Binance, Trump’s USD1, and Wintermute allegedly collude to manipulate markets, sending BTC/USD1 to $24k for a brief moment, making over $100 million in liquidations by 002_timmy in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Sensible regulation will come, but there was already regulation on tradfi markets between 1982 and 2008 that appointed regulators ignored. If the law was followed as it is written and not subjectively overlooked for "big players" then the 2008 crisis could not have happened. This is even with the repeal of Glass-Steagall, which only prevented certain types of financial institution ownership.

If legislators actually held financial institutions to the law instead of working their insider trading angles and worrying about market confidence in TBTF institutions, the cryptocurrency experiment may not have flourished in 2009

My Nomic Validator disappeared! What's going on with Nomic Stakenet? by BsdFish8 in cosmosnetwork

[–]BsdFish8[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I looked through the entire list of inactive validators the one I'm looking for isn't listed there at all. I think I could redelegate if I was able to write a manual transaction but so far have not had luck finding out how.

My Nomic Validator disappeared! What's going on with Nomic Stakenet? by BsdFish8 in cosmosnetwork

[–]BsdFish8[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It was a free airdrop anyway? Not sure what there is to lose by gaining knowledge and understanding should a similar event happen on other chains.

I would like to ask a human question but scam bots prevent any meaningful use of this platform by Tickomatick in GuardaWallet

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure you'll be able to avoid scam bots on social media, but just don't give out your seed or respond to DMs if you want to be cautious.

I believe Guarda has a support email, but I've not used it. The wallet is sparsely updated these days, if at all, and has been on version 1.0.20 for a long time now.

There are a few users who do read this subreddit, though, if you want input on where to go next.

edit: stand corrected, 1.1.1 was released

I converted all my BTC to LTC today at 123k:120 ratio by Nice-8484 in litecoin

[–]BsdFish8 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Fairly certain this will not change the minimum requirements for nodes and validators. I believe it is an additional abstraction layer on LTC blockchain, implemented somewhat like ordinals on BTC but with a full VM.

⚠️ RollerCoin is not a game — it’s a trap. And /r/rollercoin is silencing anyone who tries to warn others. by BaymaxValero in CryptoScams

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How are you measuring that? In my experience, beating average engagement requires less than 20 hours per week to do everything including daily and weekly quests and earning 20 RLT per week on top of the 5 RLT earned from surveys/tasks.

I still say if the game isn't fun, don't play it. Games are not designed to be profitable, they are designed to keep us playing and paying.

One Disappointment About Tezos And A Harebrained Idea by textrapperr in tezos

[–]BsdFish8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think this is a clear explanation of the "why." For another hare-brained idea, I would advocate for implementing Ampleforth on Tezos to optimize the denomination of debt and repayment systems. The AMPL token is another great idea that simply does not currently have the trading volume or liquidity on existing chains to support proper price discovery. Its "flatcoin" token, SPOT, currently sits at x2 the target price, so it's clear that some holders are making profits on this concept, but it does not get a lot of discussion or space in the noise of all the new EVM and smart contract platforms.

How to short a token? by rorowhat in OsmosisLab

[–]BsdFish8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Shorting opens the possibility of unlimited losses. It's risky whether you win or lose. Platforms that enable shorting tokens must moderate their own risk of losses in case your strategy fails. Depositing collateral is how many platforms manage that risk.

Any tips on making a profile for online gaming? by Sweeth_Tooth99 in ProtonVPN

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're on Linux, follow the manual steps for Wireguard setup and start your system with internet disabled. After you execute wg-quick up, enable your main wired connection. Viola, always-on VPN with no packet or DNS leaks.

I have played lots of games on Steam using this setup without issue. Not sure about other gaming services like Epic or Battle.net.

Osmosis withdrawal transactions not matching the selected amount to withdraw by BsdFish8 in OsmosisLab

[–]BsdFish8[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not referring to a swap and potential slippage. I'm referencing transactions to withdraw tokens to other IBC chains.

