Bitcoin
- Pennsylvania passes landmark Bitcoin rights bill
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/21228280
> The bill, known as the Digital Assets Authorization Act, was passed by a 176-26 vote. > > The legislation offers regulatory clarity at a time when federal regulations on digital assets are scant. While former president Donald Trump has promised to transform the United States into the "crypto capital of the planet," his vision is short on details.
- Cryptominer MARA taps US shale patch in new power generation project
> MARA's process captures gas that would have been flared, generating carbon credits
- Kingdom of Bhutan holds over 13,000 Bitcoinsbitcoinblog.de Kingdom of Bhutan holds over 13,000 Bitcoins
Bhutan, a Buddhist, climate-neutral mountainous country, holds Bitcoins worth around 730 million euros. The country continuously receives Bitcoins through mining but only sells them in small portio…
- MISSION ACCOMPLISHED | This Week In Bitcoin 23 | Jupiter Broadcastingwww.jupiterbroadcasting.com MISSION ACCOMPLISHED | This Week In Bitcoin 23 | Jupiter Broadcasting
Independent coverage of Linux, BSD, Open Source, System Administration, Information Security, News, Software Development and Discussion.
- Proton.me adds self-custody Bitcoin wallet feature
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/18390499
> For those of you using Proton services to protect your privacy, a new feature is being rolled out which is a self-custody Bitcoin wallet. If you have a proton e-mail address, you can now send and receive Bitcoin automatically. This is in tradition with their long-standing policy of accepting Bitcoin payments for their services. > > A few key points to know: > - You and only you have access to the Bitcoin, it is a self-custody wallet. You are not dependent on proton's cooperation to access your funds and they do not hold onto the funds for you. > - Proton automatically translates e-mail addresses to Bitcoin addresses. This means you can send/receive BTC to/from any Proton user by just knowing their e-mail address > - Proton does not support Bitcoin lightning. This means transactions will take an average of 10 minutes for an average fee of 75c. Hopefully they will add lightning in the future so that can drop to under a second for pennies in fees. Lightning would also enhance privacy > - Note that using Bitcoin is pseudonymous. Using it privately and anonymously requires some effort. > - Proton has also put together a good primer on Bitcoin here. > > from their blog post: > > Early in our journey, we experienced first-hand what it’s like being cut off from the financial system and at the mercy of large banks and institutions — an ordeal that affects millions of people across the globe. In the summer of 2014, as the original Proton Mail crowdfunding campaign was in progress, Proton had a near-death experience when PayPal froze our funds, questioned whether encryption was legal, and whether Proton had government approval to encrypt emails. > > Fortunately, in that instance PayPal returned the blocked funds, and Proton was able to start the journey that we’ve been on for the past decade. However, that dangerous moment has always stayed in our minds, and we still keep a proportion of Proton’s financial reserves in Bitcoin. > > Having experienced firsthand the unreliability of the traditional financial sector, building Proton Wallet is an important strategic move to make Proton more resilient and independent in the future. By enabling us and the entire Proton community to more easily adopt means of payment that deliver on the promise of financial freedom for all, we better insulate Proton from the risks posed by traditional finance.
- Global IT outage shows dangers of cashless society, campaigners saywww.theguardian.com Global IT outage shows dangers of cashless society, campaigners say
Cash provides essential fallback when digital payments break down, Payment Choice Alliance points out
Meanwhile, Bitcoin hasn't had a single hack or a single hour of downtime since it started 15 years ago. Decentralization is the answer.
- If Germany had held their Bitcoin instead of selling it
A fun website to track the "what if"
- All about BOLT12, the latest upgrade to the lightning network ⚡bolt12.org BOLT 12 | This is how we bitcoin in the future!
BOLT 12 is a protocol upgrade to the Lightning network that will enable re-usable payment requests, increased receiver privacy, and better censorship resistance. Come see the bitcoin of the future!
