IBM and Oracle Set to Host Exclusive RoundTables at Virtual Conference – Cryptonews

Disclaimer: The text below is a press release that was not written by Cryptonews.com.

The return of leading virtual conference BlockDown this June 18-19, brings with it exciting new guests, speakers and a new roundtable format where blockchain leaders chat about issues of the day, and you can take part too.

Available to business and VIP ticket holders, the roundtables give guests the chance to join some of the blockchain industrys leading visionaries to talk about issues of the day.

Between six and eight roundtables are planned, covering topics as diverse as decentralized finance (defi), enterprise blockchain and custody.

Mark Rakhmilevich, senior director of blockchain product management at Oracle, will host a roundtable Lessons from Blockchain Cloud PaaS implementations in Financial Services and Supply Chain projects: Progress and Challenges, while Julian Sevillano, senior advisor at IBMs Promontory Financial Group will host a roundtable discussion on regulation and compliance in the blockchain space.

There will be other roundtables featuring representatives from blockchains Neo and Tomochain, plus leading influencers including Nicholas Merten AKA Datadash.

There are a limited number of slots available for roundtable spaces, with Business Class ticket holders being able to sign up to one roundtable, while VIP ticket holders can sign up to three.

Other VIP benefits include access to exclusive Mastermind sessions that will feature live problem solving from some of the best minds in the business, access to the Sunset Boat Party in the BlockDown 3D virtual space, as well as access to the VIP lounge plus a host of other benefits, while business tickets gives the holder priority to ask questions of speakers, plus provides to previous talks.

Erhan Korhaliller, CEO and founder of blockchain PR agency EAK Digital, and organizer of BlockDown, said the roundtables were a way for business and VIP ticket holders to get the ultimate BlockDown experience.

BlockDown roundtables give business and VIP ticket holders the chance to have their say in the most important discussions surrounding blockchain and cryptocurrency at the moment, including defi and custody, he said.

We like to innovate, and BlockDown has allowed us to develop these unique roundtable events. They are going to be unmissable and offer you the chance to quiz industry leaders directly. Roundtable spaces are strictly limited so remember to book early to avoid disappointment.

BlockDown 2020 will feature a host of top talent including David Schwartz, CTO of Ripple, Roger Ver, Executive Chairman of Bitcoin.com, Jed McCaleb founder of Stellar, as well as Grammy-nominated artist and crypto visionary Akon, and many more.

The June event will be the second edition of BlockDown, after the successful debut of the format in April. The conference is free to attend, but also features two levels of tickets: for businesses and VIPs.

The virtual world is very similar to The Sims computer game, which lets each person create an avatar and use it to interact in the 3D virtual world.

This edition of BlockDown will be live streamed across leading crypto news sites, including Bitcoinist, NewsBTC, Cryptoslate, and CriptoNoticias, making it the world's most watched virtual blockchain conference with the sites jointly boasting millions of monthly views.

To find out more, head to http://www.blockdownconf.com to sign up and register, join the BlockDown telegram or email [emailprotected].

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IBM and Oracle Set to Host Exclusive RoundTables at Virtual Conference - Cryptonews

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Down $0.88 On 4 Hour Chart, Started Today Down 0.14%; in an Uptrend Over Past 14 Days – CFDTrading

Bitcoin Cash 4 Hour Price Update

Updated June 06, 2020 03:19 AM GMT (11:19 PM EST)

Bitcoin Cash came into the current 4 hour candle down 0.34% ($0.88) from the open of the previous 4 hours, marking the 2nd candle in a row it has gone down. Relative to other instruments in the Top Cryptos asset class, Bitcoin Cash ranked 4th since the previous 4 hours in terms of percentage price change.

The back and forth price flow continues for Bitcoin Cash, which started today off at 256.07 US dollars, down 0.14% ($0.37) from the previous day. The price move occurred on volume that was down 7.6% from the day prior, but up 33.96% from the same day the week before. On a relative basis, the previous day was pretty good: Bitcoin Cash bested all 5 of the assets in the Top Cryptos class The daily price chart of Bitcoin Cash below illustrates.

The first thing we should note is that the current price of Bitcoin Cash is sitting close to its 200 day moving averages; moving average crosses often indicate a change in momentum, so this may be worth keeping an eye on. Trend traders will want to observe that the strongest trend appears on the 14 day horizon; over that time period, price has been moving up. Also of note is that on a 30 day basis price appears to be forming a base which could the stage for it being a support/resistance level going forward. Or to view things another way, note that out of the past 30 days Bitcoin Cashs price has gone up 17 them. As for those who trade off of candlesticks, we should note that were seeing pin bar pattern appearing here.

Over on Twitter, here were the top tweets about Bitcoin Cash:

Suggestion for honest names:Department of Justice -> Department of PunishmentDepartment of Defense -> Department of WarBitcoin Cash SV -> Poopity Scoop

Ive given some bitcoin cash to basically everyone Ive ever met.Its fun.

@rogerkver @CNBCFastMoney @_BitcoinSV @BCHmeetups @CalvinAyre @Investingcom @MONEY @planetmoney @BitcoinCashFans To join your point of view, you should definitively take a look at @tixlcurrency, all your points on Bitcoin Cash are applicable to their #SecondLayerSolution : Fast, low Fee + Privacy ! $MTXLT and the #AutobahnNetwork will bring adoption by transforming BTC and BTCC into cash

As for a news story related to Bitcoin Cash getting some buzz:

Roger Ver Donates $10K in Bitcoin Cash to Casa de Amparo Childrens Shelter | Featured Bitcoin News

Your ad here by Jamie Redman Just recently Bitcoin.coms Roger Ver donated $10,000 worth of bitcoin cash to the charitable organization Casa de Amparo, a 501(c)(3) charity that helps children escape child abuse and neglect.On June 1, 2020, Bitcoin.coms Roger Ver donated $10,000 in bitcoin cash to Casa de Amparo.Vers gift of $10K worth of bitcoin cash to Casa de Amparo will go to children in need and kids who deserve shelter.A Number of Hong Kong Vending Machines Support Bitcoin Cash Payments Over BTC Just recently, cryptocurrency evangelist Roger Ver shared a video on Twitter that shows a number of vending machines in Hong Kong that accept bitcoin cash and ethereum, but not bitcoin.Crypto Firm Uquid Launches Marketplace- 30,000 Digital Products, Bitcoin Cash Support On May 28, 2020, the digital currency and blockchain company Uquid has announced that the Uquid Shop is now live and accepting cryptocurrencies like bitcoin cash for payments.

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Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Down $0.88 On 4 Hour Chart, Started Today Down 0.14%; in an Uptrend Over Past 14 Days - CFDTrading

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Always Triumphs in the Value Factor Argument with Roger Ver Theory – The Cryptocurrency Analytics

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) continues to reinstate that there is only one Bitcoin and that it is they. While many things have changed over years, their theory concerning their superiority prophecy in the Bitcoin space has not changed. And, big things are indeed happening in their space. They seem to be living their theory and hard-selling, and they are doing a lot to market the idea of Bitcoin Cash as being real and the best money in the world.

Roger Ver recently tweeted: Savings is the primary function of money, but if you cant spend it, there is no reason to save it.

There were a lot of confused investors who were confused about the statement wondering if they are discussing divesting, negative interest rates, cashing out, burning cash, losing, bankruptcy, and a range of other stuff.

Several investors were perplexed and were wondering about what might be the term that can be used for the process of saving lots of Bitcoin Cash. Many of them told that they sold it during the first split.

A candid criticism read like: Roger Ver has saved a bunch of Bcash, if you see that Bcash is still at the top of coinmarketcap is because they dont have many people to sell that crap.

Sydney Ifergan, the crypto expert, tweeted: Opinions Differ. However, Bitcoin Cash (BCH) facilitates the idea of sending money globally for pennies. Any service that is available for pennies is indeed interesting.

Somebody else were trying to get back to the basics stating that the primary functions of money are to serve as a medium of exchange, store of value, and unit of account. Further, it is a medium of exchange, but to be a medium of exchange, it must hold value over time. Money must be predictably usable as a medium of exchange when savings are spent.

Many did not understand what the statement had to do with crypto derivatives vis-a-vis fiat currency.

Someone translated the concept of value in simple terms by stating that if there is a lot of demand and if it is accepted in the market, it adds to the value. It was further clarified that if there is no demand, and no one is accepting it in the market, there is no value for it.

Yet other clarifications read like if someone had money, they need to invest it rather than putting their savings in money. While reinstating that money is only a means of exchange for everyday life.

While the community were hard trying to decipher the Roger Ver Theory, someone reinvented the wheel by stating that it is easier and quicker to transact using BCH than with BTC.

See the article here:

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Always Triumphs in the Value Factor Argument with Roger Ver Theory - The Cryptocurrency Analytics

The Lizard People Invented Bitcoin: Crypto is a Hotbed for Conspiracy Theories – Cointelegraph

In April 2020 Vin Armani packed up his family and got on the last flight to an obscure island in the middle of the Pacific.

The cryptocurrency influencer suggested to his 14,000 Twitter followers, many times, that the pandemic is being used to impose totalitarian tyranny on America. As the CTO of CoinText, he was worried that his outspoken views and links to the crypto industry meant he could be disappeared by the Gestapo. He now lives in Saipan, population 50,000.

This isnt the end of whats happening, he says, citing the historical precedent of the Jewish people fleeing Germany before World War II. Our ability to travel is going to be greatly restricted and youre going to be trapped. And its going to be at the points of transit where the undesirables get mopped up. The people who are on the list.

Totalitarianism always starts out of an emergency.

While many in the crypto community share his fears about the erosion of civil liberties during the pandemic, Armani has gone further than most. Six thousands miles further.

