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Username "Darker45" occurred in the following posts (quoted and/or mentioned):
1. Post 66017790 (unedited backup) (by Hashura) (scraped on Fri Nov 7 08:38:49 CET 2025) in Need help for wallet:
I saw the recommended wallets and decided to go with Electrum. When I made a new wallet, there are so many addresses. Which one should I use to transfer bitcoin?
You have to understand about wallet and address.
A wallet is like your house.
Your addresses are like rooms inside your house.
Imagine your Bitcoin transaction sent to your wallet is like a letter sent to your house. It can come to any room of your house but it still belongs to you. The same with bitcoins sent to any addresses in your wallet, these coins belong to you.
Some recommendations to use Electrum wallet safely.
[GUIDE] How to Safely Download and Verify Electrum.The paranoid user's security guide for using Electrum safely.I like your analogy. Thanks man, this made it easier for me to understand. I just learned how to quote and I edited my previous post to reply to Darker45.
2. Post 66017173 (unedited backup) (by bisdak40) (scraped on Fri Nov 7 02:20:20 CET 2025) in [Boxing] Donaire vs Tsutsumi for WBA Bantamweight Title Dec. 17:
Donaire has high ring IQ. He's an intelligent boxer, one who can take advantage of aggressive pressures. He can counter very well. And his counter punches aren't without power. The big problem now is the execution. At his age, speed, reflexes, quick movements, ability to sustain them for many rounds must have already waned significantly.
If the younger Japanese fighter maintains the level of pressure all throughout the fight and Donaire won't be able to land a hook that makes the opponent respect him, it'll be hard for Donaire to survive. Donaire isn't a boxer who makes the most of clinching. He often maintains a certain distance. Perhaps he should try learning that art because he's already an old veteran fighting against a young and hungry opponent.
Good observation—Donaire isn't the clinching type and might opt to slug it out early, much like he did in his rematch with Inoue. I just hope he can land some of those lethal left hooks to keep Tsutsumi at bay. Otherwise, he could be in serious trouble against Tsutsumi's relentless pressure. Donaire showed clear signs of decline in his bout with Campos; had that fight gone the full twelve rounds, the outcome might have swung the other way. For this match, he needs to make an impact early—or better yet, score a knockout—because if it drags on, things could get rough for him.
3. Post 66013323 (unedited backup) (by SilverCryptoBullet) (scraped on Thu Nov 6 04:46:38 CET 2025) in Why Refund Policies Discourage Merchants From Adopting BTC As Payments.:
It's not exactly the refund policy that's problematic. It's, first, Bitcoin's volatility and, second, Bitcoin's irreversibility. A payment system that doesn't allow even a tiny room for error is probably a hard system to adopt in business. A single typographical error could automatically mean a huge amount of money lost. Also, in doing business or in commerce in general, you can't avoid fraud. With Bitcoin, since you're your own bank, you have full control and ownership, and transactions are irreversible, you might have zero recourse.
You can not have best security if you have reversibility for transactions. If there are things like reversibility, chargeback avaialability to use for processed transactions, there will be no longer existence of transaction security as it can be reversed anytime.
So you have two opposite sides and options to choose, let's choose only one: security or reversibility.
Bitcoin blockchain provides a first one: security, and if you want to have reversibility, choose bank transfers, Paypal and even altcoin blockchains.
Volatility is still a big problem with merchants and business companies that can have good plans for receiving, storing and holding bitcoins a long time for profit and surely against short term volatility or can not have proper plan for converting bitcoin to stable coin or fiat currency immediately after receiving it as they must add conversion rate into payment amount of their customers.
There are still barriers for Bitcoin payment acceptance but there are business can accept it well and the others business can learn from these available good case studies.
4. Post 66010859 (unedited backup) (by Africolo) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 14:31:14 CET 2025) in Winning the lottery does more harm than good:
Winning the lottery is one thing, using it properly is another. It's not really the winning itself that ruins lives, it's actually your character, or lack thereof.
If lady luck grants the wishes of your heart, she's to be thanked for, not blamed. It's unfair for one to put the blame on the opportunity rather than on the one who spoiled, wasted it.
