almost too good to be true, right?
time will tell, this is all in theory at this point, but even a yield of 2-3 coins per unit of investment would be worth it.tysker said:
almost too good to be true, right?
tysker said:
almost too good to be true, right?
I dont want people to be scammed, plenty of that the industry already.Adverse Event said:tysker said:
almost too good to be true, right?
Coming from a devout fiat worshipper, it certainly looks that way. When you step away from the cult, son, you'll see it's certainly as true as presented.
certainly when derivatives have decreasing risk profiles to the underlying. the question may become (and probably already is in the case of BTC) is the tail wagging the dog?Bag said:time will tell, this is all in theory at this point, but even a yield of 2-3 coins per unit of investment would be worth it.tysker said:
almost too good to be true, right?
may we live in interesting times....
tysker said:I dont want people to be scammed, plenty of that the industry already.Adverse Event said:tysker said:
almost too good to be true, right?
Coming from a devout fiat worshipper, it certainly looks that way. When you step away from the cult, son, you'll see it's certainly as true as presented.
Just like all of these schemes, I'm sure its a good deal for some but somewhere down the line someone's going to be left holding the bag. Understand your risk tolerances and have an exit plan.
Definitely Not A Cop said:
Have there been mining scams? From my understanding, the only scams are people buying crypto that was never supposed to serve any purpose other than fun because they were convinced to by it by randos on the internet. And then phishing scams on the exchanges that happen to people just like with any other bank account.
Which metrics are you referring to?tysker said:
Not sure as its not my field, but all metrics point to the expansive wash trading being a bolster to prices and mining projects. Without wash trading does mining make sense as an investment? Mining requires flow; just like Robinhood, or various other brokers (full disclosure, my firm as well), when it receives payment for order flow.
From my estimation, these mining projects, like the one above, are not much different than real estate hedge funds that work well when rates are low, there is plenty of flow, and underlying prices rise at least to match inflation. Well, we've already seen rates rise and prices of certain products are dropping. Flow is still good, but all signs point to it being manipulated in some capacity. So I guess we'll see
Yea, I'm not following that theory either.ac04 said:
i don't think wash trading would affect miners, they get the block reward whether the block contains 0 or 1,000 transactions.
Its been going on for a while. Several outlets have been reporting on this:Deluxe said:Which metrics are you referring to?tysker said:
Not sure as its not my field, but all metrics point to the expansive wash trading being a bolster to prices and mining projects. Without wash trading does mining make sense as an investment? Mining requires flow; just like Robinhood, or various other brokers (full disclosure, my firm as well), when it receives payment for order flow.
From my estimation, these mining projects, like the one above, are not much different than real estate hedge funds that work well when rates are low, there is plenty of flow, and underlying prices rise at least to match inflation. Well, we've already seen rates rise and prices of certain products are dropping. Flow is still good, but all signs point to it being manipulated in some capacity. So I guess we'll see
tysker said:Its been going on for a while. Several outlets have been reporting on this:Deluxe said:Which metrics are you referring to?tysker said:
Not sure as its not my field, but all metrics point to the expansive wash trading being a bolster to prices and mining projects. Without wash trading does mining make sense as an investment? Mining requires flow; just like Robinhood, or various other brokers (full disclosure, my firm as well), when it receives payment for order flow.
From my estimation, these mining projects, like the one above, are not much different than real estate hedge funds that work well when rates are low, there is plenty of flow, and underlying prices rise at least to match inflation. Well, we've already seen rates rise and prices of certain products are dropping. Flow is still good, but all signs point to it being manipulated in some capacity. So I guess we'll see
https://blog.chainalysis.com/reports/2022-crypto-crime-report-preview-nft-wash-trading-money-laundering/
https://www.coindesk.com/web3/2022/12/23/over-30b-of-nft-trading-volume-on-ethereum-is-wash-trading-research-suggests/
https://www.nber.org/papers/w30783
Arent you daft.Adverse Event said:tysker said:Its been going on for a while. Several outlets have been reporting on this:Deluxe said:Which metrics are you referring to?tysker said:
Not sure as its not my field, but all metrics point to the expansive wash trading being a bolster to prices and mining projects. Without wash trading does mining make sense as an investment? Mining requires flow; just like Robinhood, or various other brokers (full disclosure, my firm as well), when it receives payment for order flow.
