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Kryptovaluta 💰 (Part 1)

Er bitter for at jeg ikke tok en nÊrmere titt pÄ bitcoin da den lÄ nede pÄ 270, altsÄ da holmes begynte Ä se potensialet.

Har generelt sett gÄtt glipp av mange muligheter denne uka, men hey, jeg lÊrer hvert fall mye.

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Blir nok ny oppgang nÄr vi fÄr resultatet av FBI sin auksjon av de siste 44000 BTC fra Silk Road klokken 20:00 norsk tid. SÄ her er det bare Ä laste opp :slight_smile:

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Tipper at Marc Andreessen skal legge inn bud pÄ grunn av belÞp og timing av dette salget:

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How to protect your Bitcoin currency from hackers

US Government to Sell Over 44,000 Bitcoins Today

http://www.coindesk.com/us-marshals-final-silk-road-bitcoin-auction/

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Oslo Bitcoin Meetup Ăžnsker Ă„ fremme interessen for Bitcoin i Norge. Vi kommer til Ă„ snakke om Bitcoin-protokollen, Bitcoin startups, annen digital valuta i en uformell setting over et par pils.

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Er dessverre i varmere strÞk da :sunrise: (sÄ ikke fortvil hvis dere ikke hÞrer noe fra meg de neste par ukene).

Edit: Bitcoin opp pÄ 415 igjen nÄ!

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Keiser Report: Trust Machine aka Bitcoin (E832)

Ned pÄ 200 timers glidende snitt. Spennende Ä se retningen herfra, kan vÊre et greit nivÄ Ä komme inn pÄ (ca 360)

Synes det begynner Ä se litt mer positivt ut, men har ikke mulighet Ä legge inn graf her nÄ

Link inn den ETN er du grei. Jeg er klar til Ä handle nÄ :slight_smile:

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Har nÄ lagt inn ordre. Men la meg litt under da kursen har falt hvert 4. sekund siden jeg Äpnet vinduet :slight_smile:

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@Morti sÄ du fant den nÄ

Ja fant den siste gangen du linket og ligger pÄ 16 kroner. HÄper jeg fÄr for det.

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Bitcoin spikes as Russian fraudster starts Ponzi scheme in China

I (Shall Happily) Accept the 2016 Nobel Prize in Economics on Behalf of Satoshi Nakamoto

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But the cryptographic technology that underlies bitcoin, called the “blockchain”, has applications well beyond cash and currency.

  • prototype of a blockchain-based land registry

  • thwarting diamond thieves to streamlining stockmarkets: the NASDAQ exchange will soon start using a blockchain-based system to record trades in privately held companies. The Bank of England, not known for technological flights of fancy, seems electrified: distributed ledgers, it concluded in a research note late last year, are a “significant innovation” that could have “far-reaching implications” in the financial industry.

  • Libertarians dream of a world where more and more state regulations are replaced with private contracts between individuals—contracts which blockchain-based programming would make self-enforcing.

  • For now blockchain-based offerings fall in three buckets. The first takes advantage of the fact that any type of asset can be transferred using the blockchain. One of the startups betting on this idea is Colu. It has developed a mechanism to “dye” very small bitcoin transactions (called “bitcoin dust”) by adding extra data to them so that they can represent bonds, shares or units of precious metals.

  • Protecting land titles is an example of the second bucket: applications that use the blockchain as a truth machine. Bitcoin transactions can be combined with snippets of additional information which then also become embedded in the ledger. It can thus be a registry of anything worth tracking closely. Everledger uses the blockchain to protect luxury goods; for example it will stick on to the blockchain data about a stone’s distinguishing attributes, providing unchallengeable proof of its identity should it be stolen. Onename stores personal information in a way that is meant to do away with the need for passwords; CoinSpark acts as a notary. Note, though, that for these applications, unlike for pure bitcoin transactions, a certain amount of trust is required; you have to believe the intermediary will store the data accurately.

  • Distributed ledgers that settle transactions in minutes or seconds could go a long way to solving such problems and fulfilling the greater promise of digitised banking. They could also save banks a lot of money: according to Santander, a bank, by 2022 such ledgers could cut the industry’s bills by up to $20 billion a year. Vendors still need to prove that they could deal with the far-higher-than-bitcoin transaction rates that would be involved; but big banks are already pushing for standards to shape the emerging technology. One of them, UBS, has proposed the creation of a standard “settlement coin”. The first order of business for R3 CEV, a blockchain startup in which UBS has invested alongside Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and 22 other banks, is to develop a standardised architecture for private ledgers.

  • Ledgers that no longer need to be maintained by a company—or a government—may in time spur new changes in how companies and governments work, in what is expected of them and in what can be done without them. A realisation that systems without centralised record-keeping can be just as trustworthy as those that have them may bring radical change.

  • If blockchains have a fundamental paradox, it is this: by offering a way of setting the past and present in cryptographic stone, they could make the future a very different place.

Why the Web Won’t Be Nirvana

Bitcoin inventor ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ nominated for Nobel Prize in Economics

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