If the universe conspires for you to hit the lottery jackpot, which is less probable than getting struck by lightning, it's something you should be grateful for. It opens up a lot of beautiful opportunities. Why should it be interpreted as harmful rather than good?
Your analysis is so true, your character and composure means a lot after winning lottery, different people have their different ways of celebrating when they win, it's only few determined and reasonable individuals that uses the money from their wins judiciously, most persons end up in the bar after winning, some go into drug taking, buying clothes, shoes, bags, phones just to name but a few.
It is interpreted as harmful as good due to the behavior of the winners after they have won the lottery, you have to invest the money wisely into other business to make profit, but some set of people don't invest after winning, all they do is to live a luxurious lifestyle and end up broke. In life every thing we do depends on luck and when one gets lucky to win, it is worthy to use it wisely than lavish nor waste the resources you were opportune to get.
5. Post 66010415 (unedited backup) (by purple_sparkles) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 12:00:19 CET 2025) in Anyone scared to look at their btc?:
I’m not too focused on the price… if it rises, I get excited to see the value go up before it dips again but that’s not the main goal. The goal is to get as many as possible before it becomes too expensive so I’m focusing more on the unit and not the price.
Anyway, this is another chance for those who are fearful that they're buying at higher price. I know they'll always have reasons not to buy…
Like ‘ohh yeah… now we wait for 22k dip’

, there’s just always that reason to miss out but still, it’s their funds and they can decide to go in however / whenever they like ..
I’m being cautious right now and not buying yet. Usually, October and November are the months when the price goes up, so based on that, we can assume the price might still drop compared to today’s level. In the previous cycle, everyone was also worried that the price wouldn’t drop, and the same happened before that. Everything repeats itself.
6. Post 66010361 (unedited backup) (by promise444c5) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 11:43:25 CET 2025) in Anyone scared to look at their btc?:
I’m not too focused on the price… if it rises, I get excited to see the value go up before it dips again but that’s not the main goal. The goal is to get as many as possible before it becomes too expensive so I’m focusing more on the unit and not the price.
Anyway, this is another chance for those who are fearful that they're buying at higher price. I know they'll always have reasons not to buy…
Like ‘ohh yeah… now we wait for 22k dip’

, there’s just always that reason to miss out but still, it’s their funds and they can decide to go in however / whenever they like ..
7. Post 66009967 (unedited backup) (by Darkex.com) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 09:41:55 CET 2025) in [ANN] Darkex Exchange — Earn 5% Withdrawable USDT Bonus | Real Trading, Real Rew:
You must be aware of the high level of competition in your market. It seems you aren't offering anything special on the table. What specifically is your edge over countless of other exchanges? I'm sure that 5% USDT bonus won't count.
Also, your company is registered in Georgia, the services are hosted in Panama and UAE, the servers are located in Japan, and the legal terms are governed by the laws of Singapore. I'm a little bit confused, or is this a normal way of doing business?
Appreciate your valid point — and you’re right, the market is extremely competitive.
The 5% bonus isn’t meant to be our main selling point; it’s simply a gesture to reward active, verified traders and encourage engagement during our growth phase.
What truly defines Darkex is our focus on secure infrastructure, deep liquidity, and transparent operations — not short-term campaigns.As for our global structure, it’s designed for regulatory compliance, data protection, and operational stability. Many international exchanges adopt similar multi-jurisdiction setups to ensure long-term reliability.
In short, promotions attract attention — but trust, performance, and transparency are what make users stay.
8. Post 66009529 (unedited backup) (by d5000) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 05:43:31 CET 2025) in Gold -> Bitcoin paradigm shift is starting?:
I'm not, either. I'm having that opinion simply because it seems to me Bitcoin isn't a foundational technological infrastructure, therefore, dispensable in a way. I mean, it isn't a technology whose absence would mean the collapse of global vital systems or way of life or whatever. I'm hesitant whenever Bitcoin is compared with the internet, for example.
I think even this ultra-optimistic view as "Bitcoin as the Internet of Money" isn't completely out of reach, although I also don't think it's a really super-likely scenario.