- Bitcoin Symbol Lit Up On The Santa Monica Pier Ferris Wheel In California
The City of Santa Monica is making history by opening an official Bitcoin office. The city council unanimously voted to pilot the office in partnership with the nonprofit Proof of Workforce at no cost to the city.|
- Democrats need a Bitcoin Strategy with Jason Maier (The Progressive Bitcoiner)podcasts.apple.com The Progressive Bitcoiner: TPB93 - Democrats need a Bitcoin Strategy with Jason Maier on Apple Podcasts
Show The Progressive Bitcoiner, Ep TPB93 - Democrats need a Bitcoin Strategy with Jason Maier - Jun 24, 2024
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/17823614
> In this episode we discusses the political landscape of Bitcoin, focusing on Trump's recent Bitcoin-friendly stance and its implications. We explore the need for a Democratic Bitcoin strategy, the importance of grassroots education, and how Bitcoin aligns with progressive values, emphasizing its potential for global financial inclusion and environmental benefits. In a crucial election year, these issues, and bitcoin education for everyone, including progressives and democrats, is more important than ever. > > My guest today is Jason Maier. Jason is a high school math teacher, educator, and author of “A Progressive’s Case for Bitcoin.”
- Over the past 2 months alone, Nostr users have 'zapped' (tipped) 1,624,227,365 sats (960k USD) over lightning
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/17822508
> 1624227344 sats = 960k USD > > All over lightning, confirming in under a second for pennies in fees
- 12 words that change everything
Had dinner with some boomer-age family friends tonight who shared stories about their grandparents and other relatives who survived (or didn’t survive) the holocaust.
One family, posing as Christians, managed to escape Poland to the US in 1939. They had to travel through Nazi Germany and Italy on their journey.
This family invested much of their life savings into expensive camera equipment to not raise suspicion, as they were traveling under the pretense of going on holiday.
The conversation developed into all the ways people attempted to conceal and travel with wealth as they fled their homeland. Apparently, sewing diamonds into clothing was a common tactic.
These close friends were struck to hear how Bitcoin enables the storage and transfer of wealth by simply knowing a secret number. I told them of the work @gladstein and others are doing to get Bitcoin knowledge and tools into the hands of political activists and refugees.
“Fuck You Money” is a world changing technology. Let us not lose site of what really matters here 🫡 🤙
From nostr https://njump.me/nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzpz9zcw6zpd9qyacx4xrqp50aw39vdn739cspkaqcn0j77jet82j9qyfhwumn8ghj7mmxve3ksctfdch8qatz9uq3vamnwvaz7tmjv4kxz7fwdehhxarj9ehx2ap0qqsy98wlnfyk6ltxrgptyq6ysxhfwenseqawk08yz493yhdqsmcq4rgc787rs
- Why Bitcoin Matters for Human Rights - Roya Mahboob
YouTube Video
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- Reclaiming Democracy With Bitcoin At The Oslo Freedom Forumwww.forbes.com Reclaiming Democracy With Bitcoin At The Oslo Freedom Forum
The event focused on "Re-claim Democracy," uniting activists, thinkers, and leaders to tackle rising authoritarianism and show how bitcoin promotes financial freedom.
"The Oslo Freedom Forum, held annually by the Human Rights Foundation, has become a worldwide cornerstone for human rights activists. This year, the 16th edition of the forum was centered around the theme "Re-claim Democracy." It brought together activists, thinkers, and leaders to discuss the challenges of rising authoritarianism and how bitcoin can support activists fighting against oppressive regimes."
