BitFather 🟨 (@bitcoinn00b) 's Twitter Profile
BitFather 🟨

@bitcoinn00b

de/gen

ID: 951069557069942784

calendar_today10-01-2018 12:33:47

784 Tweet

112 Followers

415 Following

jack (@jack) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I do not celebrate or feel pride in our having to ban Donald J. Trump from Twitter, or how we got here. After a clear warning we’d take this action, we made a decision with the best information we had based on threats to physical safety both on and off Twitter. Was this correct?

Balaji (@balajis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

No. Privacy isn’t criminal. Censorship isn’t legitimate. And seizure, whether via arbitrary asset forfeiture or corporate deplatforming, is not acceptable.

zerohedge (@zerohedge) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Those saying home price inflation isn't real inflation, please tell that to all the Millennials/GenZers who are priced out of purchasing a new home

sam.frax (@samkazemian) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Uniswap Labs 🦄 is not decentralization theater. It’s true decentralization. It’s been ethical since day 1. Literally no one is complaining about deception/fraud. If Uniswap is afoul of US law, the law needs to change, not Uniswap. This is a good time to rethink unethical laws.

6529 (@punk6529) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1/ There are no other constitutional rights in substance without freedom to transact Being meaning to write this for 6 months, but the Canadian response to the trucker protests is illustrating this so vividly, that today is the day.

Evan Van Ness 🧉 (@evan_van_ness) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Do Kwon, Zhu Su, Kyle Davies, and Sam Bankman-Fried have committed fraud for tens of billions of dollars. Not a single one of them is in jail. Alex Pertsev is rotting in a Dutch jail cell without even being charged.

Zach Rynes | CLG (@chainlinkgod) 's Twitter Profile Photo

SBF This explanation doesn’t make any sense Per FTX’s own terms of service, customers assets on FTX belong to customers, so why were they taken and given to Alameda? This wasn’t an excessive leverage problem, it was a stolen user funds problem

Cobie (@cobie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ben Zhou Bybit Kasta’s launch day was the highest point it ever traded, after which it went in a straight line downwards without a single bounce. It took Carl only 5 weeks after token launch to quit the team. Let’s not forget the tokenomics, which is 95% owned by insiders.

<a href="/benbybit/">Ben Zhou</a> <a href="/Bybit_Official/">Bybit</a> Kasta’s launch day was the highest point it ever traded, after which it went in a straight line downwards without a single bounce. 

It took Carl only 5 weeks after token launch to quit the team. 

Let’s not forget the tokenomics, which is 95% owned by insiders.
CZ 🔶 BNB (@cz_binance) 's Twitter Profile Photo

2 “FTX was killed by xyz (ie, a 3rd party)” No, FTX killed themselves (and their users) because they stole billions of dollars of user funds. Period.

notsofast (@notsofast) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I could be wrong about all the above, but my point is, it wasn't possible before, when your keys could never leave your device now it's POSSIBLE however remote and bad actors have incentive to increase the possibility