9a51

https://preview.redd.it/b3o07irtz5881.jpg?width=1913&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=a77b0d509f1b9d37444ad9e3754406387e0b26d5

https://preview.redd.it/bgjbq0rtz5881.jpg?width=1919&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=35e8047c9fd1c0235d4ff56782707e4f0370948a


147 things that happened in e-commerce in 2021

2021 was an exciting and monumental year in e-commerce. BNPL became a standard way to purchase items online. Major companies changed their names and experienced high profile executive turnover. Google fought to regain its share of e-commerce searches. India rewrote the rules of e-commerce within their borders. Shopify integrated with, well, everyone. And aggregators popped up faster than weeds in a garden.

I launched the Shopifreaks E-commerce Newsletter in January 2021 to highlight the most important happenings in our industry and have since published 48 weekly editions. Thanks for being a subscriber!

This week’s 49th newsletter is a lookback at 2021 In Review. I’ve recapped the most notable news from this past year (in reverse chronological order) so that you can have a big picture view of what happened in e-commerce in 2021.

Not yet a Shopifreaks subscriber? Join here.

December 2021

  • Shopify rolled out its integrated NFT feature for Shopify Plus merchants
  • Alibaba revealed its vision to 5x its Southeast Asian platform Lazada
  • H&R Block sued Block (formerly Square) over its name change
  • Amazon partnered with Instalments to offer BNPL in Britain
  • Belk brought BNPL to brick-and-mortar stores via partnership with Afterpay
  • Business Insider leaked Meta’s plans to take on Shopify next year
  • TikTok produced its first live shopping event
  • Target Australia re-platformed to run on AWS
  • Amazon reportedly plans to launch Instacart-like service in USA and Europe next year
  • Shopify was sued by five textbook publishers for allowing the sale of pirated text books
  • #SpotifyWrapped incorporated artist merch into its campaign for the first time
  • Square renamed itself Block
  • Nestlé announced plans to double down on e-commerce
  • Hedge funds urged Kohl’s to sell their company or separate its e-commerce business
  • Tencent opened its WeChat groups to allow Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao shopping links
  • PayPal’s Buy Now Pay Later service became available to Wix sellers

November 2021

  • Twitter tested livestream shopping with Walmart and Jason Derulo
  • Jack Dorsey stepped down as CEO of Twitter
  • Spotify launched a Netflix Hub
  • AirAsia launched a last-mile parcel delivery service
  • Google Shopping and American Express created shoppable street murals
  • fabric introduced a B2B marketplace
  • Amazon informed customers that they will no longer accept Visa credit cards in Britain
  • Macy’s hired AlixPartners to explore an e-commerce spinoff
  • Payment apps will start reporting transactions larger than $600 to the IRS
  • Linktree added Shopify storefronts to its platform
  • Shopify and Ledger’s class action lawsuit was dismissed by California court
  • Google started showing a Deals tab in Shopping results
  • Shopify and MailChimp made amends after 2 1/2 years
  • Facebook became Meta and outlined their plans for a VR / AR powered future
  • Shopify doubled its GMV in 16 months from $200B to $400B

October 2021

September 2021

August 2021

  • Amazon partnered with Affirm to offer BNPL
  • Warby Parker had an IPO
  • Walmart launched a delivery-as-a-service program for 3rd party merchants
  • Amazon eclipsed Walmart as the world’s largest retailer outside of China
  • Shopify was sued in California for collecting and storing consumer info
  • Vista (formerly VistaPrint) and Wix partnered up
  • Jack Dorsey announced plans to develop a hardware Bitcoin wallet
  • Wix launched a no-code app builder
  • 50k Chinese merchants were banned from Amazon for fraudulent reviews
  • Amazon was accused of evading tax by shifting £8.2B to Luxembourg
  • Indian Supreme Court decided that Amazon and Flipkart should face investigations
  • Apple partnered with Affirm’s PayBright subsidiary to launch a new BNPL platform in Canada
  • Square bought Afterpay for $29B
  • BigCommerce partnered with Sezzle for BNPL
  • Shopify opened a creator space in NYC
  • Twitter started testing e-commerce on its platform
  • Shopify added support for non-fungible-tokens (NFTs)
  • BigCommerce acquired Feedonomics

July 2021

  • EcommerceBytes filed a lawsuit against Ebay for intimidation, threats, and harassment
  • XPO Logistics spunout of GXO Logistics
  • BigCommerce partnered with Mercado Libre
  • Amazon launched Kindle Vella
  • Stamps.com went private in a $6B cash deal
  • Etsy acquired Elo7 for $217M
  • PayPal launched a digital POS for US merchants

June 2021

  • India proposed tightening its e-commerce rules
  • Shopify started testing a platform-wide affiliate program
  • Five bills were introduced in Congress that are aimed at limiting Big Tech’s power and dominance in the market
  • Wix launched a food ordering app called Dine By Wix
  • Facebook debuted new commerce tools including Shops on WhatsApp
  • Shopify confirmed rumors that it purchased a $350M stake in payment processor Stripe
  • Wix acquired dropshipping provider Modalyst
  • Shop Pay rolled out on Google and Facebook
  • GoDaddy launched payment processing services
  • eBay sold their Korean marketplace for $3.6B
  • Wix launched its own POS
  • Lightspeed acquired Ecwid
  • Netflix began selling merch through its new online shop Netflix.shop
  • Shopify acquired the team from the augmented reality startup Primer
  • Shopify rolled out Affirm payment options to stores via Shop Pay
  • DHL ordered 2,000 new warehouse robots to keep up with e-commerce demand
  • Alibaba formed an R&D division to develop a driverless truck
  • Etsy acquired the fashion resale marketplace Depop
  • eBay cut ties with PayPal and started depositing funds direct to seller bank accounts
  • Shippo raised $50M and became a unicorn
  • BigCommerce launched their B2B Edition
  • BLS International signed an exclusive 3-year agreement with Amazon India for cash on pick-up
  • Wix removed a Hong Kong pro democracy website and then put it back and apologized
  • Microsoft launched Smart Shopping