Link without paywall: http://archive.today/L1n4y
- Bitcoin is about more than money, adding BitVM and other smart contract features to Bitcoin will change society.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/16448198
> Globally, people are losing faith in our institutions. Our financial institutions, our governments, our media, our medical systems, even democracy as a concept in many cases. And for sound reasons. Proposed upgrades to Bitcoin's protocol would enable use of the chain (and L2s) for things aside from just money. On the world's most secure document: the bitcoin ledger. It will change everything and here's why. > > The root problem is that we are building systems which rely on trust and time and time again, that trust has been broken. We have to trust that the people elected or appointed to those positions will do their jobs faithfully. But, of course, like us, they are humans and fallible. Subject to stupidity, greed, misdirection, and error whether through malice or accident. Take money, for example. Money has to be trust-able, so it is entrusted, for all its faults, to the most stable and neutral institutions humanity has ever created: the state. And yet, the state often abuses that authority to print money they shouldn't leading to inflation and hyperinflation, particularly for unpopular wars of conquest. Every failed state ends in hyperinflation, because it's a tool in the state's toolbox and they will use it when they have no other options. They'll turn on that money printer if they need to. And time after time, they have. There are ways to create trustless systems, where we do not have to trust individual actors to administer them faithfully, only for them to be mostly rational actors subject to the same laws of math and physics as the rest of us. Instead, the system administers itself according to some form of protocol. Bitcoin did this for money 15 years ago, it was created by Satoshi in the wake of the nearly total collapse of the global financial system (2008 financial crisis) to create a system which could not suffer the same fate. We all had to bail the banks out because they were "too big to fail", which was true, Bernanke won a nobel prize in economics for his analysis of this and the bailouts likely prevented the worst economic period since the great depression had the entire banking system be allowed to fail. You may not know who Bernenke is, but if you were alive during this time period, you know his face, he was the guy who had to sell the bailouts to the world as an idea. The reality is, fractional reserve banking is a ponzi scheme, and had the banks failed and people realized it, it would have stopped functioning. Our debt-based world order would have collapsed. No credit could be issued to build roads or fund schools or do anything because there would be no money in the banks to use as collateral and nobody would trust it. Just like in the US great depression. You can argue it's a sneakily beautiful ponzi scheme which drives the engine of human progress if you are a die-hard capitalist, but you can't argue it's not a ponzi scheme. > > The crazy thing is, Bitcoin worked. It has kept every promise it made. For 15 years, it has faithfully administered a financial system with a known, transparent, limited supply of 21 million coins which can be transferred across the globe in seconds for pennies in fees. And it has continued to grow no matter which metric you measure it by. Through pandemics, wars, international conflict, attempted bans by major world powers, tick tock, next block, the blockchain continued to function. Not a single hour of downtime, not a single bank holiday, not a single hack or breach of security or protocol. Now, it has a market cap of over 1 trillion USD, which is bigger than the GDP of Israel, the Netherlands, Turkey, or Switzerland, countries with tens of millions of people. It's been consistently over 800 billion for a while now. It moves hundreds of millions of dollars of value on the regular. I can send a transaction to anybody on the planet with a cell phone and halfway reliable internet for under a cent in under a second. > > Nobody can make Bitcoin print money it's not supposed to print. Nobody can transfer money without the private key of that coin. Nobody can force the network to do anything outside of its protocol, even if they bought every Bitcoin in existence. Even if they had a trillion dollars and 1,000 people with AKs ready to die for it. It's mathematically, computationally, financially, and logistically infeasible. I think the question is, long-term, how can be we build political and social systems which are equally trustless where we don't have to put people in positions of power. Just like democracy did to monarchy in spreading power around and reducing the damage one corrupted individual could do, we can now do that again in an order of magnitude greater in the same direction towards greater democratization. Whether you're a capitalist, a communist, or a member of the federation of planets, this tech has serious promise for making your ideal global vision come true. It's a matter of setting up the system correctly and getting adoption of it. It can be used for voting systems, for the collection of taxes, for the administration of public funds, goods, and markets. It can be used for a lot more than just money. With smart contract functionality, Bitcoin will be the ledger upon which all this is built. > > I'm excited to be here with all of you. We are early. Most people I know don't own any crypto. The future is coming. Thank you Satoshi for your gift to the world.
- BTC Multisig betting with Electrum (Proof of concept)
Hello everyone!
I made a site where you can make bets online with an electrum multisig wallet (p2wsh). I made the UX easy as possible for onboarding and I'd like to hear your feedback about it. The website is currently live on BTC testnet3. I made a cheesy tutorial as well!
The site is: https://olivetitan.com
You can get testnet coins from https://cryptopump.info, https://bitcoinfaucet.uo1.net/ and many others.
I think this is the safest way to bet online currently. BTW you get proof, that you lost :)
No one can cheat.
I'm also looking into bitVM and exploring how that can help. Still learning!
