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


1. Post 66426962 (unedited backup) (by Zwei) (scraped on Thu Feb 19 22:58:07 CET 2026) in X to launch crypto trading in a couple of weeks:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 04:42:23 AM
So, not only is it convenient for clueless would-be victims Twitter users to access all kinds of information from a single platform, or arrive at any exchange's sign-up page, they also get to enjoy exclusive bait deals.
can't wait for all the things that will go wrong with this and to see people complaining about losing their money after they joined a pump and dump, etc... or however investing/trading grifters on twitter gonna abuse it. it's going to be a real shitshow.

Quote from: Pmalek on Today at 07:59:13 AM
Grok thinks that eToro could become X's partner for the Smart Cashtag transactions, but that's only speculation at this point. 
i'm sure twitter users are going to love that considering where eToro is based.



2. Post 66424670 (unedited backup) (by Sandra_hakeem) (scraped on Thu Feb 19 12:14:55 CET 2026) in Steak 'n Shake comment after accepting bitcoin for payment 9 months ago:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 18, 2026, 04:18:12 AM
I think EL MOHA is referring to regulatory policies, specifically the lack of recognition of Bitcoin as a currency. There must be businesses in some countries like Vietnam, Bangladesh, and others which would've otherwise wanted to publicly announce that they accept Bitcoin payments if not for Bitcoin's illegal status as a direct mode of payment or payment method for goods and services.
Some powerful people just don't want to have a channel of decentralized transactions that doesn't necessarily need to go through their corrupt protocols. That's how greedy they can be-- every medium is an opportunity to implement their taxation policies, and if they're not given a percentage or two, they whine around and extend their sanctions. I think I see where this is going.

Quote from: rat03gopoh on February 18, 2026, 08:04:06 AM
"Scared" to publicly declare that they accept bitcoin? Pardon my ignorance, but why? Is there a deeper secret that I don't know?
Businesses will be closed, and business owners will be arrested and subject to criminal and economic sanctions(*). This is, at the very least, a threat to our country, especially in key tourist destinations. This news became a major local headline at the time, and no business dared to openly accept crypto to this day.

*) https://coinvestasi.com/berita/kafe-di-bali-gunakan-kripto-sebagai-metode-pembayaran
I read through the link, and I fear that this is not just mere threats anymore... Investors now have to deal with retributions for investing on what they think has a stronger growth pace, with their own money? I can't even make my choices anymore... Damn!!
But, why's the case different with Steak 'n Shake?



3. Post 66424232 (unedited backup) (by Curious T) (scraped on Thu Feb 19 10:05:55 CET 2026) in X to launch crypto trading in a couple of weeks:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 04:42:23 AM
With hundreds of millions of users, many of whom gullible, combined with all kinds of promotions, analyses, experts' signals, influencers, hype, charts, predictions, and whatnot posted and shared 24/7, it's certainly easier for Twitter to haul new users to partner brokers/exchanges. Which likely means these brokers/exchanges will, in turn, also be generous in terms of exclusive bonuses and other benefits.

With their lord and personal saviour, Elon, leading the campaign, it would be very easy to fool them. Twitter has been moving towards a certain way since he took over the app, and even though this is a long shot, I am not surprised that something like this is a possibility.



4. Post 66420112 (unedited backup) (by m2017) (scraped on Wed Feb 18 04:56:37 CET 2026) in BTC below $67K: temporary correlation or macro warning?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:04:25 AM
As to "macro warning", of what particularly? I hope it isn't Bitcoin's impending death. Otherwise, it's the same old FUD recycled all over again.
I believe OP is referring to a further price decline. The desire (and expectation) of most people for an imminent rebound in bitcoin is still in the air, while, in my opinion, a further decline is clearly inevitable. Considering that bearish season has only just begun.

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:04:25 AM
Since then, it hasn't reclaimed the 6-digit price. But this correction was somehow anticipated. It's in the cycle.
Yes, that's true. So why is everyone so confused about bitcoin falling under bearish pressure? Smiley What's happening is normal in the current situation.


