Quote:
Originally Posted by GregWeld
I figure some of you are interested or perhaps IN Bitcoin or similar....
Here's my take.... the higher this thing goes -- the more hackers are going to want to figure out a way to steal it.
Another story this morning about another hack attack... and most of you are unfamiliar with the Mt Gox theft and subsequent closure a couple years back...
This mornings article.
I don't care if you're in to it -- not my money - not my job to say yeah or nay... just a "buyer beware". To me - it reminds me of the tulip bulb.... LOL
https://www.bloomberg.com/gadfly/art...n-trader-s-day
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Was reading some more about BitCoin this morning and found this in a "pro" article about how to buy them etc...... It's like - to me - "are you kidding!?!?!"
If you leave your money on deposit with the exchange, the risk is that the exchange itself will lose your bitcoins due to hacking, mismanagement, or fraud. In 2014, the then-biggest Bitcoin exchange, called Mt. Gox, declared bankruptcy after millions of dollars in bitcoins were stolen by hackers. Other early Bitcoin services simply disappeared from the web, taking customers' bitcoins with them The Bitcoin economy doesn't have anything resembling FDIC insurance, so if your exchange loses your bitcoins or goes bankrupt, you might be out of luck.
On the other hand, exchanges have matured significantly since 2014, and holding bitcoins yourself is risky, too. If your hard drive crashes and you don't have backups, your bitcoins could be lost forever. If you print out your bitcoins and then lose the paper, your bitcoins will be gone forever. If you put the bitcoins in a Web wallet and forget the password, your bitcoins will be lost forever. If someone puts bitcoin-stealing malware on your computer, you could lose your bitcoin regardless of how you store them.
In short, there's no completely safe way to hold on to bitcoins, and technical newbies are at particular risk. Investors in Bitcoin are at much greater risk of losing their investments to accidents or thefts than investors in conventional assets like stocks and bonds.
Here's where I copy and pasted the above info:
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...ginners-guide/