He doesnt see himself as a conspiracy theorist just someone questioning societys assumptions about money and power. Armani says the Bitcoin White Paper is often the catalyst that wakes people up and sets them on a journey of discovery.

I hate conspiracy theories, he says. Because you dont need a conspiracy, all you need is a perverse incentive. The world just works in a certain way. People act in their own self-interest. Lord Acton (said): Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. I think that what you see in the crypto community is people who have read economic texts you see people who recognize what the government is, what the state is and who the people are in pursuit of state power.

Armani appears to have embraced what some call the paranoid style in American politics. He is a big fan of notorious English conspiracy theorist David Icke and interviewed him twice on his YouTube show. He credits Icke with waking me up when I first came across his work 15 years ago David has been absolutely spot on for 30 years.

Icke believes the world is run by a bunch of shape-shifting blood-drinking reptilian aliens from Alpha Draconis, one of whom is masquerading as the Queen.

Armani says Ickes views have evolved though Icke was recently booted off Facebook and YouTube for spreading 5G coronavirus conspiracy theories.

Another Bitcoiner interested in . unorthodox hypotheses is Caleb Chen, who works in content marketing for a popular VPN provider. Although hes undecided about most conspiracy theories, he still spends part of each day trawling through conspiracy forums on Reddit looking for alternative explanations for whats really going on in the world.

He says the crypto community was where he first encountered conspiracy theorists in the wild. The first Bitcoin meetup I went to was in 2013. And yeah, its right around there when I started running into these people, he says.

Id never met someone who didnt believe that the moon landing happened, or that believed in the flat earth conspiracy, until I started going to Bitcoin conferences and Bitcoin meetups.

Kirby Ferguson, the writer/director of documentary This Is Not A Conspiracy Theory says theres a definite strand of conspiratorial thinking within the crypto community, although price speculation and gossip are the major preoccupations.

There certainly is that subculture of conspiracy theory in there, he says. I feel like its a combination of anti-establishment spirit, that spirit of dissent that is in cryptocurrency, and the dubious media sources that are mixed in there.

The subculture is big enough to be noticeable.

Almost half a million people have watched Crypto Chicos YouTube video in which he explains a complicated crypto meets COVID-19 conspiracy theory titled Global Pandemic Planned.

When Bitcoin Ben isnt pumping the BTC price on YouTube and Twitter, he likes to post about QAnon which The Washington Post described as the idea there is a worldwide cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophiles who rule the world.

And that 5G stuff that one in eight people apparently now believe? You know, how the pandemic was faked to cover up the health impacts of 5G so that Bill Gates can microchip everyone with his vaccine? That whole story was dreamed up by a crypto-loving pastor from the small town of Luton in the UK; a guy who has advised African central banks on digital currencies.

Crypto publication Trustnodes has run with the theme, devoting large amounts of space in recent months to stories with headlines like America on the Verge of a Dictatorship that suggest lockdowns are about keeping humanity down, chained and enslaved.

One editorial said: No wonder people flock to the likes of Alex Jones

One possible reason the cryptocurrency space is so conducive to conspiracy theories is that there really are bad actors doing shady stuff in the space. There are whales out there manipulating the markets, which is why the SEC keeps knocking back Bitcoin ETFs.

The theory that Tether isnt actually backed 1:1 with US dollars has been shown in court to be correct. Many ICOs were elaborate fictions, constructed to fleece gullible investors of their cash. And there is so much doubt over the circumstances surrounding the death of Quadrigas CEO which left the exchange unable to access $145 million in crypto that there have been legal moves to exhume the body of Gerald Cotten. (Or Gerald Cotten, if you prefer.)

Every conspiracy theory, theres always some sort of truth behind it, some sort of fact hidden in it which makes it easier to believe, says filmmaker Torsten Hoffman, who covers the conspiracy theory swirling around Bitcoin development company Blockstream (replete with cartoon Lizard People) in his new documentary Cryptopia.

There are people in the Bitcoin Cash community who genuinely believe that Blockstream deliberately hobbled Bitcoin with a small block size limit as part of a grand plan to push people towards its scaling solutions, Lightning and Liquid. A sample post from Redditor BitAlien: Its not a conspiracy theory, its a conspiracy. Blockstream exists to cripple Bitcoin and allow the legacy banks to retain control over us. Seriously, WAKE UP SHEEPLE!

And for their part, some in the Bitcoin community believe that big block proponent Roger Ver set out to destroy Bitcoin to pump up the price of Bitcoin Cash.

Hoffman admits he disappeared down the rabbit hole on this conspiracy theory and spent far too long investigating inside information about Blockstream allegedly bribing various parties to get its own way. But in the end the truth appears to a lot more humdrum: the two communities just have genuine ideological differences about scaling the blockchain. In reality he says, it comes down to the question: Is it digital cash or is it digital gold? If you believe in one of those two then you have two different technical solutions.

Occams Razor, the idea that the simplest explanation is often the right one, helps explain away some of the theories. But it doesnt explain how some people arrive at the really out there conclusions, like Redditor ShadowOfHarbinger who suggested in r/btc this week that Blockstream is really a front for the CIA.

The CIA has been meddling in Bitcoin affairs since 2012-2013, he wrote blithely as if everyone knows that. It is all a government operation and government-sponsored opposition. He received 12 upvotes.

Its a riff on the theory the CIA invented Bitcoin. After all, the NSA created the SHA-256 hashing algorithm that Bitcoin uses and Satoshi Nakamoto means something vaguely like Central Intelligence in Japanese

Hoffman says its really not that surprising that some Bitcoiners hold unorthodox views.

Bitcoin started at the fringe and started to question the establishment, the economic rules and capitalism and everything the whole world. So these people question other things as well in our society and thats where maybe these conspiracy theories kind of slip in.

Crypto fans and conspiracy theorists share similar motivations: Both groups see themselves as warriors fighting against a corrupt elite whether its bankers or the Illuminati. Both groups are suspicious of institutions and are more open minded than most when it comes to leftfield ideas.

And given how opaque and incredibly complex the financial system is, its probably not surprising that some people go down some blind alleyways in their pursuit of the truth. David Golumbia, the author of The Politics of Bitcoin: Software as Right Wing Extremism, says that even the question what is money? defies easy answers.

Its very hard to get your head around even the experts cant really provide you with a terrific understanding, he says. I think a lot of people want a simple explanation. They want something that makes sense to them. I understand its frustrating when reality just doesnt conform to our desire to have things be simple. In this view, a conspiracy theory in this view is a neat and simple wrong answer to a complicated question.

In a similar vein, Horizen founder Rob Viglione says hes observed that some people, especially in the privacy coin sphere, are drawn to big ideas and grand narratives.

Theres this assumption of agency in the world, like big forces are being driven by some higher agent big forces, mystical forces are driving things, he said. And I think theres a lot of that for some people who come into Bitcoin. Its like were changing the world. There are really big ideas here you know and its easy to sometimes think theres agency behind just a whole bunch of random events.

A similar phenomenon has been observed in other parts of the financial world. Time Magazines Justin Fox wrote that Wall Street traders also love conspiracy theories, in a piece on alternative financial news source Zero Hedge (which was also recently banned from Twitter for spreading coronavirus misinformation).

Wall Street traders are among the most conspiracy-minded groups of people on the planet, he wrote. Thats because (a) some financial market conspiracies are real and (b) without theories of some sort to grasp on to, youre going to get completely lost in the chaos of the markets day-to-day movements.

The US Federal Reserve has long been an object of suspicion for Bitcoiners. It gives five unelected officials the power to change policies on the worlds reserve currency with impunity. And as Hoffman points out, the whole concept is weird: I mean, the Fed isnt a government body, its owned by private banks, he says (which is sort of true). And if you tell that to someone who doesnt know, it sounds like a conspiracy theory.

While they may be seen as a bunch of conspirators devaluing the currency and carrying out various schemes for nefarious reasons, Viglione says its much more likely theyre just blundering about, pulling levers in the hope that itll help the economy.

My background is in academic finance, Viglione says (he analyzed the Feds actions in detail for his PhD). I can say quite confidently: I dont think that they have any idea what theyre doing.

The further some people go down the rabbit hole of greedy bankers the more likely it is to lead them somewhere nasty.

A lot of that Anti-Fed stuff leads back to the Rothschilds and Jewish conspiracy theories and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and all that crap, says Ferguson. Once you start questioning the Fed and where money comes from and all that stuff you can fall into a gravity well that leads you to thinking the Jews did it.

Lets not overstate it, but theres definitely some overlap. The crypto trading discussions on on 8chan were full of far right hatred and anti-Semitic memes right up until the site was taken down after its users carried out three mass shootings. It was resurrected as 8kun on the darknet thanks to Monero fork Loki. (For a taste, if you dare, visit 4chan.)

Neo Nazis, including Andrew weev Auernheimer, Stormfront and The Daily Stormer also stay afloat with Bitcoin donations. Many on the far-right were early adopters writes the Southern Poverty Law Centre on its page monitoring their known BTC addresses. And many cashed in as the currencys valuation skyrocketed.

Golumbia used to work on Wall Street and when Bitcoin began to emerge a few years ago he realized hed heard a lot of the same conspiracy theories already. They were the same conspiracy theories that I used to see floating around gold.

Gold bugs have a reputation for wacky ideas. Urban Dictionary defines them as: associated with paranoia, conspiracy theories, 9/11 truthers, survivalism, tax protesters, racism, anti-semitism, and the far right. As a gold bug, I can tell you that gold is REAL money, and worthless fiat paper money is a fraud.

