The Count of Crypto

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The Count of Crypto

The Count of Crypto

@Cryptocitizen49

Singapore Katılım Mayıs 2025
726 Takip Edilen354 Takipçiler
The Count of Crypto
The Count of Crypto@Cryptocitizen49·
I feel like $BANANA @bananagun will flip this privacy coin prices. No doubt about utility. $BANANA only 10 million total supply with 4 million supply only circulating. Hold 50 $BANANA and you will have a share of 40% revenue fees. $XMR $ZEC $SOL $BASE $ETH $BTC
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Script.SUPRA
Script.SUPRA@Script83·
the SEC just removed one of crypto's biggest blockers. digital commodities. digital tools. stablecoins. NOT securities. what does that mean for $SUPRA? a L1 built on real utility oracles, AutoFi, AI agents, cross-chain just got a much clearer runway. regulatory clarity + real infrastructure = 🔒 $SUPRA
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Cinfo
Cinfo@CinfoAmir·
$SUPRA let this sink in… $0.01 → ~$260M MC (~25x) $0.05 → ~$1B MC (~100x) That’s STILL below projects like $monad $ATOM $QNT $KAS $WLD $POL Yet Supra is building oracle + automation + cross-chain + AI infra in ONE stack Road to $10B MC. DYOR • NFA #SUPRA #kas #sol
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Mastercard
Mastercard@Mastercard·
@SUPRA_Labs Thrilled to see you building the future of finance 🤝
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Consigliere
Consigliere@JustKevin545·
@CryptoAudiKing @SUPRA_Labs Rumor was that a major @SUPRA_Labs partnership would be announced soon. Two days later @Mastercard news is out. Same source is saying an even bigger development for $SUPRA is around the corner. Exciting times for a developing ecosystem with immense potential.
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CryptoAudiKing
CryptoAudiKing@CryptoAudiKing·
$supra probably cooking more stuff behind closed doors... And we wont know until the time is right ⏰️⏰️⏰️ @SUPRA_Labs
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RALVΞRO
RALVΞRO@Ralvero·
Explain to me how $SACHI, $MOMO, $AURA, $TROLL and $USELESS all have ded charts but the community’s still 100% active
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Wuhan.bat
Wuhan.bat@wuhanbatdev·
Shill me a ticker which will retire my bloodline but is a long term sustainable project - I'll bid if I like 👨‍🦯
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MorphoFace
MorphoFace@MorphoFace·
If you use @coinbase or you're thinking about it, you might want to read this first: My dad bought $bitcoin from Coinbase a few years ago, along with a few other crypto assets. He always thought it was his. But think again... Last week, he tried to send his bitcoin to one of his children (my brother) because my brother has fallen on financial difficulties with his health, business and a bear market that wiped out a lot of his assets last year. But get this... Coinbase will not allow my dad to send his bitcoin to my brother. And this was literally WHY my dad bought Bitcoin in the first place (as a "safe store of value" and 100% in his control, in case of a family emergency). Last week was his first attempt to send it. My dad was asked to first submit a photo ID and a live video verification (wasn't easy for him and took quite a few hours). He got through it after a few days. He then tried to send a 'test' transaction of about $75 in value of BTC to my brother's Coinbase account. It worked. So he continues to send the rest of the bitcoin (about 3 bitcoin). My brother needs it to cover a number of late health bills, a mortgage he's late on, business credit cards he's behind on, and so on. It was going to be his lifeline. But Coinbase says "no." You can only send $5000 in USD value of BTC per day. That would take over 40 days, one transaction a day, each time needing to load a photo ID and do the live video verification process, with a few other verification steps -- a very time consuming process with EACH transaction. $5000 is not enough to cover my brother's immediate bills, let alone to help him get back on his feet rebuilding his business. And who is Coinbase to prevent my dad from sending his son Bitcoin, anway? (If you keep reading, surprisingly, it gets much worse)! Coinbase claims this is all to protect my dad's funds. According to Coinbase, my dad still owns his Bitcoin. Sends are being limited to protect my dad. But how does this make sense when both my dad's and brother's Coinbase account are fully verified and KYC'd. They live in the same country (United States), and even the same state and city. This isn't Iran or Russia we are talking about, and both accounts are KYC'd so Coinbase knows who they both are. In addition, my dad already sent a successful transaction as a test. So he can't make a mistake. What is Coinbase protecting him from? It seems obvious that Coinbase wants to hold people's bitcoin as long as they can for arbitrary