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Username "Darker45" occurred in the following posts (quoted and/or mentioned):


1. Post 66627471 (unedited backup) (by Bluedrem) (scraped on Fri Apr 17 19:28:07 CEST 2026) in Psychological Risks.... Why You Shouldn't Trade with Gambling Wins & Luck....:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:51:55 AM
I find it interesting that you seem to make a connection between gambling money and trading. I don't know if there's an established psychology behind it, but it makes sense.

Money that's earned from mere luck might be the kind of money you don't give much value to. Therefore, it might not be the best money that's used for trading, which is something way more serious than gambling. If you effortlessly earned it, you might not care about losing it. And so, you might not care much about your calls and trading positions and whether they're filled or not.

This mental effect is possible. And so, if we want to treat our trading more seriously and strive to make success from it, we might want to use hard-earned money.
Yes, you are right. The wealth that is easily obtained is not so valuable, that is, if those wealth are lost carelessly, then it does not cause much trouble for that wealth. But when a person earns money by working hard, then every penny speaks of the sweat of his body and every blood cell and it is very difficult to spend money. Every cent earned by hard work is very valuable. But if this money is earned very easily by a person, then the value of that money is not so much, so they do not hesitate to lose that money by trading or gambling.



2. Post 66625409 (unedited backup) (by pandakitty) (scraped on Fri Apr 17 06:21:37 CEST 2026) in Are “best rates” even real anymore?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:00:36 AM
Slippage is normal, but it seems changes to the estimates aren't purely out of slippage anymore. Perhaps many platforms take advantage of it and are simply cheating, taking cuts from fair estimates. Well, fixed rate is always an option.

Finally, perhaps this is the price to pay for instant exchanges or swaps--no sign-up needed, no KYC, fast, but at a rate much lower than the market's. If you're a trader and not just doing a one-time exchange, using an order book is much better.
Someone should try all the swap exchanges at the same time. You can send the same amount and compare the output for what they announced and what was received after all the spread and fees. If a exchange constantly gives a different quote compared to another that has a more stable and better quote, that would be an easy win.



3. Post 66625087 (unedited backup) (by d5000) (scraped on Fri Apr 17 01:44:19 CEST 2026) in Would a non-custodial Bitcoin ATM be possible?:

This idea has given me another inspiration for an improvement on the last concept detailed in my last answer to Darker45. In this case, we do _not_ integrate a counterfeit-checking machine, because that item probably makes all attempts of considering it "just a locker" and not an "ATM" very doubtful (regarding legal consequences).

The "refined" idea is the following - it can be used with cash or with other physical items:

- a locker like those in a train station. The distinctive thing about this locker is that it has an unique number painted on its front, and a lock that can change its state reliably, and each state requires a different code to open it. That state can be marked by a colour visible clearly at the front of the locker opening.
- a smartphone app (features described below)

People:

- Alice: a Bitcoin buyer / Item seller (sells an item or deposits cash to get Bitcoin)
- Bob: a Bitcoin seller / Item buyer (buys the item or want to sell Bitcoin for cash)
- Carol: a P2P exchange escrower connected to the smartphone app with the Bitcoin seller (i.e. the person that retires the item in the locker as exchange for the BTC).

Steps:

1) Alice and Bob arrange the exchange. Example: 0.001 BTC for a book.
2) Alice goes to the locker and deposits the book there. The locker is first in State "Idle" (e.g. green), where it can be opened without a code, and then changes to state "Deposit / Unopened" (e.g. yellow). Alice also has to pay a penalty deposit, which will be paid back if everything runs fine.
3) Bob initiates the escrow transaction. It will reach Alice only if Carol approves it. It contains a timelocked output which will reach Alice after e.g. 14 days (well behind the arranged exchange).
4) Bob arranges a video chat with Carol, e.g. at 10 AM.
5) Alice transmits the "yellow" locker code to Carol.
6) Bob goes at 10 AM to the locker and starts the video chat. Carol gives him the code to open the locker while he's filming the number and location of the locker.
7) Bob can now examine the items in the locker. If its cash, he can check the authenticity, and he has to film the serial numbers. Always with Carol observing what he does via the video chat app. Based on that, there are two possible outcomes:

7a) Bob in accordance with Carol retires the item (ACCEPTED). The locker is again placed in "Idle" state. Carol unlocks the escrow to Alice. All penalties are paid back.
7b) Bob rejects the item and places it again in the locker, videochatting all the time with Carol and recording arguments for the reason, closing the door of the locker, and putting it in red state (REJECTED), transmitting the code for that state to Carol. Carol will thus not unlock the escrow. He is of course not entitled to retire the object.