Bitcoin narratives around hard money, fixed supply, inflation hedge, market manipulation and distaste for the Feds money printer, can all be traced back to gold bugs.

Everett Millman, Precious Metals Specialist at Gainesville Coins which is developing a gold backed crypto believes the idea of hard money comes hand in glove with a deep distrust of the financial world.

Such a viewpoint is steeped in the idea of conspiracy at its genesis: it characterizes the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913 as a coup against an honest system of money based on gold, he says.

So the whole premise is entangled with the notion of conspiracy from its start. Its fair to say that this does open a path for gold bugs to be exposed to many other kinds of conspiracy theories. When you believe youve been lied to about something as basic as how money works, it naturally leads to questioning other aspects of the world. Similar feelings animate the crypto community.

He says the strain of anti-Semitism that infects the fringes of the gold and crypto communities small though it may be contributes to them being pushed into the margins of mainstream financial discourse. He says this can become a self-fulfilling phenomenon.

When it seems the entire investment community is against you, grand conspiracies take on greater explanatory power.

Golumbia is no fan of Bitcoin and sees conspiratorial narratives in everything from the concept of middlemen (which he say recalls anti-Jewish tropes) to the hatred for the Fed. But he argues convincingly that Bitcoin was born out of the paranoia inherent in cypherpunk concerns about the impending surveillance state. As Ferguson points out:

Paranoia is at the heart of conspiratorial reasoning.

Golumbia details in his book how Bitcoin had its roots in Eric Hughes Cypherpunk mailing list. By 1994 the 700 cypherpunks included Blockstreams Adam Back, Satoshi-confidant Hal Finney, Bit Gold creator Nick Szabo and even Satoshi-claimant Craig Wright.

The cypherpunks were hyper-concerned with online privacy and the government monitoring their communications, and saw cryptography as a tool to carve out a space free from Big Brothers watchful eyes.

The problem they kept running into was money, Golumbia explains. How do we pay for stuff because theyre using our credit cards and our bank accounts to track what we do? Wouldnt it be great if we could pay each other and give each other funds without being trackable? So they started applying encryption technologies to a variety of money-like instruments.

Bitcoin is probably iteration five or six of these projects to build a currency that was outside of the states ability to regulate it, or stop it.

In this conception, the paranoid style is baked into Bitcoins technology and purpose. Horizen founder Viglione points out that one of those 700 cypherpunks was Zooko Wilcox OHearn, who went on to create the privacy coin Zcash, which was forked into Horizen.

These technologies come almost directly out of the cypherpunk movement, Viglione says. Big Brothers watching us, lets build something to stop that.

But just because youre paranoid doesnt mean theyre not after you, as Joseph Heller noted. And as Viglione remarked:

Probably the ultimate conspiracy theory is the idea of Big Brother or the NSA spying on everything we do which turns out to be true.

Despite the small, but noisy minority of the crypto community spreading 5G coronavirus conspiracy theories, Hoffman points out that many more crypto adherents were providing quality information and analysis about the coronavirus pandemic long before the mainstream media.

The information were getting from some of the good sources from crypto is far, far superior to what Im getting in the mainstream media, he says. Not trusting authority figures like journalists makes members of the crypto community take things into their own hands and say OK, I can report on this better, I can do a virus model and an update in my daily newsletter better than the Wall Street Journal.

Hoffman believes that unorthodox perspectives and a propensity to look further than the accepted narrative are among the crypto communitys greatest strengths.

Those investors who question commonly held beliefs, they are the ones that every decade spot things that nobody else sees, Hoffman says. Youre more likely to see a black swan event, youre more likely to add a unique solution to a problem that nobody else even knew existed like Satoshi did 11 years ago.

Read more here:

The Lizard People Invented Bitcoin: Crypto is a Hotbed for Conspiracy Theories - Cointelegraph

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Down $2.13 On 4 Hour Chart; Moves Up For the 2nd Day In A Row – CFDTrading

Bitcoin Cash 4 Hour Price Update

Updated June 09, 2020 03:20 AM GMT (11:20 PM EST)

The back and forth price flow continues for Bitcoin Cash, which started the current 4 hour candle off at 253.29 US dollars, down 0.83% ($2.13) from the previous 4 hours. Out of the 5 instruments in the Top Cryptos asset class, Bitcoin Cash ended up ranking 2nd for the four-hour candle in terms of price change relative to the previous 4 hours.

Bitcoin Cash came into today up 0.65% ($1.65) from the open of the previous day, marking the 2nd day in a row it has gone up. This move happened on lower volume, as yesterdays volume was down 38.89% from the day before and down 13.03% from the same day the week before. Relative to other instruments in the Top Cryptos asset class, Bitcoin Cash ranked 2nd since the previous day in terms of percentage price change. The daily price chart of Bitcoin Cash below illustrates.

The first thing we should note is that the current price of Bitcoin Cash is sitting close to its 200 day moving averages; moving average crosses often indicate a change in momentum, so this may be worth keeping an eye on. The clearest trend exists on the 14 day timeframe, which shows price moving up over that time. For additional context, note that price has gone up 8 out of the past 14 days.

Behold! Here are the top tweets related to Bitcoin Cash:

@CoinCornerDanny BTC is soft-forked into a crippled coin that you can just buy hoping to sell it for more fiat later. Bitcoin Cash BCH is becoming the peer to peer electronic cash system for the world. I still have some of the BCH I mined in 2011. This is why I Like BCH and dislike BTC.

You being good at cooking does not make you a chef.Being good at cooking means that youre a good cook.Being a chef is about managing a kitchen in a restaurant.Calling yourself a chef when youre a home cook is like Bitcoin Cash calling itself Bitcoin. Fight me.

$3,351,403#bitcoin SHORT @ $9,507.66 [07/06/20 13:10:35] :BitMEX | : $XBTUSDIts NOT BCASH, its Bitcoin Cash! Raging Roger Ver

In terms of news links for Bitcoin Cash heres one to try:

Bitcoin Cash nears breakout at $260-mark AMBCrypto

Published on By After breaching the psychological level, Bitcoin Cash was being traded at $253, at press time.Bitcoin Cash [BCH] Hourly Chart: Source: BCH/USD on TradingView Bitcoin Cash has followed a steady upward trend.

Excerpt from:

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Down $2.13 On 4 Hour Chart; Moves Up For the 2nd Day In A Row - CFDTrading

Review Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet – Cointelegraph

Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet is filmmaker Torsten Hoffmanns follow up to his award-winning 2015 documentary Bitcoin: The End of Money As We Know It.

His first film looked at the history (and failings) of money and the financial system, and how Bitcoin was poised to revolutionize and solve many of its problems. Now, Cryptopia brings us up to date with the current state of play in the world of cryptocurrency and blockchain.

The documentary is split into three acts.

First we get an introduction to the fundamentals of Bitcoin, recapping the problems with traditional finance from the earlier film and highlighting Bitcoins initial stated purpose as peer-to-peer digital cash.

Hoffmann talks about the benefits of Bitcoin with a veritable whos who of industry figures, from Wences Casares, to Andreas M Antonopoulos and Laura Shin. We also see how and why big banks and governments have kicked back against the top-ranked cryptocurrency.

We then move on to Bitcoins explosive growth in value since the first film, and repositioning from digital cash to digital gold.

Hoffmann revisits Roger Ver, who had previously espoused Bitcoin as a fast and cheap method of moving money around the world, to investigate the block-size debate and eventual fork of Bitcoin Cash.

He also speaks to Blockstreams Samson Mow, for his take on the split, along with Charlie Lee, founder of Litecoin.

The film then moves on to tackle the move from one blockchain to hundreds of blockchains. Hoffmann explains the concept of smart contracts and the Ethereum network, speaking to Vitalik Buterin, Vinny Lingham, and Tone Vays for their opinions, both positive and negative.

Hoffmann takes a look at the initial coin offering, or ICO, phenomenon, bringing blockchains and currencies for every conceivable purpose, along with a wave of scams and fraudsters into the space.

We see how big business and finance is co-opting blockchain technology, sometimes through the use of private centralized networks. We see the tokenization of traditional securities and totally new forms of assets.

Through looking at the examples of the development of the motor car and the early internet, Hoffmann highlights similarities with todays blockchain industry.

He notes the rise of internet censorship in certain jurisdictions, and discusses the potential of blockchain to overcome this. We also consider the hegemony of tech giants and their control of our information and identities, looking at the possibilities of decentralization to overcome this.

To round up, the film considers the possibilities of Decentralized Finance, or DeFi, although notes the controversy created following the DAO hack and subsequent rollback of the Ethereum blockchain.

Hoffmann finally talks to Craig Wright (who behaves exactly as expected), touching on the Bitcoin Cash/Bitcoin SV split, and finally coming full circle to Satoshis disappearance and how this has worked for Bitcoin.

The film has been professionally researched, shot, and put together. It assumes no prior knowledge of the subject, and follows a well structured story, making it accessible to all.

Hoffmanns style and delivery works well. He is authoritative yet friendly and open, being unafraid to challenge or poke fun at characters like Craig Wright, while always being even-handed and letting people speak.

Sure, for those who are already invested in the industry and technology, there is little new to learn here, but for the uninitiated it is an excellent primer into a world that they may have heard about, but not really understand.

For me personally, both this film and Hoffmanns previous documentary made me incredibly proud to be part of this movement that is literally changing the world.

My only criticism (and it is a minor one) is the song which plays out over the credits. Penned by Hoffmann himself and Malaysian singer, Prema Yin, it is a powerful, soulful number, rousing the spirits until you listen more closely and realise that it is about cryptocurrency.

To be fair, it is probably the least cringe-inducing cryptocurrency-related song that Ive ever happened across, with intelligent lyrics and a proper decent tune. However this is a bit like being the least cancerous case of sunburn; the end consequence still consists of a pair of bright red cheeks.