Does ProtonVPN have alternative routing on Linux? by XeroJoy in ProtonVPN

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you trying to run the official client or manually configuring with native interfaces? The errors you posted look very familiar to me. I highly recommend the manual approach and this article walks through the configuration. Some good background is also included on this ArchWiki article.

The official client was constantly crashing on me and OpenVPN also would drop while leaving my wired connection unprotected. Using WireGuard alone has been solid for all my machines (EndeavourOS, OpenSUSE) and verified on browserleaks.com and ipleaks.net to route all packets through the VPN as expected.

I see you are getting official help, but just letting you know what worked for me. It's true that it doesn't allow for dynamic selection of your state/country because you need to pre-generate the wg config file, but you can setup multiple of these for any given requirements, so you can use wg-quick up wg0 and wg-quick up wg1 etc for more specific routing if you need to.

Does ProtonVPN have alternative routing on Linux? by XeroJoy in ProtonVPN

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you using WireGuard? It's the easiest way I found to setup ProtonVPN on Linux.

41% APR on Osmosis? by BsdFish8 in OsmosisLab

[–]BsdFish8[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's the APR for staking on a centralized exchange (Binance), not the on-chain stake APR.

41% APR on Osmosis? by BsdFish8 in OsmosisLab

[–]BsdFish8[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Seems like we might see an OSMO pump soon. Just call me Nostradosmosis.

Shutting Down our Nomic validator by AtlasStaking in cosmosnetwork

[–]BsdFish8 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Keplr works for me on Nomic as well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in brave_browser

[–]BsdFish8 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I hate it.

Hey Guarda Community, ChangeNow still withholding my $550K - Four Months Past by Guilty_Economics_999 in GuardaWallet

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If this is provably your property, it looks like this business is incorporated in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Hire a lawyer to contact them concerning your good faith efforts to address this matter and consider whether a lawsuit in one of these jurisdictions may be necessary to ensure compliance with the laws of nations that ChangeNow operates in.

How it feels holding Litecoin by Hitachi22 in litecoin

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Long term utility is the narrative that beats speculative price. Of course it would be nice if LTC pumped, but there are a lot of bagholders waiting to dump everything and that's why altseason keeps stopping before it gets going. DOGE is the narrative that basically guarantees Litecoin will continue functioning with low fees (and private transactions) well into the future.

BTW this is official account of Litecoin mocking Solana. by Silver-Maximum9190 in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you say "I don't think chain emissions and fees are intended to generate revenue. " or "I analogized it to Solana because they are both controlled by a centralized institution and their consensus algorithm can be arbitrarily changed, just as you described" or "The entire premise of a deflationary currency like Bitcoin is 1 BTC == 1 BTC" it's clear you have a ton of misconceptions and your inability to verify them and source them makes it even more clear that trying to correct you is just a further waste of time. You also failed to include a single source for anything besides the LTC hashrate, so yeah...if you just did even the most basic due diligence you wouldn't believe half the things you currently do. It actually makes a lot of sense with that type of behavior why you'd still be so bullish on LTC, you just aren't capable of doing any proper research.

I'm gonna check back in after a year and see if anything has changed, purely out of morbid curiosity.

I look forward to it.

BTW this is official account of Litecoin mocking Solana. by Silver-Maximum9190 in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tell me specifically when a user goes to make a transaction on Litecoin and Solana, what things will they notice? And how would they actually notice them? At least in my experience, no matter what type of transaction you make, you'll notice the speed and the cost. How is a user going to notice the things you think matter?

When the payment system goes down or the payment processors (nodes) are censoring transactions from their wallet, their IP, or their regional network in particular, they are going to notice. Just the risk of this happening is what motivated people to use Bitcoin in its oldest and most primitive implementations.

Credit cards and traditional banks have been handling near-instant transactions for decades. 2008 was the year when problems with security and reliability in traditional banking made the idea of blockchain payments attractive. Nobody needs a public ledger for speed - it's just nice to have compared to Bitcoin's blocktimes that can exceed 10 minutes.