This could happen if really the Bitcoin (or Lightning) wallet becomes "a must-have" where people and economic supply chains depend on to work. It would be intensely connected to the "Bitcoin as a currency" scenario, about which we don't know if it will ever materialize to the extent some early Bitcoiners have described it. But taking into account three factors which could take us there:
1) cryptocurrencies are the only really neutral and censorship resistant form of money (in terms of "nobody can prevent you to hold and transfer it"), besides perhaps cash and physical substitutes like gold which are much more clumsy to handle and will thus probably lose importance.
2) Bitcoin will be probably for decades the most important, most secure and widely accepted cryptocurrency,
3) If a second layer infrastructure develops and gets traction, Bitcoin could become the most efficient form of money too. Merchants would ask you to pay in BTC to save costs.
I agree that gold wouldn't collapse overnight also if this scenario materializes, but it would probably be enough to put its leadership as an asset in danger, with the main contender being Bitcoin.
AI burst, weakening technology sector, the Fed implements QE, sending the dollar into freefall, investors seek a hedge, and enter bitcoin, gold, and bitcoin.
Interesting scenario and indeed not impossible in my opinion. And where you're probably right is that the geopolitical and economic tensions could continue until the final stretch of the 2020s, as we are already in the middle of the decade. My outlook above was more directed into the post-2027/28 world, perhaps the post-Trump world. Multipolarity also in my opinion does not necessarily mean more tension; if leaders realize again that mercantilism is so 1600s ...
Regarding QE not being absorbed in the next economic crisis, this could indeed occur, but for me to a limited extent: we would probably see a reactivation of the stock market, because people have necessities and the stock market basically is "investing into necessity satisfaction", and thus I firmly believe it will never really "decouple" from reality (i.e. people's basic necessity level, with a reasonable growth rate for technological progress) for more than a couple of years -- with the exception of a big catastrophe like a war. But it is possible that a generalized stock market bubble like the 2010s/2020s tech sector will not be able to form, and Bitcoin indeed could benefit from that scenario. Gold perhaps too, but I continue to believe that its value is mostly not intrinsic but artificial, driven by tradition, and traditions can change.
A major "fiat crisis" is imo unlikely. Countries like Japan show that it is possible to maintain a fiat system in a high level economy even with widely static money supply.
9. Post 66009306 (unedited backup) (by Vod) (scraped on Wed Nov 5 02:55:32 CET 2025) in Anyone scared to look at their btc?:
Let's relax and enjoy the ride. We've seen far worse days. As predicted, we'll be worried when the price corrects to $99,000. Before we know it, we're again worried because it corrects to $150,000. The last time I was worried, the price corrected all the way to $16,000.
I hope the price is still above $99k as I post this. The hype and the bubble have all moved over to AI. Thanks to Trump everyone is selling their bitcoin to makes end meet. I have a working theory that the volatility of the fall is equal to the volatility of the climb at the same price point. Simply stated - people sell before they lose money. If the price hovers at $99k for a few days, a lot of people bought at that price and are now selling. If it drops quickly (like yesterday), it was from a period of slower investment.
Bitcoin still has value as the first decentralized unhackable currency. But it is backed by
nothing else - and right now people don't see it worth more the price of a month's groceries.
Ride it out, if you panic and have an anxiety attack over a 1k drop at this point, perhaps btc is not for you.
Do not own more than you can afford to lose.

10. Post 66006413 (unedited backup) (by henry_of_skalitz) (scraped on Tue Nov 4 11:29:19 CET 2025) in has bitcoin become too simplistic?:
To a great extent, yes. Adoption doesn't necessarily mean knowing how it works. That's true to Bitcoin. That's true to everything else. The great majority of the people all over the world don't even know how exactly fiat works despite trusting and using it for generations. If people know what Bitcoin means, how it's bought, spent, securely stored, and the like, that's more or less enough. Adoption doesn't require users to be an Adam Back or Andreas Antonopoulos.
Fiat is just longer on the global stage.
BTC is the alternative everybody will want in the future if they don't want to be bound to the system they do not control.

11. Post 66005639 (unedited backup) (by d5000) (scraped on Tue Nov 4 05:38:26 CET 2025) in Gold -> Bitcoin paradigm shift is starting?:
It could get obsolete, something that's hard to happen to gold.
I'd not be totally sure about that

Gold is basically tradition made value. It has industrial usage, but if we take out jewelry, the demand is negligible in relation to the amount of gold in the world.
