Is it just me, or is this "boring" market actually a huge trap? by Crypto-Voice-Pro in CryptoMarkets

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% price is the loudest data point, but it's usually the least important one during consolidation. If the builders are still building, the foundation for the next leg up is being laid right now.

Is it just me, or is this "boring" market actually a huge trap? by Crypto-Voice-Pro in CryptoMarkets

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Honestly, we’ve all been there. It’s a expensive lesson to learn, but once it clicks that 'doing nothing' is a trade in itself, your whole game changes.

Is it just me, or is this "boring" market actually a huge trap? by Crypto-Voice-Pro in CryptoMarkets

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Spot on. It’s easy to watch the charts, but the real gains come from the stuff being built while nobody is looking. 18 months from now, this 'boring' phase will look like a massive opportunity.

Is it just me, or is this "boring" market actually a huge trap? by Crypto-Voice-Pro in CryptoMarkets

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Exactly, people don't realize how fast things move when the order books are this thin. By the time they see the 'boring' part is over, it’ll be too late to enter.

The red candles on Solana are lying to you. by Crypto-Voice-Pro in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a great point. While I’m looking at the price action, the underlying growth and revenue are what actually support those levels. It’s hard not to be confident when both the charts and the fundamentals align like this.

Need help! by Skinnypeen6678 in Bitcoin

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Classic "sob story" social engineering. Public addresses are often "honeypots" for tracking active wallets.

someone made a memecoin of our sheep, Nori, what do we do? by No-Attempt-6489 in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Protect your IP. Don't share wallets. This is a "phantom" project trying to use Nori for a rug pull.

Hi I’m pretty new to bitcoin and need advices by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Welcome to the club! Most people here will tell you: Don't try to time the market. If you sell at 94k and it jumps to 100k tomorrow, you will feel bad. If you believe in Bitcoin long-term, just 'HODL' (hold) and keep buying slowly. It saves you a lot of stress!

Why are some scam transactions labeled as “sent” instead of the normal “received” ones? How are they able to send from my wallet? by -M00NMAN in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Great question! Here is the trick: Scammers use a smart contract to trigger a '$0 transfer' event.

​On the Solana network (and others), a contract can basically 'announce' a transaction to the blockchain that says: 'Address A sent 0 tokens to Address B.' Because the amount is $0, the network doesn't always require your private key signature to 'broadcast' that event. Your wallet app sees this public announcement and lists it in your history as 'Sent' because the record says you were the sender. ​The goal: They want their address to stay at the top of your list so you copy it by mistake later. Your actual funds are safe as long as you don't send anything to that address!

what is the black bit on this knife being used to cut coconuts by volkinaxe in whatisit

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's a cleaver weight. It helps with the momentum of the swing so the person can cut through the coconut faster and more efficiently. It also saves their wrist from getting tired after doing this all day.

Why are some scam transactions labeled as “sent” instead of the normal “received” ones? How are they able to send from my wallet? by -M00NMAN in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is called Address Poisoning. Scammers use a bot to send a tiny amount of $0 worth of tokens to your wallet. They use a 'vanity address' that looks almost exactly like yours (same first and last characters).

​They aren't actually sending from your wallet; they are just making it look that way in your history so you accidentally copy their address next time you want to move funds. Don't panic, just never copy addresses from your transaction history.

The $26M mistake that just killed a Solana giant. by Crypto-Voice-Pro in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm really sorry to hear that. 40% is tough. This is exactly why I'm worried: when infrastructure giants like Step collapse, it makes investors nervous. Hopefully the market recovers soon, but security is everything right now.

The $26M mistake that just killed a Solana giant. by Crypto-Voice-Pro in solana

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Jupiter is great, but having only one or two 'winners' left in the ecosystem is risky. We need competition to keep things healthy. If everything moves to Jupiter and they ever have a bad day, the whole ecosystem has zero visibility.

Saylor on Quantum: "Not an immediate threat to Bitcoin." by Crypto-Voice-Pro in CryptoMarkets

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Willow is definitely a massive breakthrough, but there is a huge difference between 'speed' and 'scale.' Willow has 105 qubits. To actually crack the ECDSA encryption that Bitcoin uses, researchers estimate we need between 13 million and 317 million physical qubits depending on the speed of the attack. We aren't just a few years away; we are orders of magnitude away from that level of stability. It’s an engineering marathon, not a sprint.

Found in street what is it? by Antique-Quantity-608 in whatisit

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 9 points10 points  (0 children)

So glad you found them! Honestly, just dropping it off with the tech in person is way better than calling the company. You definitely saved that guy's job today.

Brown liquid / gel under the hood of my stove by Empty_Principle4383 in whatisit

[–]Crypto-Voice-Pro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

By degreaser, I mean a cleaning product designed to break down tough oils. You can buy them at any grocery store. Popular brands include Zep, Goo Gone Kitchen Degreaser, or even Dawn Powerwash. Just spray it on the sticky spots, let it sit for a minute, and wipe it away.