Thank you for reading and hope you have a great time! ♥
NOTE: Do not use LTC, it asks for real LTC, not testnet
- Would be nice to get everyone into the same Bitcoin community
I stopped coming back to Lemmy 6 months ago after seeing there was not enough traction. Is there any good community for Bitcoin or just Crypto that is active with daily users?
The mod for this community (lemmy.ml) seems to have disappeared long ago (no posts, no comments, and I reached out to them many months ago and they have never got back to me)
The main mod for lemmy.world/c/bitcoin is just a squatter, who specifically mentioned to me that they are there to hand it over to the Reddit Bitcoin mods if they ever appear.
discuss.tchncs.de/c/bitcoin seems to have the most active mod, although I haven't checked the other bitcoin communities recently. I think it would be good to move activity over there, unless people think there is a better sub.
- Where to buy amazon gift cards (with btc)
Where can I buy $500 gift cards for amazon.com with cryptocurrency?
When bitcoin topped $70,000 recently, I went to a few gift card outlet websites. But when I actually went to add a $500 gift card for amazon.com to my cart, they said it was "currently unavailable".
Did amazon.com stop selling gift cards to third parties? Or was this a temporary supply problem during the ATH?
Where can I currently buy a few $500 gift cards for amazon.com using cryptocurrency?
- Human Rights Foundation hands out $500K in Bitcoin Development Grants
$500,000 to 14 projects targeting global education, Lightning Network innovation, decentralized communication, and easing access to financial freedom tools for nonprofits
🌍🌏🌎🎁
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/business/human-rights-foundation-grants-500000-to-14-bitcoin-projects-worldwide
Grant #1: USD E-Cash by Dr. Calle, leveraging the Cashu protocol for a secure USD-based Chaumian e-cash system that respects your privacy. Funding will support the full development of this project 🔒💸
Grant #2: BTC Pay Server provides free open source software for organizations that rely on Bitcoin, it is a critical tool for nonprofits operating in challenging environments. Funding will support enhancing the platform's user experience and extend its capabilities 🌐
Grant #3: BOB Space, for its Builders Residency Program in Thailand. Funding will help launch a new cohort, to be dedicated to identifying weak spots in Bitcoin’s decentralization, and making those into strengths 🌱 📡
Grant #4: YiBao, a non-profit that advocates for democracy and human rights within the Chinese-speaking world. Funding will enable translating key Bitcoin educational materials into Chinese and promoting financial freedom inside the world’s biggest Communist country 🇨🇳
Grant #5: The Bitcoin Innovation Hub, led by Noble Nyangoma in Uganda, offers a range of vocational training and financial literacy to women and men, centered around using and earning Bitcoin. Funding will support the addition of classes such as carpentry, baking, and valuable digital skills.
Grant #6: Bitcoin Dada, founded by Lorraine Marcel, is on a mission to empower African women with Bitcoin knowledge. Funds will support expansion across Africa, the creation of multilingual educational resources, and promote women-led businesses adopting Bitcoin 💪
The grants in this round to both Bitcoin Dada and The Bitcoin Innovation Hub are generously supported by Strike’s nonprofit initiative. Big shout out to Strike and everyone else that makes our work possible! ⚡
Grant #7: The Bitcoin Design Foundation contributes essential user research, aiding Bitcoin wallets and companies in enhancing UX to guarantee Bitcoin's accessibility for all 🎨📲
Grant #8: Bitcoin Optech is a vital resource for the Bitcoin developer community, offering insights into the most important Bitcoin technical conversations. Funds will be allocated towards operational expenses and growth strategies.
Grant #9: Damus, the first #NOSTR client on iOS, is expanding to Android! Funding enables this critical initiative which makes this open source client available to millions of new users in authoritarian countries and the developing world.
