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Buying a $250 Residency Card From a Tropical Island Let Me Bypass U.S. Crypto Laws
(www.404media.co)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
It's just grift all the way down with crypto, isn't it? Scams layered on scams layered on scams.
I'd say you're right for 99% of it, but there is 1% that's genuinely useful.
That's probably a fair assessment, but still a rather damning indictment of the industry writ large.
There are definitely better versions of cryptocurrency that I think could be more useful, but the industry is definitely not headed in that direction. Instead, it's all pump-and-dumps, rug-pulls, and other schemes that render them nothing more than highly speculative asset classes in which the underlying asset has no intrinsic value.
That's true. And personally, I stay away from all of that mess. And anybody I introduce, I take great pains to explain why I stay away from all that mess. But if they want to make their own mistakes, then that's on them.
Yup. There are a handful of useful coins, and a handful of legit exchanges. Hold your own keys in FOSS wallets, keep backups of your keys, and don't expect to get rich quick (and instead find a use outside of investing). Do that, and you should be fine.
I'm super interested in privacy coins like Monero, so I go out of my way to find merchants that accept it. It's reasonably stable, has very low transaction fees, and it's fairly popular among privacy advocates, so I doubt it'll go away anytime soon. That said, I only keep what I'll spend, so make a couple hundred at a time.