Here we can have again several outcomes:

1) Carol is convinced that Bob has a valid reason to reject the item and placed the item completely in the locker. She will then propose to send back the money to Bob (or do some contract magic to achieve that). Alice will be penalized.
2) Carol believes Bob has rejected the item without a valid reason. A penality will be charged to Bob, similar to the Bisq penalties.
3) Carol believes Bob could be trying to trick Alice (e.g, ran away with a part of the money, or exchanged it for counterfeit money). This would be probably the standard procedure if Alice has deposited cash in more than 3-4 banknotes.

In all these cases, if Alice wants to challenge that decision (very much the standard in 1 and 3), she will then have to go to the locker and Carol will give her the code to open it. Like Bob, she has to film from the moment she opens the door, with the "state" of the locker clearly visible. Then she has to check the items she got back by Bob. She can now also find arguments that Bob has not given back her the correct item, like replaced real money with counterfeit money. Carol should be able to check that (e.g. via the serial number on the banknote, that's why Bob had to film them).

This of course achieves no 100% security but it should give escrowers about as much information about a possible fraud than with online P2P exchanges from fiat to BTC.



4. Post 66621597 (unedited backup) (by peter0425) (scraped on Thu Apr 16 03:21:19 CEST 2026) in Is the Strait of Hormuz Now More Powerful Than a Traditional Nuclear Weapons?:

Quote from: Darker45 on April 13, 2026, 10:27:35 AM
It's indeed a form of power. Whoever controls the strait has a great leverage. The recent conflict has made obvious its significance in the global economy. It's also noticeable how closing the strait was used as a big threat by Iran.
It really shows how powerful countries in the Middle east are. If they halt any exportation of oil, that cuts off almost every country’s supply and we all are found struggling. If this isn’t a lesson to how influence oil has and particularly the middle east over the world then I don’t know what else will be.
Quote
However, I don't think it's more powerful than nuclear weapons. If only Iran had fully-developed nuclear weapons, that country would've been left alone by the US. The most that the bully would've done was to impose sanctions, not bomb its cities, schools, research centers, and many other civilian locations.
We don’t know if they’ve actually built one. If they did, will they use it just against the US? There’s a lot of considerations that they might not want to use nuclear weapons after all.



5. Post 66620634 (unedited backup) (by d5000) (scraped on Wed Apr 15 20:57:37 CEST 2026) in The Endgame of Bitcoin:

In general I agree with OP. The "endgame" should imply increased usage "as a currency". Only this way Bitcoin can really deliver its biggest strength: censorship resistance and independence from authorities.

However, I think governments are currently not the main "blockers". In most countries it is perfectly legal to transact with Bitcoin and pay for goods and services. There are some caveats to that - for example, in some countries you have to track all payments and report them to the financial authorities to calculate your capital gains tax, which can be bothersome - but in general only Turkey, China and a few other small countries outlaw the usage for payments.

The real "blocker" as Darker45 already suggested is the current speculative usage pattern, which leads to volatility, which is detrimental for "currency usage".

How to solve this "block" and arrive to the "endgame phase"? (in reality, I'd call it "adoption phase" or "currency phase", because the endgame may be entirely different). Three ideas:

- First, as I've said in other threads, I'm quite convinced that adoption by merchants can grow because of the advantages Bitcoin brings them when compared to credit cards (faster settlement, less fees -> credit cards can charge up to 10% , no chargeback)
- Second, I think once Bitcoin becomes less and less volatile it will be used more as a currency, because currently often people simply feel too much FOMO if they spend their "precious" Bitcoins.
- Third, layer2 adoption must increase. I'm currently very bullish about Ark (more than I ever was with Lightning), but it is still in its early stages (see ArkadeOS). I've made a Bitcoin payment a few days ago, and the service provider only accepted on chain transactions, which is a bit lame (but they accepted BTCPayServer, which is cool as it is self hosted). At least Lightning should be "standard" now. The problem is that the fee level can always increase, and it is not even a bad thing because it helps to make mining long term sustainable, but for small payments a 2nd layer solution then is paramount.



