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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 11368. (Read 26725370 times)

legendary
Activity: 1442
Merit: 2282
Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
Ledger Discloses Five Reported Vulnerabilities in Two Models of Trezor Hardware Wallets

Major hardware wallets manufacturer Ledger has unveiled vulnerabilities in its direct competitor Trezor’s devices, according to a report published on Monday, March. 11.
As of press time, Trezor was not immediately available to comment on Ledger’s findings.


https://cointelegraph.com/news/ledger-discloses-five-reported-vulnerabilities-in-two-models-of-trezor-hardware-wallets

https://www.ledger.fr/2019/03/11/our-shared-security-responsibly-disclosing-competitor-vulnerabilities/


(I said it yesterday, every day a new shit...)

All those attacks on the Trezor require physical access. If the attacker has physical access then they also have a wrench attack. 
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 4197

I do believe in science and math, that's precisely why I don't believe in a man made environmental change. It's an unproven hypothesis.
LOL how?

How could you deny the environmental pollution causing by the industrial smokes, cars etc?
How could you deny the fact that we are destroying the environmental ecosystem by cutting the forests?
How could you deny that we are killing animals and imbalancing the entire food chain?
How could you deny the climate change?
How could you deny the increased sea level?

Do you know what will happen if the last bee dies?
Watch this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjID1ugr1fo

It is called willful ignorance, most distasteful in an otherwise intelligent individual.

One of the largest challenges we face is the constant erosion of aesthetic expectations.  I sit here in middle age, aghast at the degradation I have seen in my short lifetime.  People younger than me never even saw it before we logged off the Pacific Northwest, before we built out the strip malls, before the fisheries started to collapse.  They have no reference point to know or value the beauty that I remember, and my recollections begin in the early 1970s when the accelerated decline had been well underway for some time.

Anthropogenic climate change may or may not turn out to be significant, but the dystopian cesspool we are creating is very, very real.

+2 WOsMerits

I'm not trying to be a cunt here, but it's important not to talk about things you don't even remotely understand the scope of as if they were fact.

Try harder... and while your at it, try practicing what your preaching. Now gtfo and go invest some of those "millions" into an actual education.
I don't think I need any more degrees. And I clearly state when I don't know the conclusion, which you would be able to tell if you read any of my numerous posts today. So how about you fuck off instead?

Its not just about the destination..but also the trip along the way. See above.

Anthropogenic climate change may or may not turn out to be significant, but the dystopian cesspool we are creating is very, very real.

Come on, Canada's not that bad yet.

 Roll Eyes









Quote
Since the beginning of the oil sands development, there have been several leaks into the Athabasca River polluting it with oil and tailing pond water. The close proximity of the tailing ponds to the river drastically increases the likelihood of contamination due to ground water leakages. In 1997, Suncor admitted that their tailing ponds had been leaking 1,600 cubic metres (57,000 cu ft) of toxic water into the river a day. This water contains naphthenic acid, trace metals such as mercury and other pollutants. The Athabasca River is the largest freshwater delta in the world but with Suncor and Syncrude leaking tail ponds the amount of polluted water will exceed 1 billion cubic meters by 2020.

Natural toxicants derived from bitumen in Northern Alberta pose potential ecological and human health risks to northerners living in the area. Oil sands development contributes arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, mercury, nickel and other metal elements toxic at low concentrations to the tributaries and rivers of the Athabasca

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athabasca_oil_sands

I am sure this is all fine..

hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 634
Fourth-generation farmer here. Underground farming? Not gonna happen, unless there is an extinction-level event. It takes more than space. The temperature is certainly constant, but at some stages the plants will do better if it's warmer. The realities of getting heat, light and water in needed quantities greatly outweigh the benefits. Underground caverns also (mostly) don't have appropriate soil, though hydroponics could be considered.

