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Topic: [ANN][DTT]🔺ICO DataTrading - trade forecasting by artificial intelligence 🔺📈 - page 5. (Read 6021 times)

sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Overview
Ethereum (ETH) differs from Bitcoin since instead of just being a method of payment it can also be used to run applications. It is a decentralized software platform that enables smart contracts. A smart contract represents an agreement that is able to enforce and execute itself and an individual can specify conditions under which a person will be paid, and once those conditions are met the money will automatically transfer to the person without any outside interference. Daily volume for the past 24 hours was $650,459,985 (IndexCoin(IDC)).
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Overview
Bitcoin (BTC) is arguably the most well-known cryptocurrency starting out in 2008 and with an admittedly onward growth, the value and popularity of this coin has reached exponential heights. With a market capitalization of $64.36 billion (as of 15/08/2017) it is currently considered to be the most valuable coin. Daily volume for the past 24 hours was $1.1 Billion (blockchain.info) and 30% of transactions currently are traded in USD. Daily volume for the past 24 hours in USD was $397,507,250 (WorldCoinIndex (WCI) figures as of 17/08/2017).
YEAR TO DATE
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Activity: 448
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Price Action
Bitcoin recently came within a whisker of the $5,000 level before a corrective move lower. Clearly the move higher has been explosive and therefore wild swing in both directions should be expected. The trend overall in the most well-known cryptocurrency is in good shape and pullbacks continue to attract buying interest, hence we do not believe that there is any reason in the short term for this sequence to end.


Why do you think the price of the BTC will be?
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
#
Name
Market Cap
Price
Circulating Supply
Volume (24h) 6.11.17
1
Bitcoin
£55,463,339,686
£3,339.70
16,607,287 BTC
£848,780,999
2
Ethereum
£21,973,469,890
£231.34
94,981,923 ETH
£203,855,475
3
Ripple
£7,028,975,094
£0.18
38,343,841,883 XRP *
£155,942,431
4
Bitcoin Cash
£4,696,974,005
£281.69
16,674,263 BCH
£155,741,122
5
Litecoin
£2,129,815,914
£39.99
53,257,732 LTC
£47,547,779
6
Dash
£1,796,726,152
£236.25
7,605,334 DASH
£17,394,618
7
NEM
£1,474,416,847
£0.16
8,999,999,999 XEM *
£3,501,335
8
NEO
£1,277,660,764
£25.55
50,000,000 NEO *
£39,604,269
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Rather than researching the multitude of cryptocurrencies currently in existence and diving headlong, especially for first-time investors, it may be a better idea to spend some time following the trends and getting to know the basic and most prevalent currencies, and then begin to branch out once the basics of a few tokens are fully understood.
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
ENTERING THE MARKET
The first thing you’ll need to do is decide which cryptocurrency you wish to purchase. There are hundreds to choose from, and each is slightly different from the other.
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
HOW DOES ONE INVEST IN CRYPTO?
There are numerous ways of investing in cryptocurrencies, these range from simply buying and holding the coins on an exchange. This can be perceived as risky, as Exchanges have been hacked and coins stolen, for example, Mt. Geox: https://goo.gl/JBhSvL. Trading on one of the cryptocurrency exchanges (still risky as the funds are held on the exchanges’ hot wallet, and many of these exchanges are unregulated) storing on a computer wallet and the risk of being hacked, paper storage (which can be tedious and troublesome) or a hardware wallet which is a combination of software and hardware (and most popular at present) are some of the options to trade these cryptocurrencies.
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
WHAT IS A BLOCKCHAIN?
To begin with, a block is where the data for the transactions are stored, the linked decentralised series of the blocks is what is named a blockchain. Blockchain is the structure of relational data storage that provides the ledger and backbone of the coin.
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
HOW DOES ONE ACQUIRE A CRYPTOCURRENCY?
A cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin is acquired by purchasing the coin via a wallet in typical fiat currency (this can be done via a credit card or wire transfer) and the wallet then allows you to buy various different cryptocurrencies using your fiat currency.
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
WHAT IS A CRYPTOCURRENCY?
Think of a cryptocurrency as a digital version of fiat currency such as the USD or GBP. Cryptography is used to secure the transaction as well as control the creation of new coins. In layman’s terms, it is a digital currency that is mined instead of printed.
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
The toolkit of the refugee advocate: understanding those elements of international law which are needed to interpret and apply refugee-related documents.