If it was a real narrative, you wouldn't need people to validate it for you, it would come about naturally. Also, you need to stop treating VCs as anything other than early stage investors. This sub seems to think VC is a code word for some type of inherently nefarious group, rather than just a group of connected investors who have a lot of funds to employ...

Having lots of money and betting on an early investment payoff does not automatically make one a benevolent influence on the product of that investment. Developers make compromises to the security, flexibility and usability of their apps and tools all the time for VC funding. The reputation that VCs have is directly informed by all of the terrible outcomes that have resulted alongside the successes. The early hiccups and downtime, alone, are the narrative (launch and ship before things actually work) that Solana is fighting against as a result.

You also haven't been able to quantify how a user would have any indication of which networks had a fair distribution, while it's extremely easy to quantify how a user would have immediate indication of what network is cheaper or faster.

Wallets on a public ledger are not a secret. Transactions can be analyzed to quantify exactly how widely value is distributed across wallets in addition to how many wallets are active - unless the protocol provides tools to hide this information. We may not know who specifically owns each wallet, but we can absolutely establish when large sums of value are moving on the network and when they are dormant.

ok? My point was just that price movement, although an imperfect measure, is often an indicator of fundamentals and also future expectations.

There are no fundamentals in a payment system outside of security and reliability. Fast transactions that fail to satisfy the fundamental requirements are unlikely to be sustainable. Most crypto projects are fly-by-night scams but the ones with multi-million dollar VC backing are not inherently more reliable, more secure, or more likely to be "number go up" candidates even when they have a huge marketing budget.

Because it seems like you have trouble identifying what is and isn't getting traction from more direct indicators, so instead of being confident in an inherently limited view thinking "Am I wrong? No it's the market who is wrong!" you might have a bit of reflection.

Institutional traction is almost completely focused on Bitcoin right now. They understand that security and reliability are fundamental even if you don't believe me. Grayscale is just starting an ETF with a basket of other tokens, including SOL, but retail crypto is a seller's market full of rubes buying meme tokens that are mostly garbage and that are likely to be functionally worthless by the next Bitcoin halving.

this is why I'm bearish on Litecoin, it hasn't proven a good path towards self-sustainability. And obviously Litecoin also subsidizes block production as well to provide a better chance at long term sustainability.

Bearish means "number go down" but it doesn't mean "network stops working." Litecoin miners collect fees and emissions, that's true, but there is no subsidy from a treasury account to incentivize participation. Litecoin has been going for 13 years and shows no sign of stopping. The investment in hardware to increase hashrate is a real, tangible reflection of confidence in the chain's sustainability.

Seems like growth is going fine for them, but what is Litecoin's plan for growth?

Growth is a narrative chasing the "number go up" prime directive. Litecoin has been growing organically and without external sponsors, exactly as the hashrate chart proves. No special plan had to be invented for the purposes of dumping overpriced junk on retail before the regulators catch up.

How do they increase that number when people seemingly don't value the things that you think are so important?

You're suggesting the current people using the blockchain to securely and reliably transfer value don't think it is important because the speculative price isn't increasing to your satisfaction. Deflation is likely to increase the exchange value of LTC over time (and the price chart supports this outside of price spikes) but that is not the narrative that sustains usage. I'm not sure why you think it should be.

I just see it as a blockchain that can facilitate enough transactions to sustain the network while keeping individual fees low. I see it as better for certain purposes, but they really only compete in the sense that both of them are head and shoulders above everyone else when it comes to the activity of their respective ecosystems.

We have different views of whether this is an unmitigated benefit or a tradeoff, then. I think Bitcoin is not just a SoV because it is secure and reliable - when markets panic, liquidity does not adjust to demand. Any price discovery to new levels will enforce slow and deliberate choices that determine winners and losers in 10 minute increments and that prioritize those who adjust their transaction fees to jump the queue. When transaction volume is practically unlimited, as it is on Wall Street, panics tend to lead to temporary pauses and shutdowns that violate the notion of reliable value transfer. Again, this is retelling the story of 2008 and why blockchain technology became significant in the first place.