"Real" farming beyond hobby gardening is going to take machinery to plant  and harvest (at the least). Currently that is all internal combustion tractors and combines, fuel exhaust will be a problem underground.
legendary
Activity: 3556
Merit: 9709
#1 VIP Crypto Casino
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can

Depends in what context, Tom Hanks had it all in the film ‘Cast Away’ in my opinion. Living off the land in beautiful nature. At times I wish I could do that. People are overrated, I love being on my own.
legendary
Activity: 2145
Merit: 1660
We choose to go to the moon
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
legendary
Activity: 3346
Merit: 1618
#1 VIP Crypto Casino
Ledger Discloses Five Reported Vulnerabilities in Two Models of Trezor Hardware Wallets

Major hardware wallets manufacturer Ledger has unveiled vulnerabilities in its direct competitor Trezor’s devices, according to a report published on Monday, March. 11.
As of press time, Trezor was not immediately available to comment on Ledger’s findings.


https://cointelegraph.com/news/ledger-discloses-five-reported-vulnerabilities-in-two-models-of-trezor-hardware-wallets


(I said it yesterday, every day a new shit...)

Not good, at all. I don’t see why people don’t keep their coins on a paper wallet or on a machine with Bitcoin QT that’s used for nothing apart from storing bitcoin. This kind of shit happens all the time.
legendary
Activity: 2184
Merit: 1540
@JayJuanGee @ LFC_Bitcoin @bitserve
~snip~
You usually can’t go wrong investing in bricks & mortar. It’s probably what I’ll do if/when bitcoin moons (buy lots of houses & start a property management company or something) otherwise I’ll become an alcoholic or a drug addict or something wandering around with nothing to do all day Cheesy

Agreed and If I minus BTC from investing purpose then IMHO Other than property, Food industry is very lucrative too ( some restaurant) I don't want to be alcoholic or drug addict.

However, opening a Gov liquor store is a good idea Cheesy I tried to get a license for a liquor store with my friends when I was in my early 20s but didn't have that kind of money and contacts.

Humans population keep increasing.

Limited Bitcoin: checked
House-property: Always a hot talk
Food: Everyone wants more and necessary for all of us.

Sex is needed too for Humans, but I am not into opening any sex-joint in this life.  Grin



I might be stating the obvious, but there are some locations in which a car is very practical and also can be a kind of livelihood enabler.  In other places, you don't really need a car....

Of course, if BTC does another 10x or even 30x, then there could be several WO participants who might be considering various ways to spend their surplus value, and cars are fun and they do signal a level of status, if you don't mind showing some status.  

Yes, in the first highlighted situation it's completely understandable and very practical but in second mention its depends on an individual, not wrong and not right at the same time.
legendary
Activity: 1694
Merit: 1207
Ledger Discloses Five Reported Vulnerabilities in Two Models of Trezor Hardware Wallets

Major hardware wallets manufacturer Ledger has unveiled vulnerabilities in its direct competitor Trezor’s devices, according to a report published on Monday, March. 11.
As of press time, Trezor was not immediately available to comment on Ledger’s findings.


https://cointelegraph.com/news/ledger-discloses-five-reported-vulnerabilities-in-two-models-of-trezor-hardware-wallets


(I said it yesterday, every day a new shit...)

Seems that ledger's wallets are not secure either.
That's why I love paper wallets, especially if encrypted they are pretty hard to hack Smiley
legendary
Activity: 938
Merit: 2540
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Ledger Discloses Five Reported Vulnerabilities in Two Models of Trezor Hardware Wallets

Major hardware wallets manufacturer Ledger has unveiled vulnerabilities in its direct competitor Trezor’s devices, according to a report published on Monday, March. 11.
As of press time, Trezor was not immediately available to comment on Ledger’s findings.


https://cointelegraph.com/news/ledger-discloses-five-reported-vulnerabilities-in-two-models-of-trezor-hardware-wallets

https://www.ledger.fr/2019/03/11/our-shared-security-responsibly-disclosing-competitor-vulnerabilities/


(I said it yesterday, every day a new shit...)
legendary
Activity: 3962
Merit: 11519
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
@JayJuanGee @ LFC_Bitcoin @bitserve

I had a choice last year that should I buy a car or house. I invested in property and reinvesting remaining money in more important things.