6. Post 66619058 (unedited backup) (by Alex077) (scraped on Wed Apr 15 11:27:07 CEST 2026) in Why Bitcoin is Compared to Gold.:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:51:35 AM
Bitcoin is compared with gold for a number of reasons. Scarcity is one. That additional supply will have to be mined is another. Satoshi compared the resources expended in gold mining to time and electricity in the case of Bitcoin.

Also, the gold standard and the Bitcoin standard share similar characteristics...
An asset really shows its value during extreme situations - wars, global crises, pandemics.
And during the recent conflict in Iran, Bitcoin actually performed much better than gold and other precious metals, which kind of proves its edge.
At the end of the day, Bitcoin is up roughly 17% since the Iran–US conflict began.
It even outperformed stocks, gold, and silver - which says a lot about how it’s starting to behave like a store of value or even a safe-haven asset in times of war and economic stress.
https://x.com/bitcoinarchive/status/2043968430877835445?s=46&t=V07IM8b232m93jXsNncAog



7. Post 66616165 (unedited backup) (by MarryWithBTC) (scraped on Tue Apr 14 15:50:19 CEST 2026) in What do you think about Cexius exchange:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 11:07:32 AM
Does it matter if the exchange is trusted or not when there's literally zero activity on it? I'd also advise anybody not to use it, but not necessarily because it's a scam but because it's a ghost exchange. Nothing will happen to your order. Even their BTC/USDT pair, which is the most traded pair globally, has zero volume. Apart from that, they only have USDT markets which are mostly paired with unknown shitcoins. And they have less than 2 dozen pairs.

I wonder how somebody stumbled upon a new and unknown exchange with blank order books and got curious or interested with it.
I have read some regrettable testimonies where people deposit in this type of ghost exchanges with little/no liquidity and they don't get their funds back.
In some cases, it will be swapping to another coin and receiving a value extremely lower than what was supposed to be received because of lack of liquidity.

I think the main thread referenced in this particular one has been moved to this board. So, there are two threads discuss the same exchange. Op, I think it is time to lock this.



8. Post 66615980 (unedited backup) (by Z-tight) (scraped on Tue Apr 14 14:58:55 CEST 2026) in What do you think about Cexius exchange:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 11:07:32 AM
I wonder how somebody stumbled upon a new and unknown exchange with blank order books and got curious or interested with it.
That is something to think about and it could be that the op who started the other thread did so in an attempt to promote or advertise this service. This would not be the first time this is happening. Many times we see users seemingly curious about an unknown service when they ask the community what it thinks, unknowing to many of us that it is an attempt to promote the platform and get people to try it. That could also be the case here.



9. Post 66615144 (unedited backup) (by melinoe) (scraped on Tue Apr 14 09:27:08 CEST 2026) in $12T Charles Schwab to Launch spot trading for BTC in first half of 2026:

Quote from: Darker45 on April 11, 2026, 02:03:58 AM
Well, maybe bullish, but not as bullish as when the first time one of its kind entered the market. This isn't big news anymore today. Charles Schwab's entry came at a time when there are already a number of competitors that have earlier joined the market. Intense excitement usually happens from 0 to 1, not from 1 to many.

Does Charles Schwab really offer "something out of the ordinary"? Haven't Fidelity and Robinhood, for example, offered direct trading already?

It's another news to the pile of the same news.. I too see it that way.



10. Post 66612760 (unedited backup) (by Livingleged) (scraped on Mon Apr 13 16:32:49 CEST 2026) in Is the Strait of Hormuz Now More Powerful Than a Traditional Nuclear Weapons?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 10:27:35 AM
However, I don't think it's more powerful than nuclear weapons. If only Iran had fully-developed nuclear weapons, that country would've been left alone by the US. The most that the bully would've done was to impose sanctions, not bomb its cities, schools, research centers, and many other civilian locations.
To begin with the fact that Nuclear weapon actually seems to be like ultimate shield against world powers, but history and recently events shows that it is overstretched. Although possessing nuclear weapons raises the stake actually but they don’t grant total immunity or make any country feel untouchable.