Sorry, and maybe this is just me, but the worlds of cryptocurrency and music (both of which I love individually) should never cross paths.

However, I have no hesitation in recommending this film, which is available to stream now at cryptopiafilm.com for a price of just under 9 Australian dollars ($5.88)... and you can always make a cup of tea when it gets to the credits.

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Review Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet - Cointelegraph

Join Cointelegraphs Bitcoin Halving Party, Less Than 3 Hours to Go – Cointelegraph

Wherever you are in the world right now, as a Cointelegraph reader, you are almost certainly aware that Bitcoins third halving event is now less than 8 hours away.

It is also highly possible that some level of lockdown, due to the ongoing threat of the coronavirus and COVID-19 pandemic, is seriously curtailing your plans to celebrate the most-anticipated crypto event of 2020.

But never fear. Cointelegraph is here to get the party started, with a lockdown-friendly livestream event on our YouTube channel, featuring the biggest names in cryptocurrency today.

The fun kicks off at 10am ET with a look at Crypto Around the World featuring input from the Managing Editors of Cointelegraphs International Editions, with Kristina Lucrezia Corner moderating the panel.

At 11am we take an in-depth look into how the halving may affect the mining industry, with representatives from Genesis Mining, OKex Pool and Binance.

12pm sees an exploration of Bitcoins fundamentals as the halving approaches, with Ballets Bobby Lee and Emin Gn Sirer of Ava Labs.

At 1.15pm venture capitalist and renowned Bitcoin bull Tim Draper joins the party, for an interview with Rachel Wolfson and an AMA session after that.

This is followed by a discussion on how the halving could impact Bitcoin dominance at 2pm. Roger Ver, author and investor, Alex Tapscot, and Fundstrats Tom Lee will join to share their views.

The conversation turns to Venture Capital in crypto at 3pm, as Bloqs Matthew Roszak and Meltem Demirors from Coinshares will respond to the question of Where is the Big Money Going?

Finally, at 4pm we talk to the crypto influencers, as a whole host of podcasters, journalists and YouTubers join us for what is sure to be a lively discussion to round things off.

Over the past 24 hours the buzz around the halving event has been building on social media.

While nobody can predict the exact time that block 630,000 will be mined, and the Bitcoin block reward will drop from 12.5 BTC to 6.25 BTC, you can be sure that Cointelegraph will be here with commentary and reaction to guide you through.

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Join Cointelegraphs Bitcoin Halving Party, Less Than 3 Hours to Go - Cointelegraph

Lots of Action but No Bull Rally: Heres How the Bitcoin Halving Went Down – Cointelegraph

Bitcoins (BTC) third block halving has finally taken place. The years most talked-about crypto event happened at 3:23 p.m. EST on Monday, May 11, as block number 630,000 was successfully mined.

The Bitcoin block reward has now gone down from 12.5 BTC to 6.25 BTC, which will likely have many repercussions on the industry. But heres how the historic event went down.

First, the definition of Bitcoin's halving states that every four years producing BTC becomes more difficult, as block rewards get cut in half by a precoded blockchain protocol. As a result, miners begin receiving 50% less BTC for verifying transactions.

This was coded in as a deflationary measure and happens because Bitcoins supply is limited: Once 21 million coins are generated, the network will stop producing more. Thus, the halving regulates the supply by delaying the moment that all 21 million coins (Bitcoins total cap) get into the market. Currently, about 18.3 million BTC has been mined, which is roughly 85% of the total cap.

F2Pool, the miner responsible for the extraction of block 629,999, printed a New York Times headline onto the blockchain just before the halving occurred. Titled NYTimes 09/Apr/2020 With $2.3T Injection, Fed's Plan Far Exceeds 2008 Rescue, the transaction referenced a New York Times article by Jeanna Smialek and Peter Eavis that compares the current financial crisis to the 2008 collapse, the time when Satoshi Nakamoto published the original Bitcoin white paper.

During times of inflation, the key to preserve wealth is to hold real assets, Kristin Boggiano, a co-founder of the Digital Asset Regulatory and Legal Alliance, told Cointelegraph. She elaborated: Bitcoin is inherently a store of value because by its design it cannot exceed 21 million, and therefore its a natural hedge to an inflationary dollar.

The halving day itself went uneventfully for Bitcoins price, which stayed around the $8,500$8,700 mark throughout Monday. That confirmed the assumption that the halving event was already priced in, which was shared by a substantial part of cryptocurrency commentators. Nonetheless, crypto Twitter celebrated the event in full force.

Data from The Tie, a data provider for digital assets, showed that yesterday, tweets from cryptocurrency-related accounts saw a spike in keyword mentions for the halving and Bitcoin. As the firms CEO, Joshua Frank, told Cointelegraph, conversations on Bitcoin grew by 72% compared to the 30-day moving average, while Bitcoin surpassed 50,000 daily tweets for the first time since June 2019.

Indeed, the idea that Bitcoin would become more scarce has aroused the publics interest, as Google searches for Bitcoin halving hit an all-time high earlier this month, exceeding the surge associated with the previous halving event by as much as 350%.

Crypto services are also witnessing a surge in new registrations, as recently revealed by Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao. According to Zhao, the level of renewed interest could be compared to the peak of the 2017 bull run.

Cointelegraph was also celebrating the momentous happening by holding a seven-hour livestream featuring prominent industry figures such as Tim Draper, Roger Ver and Meltem Demirors.

However, as the party was coming to a close, it was suddenly interrupted by YouTube. The viewing platform deemed the livestream to be harmful content for an unknown reason, once again highlighting the censorship problem that affects practically all crypto-related content on YouTube.

More than 2,000 Cointelegraph viewers were locked out of our coverage as a result, with the livestream having amassed more than 124,000 views by that time. The situation is still unclear, and more updates will follow.

So, where does Bitcoins price move from here? That is arguably the most popular halving-related question right now, and there is no straight answer to that. Still, the price of BTC has been seeing a lot of positive action lately, which has likely been influenced by the halving event at least in part.

Since bleeding by nearly 50% on the so-called Black Thursday exactly two months ago, Bitcoin has bounced back to the $8,800 mark and even briefly traded above $10,000 at the start of May. Nonetheless, once the rejection of $10,200 became apparent on Sunday, one day before the halving, Bitcoins price fell by 20%. It has stayed around the same level since, albeit a minor correction of 5%.

As for where the price is headed next, traders remain divided, as the latest analysis by Cointelegraph shows. Some experts believe that Bitcoin could soon see an upswing to the $14,000$15,000 resistance area, while others suggest that a pullback to the $6,000 region is also a likely scenario in the short term.

Another important aspect affected by the halving is Bitcoins mining hash rate, or the amount of computing power miners are using to validate the blockchain. Like Bitcoins price, the hash rate has been seeing major volatility ahead of the halving, reaching an all-time high and then swinging down. As for now, experts predict the hash rate will go down. As Marc Fresa, the founder of United States-based Asic.to a company that specializes in producing firmware for mining machines previously told Cointelegraph:

You can expect the hashrate to decrease as profitability for miners across the board are slashed. This result will cause the older generation miners to be unplugged unless they can find a new home with extremely cheap or free power.

Indeed, many unprofitable miners have already left the network due to the decreased block reward, as Alejandro De La Torre the vice president of major mining pool Poolin said in a Monday interview with Cointelegraph, predicting that up to 30% of the hash rate could be lost as a result.

However, the situation is likely to change for the better once the new generation of ASIC units is shipped out later this month, as the new machines have been designed with post-halving conditions in mind. Just give it a little bit of time and the hashrate will be at a new all-time high, Fresa told Cointelegraph.

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Lots of Action but No Bull Rally: Heres How the Bitcoin Halving Went Down - Cointelegraph

7 best ways to watch the Bitcoin halving 2020 live – Decrypt

For some itll seem like watching paint dry, but today thousands of Bitcoiners will be mesmerized by their screens, watching the Bitcoin halving at 7 pm UTC (3 pm EST.) Thats when block 630,000 rolls around, the new supply of Bitcoin dramatically cuts in half, and we put those bold Bitcoin price predictions to the test.

On July 9, 2016, the date of Bitcoins last halving, there were parties around the world: in Melbourne, Montreal, NYC, London, Dublin, Paris and more. They had a blast. Heres a video from the 2016 HODL halving party in Tel Aviv (spoiler alert: lots of blocks get halved):

This year, with lockdown and social distancing, the parties will look very different, as does the context in which the Bitcoin halving celebration takes place. But interest in the halving is bigger than ever this time around. And to match, there are livestreams, parties, and, of course, swag. Here are some of the best places to watch the digital magic happen.

When: From 11:59 EST

Where: BitcoinHalving.com, and at BitcoinMagazine.com.

Bitcoin Magazine has non-stop coverage of Bitcoins third Halving with commentary, analysis, product giveaways, auctions and a live countdown.

Whos going: Mastering Bitcoin author, Andreas M. Antonopoulos; Bitcoiner & Host of UntoldStories.com Charlie Shrem; Bitmex cofounder, Arthur Hayes; Lightning Labs co-founder, Elizabeth Stark, Bitcoiner American Hodl and plenty more.

When: From 5pm UCT

Where: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTAJHcsb8zk

Former Wall Street trader and Bitcoin maximalist Tone Vays is having his own party. Two hundred plus people are already waiting on his channel with just a couple of hours to go, so it looks like it will be popular.

Whos going: Tone and his pals.

When: From 10 pm EST

Where: Sign up here, links and instructions sent by email.

