Key Celsius liquidation level at $17.2k...
Deluxe said:
Make that $16.8k. Alameda?
Deluxe said:
Key Celsius liquidation level at $17.2k...
it's seems that Celsius is mostly a classic Ponzi scheme-tysker said:Deluxe said:
Key Celsius liquidation level at $17.2k...
If true will participants press down to cause liquidations and pick up assets cheap on the other side? There isn't much protection from price manipulation by hedge funds or governments
Alameda is Sam Bankman-Fried's crypto trading firm. Given the insanely high trading volumes on FTX last night, people were speculating that they were trying to push the price down the $16.8k and liquidate Celsius. Who knows if that was actually the case.LMCane said:what does this meanDeluxe said:
Make that $16.8k. Alameda?
Yep. It also unlocks a large supply of coins that shorts need to buy to close out their high leverage positions.tysker said:Deluxe said:
Key Celsius liquidation level at $17.2k...
If true will participants press down to cause liquidations and pick up assets cheap on the other side? There isn't much protection from price manipulation by hedge funds or governments
The strategy of shorting a commodity/security all the way down and picking up the pieces for pennies on the dollar is tried and true. And if you think naked short selling is problem with stocks, I imagine there are some players out there for engaging in the practice or allowing it happen, knowingly or unknowingly.Deluxe said:Yep. It also unlocks a large supply of coins that shorts need to buy to close out their high leverage positions.tysker said:Deluxe said:
Key Celsius liquidation level at $17.2k...
If true will participants press down to cause liquidations and pick up assets cheap on the other side? There isn't much protection from price manipulation by hedge funds or governments
Hopefully the exchange regulation aspect changes soon and I think it will. None of this is healthy and it prevents institutional capital from buying Bitcoin.
The ledger holds the private keys to YOUR unique BTC *ADDRESS*. You are moving your coins to YOUR address which only you hold the keys to.LMCane said:
I am setting up my Ledger Nano S now.
1. a youtuber is stating the ledger only holds the Private Key and not the actual bitcoin which is on the blockchain
2. but then what happens when you move the crypto onto the ledger?
3. isn't the entire point of doing this to not only protect the key, but in case Coinbase or Bitrex or FTX goes bankrupt and tries to keep your crypto coins?
I am worried more about Coinbase collapsing and not giving back funds (which in a filing a few months ago they said they could do!!) than I am about someone hacking my account and stealing the coins from coinbase.
need some good knowledge here!
will25u said:
Mail is a semi good analogy.
Post Office = blockchain
PO BOX = your address
Physical key to open PO BOX = your private keys. **NOTE** in this scenario, the Post Office does not own a second set of keys, nor can they open your PO BOX, only put stuff in your mailbox.
Celsius is one of the largest centralized gateways to crypto.
— jonwu.aztec (@jonwu_) June 13, 2022
It raised $864m of venture capital and at one point custodied over $3 billion of funds for 1m+ customers.
As of today, it appears insolvent, and it's taking the whole crypto market with it.
The Celsius Thread:
👇
Chrundle the Great said:will25u said:
Mail is a semi good analogy.
Post Office = blockchain
PO BOX = your address
Physical key to open PO BOX = your private keys. **NOTE** in this scenario, the Post Office does not own a second set of keys, nor can they open your PO BOX, only put stuff in your mailbox.
Sticking with this analogy. Coinbase has a much much bigger PO Box than you, but in the event they go tits up the post office itself is fine preserving the security of your little box. And in a few years a new big name will buy coinbase's old box.
If you move your BTC and ETH to Ledger, you no longer need Coinbase. But if you ever want to buy/sell your BTC/ETH, you'll have to move it to an exchange first. Which is fine. Just minimize the time that your coins are held on exchanges.LMCane said:
how come I have seen that Coinbase, in the event they go bankrupt, is under no obligation to return money to all it's customers?
if I move all my BTC and ETH onto my ledger, do I then still need Coinbase?
if Coinbase has my keys now that are used for my account- how come no one at coinbase steals everything like the armored car bank drivers sometimes do?
And some exchanges (not Coinbase to my knowledge) have been hacked and robbed blind. Not necessarily an inside job as alluded to here, but this is the exact risk exposure that moving to cold storage or a wallet is trying to reduce.Deluxe said:If you move your BTC and ETH to Ledger, you no longer need Coinbase. But if you ever want to buy/sell your BTC/ETH, you'll have to move it to an exchange first. Which is fine. Just minimize the time that your coins are held on exchanges.LMCane said:
how come I have seen that Coinbase, in the event they go bankrupt, is under no obligation to return money to all it's customers?
if I move all my BTC and ETH onto my ledger, do I then still need Coinbase?
if Coinbase has my keys now that are used for my account- how come no one at coinbase steals everything like the armored car bank drivers sometimes do?
You need Coinbase or Gemini because it's an exchange for whenever you want to sell a BTC. Unless you're sending to a person with another BTC address, which can be done from your Ledger. For example, I sold a few dollars worth of BTC for a purchase because the other party didn't accept BTC. So I moved it to Coinbase, sold there, transferred dollars to my bank account. You need an exchange in the event you want to sell for dollars.LMCane said:
if I move all my BTC and ETH onto my ledger, do I then still need Coinbase?
if Coinbase has my keys now that are used for my account- how come no one at coinbase steals everything like the armored car bank drivers sometimes do?
I don't know what kind of protections are setup within Coinbase specifically, but I have a reasonable guess on a few things.LMCane said:
good info here thanks Ags
let's say I want to buy more BTC- I need to use Coinbase for that and not the ledger app Nano Live?
what is stopping someone at Coinbase today from pilfering accounts as currently they are controlling so many keys?
and so I think the conclusion is MOVE THE CRYPTO from coinbase onto the Ledger - so that no one can steal it and then when I want to buy more or sell go back and link with Coinbase?
How to leave a shitcoin cult.
— Brad Mills (🔑,🧀) (@bradmillscan) March 31, 2021
1. Pack your things.
Put a change of clothes in a duffel bag. Even though you already sold your shitcoins, put your ledger in the bag.
Leave all the swag you got at the crypto conferences behind. Stow the bag away. pic.twitter.com/VPUcyPGltV
ThreatLevel: Midnight said:
Man I wish administrative error were still with us to chime in on this wild ride.
LMCane said:
so even if my Ledger Nano S is destroyed somehow, the BTC I transferred can still be accessed by ANOTHER Ledger if I have my 24 word backup codes correct?
let's say I transfer 75% of my BTC from Coinbase to my ledger. somehow the Blockchain knows that my ledger does not have access to my full amount? (as 25% is still on Coinbase)
how does that work?