Grant #10: Bitcoin Core Developer Pablo Martin's contributions help maintain Bitcoin as a secure digital currency, pivotal for activists and individuals in high-risk environments. HRF is proud to support Pablo! 🛡👨💻
Grant #11: LNbits aims to decentralize custodianship and provides users with a robust suite of Bitcoin tools they can run for themselves. Funding will support the core contributors’ salaries, bounties, and educational outreach efforts through workshops and video tutorials ⚡
Grant #12: The Bitcoin Policy Summit 2024, organized by Bitcoin Policy Institute, is a critical platform for discussing how Bitcoin can play a role in protecting human rights. Funding will support event logistics, speaker travel, and attendance by human rights advocates 🏛️🗣️
Grant #13: Video series "Bitcoin for Billions" by #Bitcoin educator Paco de la India, is making Bitcoin accessible to millions in India, in a variety of local languages. Funding will be used for research, content creation, translation, and promotion 🎥🇮🇳
Grant #14: Scalar School in Brazil, established by Luciana, is nurturing a new wave of Bitcoin and Lightning developers across South America. The grant will go towards teachers’ salaries, training workshops, and university outreach 🌎🇧🇷
The Bitcoin Development Fund is committed to facilitating $2 million of grants in 2024, aiming to bolster innovative technical, educational, and community-driven Bitcoin initiatives worldwide
Submit your application at hrf.org/bdfapply
- Bitcoin is finally above $69k
Until today Bitcoin has only been briefly above $69k. Today marks the first day it has been at that level without a rapid retrace. Congratulations to those holding strong.
- Great video explaining how secure SHA-256/Bitcoin really is. These are massive numbers
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
- To date people have donated over $30 million to Ukraine with Bitcoin. Donations continue to come in regularly
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/11793765
> ! > > Most of these transactions took a few minutes and around $1 in fees. Bitcoin lightning is pennies in fees, but the account shown is on main chain. > > If you know somebody who wants to contribute to Ukraine but doesn't want to deal with the hassle, cost, or availability of international bank wires, this is a great way. Most major cities have several Bitcoin ATMs and in many countries you can buy Bitcoin online easily. > > Transaction list: > https://www.blockchain.com/explorer/addresses/btc/357a3So9CbsNfBBgFYACGvxxS6tMaDoa1P > > Proof this address is really owned by the Ukraine govt: > https://twitter.com/Ukraine/status/1497594592438497282
- Solutions for selling event tickets via Bitcoin lightning?
After looking for a way to sell event tickets via Bitcoin lighting network, I have given up on finding a solution built for tickets. Is there another solution I can re-purpose? #shopstr seems interesting, I can list a bunch of items aka tickets and people can see them by clicking on my profile, but it requires a cashu wallet not a regular lightning wallet.
#flockstr seems great but their ticket functionality doesn't work yet.
I know lnbits has a ticketing extension but I'd rather not have to run my own node, BTCPay server, etc.
Anything else out there?
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell the US is on an unsustainable economic path
YouTube Video
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- Bitcoin Debit Card (without a phone)
Where can I signup for a bitcoin debit card without a phone?
There are a number of "bitcoin debit card" providers -- services that issue you a traditional visa/mastercard/etc debit card that allows you to pay for purchases in fiat, but where the balance of the card is automatically converted from your cryptocurrency balance stored on their custodial wallet.
> Note that a "bitcoin debit card" is distinct from gift cards in that the balance lives in an account below the debit card, not on the card itself. This is important because otherwise you may end-up with tons of different cards with low balances. It's important for my business that I can pay invoices with a single card, and if that card expires then the balance can simply be spent on the card's replacement.
Unfortunately, I've been unable to find any providers that do not require a phone to be linked to the account.
For security reasons, I do not mix insecure devices like my phone with high-risk accounts like financial services. Therefore, it's important that I find financial services that don't require a phone number to be linked to the account (shudder at the thought of implementing 2FA over SMS) or an app.
Coinsbank requires a phone number. Wirex requires a phone number. Cryptopay requires an app (which grants access to the account to a phone). Unbanked (Ternio) is dead.
Where can I get a "bitcoin debit card" without a phone?
- Suddenly we are at $33k. 🥂cointelegraph.com Bitcoin price rockets to $35K as ETF excitement grows
The price of Bitcoin has broken the $35,000 mark following a fresh wave of excitement over the potential approval of a spot Bitcoin ETF in the future.
Is this a real bull run that will take us over $50k or just another pump and dump.
People I know I'm creating low effort posts, but I can't find any active Bitcoin community in Lemmy to follow and I refuse to go back to Reddit. So we need to f*** start somewhere.