Can international law defend an individual? (And a state?) Who creates the norms of international law and in what form? How to find a refugee law norm? The practical tools to identify and interpret state obligations related to forced migration.

Readings
*   Akehurst’s Modern Introduction to International Law, Seventh Revised Edition by Peter Malanczuk, Routledge, London, 1997, pp 1 - 8
*   Chetail, Vincent: Sources of International Migration Law. in: Opeskin, Brian, Perruchoud, Richard and Redpath-Cross, Jillyanne (eds): Foundations of International Migration Law, Cambridge University Press (CUP), Cambridge, 2012, pp 56 - 92
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
What do you think I the best exchange?










 Undecided Undecided
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Activity: 448
Merit: 250
The final exam mobilises the analytical and critical skills and the ability to be productive under time pressure. Constant formal and informal  feed-back from the professor during the course creates  an iterative process leading to deeper insight. Finally, the whole spirit of the course (as of refugee law itself)  supports the idea of open society and the value of individual freedom and human rights.

Grading:    Participation and presentation(s): 40%
      Final exam: 60%


sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
arguments supporting a predetermined outcome, in other words to represent interests from a toolbox of available and legitimate legal arguments. Seminar discussion helps refine the argumentative and rhetoric skills. The presentation by each student during the course  serves strengthening the research design capabilities, the skill of academic co-operation, and, at the same time the readiness for individual work. The historic and empirical aspects of the course enrich the personal motivation


Have you started minting the tokens?
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Knowledge of law in general or international law in particular is not a prerequisite of participation in the course. The necessary concepts will be explained.

The amount of reading varies widely from class to class aiming at a balance over the whole course. Therefore students should do advance work before the weeks with heavier reading load!
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
In academic respects the course will analyse in detail the cornerstone documents of the present refugee regime. These include the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees with its 1967 Protocol, and the building blocks of the Common European Asylum System. The institutional aspects of the EU asylum acquis will also be reviewed enabling the non-EU law trained person a full  and deep understanding of the system of refugee protection in the European Union. The increasing body of human rights treaties used for the protection of asylum seekers as well as selected national legal systems and case law will also be introduced and discussed. 
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
students to meet leading actors of the refugee scene, including staff members of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Budapest Office, the Hungarian Office for Asylum and Immigration and the leading NGO-s (Hungarian Helsinki Committee, Menedek). Meeting with asylum seekers and refugees may also be  part of the course. The course consists of five major blocks: the first sets the historic, conceptual and philosophical framework. The second reviews international refugee law, to be applied at the universal level. The third thoroughly investigates the European asylum acquis  and practice from its inception to the crisis of 2015-2017.  The fourth block is rather empirical and introduces the actors, first and foremost the refugees, their psychological experience during flight and  in the asylum country and the major actors alleviating their plight. Personal encounter with  UNHCR officers, NGO case workers, psychologists treating vulnerable cases and visit to a refugee reception centre usually form part of this block. The last unit extends the view: it covers internal displacement and the debates about migration caused by environmental change.
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Identitarians claim that the European Union also threatens the national identity of the member states.  Deficit of democracy is not the only problem that the EU is facing. According to the representatives of modern European identitarian movement, states are delegating their state sovereignty to the EU and are thus losing jurisdiction over many important issues. Identitarians admit that the concept of national sovereignty is being eroded all the time and most radical right parties promote Euroscepticism in order to protect national identity, sovereignty and independence.
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
When will there be any info about the cryptoexchanges?








 Huh
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
Any other prospective ICOs in 2018?
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