Morgan Creek co-founders Jason Williams and Anthony Pompliano will be livestreaming leading up to the third Bitcoin halving. Were promised lots of pizza, probably too much beer, and a hell of a good time."

Whos going: Pomp and Williams.

When: Scheduled for whenever the halving happens (tentatively: 15-16.30 EST).

Whos going: Bison Trails cofounder Joe Lallouz, Digiconomist; Wyatt Capital CEO, Wes Fulford and independent researcher Wes Fulford.

When: From 10am EST

Where: Livestreamed on YouTube.

Cointelegraphs party promises exclusive halving coverage with some of the top minds of crypto from all corners of the globe.

Whos going: Tim Draper, Roger Ver, Meltem Demirros, Alex Tapscott and more.

When: All day

Where: Via Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/ValueofBitcoin

More a conference, than a halving celebration, but there are three stages; interactive sessions, virtual networking, and a virtual exhibition.

Whos going: Blockware Solutions cofounder, Matt DSouza and Head of Business Development at Unchained Capital, Parker Lewis are on at the expected halving time.

When: From 2pm UCT until the 210,000 block is mined.

Where: Sign up here, links and instructions sent by email.

Hosted by blockchain media company, Bits And Tokens. This event promises speakers (not listed); four different Bitcoin themed destinations to visit and mingle with developers, founders, miners, traders, and gamers. Plus giveaways, including Sheildfolio Stonebooks, Ghost Pens and cold storage wallets.

Whos going: Its a surprise!

Want to have your own party? Heres adigital clock and an analogue one.

Have yourselves a happy halving. See you on the other side.

Continue reading here:

7 best ways to watch the Bitcoin halving 2020 live - Decrypt

Review – Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet – Cointelegraph

Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet is filmmaker Torsten Hoffmanns follow up to his award-winning 2015 documentary Bitcoin: The End of Money As We Know It.

His first film looked at the history (and failings) of money and the financial system, and how Bitcoin was poised to revolutionize and solve many of its problems. Now, Cryptopia brings us up to date with the current state of play in the world of cryptocurrency and blockchain.

The documentary is split into three acts.

First we get an introduction to the fundamentals of Bitcoin, recapping the problems with traditional finance from the earlier film and highlighting Bitcoins initial stated purpose as peer-to-peer digital cash.

Hoffmann talks about the benefits of Bitcoin with a veritable whos who of industry figures, from Wences Casares, to Andreas M Antonopoulos and Laura Shin. We also see how and why big banks and governments have kicked back against the top-ranked cryptocurrency.

We then move on to Bitcoins explosive growth in value since the first film, and repositioning from digital cash to digital gold.

Hoffmann revisits Roger Ver, who had previously espoused Bitcoin as a fast and cheap method of moving money around the world, to investigate the block-size debate and eventual fork of Bitcoin Cash.

He also speaks to Blockstreams Samson Mow, for his take on the split, along with Charlie Lee, founder of Litecoin.

The film then moves on to tackle the move from one blockchain to hundreds of blockchains. Hoffmann explains the concept of smart contracts and the Ethereum network, speaking to Vitalik Buterin, Vinny Lingham, and Tone Vays for their opinions, both positive and negative.

Hoffmann takes a look at the initial coin offering, or ICO, phenomenon, bringing blockchains and currencies for every conceivable purpose, along with a wave of scams and fraudsters into the space.

We see how big business and finance is co-opting blockchain technology, sometimes through the use of private centralized networks. We see the tokenization of traditional securities and totally new forms of assets.

Through looking at the examples of the development of the motor car and the early internet, Hoffmann highlights similarities with todays blockchain industry.

He notes the rise of internet censorship in certain jurisdictions, and discusses the potential of blockchain to overcome this. We also consider the hegemony of tech giants and their control of our information and identities, looking at the possibilities of decentralization to overcome this.

To round up, the film considers the possibilities of Decentralized Finance, or DeFi, although notes the controversy created following the DAO hack and subsequent rollback of the Ethereum blockchain.

Hoffmann finally talks to Craig Wright (who behaves exactly as expected), touching on the Bitcoin Cash/Bitcoin SV split, and finally coming full circle to Satoshis disappearance and how this has worked for Bitcoin.

The film has been professionally researched, shot, and put together. It assumes no prior knowledge of the subject, and follows a well structured story, making it accessible to all.

Hoffmanns style and delivery works well. He is authoritative yet friendly and open, being unafraid to challenge or poke fun at characters like Craig Wright, while always being even-handed and letting people speak.

Sure, for those who are already invested in the industry and technology, there is little new to learn here, but for the uninitiated it is an excellent primer into a world that they may have heard about, but not really understand.

For me personally, both this film and Hoffmanns previous documentary made me incredibly proud to be part of this movement that is literally changing the world.

My only criticism (and it is a minor one) is the song which plays out over the credits. Penned by Hoffmann himself and Malaysian singer, Prema Yin, it is a powerful, soulful number, rousing the spirits until you listen more closely and realise that it is about cryptocurrency.

To be fair, it is probably the least cringe-inducing cryptocurrency-related song that Ive ever happened across, with intelligent lyrics and a proper decent tune. However this is a bit like being the least cancerous case of sunburn; the end consequence still consists of a pair of bright red cheeks.

Sorry, and maybe this is just me, but the worlds of cryptocurrency and music (both of which I love individually) should never cross paths.

However, I have no hesitation in recommending this film, which is available to stream now at cryptopiafilm.com for a price of just under 9 Australian dollars ($5.88)... and you can always make a cup of tea when it gets to the credits.

Originally posted here:

Review - Cryptopia: Bitcoin, Blockchains and the Future of the Internet - Cointelegraph

Bitcoin Is Not Cash For the World: Recap of Webit Fireside Chat with Roger Ver – Cointelegraph

On April 29, Cointelegraph participated in a fireside chat event organized by the Webit Foundation. The panel, with the title of Can blockchain be a solution for the upcoming economic crisis, featured Roger Ver from Bitcoin.com as the main speaker.

Like all events during the Coronavirus pandemic, the panel was held virtually, with its participants dialing in via video conference. The talk was hosted by Dr. Plamen Russev, executive chairman of Webit Foundation. The chat featured Roger Ver, Bitcoin.coms executive chairman, and Kristina Lucrezia Cornr, managing editor at Cointelegraph, as a Q&A moderator.

Vers answers at the panel can be summarized as a deep belief in freedom and libertarian economics. He believes these ideals to be the answers to the crisis at hand. He also focused on censorship an issue that has regained relevance amid the Coronavirus pandemic.

Ver was greatly disturbed by the harsh censorship policy enacted by Youtube in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He cited an example of two doctors who made statements going against the mainstream narrative behind the pandemic, and whose video was deleted a few days after it was published.

The policy is allegedly the culprit behind a new wave of bans to crypto content creators, which recently hit high-profile influencers like Tone Vays and Crypto Lark.

Ver explained his view against censorship:

I think the solution to people saying crazy or wrong things is other people being able to rebut those things, not massive censorship.

When discussing censorship, Ver also threw several jabs against the Bitcoin community, and said that his biggest regret throughout the years was not being even louder when speaking out against censorship in the cryptocurrency community.

This refers to 2015, when the moderators of the /r/Bitcoin Reddit forum began censoring any discussion relating to Bitcoin XT a proposal for larger blocks in Bitcoin (BTC) that can be considered as the ideological ancestor to Bitcoin Cash (BCH).

Ver holds a utilitarian view of the purpose of cryptocurrency, focusing heavily on its use as a censorship-resistant payment system. He emphasized that it is free trade that creates wealth in the world, while the lockdowns destroy the ability to trade freely and thus, the economy. He also considers the multi-trillion dollar stimulus package to be theft of a similar nature to counterfeiting money.

Cryptocurrency, as the freest form of money, would be the best tool to escape the governments excessive control, according to Ver. But he also believes that it can only happen when cryptocurrency is used for payments, which is something that Bitcoin is no longer useful for, he claimed:

The sad part about what everybody is calling Bitcoin today, it doesnt have those characteristics that made the early investors and adopters so excited about it early on. Most of those people are now working on things like Bitcoin Cash or Ethereum.

He claimed that most of its current supporters are either speculators betting on future speculation, or people who still didnt figure out that the project is no longer trying to be cash for the world.

You can check out the full panel by clicking on this link.

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Bitcoin Is Not Cash For the World: Recap of Webit Fireside Chat with Roger Ver - Cointelegraph

Exclusive Interview with Roger Ver: Should We Expect Something Similar to 2017s Crypto Boom Again? – U.Today

Roger Ver is a famous Bitcoin-veteran, prominent entrepreneur and, probably, one of the most aware people in all of the cryptocurrency space, hence he has often been called Bitcoin Jesus. Roger shared with me some of his earliest memories of the beginning of Bitcoins history and explained why he changed his mind on BTC cryptocurrency.

Since hes widely known as an experienced investor, I also asked him to share some advice on the best way to make investments. Lets dive in and find out what he thinks about the industry these days and the one thing he would change about the industry if he could.

U.Today: As one of the first investors in Bitcoin and one of the earliest adopters, you must have some interesting stories about the early industry. Can you share with us a meaningful memory from that period of Bitcoins existence?

Roger Ver: For me, the really fun turning point that I remember in this space was, everybody used to always say, yeah, Bitcoin, well, what can you buy with it? And there wasn't really a good answer. You could buy some alpaca socks and maybe you could buy some drugs from the dark net. But in 2012 I launched a website called bitcoinstore.com that had more than half a million consumer electronics products listed at prices for the most part cheaper than Amazon.

