BitCone to expand into other subreddits as a community token
We all love our moons but outside of r/cryptocurrency, no one gives a shit about them BitCone, the community token for the r/ConeHeads subreddit that was created for Reddit NFT holders will be expanding soon into other subreddits to serve as a community token which is really cool. I honestly think this is the fastest way to achieve mass adoption across Reddit. We saw with free Reddit avatars, how much people love free shit. Once Redditors start earning community points for posting on non related crypto subs that they can sell, I think minds will start to change. Do you see Moons ever expanding outside of this subreddit? BitCone isn’t officially tied to Reddit which maybe gives the developers a little more freedom but who knows, I think it would be really good for moons if that happened.
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Analyst Says Altcoins Have Bottomed, Evaluates a Possible Altcoin Bull Season!
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[SATIRE] It was nice when it lasted, Reddit terminated the community points
I don't know if you noticed, but there was no MOONS distribution today, wondering why, I checked Reddit's tweeter and unfortunately, there was a post about it. >As of today, we are ending the community points system, which we have been testing for more than 2 years. ​ https://preview.redd.it/9ft4e2bpug0b1.png?width=539&format=png&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=6ccb4629173ad4f1e60125ce944f9c3584c2f2d8 And I was curious why this happened while everything going nice, then noticed Gary asked them to terminate their community points and declared MOONs as securities. All because Reddit is going to IPO. https://preview.redd.it/ovyig22ksg0b1.png?width=535&format=png&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=49542ef5964866602789ce1c2ee52583f2374f17 It was good while it lasted, now we know who to blame, Gary made his last move, grab your torches and get ready to riot.
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DIY crypto wallets should become the norm (or at least more popular)
Recently people have started realising the problems with proprietary cold wallets, it seems like the perfect time for Free and Open Source DIY crypto wallets to take their place. We (and by "we" I mean you guys which insisted that these wallets were a must-have) have become so reliant on closed-source, proprietary technology to hold our money. It's not as bad as banking, but I can definitely see some similarities. Making your own crypto wallet is definitely doable, and should naturally be more safe if it uses Open Source software, just like cryptocurrencies do. Crypto should be about control of your own money. What's the point of controlling your own money if someone else controls your wallet?
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Just trust us
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Weird folder called crypto
I was given my aunts computer hardrive , my family asked me to recover folders, documents, and files but deleted anything else, My aunt died a few years ago sadly but as I was in the recovery process on my Linux computer I discovered a folder in her user's titled crypto. Inside that was a folder called RSA and in that was another folder titled s-5-21 then a long string of numbers then in that was 3 files which were unopenable, a unknown file type and has a name of a long strings of numbers and letters. Last modified 2016. Are these actual crypto files? If so how exactly do they work?
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DRC-20 Hype Fest Triggers Huge Spike in Dogecoin (DOGE) Transaction Volume
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Apple announcement might hint that there's life, yet, in the Metaverse
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French Regulator Says Fleeing U.S. Crypto Firms ‘Welcome’
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FDIC Blames Crypto Exposure for Silvergate Bank Failure as Execs Remain Confused | CoinMarketCap
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When will the public learn when they keep shooting the messengers?
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US Secret Service's NFT collection on the Ethereum network
Just found out this while reading an article covering the AMA this sub had a couple days ago. Pretty cool stuff.
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Bankrupt crypto lender Voyager Digital predicts 35% customer payout
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Voyager Customers May Get 35% Return, as Judge Approves Liquidation Plan
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Why are Coldcard and BitBox02 preferred over Trezor One, when their secure chips aren't open source?
Interested in your opinion and elaboration. I understand both of those are designed in a way in which we don't need to trust it, but why is the community so confident in it? The alternative, Trezor, is without a secure element, but at least it's fully, really *fully*, open source. Let me know your thoughts!
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