Quote from: Charles-Tim on February 17, 2026, 10:57:52 PM
This bear market may be long, you can see that people are not ready to push bitcoin above $70000.
Of course, it will be long if it has always been like this.

Quote from: Charles-Tim on February 17, 2026, 10:57:52 PM
The bear market will later be over but it may take few months.
A few months? You're just being optimistic. Smiley

Fasten your seatbelts and get ready for a long, drawn-out dive into the depths of bitcoin's price. Smiley



5. Post 66419699 (unedited backup) (by aioc) (scraped on Tue Feb 17 23:52:43 CET 2026) in Wardley - Dubois WBO Heavyweight Championship May 9 Manchester:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 14, 2026, 01:48:58 PM
This is going to be explosive. It seems they can do away with judges with this one. And it could be anybody's fight, but I'm leaning more on Wardley. Dubois disappoints.


When two fighters with a combined knock-out average of 90% collide in the ring, we should not blink because anyone could knock out the other and end the fight.

This is what fights like to see: two fighters who have power and only know how to move forward, especially if it's a title fight. I'm leaning on Wardley, but I never ignore Dubois' power problem. With him, it's his motivation. It's bad for a boxer's reputation if they are a known quitter.



6. Post 66418293 (unedited backup) (by 0xredhot) (scraped on Tue Feb 17 16:58:31 CET 2026) in Singleplayer casino games vs multiplayer gambling games:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 12:45:21 AM
Casinos have options. There are games you can play alone, games you can play against other players, and games you play against the house. You can hop from one game to another depending on your preference or mood.

In plinko, flip, or wheel, would it really matter if you're playing against other players or the house? What makes the difference? Either way, it isn't a skill-based game, you're just relying entirely on luck to win. The results are random and you playing against other players doesn't involve any kind of strategy or any competitive edge.

I think you explained it the best i meant pvp only from fairness point, whereas whole pot is between you and other players and house takes small cut but things are completely random "luck based" so there is really still no need for pvp since it is not skill based.



7. Post 66418098 (unedited backup) (by Satofan44) (scraped on Tue Feb 17 16:04:25 CET 2026) in The reality of Bitcoin and why you shouldn't be scared :

Quote from: Chinesebaby on February 16, 2026, 07:01:35 AM
So in the image below, you could see that;

- In 2018-2019 Bear Run, it lasted for 365 days, while falling in value at 84%
- In 2019-2022 Bull Run, it lasted for 1065 days, while rising in value at 2000%
- In 2022-2023 Bear Run, it lasted for 365 days, while falling in value at 77%
- In 2023-2025 Bull Run, it lasted for 1066 days, while rising in value at 715%
Instead of copying superficial information from the image, next time include dates when you are referring to something like this otherwise it is quite an incomplete view of the situation.

Quote from: Chinesebaby on February 16, 2026, 07:01:35 AM
-In 2025-2026 Bear Run, Bitcoin have just fallen more than 73% to 100% of it's previous All Time High (i.e from $126,200) and it is expected to last for another 365 days.
Expected by idiots. If you believe in this, then stake your whole net worth and take out loans to make the most profitable trade in your life. Of course you like most of these idiots won't do it, because you don't believe this.

Quote from: Chinesebaby on February 16, 2026, 07:01:35 AM
-In 2026-2028 Bull Run, Bitcoin is expected to rise by 817%. Which also implies that by end of 2028/2029, the price of Bitcoin is expected to hit approximately $400,000 per BTC.
Complete nonsense. It is not expected to rise 817%, terrible example here and completely wrong. Fuck diminishing returns right, it is not as if it was already an established fact. Let's introduce a completely random expected increase in % that makes no sense whatsoever?  Roll Eyes

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:07:46 AM
What are you saying? Bitcoin hasn't even fallen more than 50% yet.
It does not need to fall more than 50%, check your numbers and don't shitpost.

Quote from: pooya87 on Today at 04:17:42 AM
You are misinterpreting the chart again. They are speculating the 817% rise from the bottom of the crash ($30k-ish) which means they expect it to reach somewhere around $250k not $400k.
It is a terrible chart and the whole premise here is stupid. A crash to 30k would be a bad sign as it shows that decreases are not diminishing, but the upside is diminishing. $125k to $30k would be a 75% decrease.