Look at North Korea for example they have nuclear weapons and have also tested missiles yet they still remain one of the most sanctioned country in the world. Im sure the reason why US haven’t invaded and boomed its cities into rubble should because of the massive conventional risk involved like refugees crises and also artillery threats to the southern Korea.

However the situation around the strait of Hormuz has open the US eyes now and that should probably be more diplomatic in their actions because  the feast of the world are feeling the pain they are causing as petroleum production are being held on ground due to the passage of the strait.



11. Post 66612401 (unedited backup) (by freedomgo) (scraped on Mon Apr 13 14:51:07 CEST 2026) in How do you understand the odds in sports betting?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 12:24:17 PM

If you convert those odds into percentage form, it would be 33.3% and 35.7%, respectively. In a way, we could say those are their chances of winning, at least as far as the bets or the analyses of the bookmakers that released them are concerned.

we can easily use a calculator for that.. ( https://www.aceodds.com/bet-calculator/odds-converter.html

However, sometimes the odds do not really reflect the true probability. I think this was already discussed before, the difference between implied probability and true probability.

So regardless of the odds, if we are able to find the value, that’s where we should take the risk.
Maybe with that, we can actually be profitable in the long run.



12. Post 66609110 (unedited backup) (by Fiatless) (scraped on Sun Apr 12 16:16:08 CEST 2026) in Do the faithful abstain from gambling during fasting? :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 10:55:12 AM
This is true to all religions. Not all members of any organized religion are true to their faiths. Many casually deviate from their religion's teachings. I'm from a country that's highly diverse in terms of religion. I personally know members of different religions and sects who do things that are contrary to their beliefs. I myself am a member of a certain religion, but I also don't strictly observe religious dos and don'ts. Above anything else, what's important is to be kind to others.
My religion doesn't forbid gambling but many leaders preach against it. This is because many people are not gambling properly. Due to the high number of gambling addicts in my area, most religious leaders ask members to abstain from it. This has led many within my faith to see gambling as immoral. I gamble secretly because of people's stereotypes. This is why I prefer using online casinos. 



13. Post 66608766 (unedited backup) (by Bastketsrus) (scraped on Sun Apr 12 13:53:43 CEST 2026) in Past scare rumors (Fud) about Bitcoin that completely failed:

Quote from: bricky2ndlife on Today at 04:23:39 AM
These aren't "scare rumors". They were true events in Bitcoin's history. China did kick out Bitcoin miners in the past. It wasn't a mere FUD.  And it somehow shook the market. The same with trading. To this day, Bitcoin remains banned in China. That's not FUD.

The collapse of Mt. Gox wasn't FUD as well. It was a real terrible event in the past that made Bitcoin's price plunge. This was somehow similar to the fall of FTX.

The point is that Bitcoin survived all of it. Bitcoin grew stronger from all those unfortunate events. Hopefully, this reminds us that despite certain hiccups in the market, Bitcoin always recovers. Dips are therefore an invitation to buy, sale opportunities.
There were FUDs and there were actual events but it's interesting to see Bitcoin has survived through all these things very well and impressively. With time, Bitcoin has become stronger in its network security and bigger in its adoption, so with Bitcoin holders, they have done great jobs if they bought bitcoin and hold their coins from the past years until now.

True, some were real events and some were just FUD, but Bitcoin keeps surviving and getting stronger. Those who held through it all really made the most of it.



14. Post 66608754 (unedited backup) (by Juicyhome) (scraped on Sun Apr 12 13:49:49 CEST 2026) in Do the faithful abstain from gambling during fasting? :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 10:55:12 AM
This is true to all religions. Not all members of any organized religion are true to their faiths. Many casually deviate from their religion's teachings. I'm from a country that's highly diverse in terms of religion. I personally know members of different religions and sects who do things that are contrary to their beliefs. I myself am a member of a certain religion, but I also don't strictly observe religious dos and don'ts. Above anything else, what's important is to be kind to others.
Being kind to others is the real religion, you're right, there are many principles that religious people don't keep even when it's  against their religion, like early sex before marriage and many others, religion has no place in gambling, almost everyone gamble no matter your religion.