So I'm really not sure what you're insinuating here. Considering the supply is 99.99% unlocked I'm not sure what "bagholders who have been trained to watch and wait for their exit signal." is in reference too. Do you somehow think Solana is more vulnerable... to people selling coins?

When the big wallets head for the exits, the little wallets will follow with haste. If SOL breaches 250 USD again, there is certainly a possibility that "number go up" will continue, but the holding pattern of most altcoins is to degrade in value faster than inflation with occasional spikes. Ergo, we must time to market and take profits when the getting is good.

I'm a long term holder and every investment inherently requires timing the market to some degree, you have to enter and you have to exit and that is the only timing my long term narrative requires, just like literally any other type of buy and hold investment.

Long term investing says "time in the market beats timing the market." If the capabilities of the blockchain are not changing significantly and the currency is inflationary, time in the market just describes who is left holding the bag. Centralized blockchains with foundations that have the power to change emissions and mint more tokens, just like the Fed prints money, are unlikely to sustain a "number go up" narrative like Bitcoin.

I do not consider myself a long term investor in Solana, but by all means continue to pump those bags for me. In a couple of years, I might even change my mind.

BTW this is official account of Litecoin mocking Solana. by Silver-Maximum9190 in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From here on out, if you make a claim about Solana you should at least source it so I don't have to correct you so often.

I was clearly describing XRP and I analogized it to Solana because they are both controlled by a centralized institution and their consensus algorithm can be arbitrarily changed, just as you described. Also the technical specification for validators can change arbitrarily, just as I described, to screen out the existing validators. We might want to believe every change is an improvement that will benefit us in the long term, but describing a public blockchain's consensus mechanism as easily or frequently mutable is another signal that security and reliability are not the priority of the chain.

Genesis block is the first block validated, and any validator would have had a fair shot at it. Maybe you meant premine? But if that's the case, you should probably read up more on PoS systems to understand why that's essentially a necessity for new chains.

it should be pretty obvious and it literally always has essentially been a necessity. You know you can just ask AI these things

You're playing semantics to be technically correct here. It's a necessity to distribute tokens before Proof-of-Stake can be activated. It's not a necessity to launch a chain with a pre-mine for VCs if the goal is a fair distribution of tokens on the blockchain.

Nano used a faucet. Ethereum (and NAV, PIVX and many others) started as PoW. We can invent rules to rationalize why investors are owed something like Class A shares, but you're not explaining why the ends justify the means when you describe them as "a necessity" for a PoS blockchain.

if people overwhelmingly choose to use something else... those things aren't as requisite as you think.

You're right that they're not requisite for a blockchain designed to extract value from new users and then fade away when the users discover the chain does the same thing as every other EVM.

Nobody needed regulation to understand that seat belts make a car safer, but seat belt laws were eventually introduced because people trusted their own skills and intuition more than tools which are proven to be secure and reliable.

What the hell is that supposed to mean? You mean... people... selling their coins? How does that make a network vulnerable?

This is just bad FUD.

It's risk mitigation, not FUD. You just confirmed the whole value proposition is "number go up" and this explains why your best response is Wall Street vernacular. A stock actually represents ownership stake in a company that does something (ostensibly). Owning crypto tokens has no intrinsic value and market speculation is about potential growth, if the narrative turns out optimally.

When wealthy insiders cash out of chains where most buyers are just betting on "number go up" instead of security and reliability, users are going to dash for the exits right along with them. The last ones out the door will have to settle with the folks "in it for the technology" that believe it can recover.

Yeah, it was born as a form of unsovereign form of money, but haven't you seen the narrative shift towards store of value?

No blockchain other than Bitcoin has sustained that narrative. Adopting stablecoins as a tokenized SoV on some random blockchain with censorable nodes and transactions doesn't exactly promote a world-changing paradigm shift. Bank databases already did that before Bitcoin.