8. Post 66413071 (unedited backup) (by Pmalek) (scraped on Mon Feb 16 09:25:25 CET 2026) in Monitex: Monitoring with 80% Cashback in USDT:

Both the OP in this thread and the Swapwatch thread, linked to above in Darker45 reply, behave similarly. They have no intention to engage with Bitcointalk users, answer questions, or dispel any doubts voiced by people. Their bot-like activity is very suspicious. I wouldn't trust their monitoring services or the unknown exchanges they advertise.

Stay safe and don't get scammed!



9. Post 66412517 (unedited backup) (by Alpen) (scraped on Mon Feb 16 02:43:55 CET 2026) in Bitcoin Failed Its Ultimate Test:

Quote from: Mhizlove on February 15, 2026, 04:36:12 PM
So what if Trump was wrongly called the "first crypto president"? Does that mean he can "save BTC from closing the year in the red"? What makes you think he has that power?

If you come to assess Bitcoin's safe haven label when it's at the bottom, it surely failed. If you do it some other time, it easily passes the test with flying colors. To be fair, perhaps we should take a few steps back and take a look at Bitcoin's overall performance, not just short time frames.
Okay first of all bitcoin don't depends on title or controlled by politicians so you saying or they call trump crypto president, that do not mean that one person can control bitcoin, it's all about how demands , supply and also confidence on the way the global market or events goes.

And again this safe heaven label this don't mean that the price of bitcoin won't drop even when it comes to gold the price still fall sometimes, the thing is that even if it drops can the assets recover from it and holds value as the years pass by because instead of you focusing it if bitcoin is on red or green in a year it's just okay to ask because with this alone it has proven that no matter how the market seems it can still survive and in the terms of a long run bitcoin still holds its value or bitcoin is makes sense as an asset and solid reason to stand strong.

It takes very little for one person to tank Bitcoin by 60% if that person is the head of a major global power. Just look at the Chinese mining ban; those miners only survived because they found a safe haven in the US.

What happens if they are kicked out of the States by a Trump executive order? Or if the DOJ, under presidential direction, goes after Tether again? Remember 2018: Bitcoin plummeted 50% simply because Tether was caught up in US legal proceedings. Political decisions have massive consequences.



10. Post 66412487 (unedited backup) (by Alpen) (scraped on Mon Feb 16 02:16:01 CET 2026) in Bitcoin Failed Its Ultimate Test:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 15, 2026, 03:28:10 AM
So what if Trump was wrongly called the "first crypto president"? Does that mean he can "save BTC from closing the year in the red"? What makes you think he has that power?

If you come to assess Bitcoin's safe haven label when it's at the bottom, it surely failed. If you do it some other time, it easily passes the test with flying colors. To be fair, perhaps we should take a few steps back and take a look at Bitcoin's overall performance, not just short time frames.

The mistake wasn’t calling Trump the "crypto president"—the real mistake was the crypto industry backing him in the election. He used crypto for personal enrichment, and now the Democrats are gearing up for investigations. We’re likely to see a wave of anti-crypto legislation framed as a crackdown on "political bribery." None of this is going to end well for the market.



11. Post 66412075 (unedited backup) (by SUPERSAIAN) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 23:01:49 CET 2026) in How long would you stay before gambling?:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 11, 2026, 12:01:20 AM
Of course. The longer you stay in the casino, the more you're hooked on it, and the harder it would be to leave. I think it would be best to set a definite length of time when gambling rather than keep it open.

The risk isn't that you'd be having so much fun you'd completely forget about the time; it's that you'd continue gambling despite not enjoying it anymore. There are many gamblers who aren't excited anymore, already bored, but continue on betting, can't seem to detach themselves from it even if it's supposed to be over.
A person without a plan, someone who doesn't have a strategy, is always adrift, so setting a timer and leaving when the time is up is the best approach. I think even if you're addicted, you can maintain this discipline; it's necessary to do this to feel good about yourself. If you leave when the time is up, you'll feel really good because you've kept your promise to yourself. I bet on sports, and I set different limits for myself there and try not to exceed them.



