Bitcoin and its vulnerabilities

anything could happen ;

- hackers generate new BTC through don't-know-what mining process
- CEO goes India and die
- BTC reaches 100 000 and Elon closes his position to take profit, NOT
take loss !!!
...


Hackers cannot generate new BTC, its impossible. There are so many elements to the setup of Bitcoin that make that impossible.
CEO? Of Bitcoin? What?
If Elon sells his position it would make little difference in terms of price impact. The publicity of him saying he thinks BTC will go down would be a media story that dampens price for sure. But the market can easily absorb that selling pressure. The market didn't even notice he bought, its only when he told everyone he bought and other people copied him that the price moved.
 
Hackers cannot generate new BTC, its impossible. There are so many elements to the setup of Bitcoin that make that impossible.
CEO? Of Bitcoin? What?
If Elon sells his position it would make little difference in terms of price impact. The publicity of him saying he thinks BTC will go down would be a media story that dampens price for sure. But the market can easily absorb that selling pressure. The market didn't even notice he bought, its only when he told everyone he bought and other people copied him that the price moved.

Are you sure about that? There was a huge green candle an hour before the news came out that he bought. Of course that could also be inside information for early investors.

The way I see it, it would take a lot of money to try to manipulate the market right now since now there is over a trillion pouring into Bitcoin. That's why I think these CME futures gaps aren't closing. They don't have the balls or the power to go against the tide
 
Are you sure about that? There was a huge green candle an hour before the news came out that he bought. Of course that could also be inside information for early investors.

The way I see it, it would take a lot of money to try to manipulate the market right now since now there is over a trillion pouring into Bitcoin. That's why I think these CME futures gaps aren't closing. They don't have the balls or the power to go against the tide

He bought it weeks before. The SEC filing just alerted ppl to the fact he had earlier in the month.
 
Bitcoin wallets sometimes are hacked ... just like people and businesses sometimes are robbed of their cash by gun-toting criminals.

Funny thing though about hacking someone's electronics - if doesn't involve risk of the victim potentially losing their life.
 
Bitcoin wallets sometimes are hacked ... just like people and businesses sometimes are robbed of their cash by gun-toting criminals.

Funny thing though about hacking someone's electronics - if doesn't involve risk of the victim potentially losing their life.
And wallets will become harder and harder to hack as the industry grows. Most of the big brokers hold the coins in cold storage now. There’s as much chance of those coins being hacked as a gold bar.
 
Bitcoin wallets sometimes are hacked ... just like people and businesses sometimes are robbed of their cash by gun-toting criminals.

Funny thing though about hacking someone's electronics - if doesn't involve risk of the victim potentially losing their life.

Sometimes the victims are hacked instead of their wallets.:)
https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...er-bitcoins/story-A18ipLTQCrlFphgBPYHxoI.html
Man killed after being tortured for days over bitcoins
The alleged killers, also from Kerala, took the man to a hospital on Wednesday night after he stopped responding to the torture.
By Kalyan Das | Hindustan Times, Dehradun
UPDATED ON AUG 31, 2019 07:05 AM IST
A 24-year-old man from Kerala was tortured to death in Dehradun by 10 people who wanted to get their hands on the ₹485 crore that investors had plowed into bitcoin on two virtual currency exchanges he used to run in his home state, the police said on Friday.

The alleged killers, also from Kerala, took the man to a hospital on Wednesday night after he stopped responding to the torture. He was declared “brought dead” at the hospital. Police caught five of the men and said the remaining were on the run.

The victim has been identified as Abdul Shukoor, a resident of Malappuram district in Kerala, said Arun Mohan Joshi, senior superintendent of police (SSP), Dehradun. He had been engaged in bitcoin trading for the past two years and used to operate two trading exchanges named ‘bitjax.BTC’ and ‘BTC.bit.shukoor’, the officer said.

The 10 men accused of killing him have been identified as Ashiq, a close aide to Shukoor and the main suspect, Arshad, Sihab, Muneef, Yasin, Sufail Mikhtar, Aftab Mohammad, Faris Mamnoon, Arvind C and Ansif Ali. They are also residents of Malappuram, Joshi said.

He said that four of the 10 belonged to Shukoor’s core team in his trade of the virtual currency and mobilised many people to invest money in Bitcoin. The total investment amounted to about ₹485 crore.

The business was going well until a year ago when the value of Bitcoin started declining. Shukoor began to incur losses and investors, too, began to ask where their money was.

One of the alleged killers, Yasin, was studying in a college in Dehradun, where Shukoor and the nine others fled from Kerala on August 12 to escape growing pressure from investors.

Shukoor had told Ashiq that his Bitcoin trading account had been hacked, and that he would soon launch his own cryptocurrency. He claimed he would return the investors’ money from the profits he would make on the new virtual currency, SSP Joshi said. Ashiq thought Shukoor still had Bitcoins worth hundreds of crore and planned to acquire the password for his trading accounts to encash it, according to the police.

At Yasin’s rented accommodation in Dehradun, the men tied Shukoor to a chair and tortured him brutally from August 26 to August 28, superintendent of police, Dehra Dun city, Shweta Chaubey, said. “Despite the torture, they failed to get the password out. On August 28, when his condition worsened, they panicked that they would lose the hefty amount with his death. Five of them – who were later arrested – first took him to a city hospital where he was declared ‘brought dead’. They then took him to a private hospital which also declared him dead,” Chaubey added.

They fled the hospital premises, leaving Shukoor’s body in the car in the parking lot and took a bus to Delhi. “The police got the information about the death from the hospital authorities at midnight on Wednesday. After learning about Shukoor’s identity and Kerala address from a diary in the car, they informed the Kerala police,” Chaubey said. After questioning an auto-rickshaw driver, hospital staff and examining CCTV footage, all five men who had brought Shukoor to hospital were caught on Thursday. “The other five, including main accused Ashiq, are on the run,” Chaubey said.
 
And wallets will become harder and harder to hack as the industry grows. Most of the big brokers hold the coins in cold storage now. There’s as much chance of those coins being hacked as a gold bar.
I think the most vulnerable in the digital asset is because hackers, and second because fail software, already recorded some story where exchanges get trouble because of hackers and losing crypto, the crime always growth accompanied the growth in the digital asset.
 
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