From my estimation, these mining projects, like the one above, are not much different than real estate hedge funds that work well when rates are low, there is plenty of flow, and underlying prices rise at least to match inflation. Well, we've already seen rates rise and prices of certain products are dropping. Flow is still good, but all signs point to it being manipulated in some capacity. So I guess we'll see
https://blog.chainalysis.com/reports/2022-crypto-crime-report-preview-nft-wash-trading-money-laundering/
https://www.coindesk.com/web3/2022/12/23/over-30b-of-nft-trading-volume-on-ethereum-is-wash-trading-research-suggests/
https://www.nber.org/papers/w30783
Have we had these discussions for this long, and you're still confusing ethereum for bitcoin?
No wonder you're so hard for bailout bucks (usd).
If you say so. Definitely no manipulation in BTC trading and prices.Deluxe said:
Ah. None of those have anything to do with Bitcoin mining.
Agree that price manipulation is rampant in the alt token/NFT game though. Low liquidity and transaction volume makes it alot easier. SBF was basically able to pick his price for FTT because he controlled the liquidity and supply. Not even remotely the same situation with Bitcoin markets.
So are you saying that Bitcoin miners are just globalized philanthropists? I got the impression from most of the posts on here that people were in it for the bucks.Adverse Event said:AggieAL1 said:Well, not quite. The same amount of Bitcoin will be mined no matter how much or (virtually) how little energy is used. Expanded energy consumption is only required when an individual mining operation wants a bigger share of the Bitcoin available.jt2hunt said:
The mining of bitcoin is constrained by the energy requirements and speed of the processors? In simple terms. The value will continue to rise until the mining issue is solved. Except, the algorithm gets more complex with each bitcoin mined?
Is this a fairly accurate dummies 101 explanation?
Thus, a startup miner would have to match, say, 25 percent of all power being consumed currently by the world's miners (plus the equipment investment) to gain a one-fifth share of the roughly 340,000 Bitcoin that will be produced in the next year. Since that would cut the other miners' shares to 80 percent, they could be expected to boost energy and hardware investment to try to maintain proximate share.
That's called a free market, or hyenas on a carcass - take your pick.
Then in the year after, no matter what they do, everybody's share will be cut in half. Strange business plan.
It's not a business plan, it's an incentive structure to maintaina decentralized global computer.
I'm not doubting BTC prices can be manipulated. Far from it. Paper bitcoin. 50x trader calls and covers. Etc.tysker said:If you say so. Definitely no manipulation in BTC trading and prices.Deluxe said:
Ah. None of those have anything to do with Bitcoin mining.
Agree that price manipulation is rampant in the alt token/NFT game though. Low liquidity and transaction volume makes it alot easier. SBF was basically able to pick his price for FTT because he controlled the liquidity and supply. Not even remotely the same situation with Bitcoin markets.
I mean Alemeda Research informed us that BTC trading was totally legitimate: https://blokt.com/news/alameda-research-bitwise-report-on-fake-bitcoin-trading-volume-inaccurate
AggieAL1 said:So are you saying that Bitcoin miners are just globalized philanthropists? if you're incentivized to perform a behavior, like securing the largest computing network on the planet, is that philanthropy? I'm sorry, were you asking a real question...Adverse Event said:AggieAL1 said:Well, not quite. The same amount of Bitcoin will be mined no matter how much or (virtually) how little energy is used. Expanded energy consumption is only required when an individual mining operation wants a bigger share of the Bitcoin available.jt2hunt said:
The mining of bitcoin is constrained by the energy requirements and speed of the processors? In simple terms. The value will continue to rise until the mining issue is solved. Except, the algorithm gets more complex with each bitcoin mined?
Is this a fairly accurate dummies 101 explanation?
Thus, a startup miner would have to match, say, 25 percent of all power being consumed currently by the world's miners (plus the equipment investment) to gain a one-fifth share of the roughly 340,000 Bitcoin that will be produced in the next year. Since that would cut the other miners' shares to 80 percent, they could be expected to boost energy and hardware investment to try to maintain proximate share.
That's called a free market, or hyenas on a carcass - take your pick.
Then in the year after, no matter what they do, everybody's share will be cut in half. Strange business plan.
It's not a business plan, it's an incentive structure to maintaina decentralized global computer.
I got the impression from most of the posts on here that people were in it for thebailout bucksSats. (Fify)
tysker said:If you say so. Definitely no manipulation in BTC trading and prices.Deluxe said:
Ah. None of those have anything to do with Bitcoin mining.
Agree that price manipulation is rampant in the alt token/NFT game though. Low liquidity and transaction volume makes it alot easier. SBF was basically able to pick his price for FTT because he controlled the liquidity and supply. Not even remotely the same situation with Bitcoin markets.