12. Post 66412061 (unedited backup) (by Odohu) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 22:59:25 CET 2026) in How long would you stay before gambling?:

Quote from: Versatile_choice on Today at 08:39:27 PM
Of course. The longer you stay in the casino, the more you're hooked on it, and the harder it would be to leave. I think it would be best to set a definite length of time when gambling rather than keep it open.


You might be right about that but our intention is what determines how the end will look like, if your intention is to have fun with it trust me you can gamble as much as you like even though you would want to spend the whole of your day and you won't regret it that's if your mind is fixed to have fun but it's advised to set a limit while gambling just as we also have limit in other things we do which gambling is even more dangerous than most of the things we set limit while doing it so it is good for us to also apply that same method in gambling, by so doing it shows that we are gambling responsibly.
No matter your intention you must always



13. Post 66411806 (unedited backup) (by Versatile_choice) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 21:39:31 CET 2026) in How long would you stay before gambling?:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 11, 2026, 12:01:20 AM
Of course. The longer you stay in the casino, the more you're hooked on it, and the harder it would be to leave. I think it would be best to set a definite length of time when gambling rather than keep it open.


You might be right about that but our intention is what determines, if your intention is to have fun with it trust me you can gamble as much as you like even though you would want to spend the whole of your day and you won't regret it that's if your mind is fixed to have fun but it's advised to set a limit while gambling just as we also have limit in other things we do which gambling is even more dangerous than most of the things we set limit while doing it so it is good for us to also apply that same method in gambling, by so doing it shows that we are gambling responsibly.



14. Post 66411641 (unedited backup) (by ETZ-Swap) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 20:48:25 CET 2026) in ETZ-Swap anonymous cryptocurrency exchange:

Hello Darker45,

First of all, apologies for the long silence on this thread.

Over the past few months, we had very limited direct access to Bitcointalk. At the same time, our team was heavily focused on strengthening the core of ETZ-Swap — improving user anonymity and security mechanisms, expanding our liquidity pool, and resolving several structural matters with partners and integrations.

These upgrades required significant internal resources, and we chose to prioritize infrastructure and product stability before returning to public communication.

We’re now fully back online here and ready to actively maintain and develop this topic again.

Regarding your previous points:

1. Fee competitiveness — yes, that’s something we’ve been actively optimizing. Liquidity expansion was one of the key steps to improve execution quality and rates.
2. KYCnot.me — we appreciate the suggestion. We are open to pursuing verified/approved listing status and will follow up accordingly.

We’re here to stay and ready to continue the discussion.



15. Post 66410855 (unedited backup) (by Mhizlove) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 17:36:13 CET 2026) in Bitcoin Failed Its Ultimate Test:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:28:10 AM
So what if Trump was wrongly called the "first crypto president"? Does that mean he can "save BTC from closing the year in the red"? What makes you think he has that power?

If you come to assess Bitcoin's safe haven label when it's at the bottom, it surely failed. If you do it some other time, it easily passes the test with flying colors. To be fair, perhaps we should take a few steps back and take a look at Bitcoin's overall performance, not just short time frames.
Okay first of all bitcoin don't depends on title or controlled by politicians so you saying or they call trump crypto president, that do not mean that one person can control bitcoin, it's all about how demands , supply and also confidence on the way the global market or events goes.

And again this safe heaven label this don't mean that the price of bitcoin won't drop even when it comes to gold the price still fall sometimes, the thing is that even if it drops can the assets recover from it and holds value as the years pass by because instead of you focusing it if bitcoin is on red or green in a year it's just okay to ask because with this alone it has proven that no matter how the market seems it can still survive and in the terms of a long run bitcoin still holds its value or bitcoin is makes sense as an asset and solid reason to stand strong.



