Binance users pull over $1 billion from the exchange after CEO leaves, pleads guilty (www.cnbc.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 23 Nov 2023 00:00
https://lemmy.world/post/8625011

Binance users pull over $1 billion from the exchange after CEO leaves, pleads guilty::Binance has seen outflows amounting to more than $1 billion in the past 24 hours, not including bitcoin, according to data from blockchain analysis firm Nansen.

#technology

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Kalkaline@leminal.space on 23 Nov 2023 00:41 next collapse

Why would anyone keep their coins on an exchange? How many times do people have to learn this lesson?

NOT_RICK@lemmy.world on 23 Nov 2023 01:18 next collapse

A new bag holder is born every day

shortwavesurfer@monero.town on 23 Nov 2023 09:28 next collapse

Apparemtly they never will. Its sad really.

BURN@lemmy.world on 23 Nov 2023 16:13 collapse

Anything farther is a LOT more complicated to the average user.

I gave up on holding crypto when I couldn’t find a way to hold it locally, nor do I trust myself to not lose the data in one of my frequent data purges.

photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 23 Nov 2023 02:53 next collapse

Who could’ve ever seen this coming? Who could’ve known that crypto is a sham?

Oh, wait. Yeah, that’s right, almost everybody. If you lost money in this, that’s on you.

DetectiveKakuna@lemmy.world on 23 Nov 2023 05:36 next collapse

If you actually read the article and not the headline you would recognize that this has nothing to do with the legitimacy of cryptocurrency and everything to do with money laundering. All monetary value is imaginary after we got off the gold standard, so how are currencies controlled by global governments any less of a sham than crypto that is decentralized and not obfuscated by central banks?

Also if you lost money trading this news then I agree, that’s on you. The total crypto market cap is valued higher today than before this news broke in the past 24 hours so if you sold on this news you only have yourself to blame 😂😂😂

realharo@lemm.ee on 23 Nov 2023 14:44 next collapse

Well the practical difference is that money is something people actually use, where as crypto is mostly something they just hope to resell later to a higher bidder - who will only buy it because they hope to resell later to an even higher bidder.

stifle867@programming.dev on 23 Nov 2023 16:08 next collapse

Oh people definitely use crypto all right! That’s why they had to pay $4.6B to settle a money laundering case.

thenightisdark@lemmy.world on 23 Nov 2023 21:46 collapse

" crypto is mostly something they just hope to resell later to a higher bidder"

Unfortunately this is not true. It was getting used for money laundering, which is not reselling to the highest bidder. The proof is in the fact that they payed the fine.

Otherwise what was the fine for?

Thetimefarm@lemm.ee on 23 Nov 2023 15:54 collapse

Honestly all value is relative, even the gold standard is fairly arbitrary. If you’re stuck in the desert with 100kg of gold bars you’d trade them for a gallon of water in a heart beat. That’s basically how the american healthcare system works lol.

stifle867@programming.dev on 23 Nov 2023 16:06 collapse

Arbitrary vs imaginary are distinctly different. You’re both right but talking about different things.

webghost0101@sopuli.xyz on 23 Nov 2023 13:24 collapse

FTFY: Who could’ve ever seen this coming? Who could’ve known that capitalism is a sham?

Oh, wait. Money’s merely a social construct, a game where we all agree that paper and coins mean something. If you missed that every profit chase is rigged with the same set of skewed rules, that’s on you.

stifle867@programming.dev on 23 Nov 2023 16:10 collapse

I wonder how the $1B “outflows” breaks down into cash withdrawals vs moving crypto off-exchange.