BUSY - BITCOIN CAN HELP THE POOR

in #busy7 years ago


I want to share my experience, there is my brother, he is poor and his daily efforts are making tempe. Keep going when night he often goes to the cafe. What I saw he was busy opening a bitcoin faucet site, in a period of more than a year, he was able to buy a house. So I think that bitcoin has a very positive impact on all of us, especially the poor. How is your experience?

That's right..baccoin understands the livelihood of human life .. the poor need help ..... the poor bs learn the bitcoin system ... with the bitcoin we are the attendees who are still in dire need of funds for the happiness of anak2kami..bitcoin one solution for us try looking for where there is luck..my bitcoin hopes for you too poor.

When do you have faucet gan? Klo for now it seems the faucet is less promising especially now the high bitcoin lgi price and definitely obtained from the small faucet gan, may ask sm sodaranya link faucetnya what, who know can be sprayed buy a house also gan

it seems that if only capitalize the faucet alone is very difficult to be able to get Bitcoin deh gan unless you brothers ente many reff him. or maybe not just playing faucet aja maybe there is another one again. its good information gan can to motivate us as bitcoiners
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If from my experience many of my colleagues are more senior colleagues which average their lives are very backward From the perspective of his @economy.
Alhamdulillah now they my colleagues have been on home renovation and there are buy a house.

Ministers are launching a crackdown on the virtual currency @Bitcoin amid growing concern it is being used to launder money and dodge tax.
The Treasury has disclosed plans to regulate the Bitcoin that will force traders in so-called crypto-currencies to disclose their identities and report suspicious activity. 
Until now, anybody buying and selling bitcoins and other  digital currencies have been able to do so anonymously, making it attractive to criminals and tax avoiders.

America's largest banks had myriad worries in mind when they rushed this week to ban customers from using credit cards to buy @cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin's gut-wrenching slide was just one of the threats.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. started to decline purchases as industry executives zeroed in on a variety of ways they could get burned, according to people briefed on the decisions. Publicly, JPMorgan cited the risk that borrowers might not repay. Behind the scenes, card issuers were also concerned about the protections they offer shoppers and their vulnerability to thieves, the people said. @busy-org

Near the top of many lists were initial coin offerings. Start-ups have embraced the fundraising method, selling tradable tokens to gather money for projects, sometimes promising future rewards. Initial coin offerings drew $3.7 billion last year, but in many cases companies have struggled to make good on obligations or revealed themselves as scams. Increasingly, regulators are intervening, deeming some tokens to be unregistered securities.

Card executives saw a few dangers, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing confidential deliberations. It can take days for buyers to receive their tokens, and if the instruments turn out to be fraudulent or illegal, cardholders may dispute the charges. Major crypto exchanges such as Coinbase eschew most tokens, but some initial coin offerings and smaller venues enable card purchases. In December, U.S. regulators sued a Quebec man and his company, claiming they raised $15 million in a fraudulent initial coin offering that found workarounds to accept cards.

Not only that even poor people who do not know bitcoin or can not know online or digital world can also feel the result of bitcoin we get. because we have BITCOINERS compensation to the poor and orphan ...
"Am I worried? No," the user wrote. "I bought it on my credit card through Coinbase and had planned the repayments would be paid out of bitcoin profits. First payment due in a couple of weeks and I believe we will start to rise up before then."

Short of that, the user might sell a portion of the investment to keep up with initial card payments. What could possibly go wrong?

Bitcoin fell below $6,000 this week after authorities continued to speak out against speculation. And another big lender, Lloyds Banking Group, said it, too, was halting credit card purchases, further constraining the inflow of investor money.

It got even tighter Tuesday. Coinbase said people using credit cards to fund accounts are starting to get stung by "cash advance" fees. Customers began noticing the costs in their card statements last week after payment networks told banks it's OK to classify crypto exchanges in a way that treats transactions like buying a currency.

"You've got people that are eschewing their mortgage to buy bitcoin to get rich quick," said Kristina Yee, an Aite Group analyst who studies cryptocurrencies and blockchain. The banks are "worried that people are over leveraging themselves and they won't be able to pay back the debt."

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