Gold jewelry only exists because gold is valuable. The colour of the metal and other properties aren't really relevant as of today.
So let's imagine a scenario where gold enters a decade-long bear market. Central banks sell, people who hoarded gold jewelry sell them because they are panicking that it won't be worthy anymore, and only the industrial users are happy. This has already happened, the last time between ~1980 and ~2000 (see
https://goldprice.org/es/gold-price-history.html).
And in this scenario, Bitcoin soars again ...
I don't expect this in the 2020s, but in the 2030s it is possible if Bitcoin adoption continues (and people like Luke-jr don't ruin it).
I'd be happy if Bitcoin would reach and maintain half of gold's market cap.
Here I agree, although I don't think it's impossible that Bitcoin can reach gold's market cap, especially if the above mentioned bear scenario happens.
12. Post 66005540 (unedited backup) (by tbct_mt2) (scraped on Tue Nov 4 04:24:13 CET 2025) in If we think the government is manipulating us, can bitcoin really solve that?:
It seems the argument is going in circles. There's the government. There's Bitcoin. But then there's the government again. Well, that's why you Bitcoin. Isn't that exactly the reason why you Bitcoin? I guess the problem is that you want to have your cake and eat it, too. You're into Bitcoin to get rid of the government and yet you want to use centralized exchanges, convert Bitcoin to fiat, and so on, things that can't be totally detached from the government.
Perhaps the ultimate question is, can we really escape from government manipulation?
The principle is governments always follow their citizens. They don't create new things, new technologies for benefits of their citizens. In fact citizens in their communities innovate new things, new technologies for their benefits, and after a while of observation and consideration of possible regulations on such new things, governments will take action and do their legal and regulatory enforcements on their citizens.
It's true with Bitcoin, blockchain, cryptocurrencies and is always true with many other things.
I don't consider what governments do as manipulation and even they do it, why do we have to mind about it as basically in all markets, there are manipulations from market makers that can be governmental or non-governmental?
13. Post 66002383 (unedited backup) (by Viscore) (scraped on Mon Nov 3 12:23:13 CET 2025) in Trump says he doesn’t know CZ - seriously?:
It is very possible Trump may not know CZ.
No, its not possible.

It is. Trump doesn't have to
know CZ, or he might only know CZ as we know him, somebody influential in the crypto business. But his business partners or associates and possibly family members surely know CZ. Otherwise, how could certain deals be struck between their business and personal interests? How could Binance help develop the Trump family's stablecoin without that connection? But it doesn't have to be Donald himself. It's even possible he doesn't know what a meme coin is despite having one.
CZ being the richest int he crypto world as per this list
https://www.bankrate.com/investing/richest-crypto-billionaires/its impossible Trump does not know him when during his campaign he promise to bring positive news in the crypto market.
14. Post 65994184 (unedited backup) (by ultrloa) (scraped on Sat Nov 1 12:03:25 CET 2025) in US gives 0% tariffs to Thailand, Malaysia, and Cambodia but not the Philippines:
Because what can the Philippines offer really? What leverage does it have? I usually encounter the word "strategic"--strategic this, strategic that. Strategic my foot! Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur. We love to be fooled. We love fooling ourselves. So be it. We don't want to be truly independent, anyway. We so love to strengthen that colonial bond. We can't let go of it.
And then I remember what the great Lee Kuan Yew mentioned in his book about the country's leader or representative. You can scrutinize the country by scrutinizing the leader. What kind of leader does the Philippines have? He's a dropout. He doesn't have a track record to boast. He didn't excel in anything. He's the only son of the infamous Marcos couple, an unscrupulous dictator father and a narcissist mother who lived in her fantasy world as a princess. So, how do you want the Philippines to be treated?
To bad Philippines had a weak leader now. It show his negligent and ignorance on his performance.
Philippines can actually raise some points which they can use as their leverage to get a zero tariff from US, but unfortunately the current leader seems didn't do anything and he's been outsmart by Trump.
He can use that expanded free access for US goods or products and also strategic alignment of their tech and defense. Also for what I know Philippines is rich with its natural resources. To bad they didn' use that as good bargain to ask for zero tariff from Trump.
This is really a bad sign for Philippines and with those situation we see it seems that they have less respect of current leader of Philippines.