reasons. And those reasons can change at any time and impact anyone. But it gets worse.. My dad was told he 'may' be able to get the limit removed. He is then told he needs to send a copy of a bank statement and utility bill. Even though my dad was logged into Coinbase he thought this sounded like a scam and that perhaps Coinbase's customer support had been hacked. So he asked for the family to help. I reached out to Coinbase and learned that Coinbase may ask for bank statements or utility bills as part of this process. I let my dad know. He gathered the documents (more time) and reached back out to Coinbase. At this point my dad and many family members are working on this. Most of us use Coinbase and are shocked. Lawyer friends are being called. Everyone in the neighborhood is talking about it. My dad is at least 15 hours into this process, over the span of 10+ days. All the while my brother is going deeper into financial debt, loads of stress. My brother never asked my dad for help so by the time my dad learned how bad his situation was, he needed to get him the bitcoin ASAP. My dad reaches out to Coinbase AGAIN after learning their request for a bank statement and utility bill may be reasonable and was not a scam request. This time the agent says, "no, we do not need that actually. I just need to ask who you are sending this to (full name), what the reason is you are sending it, and the relationship this person has to you. Now let's give Coinbase the benefit of the doubt and say they are doing all this, not as a way to put up roadblocks and hold people's bitcoin, but to protect people like my dad. Well this next step proves that is not the case: My dad answers by giving my brother's full name, let's them know he is sending the BTC as a gift to help my brother in a financially devastating situation, and that it is his son (they have same last name and live in same city in the United States, and both accounts are verified so Coinbase can easily verify all this is true). My dad adds that both his and his son's Coinbase accounts have been active for many years, and he reminds the agent that his son and him live in same city (in the United States) and that he has sent a small test BTC amount so he can't make a mistake in sending to the wrong address (Coinbase support originally said that was why limits are set up like this... to prevent mistakes). My dad added that considering all of this, there is no need to protect him from sending his own bitcoin to his son. He is then told he has to wait another 24 hours to hear back after review. And guess what he learns today... "We have completed your account review. Send services remain disabled. You will be able to send again on 4/15/2026. You are still able to buy, deposit, sell, or receive any cryptocurrency you currently have on Coinbase, and withdraw funds to your existing payment method. [But you cannot send your bitcoin for another 30 days, at which point we may arbitrarily create more delays with no additional explanation.] As a trusted crypto exchange, we take a number of steps to keep all accounts safe..." So they claim you own the cryptocurrency you buy, send into, or hold in Coinbase. But if you can't send it to your own family during a family emergency, do you really own it? Isn't one of the top reasons people buy and hold Bitcoin (as a store of value) so because they believe they you can control what to do with it, without interference? That is literally the main usecase that @brian_armstrong himself talks about. We have all heard that "if it's not your keys, it's not your wallet" and this is a painful reminder to my family, and all our friends, and I hope a reminder to all of you... that a CEX like Coinbase can arbitrarily prevent you from sending your bitcoin to anyone, even another family member in need... and they can hold it for as long as they choose, even if: - Your Coinbase account is fully verified (KYCd) - You are sending it to another fully verified /KYC'd Coinbase account that has no outstanding issues and never did - You and the other account has been active for many years - The country you are sending it to is not in a restricted list (in this case it is the United States) - You are sending it to a family member who not only lives in the same country as you, but in the same state and city There can be no mistake what is happening here. Coinbase holds people's bitcoin for their own benefit, using the excuse of protecting you, or an excuse of regulatory issues. Under these circumstances, there is no legitimate explanation for Coinbase to limit my dad's control of his bitcoin to protect him, or for reasons related to regulations. It is obvious Coinbase is holding it because they can. And who knows for how long. When will it happen to you?
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Anndy Lian
Anndy Lian@anndylian·
Is your coin pumping? Tell me 👇
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