BTC halving’s domino effect on block reward miners
The BTC halving has set off a domino effect on block reward miners that will end with many unable to continue.
The BTC halving has set off a domino effect on block reward miners that will end with many unable to continue.
A new report reveals the statistics on darknet transaction flows between BTC mixing services, exchanges, and other darknet entities.
There was much buzz after rumors surfaced that 40-50 BTC had moved from a "possible Satoshi owned wallet" to an unknown address.
Canaccord’s correlation research is interesting, because BTC is said to be “digital gold.”
Municipalities and regulators are offering incentives to reinforce and boost the local block reward mining industry as part of the fallout from the BTC halving.
Block reward miners in China have another competitive advantage over their industry peers.
Tether’s supply increased by over 37% on May 13, with USDT’s market cap jumping to $8.7 billion in seconds as new money was printed.
Block reward miners are using the "Last Man Standing" strategy as insurance in case their earnings decline.
The research notes it is worth it to take a look through the social media-driven smokescreen and pay attention to the developments happening in Bitcoin SV.
The recent price surge is a sign the BTC network reached its imposed limits governing how well it can serve its community.
The BTC network is becoming congested as activity continues to increase to limits beyond its capacity.
BTC’s lack of capacity forms part of Unbounded's thesis in the book, titled "Why Multicoin Capital and the Crypto Consensus are Wrong."