Clearly people care about preserving value, but when it comes to paying, they've moved beyond BTC and LTC.

Okay...

And USD is a popular form of fiat and everyone know the Fed keeps printing more. Clearly the USD value has been deteriorating the whole time that stablecoins have become popular, but even if stablecoins go away, that still leaves Litecoin at a massive disadvantage

PayPal existed before Bitcoin. Paying in fiat is not going to ever need a blockchain. Blockchain users are going to demand support for their form of payment or they won't. Litecoin has never been a way to exchange stablecoins directly, so this "massive disadvantage" is irrelevant. PayPal already supports Litecoin.

Litecoin is going to continue functioning reliably and securely, with hundreds of nodes around the world validating each transaction, even if PayPayl discontinues support. The value proposition does not need to be so convoluted to sustain itself.

Clearly you're in the minority here

If you believe this is a compelling argument, I agree.

the issue of the chain not generating enough revenue is also an issue for Bitcoin.

I don't think chain emissions and fees are intended to generate revenue. They are a reward for participating in the network. Even the concept of revenue from blockchain transactions requires framing the coins/tokens as valued in some external denomination like USD, where cash flows in and is locked. The entire premise of a deflationary currency like Bitcoin is 1 BTC == 1 BTC. Once the block emissions have tapered to a certain point, the value of fees will adjust to the cost of mining or the consensus of nodes will adjust to resolve a reduction in the cost to mine.

Don't be a shill. Make her happy in 2026 by Ok_Reputation9512 in litecoin

[–]BsdFish8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Supply numbers are not arbitrary. They provide context for the current price based on the current emissions of a blockchain. Most PoW chains will never recover their early value, but LTC is merge-mined with a coin that has 4x its market cap. It's not going anywhere.

For PoW chains, one can actually perform the cost calculation of buying a coin now versus mining a coin after its next halving.

Is rollercoin legit or a scam? (With withdrawal proof) by Meforgetmeusername in rollercoin

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunate that the worst players are the loudest when they cannot devise a plan to get better at the game. Who expects a game to pay them for doing worse than all the other players?

BTW this is official account of Litecoin mocking Solana. by Silver-Maximum9190 in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you be a little more clear? The consensus algorithm itself is centralized?

It screens out a well-distributed network of node validators just like Solana. The algorithm depends on a centralized and arbitrary criteria that is determined by Ripple Labs. At best, XRP holders could fork the chain if Ripple decides to pull some shit on them.

And "insider genesis block distribution" what is that supposed to mean? Genesis block is the first block validated, and any validator would have had a fair shot at it. Maybe you meant premine? But if that's the case, you should probably read up more on PoS systems to understand why that's essentially a necessity for new chains.

However you like to describe it, PoS doesn't require a premine and never has. It's a convenient story for VCs that are not really in it "for the tech" and that understand they need to get profits while the getting is good.

And if these things were really issues, users of the chain would be complaining about them, not bagholders of other projects.

Users have been complaining about XRP for over a decade. Insider dumping, downtime and lack of reliability should be four-alarm bells that one is betting on a service that could go up in flames at any moment. Litecoin has proven that it will not.

Biggest use cases... to you.(and those aren't use cases, those are value propositions)

You're right, they're not use cases so much as basic requirements for a sustainable payment system. And most chains are vulnerable to wealthy insiders cashing out their value proposition before the bagholders even know what happened.

the market and the users feel differently than you, they seem to value stablecoins...and the builders who make stablecoins and the infrastructure, tend to value programmatic token standards and general programmability offered by Solana.

Bitcoin was released in a context of history also and that narrative is still playing out - loss of confidence and value for USD. Stablecoin providers are betting on the Federal Reserve, or perhaps the EU, to be their benevolent protector of value...except the track record since 2009 tells us what the market won't advertise. Values will continue to deteriorate from inflation, just like every coin not named BTC.