If you're a religious person don't be selective to sins to commit and the ones to keep, sin is a sin, observe all. The moment you select your sins them you're an hypocrite. No faith should limit you from making money, without money you can't be faithful to your religion. Gamble with sense and not emotion, to me I feel the only bad thing about gambling is when you're addicted and you start stealing from people to bet, but if you're using your money and you're not being addicted and making money then don't let any faith to stop you.



15. Post 66607933 (unedited backup) (by tbct_mt2) (scraped on Sun Apr 12 06:35:31 CEST 2026) in Is the "Medium of Exchange" narrative dying due to L2 dominance?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:04:15 AM
Quite frankly, this narrative has already been dying from the very beginning. This was already a significant issue back then because of ridiculous fees and delayed confirmation. If anything, on the contrary, we have a much improved situation recently. We can send high priority transactions with only 1 Sat/vB today.
1 sat/vbyte for transactions to have a first confirmation in a next block is quite popular in recent months, and it's a very good fee rate to use compares to how considerable higher fee rates Bitcoin users had to use in past years.

They even can get a first confirmation quickly for their transaction with fee rate lower than 1 sat/vbyte but they must check Bitcoin mempools and choose a proper fee rate for their favorite waiting time.
How to make a bitcoin transaction and pay less than 1 sat/vByte.
LoyceV's 0.1 sat/vbyte Electrum Server Adventure.




16. Post 66607921 (unedited backup) (by bricky2ndlife) (scraped on Sun Apr 12 06:23:43 CEST 2026) in Past scare rumors (Fud) about Bitcoin that completely failed:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 02:25:26 AM
These aren't "scare rumors". They were true events in Bitcoin's history. China did kick out Bitcoin miners in the past. It wasn't a mere FUD.  And it somehow shook the market. The same with trading. To this day, Bitcoin remains banned in China. That's not FUD.

The collapse of Mt. Gox wasn't FUD as well. It was a real terrible event in the past that made Bitcoin's price plunge. This was somehow similar to the fall of FTX.

The point is that Bitcoin survived all of it. Bitcoin grew stronger from all those unfortunate events. Hopefully, this reminds us that despite certain hiccups in the market, Bitcoin always recovers. Dips are therefore an invitation to buy, sale opportunities.
There were FUDs and there were actual events but it's interesting to see Bitcoin has survived through all these things very well and impressively. With time, Bitcoin has become stronger in its network security and bigger in its adoption, so with Bitcoin holders, they have done great jobs if they bought bitcoin and hold their coins from the past years until now.



17. Post 66604839 (unedited backup) (by SilverCryptoBullet) (scraped on Sat Apr 11 09:28:49 CEST 2026) in $12T Charles Schwab to Launch spot trading for BTC in first half of 2026:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 02:03:58 AM
Well, maybe bullish, but not as bullish as when the first time one of its kind entered the market. This isn't big news anymore today. Charles Schwab's entry came at a time when there are already a number of competitors that have earlier joined the market. Intense excitement usually happens from 0 to 1, not from 1 to many.

Does Charles Schwab really offer "something out of the ordinary"? Haven't Fidelity and Robinhood, for example, offered direct trading already?
It is always most exciting when things are done a first time in anything, like a first Peer to Peer transaction between Satoshi Nakamoto and Hal Finney, a first trade of bitcoin for pizza, a first Bitcoin exchange, first Bitcoin Futures CME and CBOE in 2017, and first Bitcoin Spot ETFs in January 2024 for example. Later ones are similar to first ones are no longer similarly exciting with the people.

Charles Schwab is just another late comer in this market, so they will not create similar big excitement like first ones but they will still have contributions for Bitcoin adoption and this market growth.

Like it's always good for Bitcoin market to have new users, new investors, new traders, it's simple and undeniable.



18. Post 66602238 (unedited backup) (by macson) (scraped on Fri Apr 10 16:10:25 CEST 2026) in Question about accepting Bitcoin in my new shipping business :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:05:46 PM
Your life is interesting, and I'm so happy for you. When you came here more than 2 months ago, you mentioned that:

...I don't make alot of money, all I can afford per day is a dollar...

But look at you now, asking about accepting Bitcoin payment for your shipping company. That's quite a fast success story.

Maybe he just hit the jackpot, who knows. And in that short time, he managed to become rich LOL. Let's just pretend to believe that he owns that shipping company so he can be happy  Roll Eyes