May 2021

  • Twitter launched their Blue Subscription service
  • Amazon acquired MGM Studios for $8.45B
  • Shopify brought its POS and Payments systems to Australia
  • Google revealed their Shopping Graph and partnered with Shopify, Square, GoDaddy, and WooCommerce for direct integration
  • Shopify struck a deal with Google Cloud to better handle higher levels of traffic
  • Shopify integrated with Sweet so that merchants could sell NFTS
  • SquareSpace (SQSP) went public through a direct listing instead of an IPO
  • Global E-Online (GLBE) went public through an IPO after Shopify invested $193M pre-IPO
  • Shopifreaks coined the term Shopify Saints for former Shopify employees who have moved on to launch companies, but it didn’t stick. 
  • Shopify joined the Open Invention Network (OIN)
  • Commonwealth Bank and BigCommerce partnered to help clients set up their own digital storefronts
  • Shopify was named as one of the TIME100 Most Influential Companies of 2021
  • MailChimp launched its own e-commerce platform and appointment booking service for small businesses

April 2021

  • Amazon started testing a pilot program that allows merchants to market to customers via e-mail
  • Shopify added Amazon order tracking to its Shop App
  • Pinterest expanded its Shopify integration to 27 new countries 
  • Three of Shopify’s top execs left the company
  • Chick-fil-A and Shopify delivered spicy chicken sandwiches via robots in Santa Monica
  • TCC took over six floors of Shopify’s offices to rent as flex space after Shopify announced that its  7000+ employees would be permanently working remotely
  • Shopify removed 1.5% of apps from their marketplace for not meeting their standards of trust and integrity
  • A grand jury indicted Tassilo Heinrich for stealing Shopify customer data on over a hundred merchants
  • A class action lawsuit was filed against Shopify and Ledger over a 2020 customer data breach
  • Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke asked the DeFi community on Twitter what they were most excited about
  • Keith Rabois and Jack Abraham launched OpenStore

March 2021

  • Shopify added a directory of Asian owned businesses to its Shop App
  • Walmart opened its marketplace to non-US sellers
  • Amazon surpassed Walmart as the top apparel retailer in the US
  • Former Shopify employees launched Backbone Angels
  • TikTok’s integration with Shopify expanded to Canada and Europe
  • RageOn lost their case against Shopify
  • LockeBio launched their “Shopify for Pharma” e-commerce platform

February 2021

  • Shopify launched an e-sports organization called Rebellion
  • Amazon acquired the e-commerce platform Selz
  • Fabric raised $43M in their Series A

January 2021

I hope you had a great year in e-commerce!


My bull case and why I'm all in on Ether, tell me how I'm wrong!

TLDR; Vitalink says he doesn't care much about price but the current roadmap certainly seems designed to increase the value of ETH.

1) Eth price is driven by supply. At least for ETH/BTC, current supply/demand seems to be a very good predictor of price. This is seen very clearly on the halvings impact on bitcoin price. Predictable events drive up bitcoins price, simply because there is not enough coins to meet demand.

2) Mining adds a lot of ether to supply. POW mining is a commodity business. These industries tend to have very low margins(because competition is very fierce). This means most miners will have costs(hardware, operations and electricity) very close to the rewards they currently get. I believe most miners sell almost all of their mining rewards to cover these costs – adding supply. Currently adding ~4.6 million ether per year(ETH inflation is 4%).

3) The merge will stop this supply As the merge happens, mining will suddenly stop. Thus removing the biggest contributor to ether supply,

3.1) Another way to think of this is, Ether is currently paying for POW, once this is no longer needed, this value will instead contribute to ethers price.

4) Ether is going to become a better store of value. If ether goes deflationary due to high burn-rates, this will make ether a more interesting asset to hold. Further reducing supply in circulation.

5) A lot more ether will be taken out of supply as trust in staking increases. Since staking generates returns, I believe more ether will go in to staking over time. This may increase inflation of ether, but also removing ether from circulation. According to this article, 100 million ether staked would still generate 1.8% yearly returns to stakers. The central banks are starting to warm up to higher interest rates, but right now, this kind of ROI is not that easy to come by for liquid assets. If 100 million ether are staked, that would be 85% of all ether in existence.

7) Increased costs of transactions will reduce supply. I haven't been able to figure out how this works exactly, but my understanding is, increased transaction costs on the base layer will either be burned – decreasing supply or awarded to stakers –Increasing ROI on staking. This in turn will increase the number of staked coins, and that will also decrease supply.

8) Scaling ether will increase transaction-costs(on the base-layer). Contrary to popular belief, sharding and other scaling solutions will first alleviate congestion on the base-layer. But as transactions get cheaper, more transactions will happen. Currently, we see people are willing to pay 20-60 USD for transactions. Over time, we will see the same thing on layer 2(though possibly a bit lower fees due to price elasticity). 100s of layer 2 transactions can then be bundled and all their fees will be used to create a single transaction on the base-layer.

I've been struggling find good data on amongst others, daily burn rate, staking rewards and mining rewards. If someone can share that with me, I could quantify some of these statements better. I'd also love to know what i've gotten wrong here.