16. Post 66409669 (unedited backup) (by Jaweria parveen) (scraped on Sun Feb 15 09:06:20 CET 2026) in Bitcoin Failed Its Ultimate Test:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:28:10 AM
So what if Trump was wrongly called the "first crypto president"? Does that mean he can "save BTC from closing the year in the red"? What makes you think he has that power?

If you come to assess Bitcoin's safe haven label when it's at the bottom, it surely failed. If you do it some other time, it easily passes the test with flying colors. To be fair, perhaps we should take a few steps back and take a look at Bitcoin's overall performance, not just short time frames.
While he has not been performing very well in this, which is why we do not consider him to be very good. He promised to make crypto big, but he has not fulfilled it yet, which is why he is not using this power properly, while he is using this power well in his country. Bitcoin has fallen below its price for some time, this does not mean that Bitcoin or its growth has stopped, but it has the potential to rise this year with many big predictions. It is absolutely okay to do so because at this time everyone's eyes are on Bitcoin, if we do not make any changes in Bitcoin for a while, maybe it will seem to go up, so we should not invest in Bitcoin right now, although this time is good, but sometimes profitable investments have to be abandoned.



17. Post 66408769 (unedited backup) (by Hypnosis00) (scraped on Sat Feb 14 22:54:49 CET 2026) in How long would you stay before gambling?:

Quote from: Darker45 on February 11, 2026, 12:01:20 AM
Of course. The longer you stay in the casino, the more you're hooked on it, and the harder it would be to leave. I think it would be best to set a definite length of time when gambling rather than keep it open.

The risk isn't that you'd be having so much fun you'd completely forget about the time; it's that you'd continue gambling despite not enjoying it anymore. There are many gamblers who aren't excited anymore, already bored, but continue on betting, can't seem to detach themselves from it even if it's supposed to be over.
As long as there is greed, even the games have become boring, these gamblers can't stop themselves from gambling especially if they have been losing already a huge amount. And most of them are gambling addicts, so they don't just gamble for their greed for money, but they gamble its because their mind can no longer stop them from satisfying their gambling addiction.

At the end of the day, gambling is just all about time management and responsible gambling, if you can't do it, you'll definitely fall into gambling addiction.



18. Post 66407486 (unedited backup) (by tbct_mt2) (scraped on Sat Feb 14 16:19:43 CET 2026) in Question about BTC fork:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 09:57:02 AM
Bitcoin fork isn't just a possibility, it's a necessity. Bitcoin has to upgrade. Otherwise, it would get stuck and grow obsolete. Surely, Bitcoin at its current state isn't its best version at all times, forever, especially taking into consideration technological developments. For example, when quantum computers finally become a thing in the future, Bitcoin has to adjust. There's most likely a fork.

However, you have to take note that there isn't just one type of fork. There's soft fork--backward compatible upgrades, doesn't require a blockchain split. There's hard fork--non-backward compatible, results into two separate networks. There's even a kind of fork which simply involves just copying Bitcoin's code like Litecoin, although some don't consider it as such.
Bitcoin forks are necessary things for Bitcoin technical improvements, upgrades to make it stronger, better and more convenient as well as feasible with time so generally it's good. It's only bad if scammers try to use forks for creating their shitcoins as their easy tools to scam people, steal money of people in the market while they don't actually have any technical capability of developments their "projects" after forking from Bitcoin source codes and Bitcoin chain.

Bitcoin fork is a technical feature that is either good or bad depends on people behind each fork but Bitcoin is only one, the longest Bitcoin chain, while other chains are weaker and most of them are useless too.



19. Post 66403953 (unedited backup) (by bitterguy28) (scraped on Fri Feb 13 15:23:31 CET 2026) in Professor who studied gambling:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:12:21 AM
Their studies are worth reading, although I'm sure it's extremely difficult to establish a direct causation line between exposure to Nintendo game systems as a little kid and becoming, or at least having the potential of becoming, a gambler later in life. It might be a contributing factor, but along with hundreds of others.
the fact is still that there was some kind of exposure to gambling at an early age so i agree that it’s only a contributing factor but it may be one of the biggest factor. but since kids grow up differently, there will be different factors along the way

it’s quite interesting and i’m sure experts may be studying now the modern games kids have that might affect them later on in life



