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Topic: Deleted - page 13. (Read 70461 times)

sr. member
Activity: 254
Merit: 250
January 12, 2017, 12:54:45 PM
We are seeing a very positive price movement in the late last year, and this trend will persist. The main thing that was not artificial regulation of bitcoin prices, and it will cause a lot of bad reactions.
full member
Activity: 150
Merit: 100
January 12, 2017, 12:17:46 PM
Bitcoins are not going to die while there are some people supporting and using bitcoin transactions. I think it's impossible that bitcoins will be gone especially now bitcoins become popular.
Recently, the users themselves are doing all that is possible, to make bitcoin popular. With this motion, I think it is not worth even the hope that bitcoin will die. If we ourselves will offer bitcoin as a payment for the goods, the owners also realize the benefits bitcoin.
hero member
Activity: 1834
Merit: 759
January 12, 2017, 01:52:06 AM
Bitcoins are not going to die while there are some people supporting and using bitcoin transactions. I think it's impossible that bitcoins will be gone especially now bitcoins become popular.
newbie
Activity: 44
Merit: 0
January 12, 2017, 01:27:59 AM
bitcoin die when internet offline automatically in the world , Grin
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
January 12, 2017, 12:52:15 AM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.

The idea doesn't need to fail, it just needs to be improved upon or changed to make people leave Bitcoin. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that improved on what Bitcoin is about to people, there would be a run to sell. When the mining reward drops to nearly nothing and the potential to make money "out of thin air" stops, people might run to sell. If speculators and forex traders find a new toy to play with Bitcoin is toast.

Nothing is too big to fail.

That's true I suppose. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that was better than bitcoin, people wouldn't use bitcoin. Much the same as how airplanes were revolutionary but if some new revolutionary mode of transportation were to arise, people would use that.

Exactly, it's dangerous for people to see Bitcoin as something that's too big to fail because it's still experimental and in beta. People should only invest what they are comfortable losing. There's no federal depositors insurance corp (FDIC) to save you with Bitcoin. When your money's gone, it's gone and no one will give it back.
Everything has it's own risk. That's why shouldn't ppl invest more than they can afford to lose. If you just ignore the risk, well... you really can't blame Bitcoin, or anything you've invested in...
To risk investing in bitcoin is today is the best that can offer the market. Perhaps more bitcoin indicators change, but now projected stability and good growth cryptocurrency.
full member
Activity: 234
Merit: 250
January 11, 2017, 06:11:31 PM
About bitcoin's death I do not even want to talk, because such issues do not arise just as well on request. Of course there are people that are going through and therefore to ask, but there are those who want the excitement to cryptocurrency market.
sr. member
Activity: 644
Merit: 274
January 08, 2017, 06:23:07 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.

The idea doesn't need to fail, it just needs to be improved upon or changed to make people leave Bitcoin. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that improved on what Bitcoin is about to people, there would be a run to sell. When the mining reward drops to nearly nothing and the potential to make money "out of thin air" stops, people might run to sell. If speculators and forex traders find a new toy to play with Bitcoin is toast.

Nothing is too big to fail.

That's true I suppose. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that was better than bitcoin, people wouldn't use bitcoin. Much the same as how airplanes were revolutionary but if some new revolutionary mode of transportation were to arise, people would use that.

Exactly, it's dangerous for people to see Bitcoin as something that's too big to fail because it's still experimental and in beta. People should only invest what they are comfortable losing. There's no federal depositors insurance corp (FDIC) to save you with Bitcoin. When your money's gone, it's gone and no one will give it back.
Everything has it's own risk. That's why shouldn't ppl invest more than they can afford to lose. If you just ignore the risk, well... you really can't blame Bitcoin, or anything you've invested in...
legendary
Activity: 2156
Merit: 1393
You lead and I'll watch you walk away.
January 08, 2017, 06:07:12 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.

The idea doesn't need to fail, it just needs to be improved upon or changed to make people leave Bitcoin. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that improved on what Bitcoin is about to people, there would be a run to sell. When the mining reward drops to nearly nothing and the potential to make money "out of thin air" stops, people might run to sell. If speculators and forex traders find a new toy to play with Bitcoin is toast.

Nothing is too big to fail.

That's true I suppose. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that was better than bitcoin, people wouldn't use bitcoin. Much the same as how airplanes were revolutionary but if some new revolutionary mode of transportation were to arise, people would use that.

Exactly, it's dangerous for people to see Bitcoin as something that's too big to fail because it's still experimental and in beta. People should only invest what they are comfortable losing. There's no federal depositors insurance corp (FDIC) to save you with Bitcoin. When your money's gone, it's gone and no one will give it back.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
January 08, 2017, 05:59:50 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.