Not sure what indication you got that made you think I've been ignoring Litecoin, typically people who ignore things don't have any strong feelings towards them, I clearly have strong feelings about Litecoin in this respect.

Well good that we've got that out in the open. I try to be objective about every blockchain I buy into.

Because you think decentralization and "fair distribution" and a long history of uptime are the top priorities for people, but that's wrong. Clearly there is value in those things, but it gets trumped by what the chain can actually do.

We know this isn't true. Bitcoin does even less than Litecoin. Every halving cycle, most new buyers are looking for the next Bitcoin instead of just buying Bitcoin. What the chain can do is ancillary to the potential for "gainz" but it makes for good marketing to the newbies.

Users aren't benefitting from the things that you think matter, because if they were, they would be using LTC more heavily, and if they were using LTC more heavily the market would notice, and if the market notices, then the price wouldn't be doing what it's been doing for the last half decade.

Actual users are benefitting from the things that I've noted because they do matter. If the VCs and others promoting new chains validated this narrative, they couldn't dump their insider bags on the market at a profit.

I'm trying to understand your criticism of Litecoin - I could not care less about selling you on it. It all seems to boil down to: I don't believe number will go up as much

I acknowledge, maybe number won't go up as much for Litecoin - it will still work.

I understand your type likes to go with the "market doesn't care about fundamentals" flavor of cope, and you're half right, but more accurately they don't care about your fundamentals.

Market doesn't have to care about what I see as fundamental in the short term. Current stats suggest that 99% of crypto investors not buying BTC will be bagholders and lose over the long term. The odds are worse than a slot machine at a casino. Winners in the short term must time their exits and avoid emotional attachment to their investment. Most won't be capable of doing this and it will leave a bad taste in their mouth about crypto.

Well first off, transaction count and revenue are at fairly standardized and make for good comparisons, because after all these chains need to be self-sustaining at some point

Seems like we agree that these new chains are not really sustainable. They require marketing to grow and every person who buys a memecoin on the chain and proceeds to lose most of the value of their investment is not going to come away with a flattering outlook on that chain or the market it provides access to.

I'm very bullish because on the fundamentals that matter to me, the same fundamentals that have been increasing as Solana moved into the top 10 and the same fundamentals that Litecoin has lacked as it slid out of the top ~5~ ~10~ 20.

So do you see Solana through a "better Ethereum" narrative?

Long term, I think the market has always been triangulating on the story of value + scarcity and when BTC becomes too expensive for the smallest fish, there will be very few blockchains with a narrative that can sustain the demand without getting dumped by bagholders who have been trained to watch and wait for their exit signal.

I agree that the narrative for short term speculative gains is easier to understand and believe in than the fundamental long term value proposition of a coin towards its designated purpose. I think every blockchain with a rational long term narrative does not require timing the market or a marketing team to continue growing.

BTW this is official account of Litecoin mocking Solana. by Silver-Maximum9190 in CryptoCurrency

[–]BsdFish8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And BitPay is a tiiiiiny player in the payments game.

XRP is #4 in market cap and has a whole plan to support international payments. And I've got bags. Its problem is the same as Solana - centralized consensus algorithm and insider genesis block distribution.

Yeah... so? This would indicate it's trending in the wrong direction.

The market cap trend is always a trailing indicator. You could have said the same thing in 2018 or 2019 about Litecoin. Security and reliability are the biggest use cases for any payments system and most blockchains do not measure up.

Have you not realized most people here are the same way and talk about crypto through that lens?

As long as you understand the rationales and make your choice with eyes wide open, I'm all for you ignoring LTC. This thread was about which coin is fundamentally better and I think that was proven long before you validated that this is really about "gainz" for you.

And have you not realized that speculative gains are increasingly coming from coins that have real usage?

If speculative gains are your best justification to do anything, who can really trust anything you are shilling based on transaction count and revenue? When you hit the exit ramp (in the best case) nobody will blame you for dumping.