20. Post 66403591 (unedited backup) (by Crypto Library) (scraped on Fri Feb 13 13:32:26 CET 2026) in Is there any idea to withdraw bitcoin from the CEX with low fees ?:

Quote from: Pmalek on February 12, 2026, 08:19:18 AM
By the way, I would like to draw NotATether attention because I see on their bitmixlist website that the BitcoinVN platform was founded in 2014, but unexpectedly when I check their website whois.com, I see that their platform was registered on 2018-03-21. I will request NotATether to check and verify this, and put the correct time in the Founded cell.
Maybe the exchange didn't always have that website or they were founded under a different name. Their website also claims that they have been operating as a cryptocurrency exchange since 2014. More precisely, their about us page says that the company was founded in late 2013. Could it be that they first started as a physical shop in Vietnam (maybe with bitcoin ATMs) and only later expanded and started offering online exchanges?!
Yes I can also see India about us page that they started their journey on 2014. Thanks for letting me know this .  Wink

Quote from: The Cryptovator on February 10, 2026, 11:06:54 AM
I don't know why you have to withdraw CEX from another exchange. You have to hold it on a non-custodial wallet at the end of the day. First of all, you have to choose an exchange that doesn't require high fees, as other members already suggested the names. For me, I have been doing a strategy; I am accumulating Bitcoin as well. I have been receiving payment from the signature campaign to a non-custodial wallet. Since I want to break the transaction, so per month I am moving my money into KuCoin and then from KuCoin to Binance through the BEP20 chain, and it does cost a small amount only.

So finally I withdraw Bitcoin from Binance to my hardware wallet. Likely after 3/4 months I withdraw from Binance. So I don't need to spend a lot of fees to break the connection. So you may purchase from Binance or from another exchange and move to another lower-fee exchange through another chain. Then finally withdraw it to the hardware wallet or a non-custodial wallet through the Bitcoin blockchain. It seems MEXC or OKX charge fewer fees now; you may use them to buy Bitcoin or may use them as mediators to reduce the exchanging and withdrawal fees.
I already said that I have to buy it on cex because of my personal reasons and then I am trying to stay safe by transferring to a decentralized wallet. Since my DCA planning amount is not very high, I am looking for some ninja tricks to reduce my withdrawal fees in this regard and maybe I have found it.


Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:41:27 AM
But I don't know how much USDT it would be safe to exchange here but for now I think the low amount transactions are risk-free.



I'm not sure about being risk-free. I don't think there's such a transaction with a third-party that's risk-free.

Anyway, if you want to add another layer of security to your transaction, you might want to consider using BitcoinVN via OrangeFren or Trocador. The former has up to 0.016BTC of BitcoinVN's funds as a guarantee against the service scamming you while the latter insures BitcoinVN transactions 100%. Of course, please do your research. Terms apply.
Actually I have also doubt on them but my monthly transaction amount will be not much higher than $40 or $50, and I think that we can trust at least with this amount in this platform.



21. Post 66402793 (unedited backup) (by john_egbert) (scraped on Fri Feb 13 08:45:49 CET 2026) in The Nancy Guthrie Kidnapping and the Narrative Risk to Bitcoin:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 12:36:09 AM
If people chose Bitcoin as the go-to currency when moving value across borders, then it's a good thing. It's a testament to its usefulness and practicality. However, as true for the rest of neutral tools, it could be used by both good and bad actors.

To emphasize, to make it a headline, or to highlight only its use by a few bad apples is obvious nitpicking just to discredit it. That's an old bitter way to try give Bitcoin a bad name. We're in 2026 already. If it didn't work more than a decade ago, it won't now.

Also, Bitcoin is transparent. Moreover, its transaction history is public and immutable. In which case, Bitcoin is even helpful to the authorities in finding clues as to the identities of the criminals.

It didn't work previously, but back then, BTC wasn't as relevant as it is now.

Who knows whats on their minds if they would want to go the defaming route for BTC and regulating all the holes they can due to it..