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10 votes
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Blockchain technology changes the nature of trust, but it doesn't eliminate the need for it
4 votes -
Cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX locked out of over $180M in funds after CEO's unexpected death
11 votes -
Remember Bitcoin? Some investors might want to forget
8 votes -
Tom Scott warns viewers that Brave donations do not reach him
@tomscott: This warning is prompted by a company called Brave, who've been taking cryptocurrency donations "for me", using my name and photo, without my consent. I asked them not to, and to refund anyone who's donated; they said "we'll see what we can do" and that "refunds are impossible".
33 votes -
Razer wants gamers to mine cryptocurrency for store credit
11 votes -
The KodakCoin ICO failed, and now everyone wants their money
14 votes -
Four days trapped at sea with crypto’s nouveau riche
16 votes -
Debunking the bitcoin death spiral theory
10 votes -
Opinion piece: Bitcoin is close to becoming worthless
23 votes -
What do you legally “own” with Bitcoin? A short introduction to krypto-property
7 votes -
Bitcoin turns ten – here’s how it all started and what the future might hold
8 votes -
Coinbase and Circle announce the launch of USDC, a stablecoin that is fully collateralized by US dollars
7 votes -
Could cryptominers be the good alternative to ads?
Everyone hates ads. Frankly, no one wants to pay for anything online. And places like CoinHive offer a service that doesn't clutter the screen and pays people. Too good to be true right? Well the...
Everyone hates ads. Frankly, no one wants to pay for anything online. And places like CoinHive offer a service that doesn't clutter the screen and pays people. Too good to be true right? Well the first group of people to latch on the service ramped up the mines to 8 threads at 100% because they were hackers and didn't care if they slowed your computer or drained your battery. They just wanted their almost untraceable money.
What I'm proposing is that if sites were to use miners that instead use 2/4 threads at 10% thereby using far less resources, across enough users provided your traffic is ok, could the results be tangible if we gave it a chance?
edit: I hate cryptocurrency but I was more trying to discuss the idea of getting paid for passive CPU usage more described in this comment by @spctrvl
23 votes -
The man who dodged the Dogecoin
10 votes -
All In - The hidden history of poker and cryptocurrency
6 votes -
The best performing cryptocurrency started off as a joke by an Australian
8 votes -
Any cryptocurrency investors/enthusiasts in here?
Hey all, haven't seen a thread on this yet. What projects do you folks have some stake in? Any you're interested in but haven't picked up? Thoughts on the market?
14 votes -
Brave browser gets Chrome's extensions starting Thursday with major new version
20 votes -
Anybody here own cryptocurrency?
If so then what coins are you invested in? What attracted you to crypto?
29 votes -
After the Bitcoin boom: Hard lessons for cryptocurrency investors
9 votes -
What are your opinions on cryptocurrency?
What about the technical aspects do you support and what are your reservations? Bitcoin vs. altcoins? Do you anticipate widespread adoption or fizzling out to occur in the next few decades?
20 votes -
The game "Abstractism" on Steam appears to have been covertly mining cryptocurrency for its developers (and has now been removed from Steam)
9 votes -
The Elon Musk impersonators of the internet - For cryptocurrency scammers, imitation is the sincerest form of fraud
7 votes -
The SIM Hijackers
8 votes -
Chinese police break up US$1.5 billion cryptocurrency World Cup gambling ring
8 votes -
The Crypto Anarchist Manifesto
10 votes -
The great illusion of digital currencies
7 votes -
Bitcoin bloodbath nears historic levels
21 votes -
Inside the crypto world's biggest scandal
4 votes -
Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin cannot replace money, says Bank for International Settlements
10 votes -
BitTorrent sells to blockchain entrepreneur Justin Sun
4 votes -
Bitcoin
Bitcoin doesn't really fit in any of the overall headers; I'm trying it here. It's the main reason I found tildes. For me, Bitcoin is both 'tech' and 'politics.' Lol
4 votes -
Blockchain
Well hello, I'm still learning about the blockchain day by day and it's quit interesting to try to "predict" the future use of this technology. But i have my own doubts.(maybe I'm still lacking in...
Well hello,
I'm still learning about the blockchain day by day and it's quit interesting to try to "predict" the future use of this technology. But i have my own doubts.(maybe I'm still lacking in research)- If everything will be decentralised, how will you make the profit out of it?(business point of view)
- If you have million dollar today to work on blockchain technology what business would you get into to get appropriate profit in near future?(Of course excluding those exchange of cryptos)
P.S: You are not a tech company and just want to enter in the field.
5 votes -
ZenCash – A privacy based cryptocurrency with zero-knowledge technology over which communications, data, or value can be securely transmitted and stored
3 votes -
Bitcoin's energy consumption is growing at 20% per month and threatens to erase decades of progress on renewable energy
41 votes -
Monster is Quietly Planning a $300 Million ICO
6 votes -
The BCT terminal brings crypto to Wall Street
4 votes -
Andreas Antonopoulos - The death of money
5 votes -
Cryptocurrency has been great for GPU makers—that might change soon
5 votes -
The Wealthy Are Hoarding $10 Billion of Bitcoin in Bunkers
5 votes -
Blockchain is not only crappy technology but a bad vision for the future
6 votes