If everything works out fine in the next 5-10 year or so then, will buy Car with Driver  Grin

I am very happy with my under $100 bicycle and other than that I have my old "Royal Enfield classic 350" for road trips.

I might be stating the obvious, but there are some locations in which a car is very practical and also can be a kind of livelihood enabler.  In other places, you don't really need a car....

Of course, if BTC does another 10x or even 30x, then there could be several WO participants who might be considering various ways to spend their surplus value, and cars are fun and they do signal a level of status, if you don't mind showing some status. 
hero member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 755
Homo Sapiens Bitcoinerthalensis
Hey WO brothers (cunts, pricks, flat-earthers & ballerinas).

Had a very busy party weekend, friends coming in for the 3 day carnival event.
Drugs & alcohol hit the usual yearly ATH. Tongue
Sobering up & trying to pull myself together.

BTC seems to be shaking off weak hands, getting ready for the $4k smash-through.
Had all my orders filled out & eventually bought another whole coin ~1.15BTC.
Also made a decent profit of ~0.3BTC on a pumping shitcoin last week.

Last but not least, a couple of hetairas discovered the world of crypto. Roll Eyes

Life is good. Grin
legendary
Activity: 3962
Merit: 11519
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
When you want to look for better and faster alternatives, new and scalable, with very low fees; when you criticize the Pow and exalt the Pos, DPos, Tangle, and the waltz ..... when you invent them and try them all, then understand at the end that the KING is always the same, always and forever.  Wink



Is there a link for that? 

I looked datalight.me website, and I could not find that chart.
legendary
Activity: 3556
Merit: 9709
#1 VIP Crypto Casino
@JayJuanGee @ LFC_Bitcoin @bitserve

I had a choice last year that should I buy a car or house. I invested in property and reinvesting remaining money in more important things.

If everything works out fine in the next 5-10 year or so then, will buy Car with Driver  Grin

I am very happy with my under $100 bicycle and other than that I have my old "Royal Enfield classic 350" for road trips.



You usually can’t go wrong investing in bricks & mortar. It’s probably what I’ll do if/when bitcoin moons (buy lots of houses & start a property management company or something) otherwise I’ll become an alcoholic or a drug addict or something wandering around with nothing to do all day Cheesy

legendary
Activity: 2184
Merit: 1540
@JayJuanGee @ LFC_Bitcoin @bitserve

I had a choice last year that should I buy a car or house. I invested in property and reinvesting remaining money in more important things.

If everything works out fine in the next 5-10 year or so then, will buy Car with Driver  Grin

I am very happy with my under $100 bicycle and other than that I have my old "Royal Enfield classic 350" for road trips.

legendary
Activity: 2660
Merit: 2868
Shitcoin Minimalist
Anthropogenic climate change may or may not turn out to be significant, but the dystopian cesspool we are creating is very, very real.

Come on, Canada's not that bad yet.
sr. member
Activity: 1022
Merit: 391
When you want to look for better and faster alternatives, new and scalable, with very low fees; when you criticize the Pow and exalt the Pos, DPos, Tangle, and the waltz ..... when you invent them and try them all, then understand at the end that the KING is always the same, always and forever.  Wink

legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 17063
Fully fledged Merit Cycler - Golden Feather 22-23
legendary
Activity: 3962
Merit: 11519
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
I lease my Mercedes to be honest, I like to drive a new car because I’m a snob. No worse investment (ok maybe BCH or BSV are worse Wink) than buying a brand new car yourself, as soon as you drive it off the forecourt it starts losing money.

Not many people own a car any way, they have finance on it which isn’t much better than leasing. I suppose you have the car fully paid off at the end as an asset but then it’s old & lost loads of value any way.

Just my opinion though.

I will concede that cars are an expensive habit.  I have owned cars since I was 15.  Admittedly, my first few cars were not very good cars, but still they are also expensive to maintain.

Regarding buying new cars, and especially luxury cars, they tend to lose the vast majority of their value in the first three years, so if you buy three year old cars, they might still be like new (depending on how they were driven, of course), but have already done their most dramatic depreciation. 

By the way Toyotas and Hondas don't tend to depreciate as much as Mercedes and BMWs.
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