I mean Alemeda Research informed us that BTC trading was totally legitimate: https://blokt.com/news/alameda-research-bitwise-report-on-fake-bitcoin-trading-volume-inaccurate
From RIOTs SEC disclosures:Deluxe said:I'm not doubting BTC prices can be manipulated. Far from it. Paper bitcoin. 50x trader calls and covers. Etc.tysker said:If you say so. Definitely no manipulation in BTC trading and prices.Deluxe said:
Ah. None of those have anything to do with Bitcoin mining.
Agree that price manipulation is rampant in the alt token/NFT game though. Low liquidity and transaction volume makes it alot easier. SBF was basically able to pick his price for FTT because he controlled the liquidity and supply. Not even remotely the same situation with Bitcoin markets.
I mean Alemeda Research informed us that BTC trading was totally legitimate: https://blokt.com/news/alameda-research-bitwise-report-on-fake-bitcoin-trading-volume-inaccurate
I'm refuting your claim that the miners are doing it. They don't control enough Bitcoin to manipulate even if they really wanted to. Those games are done by the casinos and traders.
Quote:
Our ability to achieve profitability is largely dependent on the price of Bitcoin, which has historically been volatile.
Our primary focus on vertically integrating our Bitcoin mining operations and the associated expansion of our Rockdale Facility is largely based on our assumptions regarding the future value of Bitcoin, which has been subject to significant historical volatility and may be subject to influence from malicious actors, real or perceived scarcity, political, economic, and regulatory conditions, and speculation making its price more volatile or creating "bubble" type risks for the trading price of Bitcoin. Further, unlike traditional stock exchanges, which have listing requirements and vet issuers, requiring them to comply with rigorous listing standards and rules, and which monitor transactions for fraud and other improprieties, markets for Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies tend to be underregulated, if they are regulated at all. Less stringent cryptocurrency markets have a higher risk of fraud or manipulation and any lack of oversight or perceived lack of transparency could reduce confidence in the price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, which could adversely affect the price of Bitcoin. As disclosed in Part I, Item 1, "Business" of this Annual Report, under the subheading "Regulatory," Bitcoin and crypto asset markets generally may be subject to increased scrutiny and regulation by the SEC and other U.S. government agencies, and such evolving regulatory and legal environment may impact our mining and other activities.
These factors make it difficult to accurately predict the future market price of Bitcoin and may also inhibit consumer trust in, and market acceptance of, cryptocurrencies as a means of exchange, which could limit the future adoption of Bitcoin and, as a result, our assumptions could prove incorrect. If our assumptions prove incorrect and the future price of Bitcoin is not sufficiently high, our income from our Bitcoin mining operations may not exceed our costs, and our operations may never achieve profitability.
Alemeda was the group saying there is "nothing to see here" even back in 2019 when, as noted in the NBER paper linked above, wash trading and market manipulation was being reported by a variety of market participants and observers. But like the author of this article, I guess you think we should trust FTX and SBF rather than whistleblowers:Adverse Event said:tysker said:If you say so. Definitely no manipulation in BTC trading and prices.Deluxe said:
Ah. None of those have anything to do with Bitcoin mining.
Agree that price manipulation is rampant in the alt token/NFT game though. Low liquidity and transaction volume makes it alot easier. SBF was basically able to pick his price for FTT because he controlled the liquidity and supply. Not even remotely the same situation with Bitcoin markets.
I mean Alemeda Research informed us that BTC trading was totally legitimate: https://blokt.com/news/alameda-research-bitwise-report-on-fake-bitcoin-trading-volume-inaccurate
You must have missed the while ftx, sbf, Alameda fiasco, somehow. Or did you just Google and not read anything you posted to try to support your terrible takes?
Quote:
It might not be wise to accept Bitwise's view that the majority of the reported volume is fake, as both anecdotal evidence and other firm's digital asset reports seem to show otherwise. Instead, like Alameda Research, it might be better to adopt a balanced approach to crypto trading volume.
The way you restated your point here makes more sense than the way I read it before. I thought you meant the miners themselves were colluding to manipulate the price, but it sounds like you're saying that the manipulated price (regardless of who's doing the manipulating) is what keeps the mining rails greased. Is that right?tysker said:
Economics is about incentives. without flow, without trading, without activity, there is no need for miners. the higher the price of the underlying, the more incentive there is for miners. Its a symbiotic feedback loop. BTC requires adopters to inflate the price and false trading volumes, and related mining, adds to the BTC narrative.
Back in January BTC seemed to lock itself in, trading within a range. (https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitcoin-derivatives-data-suggests-a-btc-price-pump-above-18k-won-t-be-easy) It needed a push, nay, a government endorsed bank failure or two to help ramp up the price. Pretty good returns from the November lows and helps to stabilize other participants in the market, especially those with excessive leverage, at least for a period.