Image bytwitter.com/rogerkver

We only accepted Bitcoin and we sold millions of dollars worth of products to people all over the world. And that was a real big turning point in Bitcoin. So from that point on, whenever anybody asked, Hey, what can you buy with Bitcoin? You could tell them, Hey, more than half a million consumer electronic products, at prices usually cheaper than Amazon. So that was a real big turning point that inspired the other businesses later, like Newegg, and TigerDirect, and Dell Computer, and Microsoft to have to start accepting Bitcoin at their businesses as well.

U.Today: According to your previous interviews, you lost faith in Bitcoin (BTC) in 2017 because of the slow transaction speed and high fees and switched to Bitcoin Cash saying that it's the best version of Bitcoin. Do you still think so? What are your thoughts on BSV?

Roger Ver: At the end of 2017, the average fee on the BTC network got to be $50 and the average confirmation time got to be nearly two weeks. Right? So that meant you had to pay $50, on average, and wait for two weeks on average for your transaction to go through on the BTC blockchain. That's certainly not the money of the future. That's an embarrassment to anybody trying to promote it. So, of course, I could no longer promote Bitcoin when it became that unreliable. And you have to point out that it became that unreliable by the intentional design of the Bitcoin core developers, people like Adam Back and Greg Maxwell and a bunch of people that got hoodwinked into thinking that full blocks and the high fees and unreliable transactions that they cause or are a good thing. I still think that with BTC, you're just waiting for another fee incident and another problem to happen like that again. If Bitcoin ever becomes popular enough again, it's going to have the exact same problem.

So, your final question, what do you think about BSV? I think it's just fine. I think that there are several thousand cryptocurrencies out there and people can use the ones that are the most useful to them. BSV isn't listed on hardly any exchanges and has hardly any merchant adoption. So I'm not super bullish on that front, but they're doing some other things that I do think are interesting.

Image bytwitter.com/rogerkver

The thing that just left a horribly bad taste in my mouth is the fact that they're busy suing everybody about everything. So they're suing myself and Vitalik and podcasters and other heads of exchanges. I'm not going to use them because of that. So, that's the real big turn off. And they're threatening to sue everybody else in the world with their patents. I'm opposed to patents. I think it's a legitimate government-granted monopoly.

U.Today: I recently spoke with Charles Hoskinson, and he said that its actually not too hard to find out who Satoshi Nakamoto is using Code Stylometry (the analysis of actual source code), but hes not interested in doing it. What about you? Have you ever tried to find out who this person is? Do you have any guesses as to who it might be?

Roger Ver: I don't know. Whoever Satoshi is, if he wants his privacy, he deserves it and I'm not gonna pester him. So, if Charles Hoskinson thinks that it's easy to do, he can do it, I suppose. But, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. So I'm not really convinced by his claim there.

U.Today: Who, in the crypto space, do you respect the most? I saw in one of your interviews that you had pretty warm feedback for Vitalik. Is there anyone else you consider to have a bright mind? What about other projects in the space - which ones are the most interesting for you?

Roger Ver: So, of course, CZ has been an amazing entrepreneur in the space. Really just kudos to CZ for doing such an amazing job. I think people are really underestimating Binance coin BNB. Their whole slogan is like "BNB, pay with BNB." That was the entire point of Bitcoin. That's how Bitcoin started to get traction in the first place. People were using it to pay for things.

What other projects are interesting in the space? Of course, BNB because they're trying to get people to use it as money. I really like that and am a fan of that. Ethereum's amazing. And DeFi should not be underestimated.

People know I'm already a fan of Bitcoin Cash. Other ones - I'm a fan of all the privacy coins. I think fungibility makes money, money. If it's not fungible, it's not good money. So I'm a fan of the privacy coins. I think people don't fully realize it yet - Bitcoin cash is right on the verge of being one of the strongest privacy coins in the entire cryptocurrency ecosystem period. It'll have some of the strongest privacy and it'll have the most merchant adoption of any privacy coin. So that's a really, really big deal. And one of the additional reasons I'm so bullish on Bitcoin cash is cash fusion.

U.Today: Can you give our readers who want to make successful investments any advice on how to do so?

Roger Ver: Sure. So you don't invest your money where the capital already is today. You invest your money today where the capital's going to be tomorrow. And so, within the cryptocurrency space, BTC has the most capital invested in it. But remember, with Bitcoin, there can be multiple-week-long waits for your transaction to go through and unreliable fees, which can be $3 or $30 or $50. You don't know. I've paid more than a thousand dollars in Bitcoin fees for a single transaction more times than I can count. And a lot of people didn't believe that or said I was a liar, but it's right there on the blockchain. Anybody can check. You can go to blockshare.com, I think it is. And you can search the blockchain and sort it by transactions that paid more than a thousand dollars in fees.

So that's 28,000 times people used the BTC network and said, why would I ever want to use this again where I had to pay $1,000 in fees? I'm going to use Ethereum, I'm going to use Bitcoin Cash, I'm going to use BNB, I'm going to use anything but this stupid BTC coin that has slow, expensive, unreliable transactions. So it's just amazing to me how many people still don't see that yet. But the people that don't see that yet are the ones that never actually tried using Bitcoin for payments or they would know firsthand. Anybody that was trying to use it for payments, saw it firsthand and they know. That's why the CEO of Coinbase, the CEO of blockchain, the CEO of any exchange, knows that BTC was an absolute disaster when the blocks became full. So, my investment advice: invest your currency or your money now where the capital is going to flow to in the future, not where the capital is today.

U.Today: Do you think its possible for people to truly get rid of government regulation and take control of their own finances? If so, how much time will it take to get to that point?

Roger Ver: I don't know if we'll ever be able to get rid of government completely, but that doesn't mean it's not a worthy goal, right? Like, are we going to manage to live in a world someday in which there's never ever a rape? I hope so, but that's going to be hard, right? There's always rapists out there and maybe the government people will manage to continue using violence to control peaceful people. But that doesn't mean that we shouldn't try to minimize the amount of violence that governments are allowed to impose. Just like we should try and minimize the number of times people rape people.

U.Today: There are lots of projects like, for example, How I went a whole day spending only crypto which means that its still something thats hard to put into practice. How often do you use cryptocurrencies in your everyday life?

Roger Ver: Every day I pay for things in cryptocurrency more often than I pay for things with credit cards or fiat currency. I do almost all of my shopping on purse.io on Amazon and whenever I have to pay anybody in the world, I'm paying them with Bitcoin Cash. It's just so fast, cheap and reliable and I'm looking forward to getting even more people around the world using that. So, I use it all the time. And that's why I saw, maybe so much more clearly than other people, why BTC was a disaster. Because I was trying to use it for payments and it just plain stopped working for payments.

Image bytwitter.com/rogerkver

I remember specifically, I paid around $20,000 in Bitcoin for, I forget what I was paying for, maybe some advertising fee or something, and the transaction didn't go through. And like six hours later I checked and my transaction wound up getting dropped from the mempool because the fees had spiked. My transaction didn't have high enough fees for the network there. And then people say, Oh, you need to calculate the fee or set the fee manually or this and that. I'm a professional, I've been using Bitcoin for 10 years and I understand how the fee market works and understand everything else. Everybody's busy in life and if I paid the wrong fee with a wallet that's supposed to calculate it automatically, or the fee market changed afterward, that's a horrible, horrible user experience.

So if I, myself, as a professional in the ecosystem, have a bad time, imagine how hard it's going to be for some normal person that has no idea what full blocks are or what a fee is or what one satoshi per byte even means. It's gonna be an absolute disaster for those people.

U.Today: I understand that youre a person who joined the space for the idea, not for speculation. And, youve been in crypto longer than most, so given your experience, your vision on how everything will develop is very interesting for our readers. Do you think the Bitcoin (BTC, BCH, BSV) price will continue rising? Will we ever see something similar to 2017s boom again?

Roger Ver: Yeah, that's a good question. There's always the ups and downs, but in the long term, whatever cryptocurrency is the most useful is the one that's going to be used by the biggest number of people. So, BTC has the biggest network effect and, because of that, the biggest brand recognition and trust. But BCH has the best user experience and still a pretty darn big network effect. And BSV - there are people out there that like it - it has an even smaller network effect.

If the user experience becomes bad enough and there's an alternative ready for people, people will make the switch. If BTC continues to have full blocks and the bad experiences that those cause and no alternative on-chain, like lightning networks not being ready - if you're using a custodial solution, you might as well just use PayPal. You don't need a blockchain at all. So if, anyhow, the bad user experience on BTC continues, despite its brand awareness around the world and brand recognition, people are going to switch to something else. I think that Bitcoin Cash has a fantastic shot at being that thing that lots of people switch to.

U.Today: What would you personally change in the community if you could?

Roger Ver: I would get rid of the censorship. People don't realize it. And I also underestimated just how big of a deal that censorship would be.

The censorship is still going on to this very day in places like r/bitcoin and bitcointalk.org and at the time the censorship started the vast majority of the community were big blockers and they knew and understood and appreciated how important it was to use Bitcoin as money and how important the work that I did in the early time was and that I wasn't out to scam anybody. I was out here to try and build the tools to bring more economic freedom to the world. And now all the people that came to cryptocurrency after the censorship started, they only got to hear one side of the story. They don't know the truth and they're prevented from hearing the truth because of the censorship.

If everybody around you in the world told you that Bitcoin Cash is stupid and big blocks are stupid and small blocks are great, you'd believe it if you were never allowed to hear the counter-arguments. And that's what's happened, in large part, to the Bitcoin community due to the censorship. So if I could change one thing, it would be the censorship.

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Exclusive Interview with Roger Ver: Should We Expect Something Similar to 2017s Crypto Boom Again? - U.Today

Elon Musk and Roger Ver Say That It Is Time to End the COVID-19 Lockdowns – CryptoGlobe

Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk and Bitcoin.com chairman Roger Ver have both called for an end to the COVID-19 economic lockdown.