The idea doesn't need to fail, it just needs to be improved upon or changed to make people leave Bitcoin. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that improved on what Bitcoin is about to people, there would be a run to sell. When the mining reward drops to nearly nothing and the potential to make money "out of thin air" stops, people might run to sell. If speculators and forex traders find a new toy to play with Bitcoin is toast.

Nothing is too big to fail.

That's true I suppose. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that was better than bitcoin, people wouldn't use bitcoin. Much the same as how airplanes were revolutionary but if some new revolutionary mode of transportation were to arise, people would use that.
legendary
Activity: 2156
Merit: 1393
You lead and I'll watch you walk away.
January 08, 2017, 05:51:11 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.

The idea doesn't need to fail, it just needs to be improved upon or changed to make people leave Bitcoin. If a new revolutionary financial product came along that improved on what Bitcoin is about to people, there would be a run to sell. When the mining reward drops to nearly nothing and the potential to make money "out of thin air" stops, people might run to sell. If speculators and forex traders find a new toy to play with Bitcoin is toast.

Nothing is too big to fail.
sr. member
Activity: 644
Merit: 274
January 08, 2017, 05:40:57 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.
Too big to fail like Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan etc. Yeah there is a possibility of every company can collapse, but I'm quite sure I won't see Microsoft to break into pieces in the near future for example.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
January 08, 2017, 05:38:27 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.

The difference is I see bitcoin as an idea. An idea too big to fail. Bitcoin would be the idea of airline businesses rather than any one specific airline business that could fail. If holders were to for some reason sell all of their coins, people like me would just buy them up at a ridiculous discount like we did after the 2013 crash.
legendary
Activity: 2156
Merit: 1393
You lead and I'll watch you walk away.
January 08, 2017, 05:30:51 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.

Too big to fail like PanAm Airlines? Founded in 1927, the airline was a part of world culture for the better part of the 20th century. It led the industry in international flights and luxury travel. It was also the first airline to make widespread use of jumbo jets, and the first to use an air staff of stewardesses as a PR focal point. Little girls grew up wanting to be PanAm stewardesses, and boys grew up wanting to pilot one of the fleet. Heck, the Beatles arrived to America on one. It carried 6.7 million passengers a week by 1970. It's jets flew to 86 countries on every continent except for Antarctica over a scheduled route network of 81,410 unduplicated miles. It's cabin staff were multilingual college graduates, hired from around the world, frequently with nursing training. At its peak the airline made, in today's dollars, $24 billion a year and had nearly 300,000 employees worldwide (more employees than the daily number of Bitcoin transactions worldwide). Their dead and gone.

Too big to fail like Washington Mutual? WaMu was America’s largest Savings and Loan association, the sixth largest bank in the U.S., and the largest bank failure in history. Let that sink in for a minute. After a 10-day run on the bank in late September 2008, with total withdrawals in excess of $16 billion USD–almost 10% of the deposits–the FDIC seized WaMu’s assets. In total, they lost $307 billion dollars in assets (30 times larger than the market cap of Bitcoin).

If all holders of Bitcoin for some unexpected reason decided to make a "bank run" against Bitcoin it wouldn't take the 10 days it took WaMu to fail, a few hours maybe.
sr. member
Activity: 644
Merit: 274
January 08, 2017, 02:10:30 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
Yes, I think it's already too big to die.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
January 08, 2017, 02:04:07 PM
die? never. if price goes lower, it will find a way to increase
member
Activity: 64
Merit: 10
January 08, 2017, 01:47:54 PM
Bitcoin is here to stay. Many altcoins will die but never Bitcoin. There is too much money behind it now. If anything happens it will be fixed. Simple as that.
sr. member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 256
January 08, 2017, 12:42:58 PM
Bitcoin have come to saty and will never die, the price will only fluctuate but it will keep on staying.
full member
Activity: 180
Merit: 100
January 08, 2017, 02:06:19 AM
bits no die

big whale angry bitcoin die

must keep live like krill whale eat

no die soon
sr. member
Activity: 686
Merit: 253
January 07, 2017, 05:15:04 PM
I doubt if it will ever die anytime soon because of the current growing demand for bitcoins and the crave about setting up bitcoin mining farms across every nook and cranny of China and the rest of the world. The love for it is yet to escalate and I don't think it will die until it's past its peak of popularity and that isn't coming anytime soon.
copper member
Activity: 2870
Merit: 1279
https://linktr.ee/crwthopia
January 04, 2017, 12:47:37 PM
Being the start of cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, it could survive long before some cryptocurrency will overtake it. No one can say that Bitcoin will die, it will just make people want to improve it more. That's what I think they should do. Cryptocurrency is not yet applied everywhere in the world, and the first thing they would know are Bitcoins, not other alternative. Bitcoin wont die.
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