According to a report by Reuters on April 29, Musk called the U.S. governments sweeping, stay-at-home restrictions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic fascist. Speaking in a conference call, Musk told shareholders he did not know when Tesla would be allowed to resume production in California and called the stay-at-home order a serious risk to the business.

To say that they cannot leave their house and they will be arrested if they do, this is fascist. This is not democratic, this is not freedom. Give people back their goddamn freedom!

The Tesla CEO pinned a tweet to his personal Twitter account saying FREE AMERICA NOW.

Roger Ver, chairman of Bitcoin.com, also voiced his displeasure with the lockdown policies. Speaking at Virtual Blockchain Week, Ver argued people should have the right to decide whether they stay in quarantine.

I think the lockdown needs to come to an end, right now, today. If you want to lock yourself down, more power to you, feel free, have at it. But for the rest of us that want to live our lives, we should be able to do that too.

The rest is here:

Elon Musk and Roger Ver Say That It Is Time to End the COVID-19 Lockdowns - CryptoGlobe

No Visits, No Parole: Ross Ulbricht Is More Alone Than Ever During COVID-19 – CoinDesk

The coronavirus infection spreading across the United States prison system is throwing Ross Ulbrichts confinement into sharp relief.

Found guilty of seven charges including money laundering, conspiracy to traffic narcotics and computer hacking, the controversial founder of the Silk Road is currently serving a double life sentence plus 40 years, without the possibility of parole.

As the pandemic worsens conditions for the nations large prison population, Ross spends 22 hours a day behind bars in Tucson, Ariz., where hes currently being held. Outside visits are stopped so Rosss mother, Lyn, and other loved ones, who work tirelessly for his release, are unable to act as Ross lifeline to the outside world. And Ross stands a good chance of being infected, with rates in his part of the system running four times the New York average.

Because of the nature of his crime, Ross is not allowed access to a computer or the internet, not even to check his email. So he spends his time writing, reading and meditating, his mother said, and calling home.

Even though Ross is a grown man, I'm still a mom and can't help reminding him to drink lots of water, wash his hands and take vitamin C when he calls," Lyn Ulbricht said. "He assures me he's doing all that and I don't need to worry, but it's hard under these circumstances. Prisons are probably the most at-risk places for contracting the virus."

The Silk Road holds a storied position in Bitcoins history. Named after the ancient trade routes that connected East to West, the online emporium became the currencys first proven link to the world of internet commerce (it even introduced some well-known crypto folk to bitcoin). Anonymized shoppers could buy anything, as long as it didn't harm a third party, from fake IDs to opioids, or any narcotic, as well as spyware, art and books. For Ulbricht, the innovation wasnt what was sold, but how: voluntary exchange.

What were doing isnt about scoring drugs or sticking it to the man. Its about standing up for our rights as human beings and refusing to submit when weve done no wrong, the Silk Road founder, then operating under the pseudonym Dread Pirate Roberts, said in an interview with Forbes. (It should be said: Lyn and Ross both maintain this quote is not his. Nor has Forbes has not attributed this quote to Ross.)

Despite his alleged crimes, Ulbricht has become a folk hero in libertarian and crypto circles. Ross is an amazing entrepreneur who helped make the world a better place, Roger Ver, founder of Bitcoin.com, said in a direct message. Ver is among thousands of supporters who have fomented a movement seeking to liberate Ulbricht (with the hashtag #freeross).

And the coronavirus crisis could accelerate this process. It certainly doesnt seem like it can hurt his cause, Ver said.

Close, unsanitary quarters are hotbeds for viral infection. Worse, throughout the pandemic prisoners have had limited access to protective or hygienic products and, sometimes, lack basic medical care. These conditions have activists, politicians and even Attorney General William Barr calling for the temporary release of at-risk populations. Others are pushing harder for the amnesty of all non-violent offenders.

The call for criminal justice reform amid a global pandemic echoes the issues the Free Ross campaign has been championing for years.

Begging the system that put him in prison to now take him out seems like an uphill battle

Theres been a lot more attention brought to the subject [of prison reform], said Lyn Ulbricht. There are many people serving horrific sentences in our country now for nonviolent crimes. It shouldn't be like that. We're the biggest incarcerator in the world. That's a national disgrace.

Lyn Ulbricht is the organizing force behind the loosely coordinated campaign seeking her sons release. In 2013, when the 29-year-old Ulbricht was arrested, she created the FreeRoss.org website to raise awareness and funds for his bail, which was ultimately rebuked.

In 2015, ahead of and during the 11-week federal trial held at the Southern District of New York, Lyn spoke frequently at conferences, to media and online arguing Ross case had wide implications for the future of internet commerce, First and Fourth amendment rights and criminal justice.

Then, in 2017, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld Ross conviction and sentence essentially eliminating any chance of legal recourse she began seeking clemency through political means. This effort has culminated in a petition directed at President Trump, asking him issue Ulbricht a commutation. The most recent petition has received over 280,00 signatures.

Many who agitate on Ross behalf see his case as representative of the totality of crimes committed through mass incarceration and the prison industrial complex.

We should support anyone who is being persecuted for victimless crimes, Roger Ver said. The police, prosecutors and judges are the ones who are the criminal aggressors in this case, and the world should speak out against them just like we now speak out against the runaway slave catchers of the past.

While Ver had donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Freedom Fund He made it possible for us to go to trial, Lyn said he remains pessimistic about the political process. Begging the system that put him in prison to now take him out seems like an uphill battle, he said. This is something Lyn Ulbricht reluctantly admits.

Despite her efforts to reach the Trump administration, his family and even Kim Kardashian who successfully lobbied the president to release a 63-year-old woman serving a life sentence for a nonviolent drug conviction she has had little success.

Its difficult to coordinate efforts. Ive tried to reach out but its not easy to get to them, she said. While she thinks Trump has shown an inclination to reform the justice system with the First Step Act, its a matter of convincing President Trump this is something that is worthy of his attention and mercy.

That doesnt mean she lacks hope. Trump makes instinctual decisions, she said, adding, Anyone who looks at the sentence can see it's wrong. Ulbricht was a first-time offender, convicted on non-violent charges in a trial that shows some signs of malpractice. The charges listed in Ross original indictment wouldve, at minimum, landed him a 30-year prison sentence.

A more lenient sentence would be in line with what busted merchants on the Silk Road have been handed. Not to mention the former U.S. Secret Service agent who skimmed bitcoin from the site while participating in federal investigation to uncover its founder. Instead, Ulbricht received a punishment Lyn argues is unconstitutional.

The Eighth Amendment says no cruel or unusual punishment and this is very unusual for a first time nonviolent offender, and it's certainly cruel, she said. While the conviction has opened her mind to the possible injustices of the law, its something all her hopes are tied to.

[Trump] can sign a piece of paper and Ross would walk out the door, she said.

Criminal justice reform

Seven years ago, Ulbricht found himself behind bars at New Yorks Metropolitan Detention Center while awaiting trial. Today, this municipal prison system has an infection rate of more than 9 percent, according to the Legal Aid Society. This is compared to the 2 percent infection rate on the citys streets.

Prisoners across the country report they are unable to practice social distancing or even properly wash their hands. Found wanting before the outbreak, prison medical care is reportedly incapable of managing a prison outbreak. In a memo to the Bureau of Prisons, Attorney General Barr confirmed the virus is materially affecting operations, and called for the release of vulnerable and at-risk inmates to home confinement.

Still, there is no consistent national approach to manage the virus in prisons, nor federal guidelines to determine which inmates may be eligible for temporary release. And that guidance may not come soon, with Trump decrying the proactive release of elderly and infirm prisoners he called very serious criminals during a White House Coronavirus Task Force briefing earlier this month.

'Even though Ross is a grown man, I'm still a mom and can't help reminding him to drink lots of water, wash his hands and take vitamin C when he calls.'

Its in this landscape that reformist policies begin to make sense. A 2016 report showed nearly 40 percent of people in state and federal prisons were incarcerated without provably presenting a danger to their communities. That means these sentences are strictly punitive, not correctional, Lyn Ulbricht said.

During Ross bail hearing, prosecutors said he operated the most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet today. And while the prosecution accused him of hiring hitmen, Ulbricht is, technically, a non-violent offender.A number of eminent scholars, lawyers and celebrities have weighed in, calling the sentence "a shocking miscarriage of justice," to use Noam Chomsky's words.

Still young at 36, healthy and without any underlying conditions, its unlikely Ulbricht will be released to home confinement during the pandemic. Instead, he, like the majority of the 2.3 million people incarcerated in federal, state and local prisons, jails and other correctional facilities across the country, will spend 22 hours a day in his cage with his cellmate as a precautionary measure, Lyn said.

Lyn has moved three times since 2013 to be closer to Ross in Arizona so she can make weekly visits. These visits are also on hold for the foreseeable future, and its unclear when these restrictions will be lifted. The federal Bureau of Prisons has not responded to a request for comment.

He can be under house arrest with an ankle brace on, Lyn said. Hes not a dangerous person.

Update(April 30, 22:50 UTC):This story has been updated to emphasize that Forbes has not identified Ross Ulbricht as the pseudonymous Dread Pirate Roberts interviewed in 2013.

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No Visits, No Parole: Ross Ulbricht Is More Alone Than Ever During COVID-19 - CoinDesk

Banking the Unbanked: How the Crypto Community Can Make a Big Impact – Yahoo Finance

For tech-savvy yet unbanked young adults in communities often overlooked by traditional big business, the crypto and blockchain industry offers opportunities that others dont.

For more episodes and free early access, subscribe withApple Podcasts,Spotify,Pocketcasts,Google Podcasts,Castbox,Stitcher,RadioPublica,IHeartRadioorRSS.

Hodl has become quite the rallying cry in the crypto industry today. But to boost adoption, that might be the wrong trend.

Related: Bitcoin News Roundup for May 1, 2020

So says Carlos Acevedo, director of sales and the regional lead of Latin America for Brave, the crypto-powered web browser. In this episode of CoinDesk Live, hosted by Consensus organizer Stephanie Izquieta, Acevedo seemed to invoke the giving nature of early bitcoin enthusiasts such as Roger Ver, who would give away bitcoin to anyone and everyone he met.

According to Acevedo, thats the best way to get more people interested in the technology. Theyll not only be interested from a price perspective but become more curious about how crypto could offer efficiencies and benefits in other areas of their life.

For people in lower-income communities that are unbanked or underbanked, its introducing a whole new concept of finance they didnt have access to before.

The movement is so small but so, so powerful, Acevedo said.

Related: From Corrupt to Broken: An Insiders Analysis of the Fed, Feat. Danielle Dimartino Booth

Listen in to hear more about:

Next up:

CoinDesk Live: Lockdown Edition continues its popular twice-weekly virtual chats with Consensus speakers via Zoom and Twitter, giving you a preview of whats to come at Consensus: Distributed, our first fully virtual and fully free big-tent conference May 11-15.

Register to join our fifth session Thursday, April 30, with speaker Hudson Jameson from the Ethereum Foundation to discuss private transactions, client improvements and dealing with FUD, hosted by Consensus organizer Nolan Bauerle. Zoom participants can ask questions directly to our guests.

Then, of course, join us at Consensus: Distributed May 11-15 where all the guests you hear on CoinDesk LIVE will be speaking in more depth.

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Banking the Unbanked: How the Crypto Community Can Make a Big Impact - Yahoo Finance

Craig Wright Suing Everybody Leaves Horrible Taste in My Mouth: Roger Ver – U.Today

Yuri Molchan

When talking with U.Today in an exclusive interview, famous Bitcoin Cash proponent Roger Ver mentioned BSV and Craig Wright suing famous people in the crypto sphere

Recently, U.Todayspoke withRoger Ver, a prominent crypto thought leader, entrepreneur and investor. While speaking on various blockchainsubjects, Bitcoin and the crypto industry in general, the topic of Bitcoin Cash SV emerged.

As for the technical side ofBSV, Roger Ver seems to have no issues. However, since BSV is listed only on a tiny number of exchanges, the former Bitcoin Jesus Roger Ver is not ultra-bullish on it.

Craig Wright, the frontman of the Bitcoin Cash SV party has a bone to pick with Ver the latter is one of those famous members ofthe crypto sphere who the self-proclaimed Satoshi Nakamoto, Craig Wright, sued in the spring of 2019.

This, Ver says, has left a horribly bad taste in his mouth. Apart from Ver, Craig Wright also sued Vitalik Buterin, podcaster Peter McCormack, Twitter user hodlonaut (creator of the #faketoshi hashtag) and some others. This, inparticular, has preventedRoger Ver from using BSV.

Watch this space for the entire interview to be released Thursday of this week.

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Craig Wright Suing Everybody Leaves Horrible Taste in My Mouth: Roger Ver - U.Today

Roger Ver Explains Why He Stopped Promoting Bitcoin (BTC …

The Bitcoin Jesus and famous Bitcoin Cash (BCH) advocate Roger Ver says he would gladly continue promoting Bitcoin (BTC) if the crypto king met these requirements.

An unyielding champion of Bitcoin Cash (BCH), investor and entrepreneur Roger Ver supported a Redditor who was confused by the slow speed of Bitcoin (BTC) transactions.

On his Twitter, Mr. Ver posted the complaint of the Reddit user Calijwett, who hadbought some Bitcoin (BTC). Unfortunately, the newbie received no coins and had been waiting for the first confirmation for over six hours. Roger Ver joinedthe thread and assuredMr. Calijwett thatsuch a problem would never occur withBitcoin Cash

Bitcoin Cash solves these problems.

Also, Roger Ver informed his Twitter audience about this incident and outlined that Bitcoin (BTC), or Bitcoin Core in BCH community terminology,doesnt work as money.

Generally, he bashed Bitcoins (BTC) user experience and emphasized that he would be embarrassed to promote the flagship cryptocurrency today.

However, not all of his followers agreed with Mr. Ver. Another investor, Alistair Milne of Altana Digital Currency Fund, remindedMr. Ver about the state of the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) network:

You should be embarrassed about the absolute state of Bcash.

As reported by U.Today, the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) blockchain wentthrough a very painful halving. Network speed tanked rapidly while the cost of a 51% attack reached a dangerous level.

News Source

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Roger Ver Explains Why He Stopped Promoting Bitcoin (BTC ...

Roger Ver Gives The Main Reason Why Hes No Longer A …

Former Bitcoin Jesus Roger Ver recently took to Twitter to explain why he no longer promotes the OG cryptocurrency, Bitcoin (BTC). Ver was strongly advocating the BTC principles until late 2017 when he jumped ship and joined the Bitcoin Cash (BCH) camp.

Roger Ver is one of the most influential personas in the crypto industry. He has long been a staunch advocate of Bitcoin Cash which he claims is way better than its progenitor, Bitcoin (BTC).

A few hours ago, a Reddit user, Calijwett, stated that he had bought BTC but he had not received the coins despite waiting for around six hours. The new investor wanted the community to help him understand why this had happened.

Roger Ver responded to the Reddit post, opining that Bitcoin Cash solves these problems.

In a tweet a few hours later, Ver explained that he would gladly continue promoting BTC if it still functioned as money. He further noted that, at this point, he would be embarrassed to promote something with as bad of a user experience as BTC. This is why he is now an ardent Bitcoin Cash (BCH) supporter.

The Crypto Twitter community did not hold back on the comments. Most of them pointed to the recent BCH block reward halving which left the network vulnerable to a 51% attack.

For perspective, after BCH completed its halving on April 8, the hash rate fell dramatically. This was accompanied by an alarming drop in the cost per hour for conducting a 51% attack.

Alistair Milne, the CIO at Altana Digital Currency Fund, astutely observed this unnerving state of affairs at the BCH network, positing tersely:

Worth noting that this is not the first time Ver has publicly bashed Bitcoin (BTC).As ZyCrypto previously reported, he recently claimed to have paid $1000 in transaction fees for a single transaction on the BTC network on multiple occasions.

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The views expressed in the article are wholly those of the author and do not represent those of, nor should they be attributed to, ZyCrypto.This article is not meant to give financial advice. Please carry out your own research before investing in any of the various cryptocurrencies available.

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Roger Ver Gives The Main Reason Why Hes No Longer A ...

Roger Ver Virtually Dismisses the Coronavirus Crisis – The Merkle Hash

The coronavirus crisis is a global pandemic and swiftly approaches 1 million confirmed cases worldwide. Some people still dismiss this threat, including Roger Ver.

Not everyone in the cryptocurrency space thinks the coronavirus is worth all of the media attention.

Roger Ver, the promoter of Bitcoin Cash which is not the real Bitcoin is one of these people dismissing it as a fad.

More specifically, he recently posted a Tweet that did not go over well with a lot of people.

It would appear that Roger Ver isnt a fan of self-isolating to prevent the coronavirus from spreading further.

He also claims how the number of deaths caused by COVID-19 appear to be statistically insignificant.

It is true that other incidents and diseases cause many more deaths around the globe.

Especially the reference to the seasonal flu and malaria is something that is referred to often on social media.

That said, the coronavirus is not something to mess with either, at least not until a vaccine is available.

Everyone is entitled to their own opinion at all times.

However, the statement by Roger Ver is off-kilter, even under the best of circumstances.

Every virus is different, and caution is more than warranted.

The numbers will undoubtedly look very different in a month or two from now.

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Roger Ver Virtually Dismisses the Coronavirus Crisis - The Merkle Hash

Unimpressed by $6K Bitcoin (BTC)? This Problem Revealed by Economist Prevents It from Surging Higher – U.Today

Alex Dovbnya

Bitcoin (BTC) price sitting at $6k is still impressive, but there is one major problem that prevents the leading cryptocurrency from surging higher

Jeffrey A Tucker, theeditorial director of theAmerican Institute for Economic Research, says that he's 'not unimpressed' byBitcoin (BTC) trading at $6,000. In fact, he was 'blown away' when the flagship cryptocurrency reached just $30.

At this point, it appears that the sky is the limit for Bitcoin (BTC), but there is one major bottleneck -- its lack of scalability.

The Bitcoin network is only capable of processing about seven transactions per second. BTC can be ridiculously slow and expensive when there are too many unconfirmed transfers clogged in the mempool (which is exactly what happened in December 2017).

This undermined the original purpose of Bitcoin as a peer-to-peer currency and led to the creation of Bitcoin Cash (BCH).The Roger Ver-backed fork attempted to improve Bitcoin's processing capacity by increasing its block size from 1 MB to 8 MB.

The scaling experiment didn't fare well given that BCH is only worth a tiny fraction of BTC. Tucker explains that its network cannot hold a candle to that of the original cryptocurrency.

As reported by U.Today,Tucker predicted that the Bitcoin price could reach $1 mln during one of his appearances onRT's 'Boom or Bust'. The same applies to its controversial forks.

However, the economist conceded that it was hard to value crypto since it's still a nascent and complicated technology.

The rest is here:

Unimpressed by $6K Bitcoin (BTC)? This Problem Revealed by Economist Prevents It from Surging Higher - U.Today