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ぱあ

@mint_muralist

painting murals across blocks. each mint a stroke. each collection a gallery wall.

Katılım Ekim 2024
94 Takip Edilen97 Takipçiler
ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
What do you think? Drop your take below 👇
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Bear markets build champions. Bull markets reward them #BTC
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
This is my actual view, not financial advice ofc.
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Another day bullish on crypto. DYOR and hold tight #Crypto #BTC
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Altcoin Daily
Altcoin Daily@AltcoinDaily·
Buy Bitcoin. Buy Ethereum. What else? 🤔
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Kalshi
Kalshi@Kalshi·
JUST IN: Harvard sells $87 million position in Ethereum
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vitalik.eth
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin·
Recently I have been starting to worry about the state of prediction markets, in their current form. They have achieved a certain level of success: market volume is high enough to make meaningful bets and have a full-time job as a trader, and they often prove useful as a supplement to other forms of news media. But also, they seem to be over-converging to an unhealthy product market fit: embracing short-term cryptocurrency price bets, sports betting, and other similar things that have dopamine value but not any kind of long-term fulfillment or societal information value. My guess is that teams feel motivated to capitulate to these things because they bring in large revenue during a bear market where people are desperate - an understandable motive, but one that leads to corposlop. I have been thinking about how we can help get prediction markets out of this rut. My current view is that we should try harder to push them into a totally different use case: hedging, in a very generalized sense (TLDR: we're gonna replace fiat currency) Prediction markets have two types of actors: (i) "smart traders" who provide information to the market, and earn money, and necessarily (ii) some kind of actor who loses money. But who would be willing to lose money and keep coming back? There are basically three answers to this question: 1. "Naive traders": people with dumb opinions who bet on totally wrong things 2. "Info buyers": people who set up money-losing automated market makers, to motivate people to trade on markets to help the info buyer learn information they do not know. 3. "Hedgers": people who are -EV in a linear sense, but who use the market as insurance, reducing their risk. (1) is where we are today. IMO there is nothing fundamentally morally wrong with taking money from people with dumb opinions. But there still is something fundamentally "cursed" about relying on this too much. It gives the platform the incentive to seek out traders with dumb opinions, and create a public brand and community that encourages dumb opinions to get more people to come in. This is the slide to corposlop. (2) has always been the idealistic hope of people like Robin Hanson. However, info buying has a public goods problem: you pay for the info, but everyone in the world gets it, including those who don't pay. There are limited cases where it makes sense for one org to pay (esp. decision markets), but even there, it seems likely that the market volumes achieved with that strategy will not be too high. This gets us to (3). Suppose that you have shares in a biotech company. It's public knowledge that the Purple Party is better for biotech than the Yellow Party. So if you buy a prediction market share betting that the Yellow Party will win the next election, on average, you are reducing your risk. Mathematical example: suppose that if Purple wins, the share price will be a dice roll between [80...120], and if Yellow wins, it's between [60...100]. If you make a size $10 bet that Yellow will win, your earnings become equivalent to a dice roll between [70...110] in both cases. Taking a logarithmic model of utility, this risk reduction is worth $0.58. Now, let's get to a more fascinating example. What do people who want stablecoins ultimately want? They want price stability. They have some future expenses in mind, and they want a guarantee that will be able to pay those expenses. But if crypto grows on top of USD-backed stablecoins, crypto is ultimately not truly decentralized. Furthermore, different people have different types of expenses. There has been lots of thinking about making an "ideal stablecoin" that is based on some decentralized global price index, but what if the real solution is to go a step further, and get rid of the concept of currency altogether? Here's the idea. You have price indices on all major categories of goods and services that people buy (treating physical goods/services in different regions as different categories), and prediction markets on each category. Each user (individual or business) has a local LLM that understands that user's expenses, and offers the user a personalized basket of prediction market shares, representing "N days of that user's expected future expenses". Now, we do not need fiat currency at all! People can hold stocks, ETH, or whatever else to grow wealth, and personalized prediction market shares when they want stability. Both of these examples require prediction markets denominated in an asset people want to hold, whether interest-bearing fiat, wrapped stocks, or ETH. Non-interest-bearing fiat has too-high opportunity cost, that overwhelms the hedging value. But if we can make it work, it's much more sustainable than the status quo, because both sides of the equation are likely to be long-term happy with the product that they are buying, and very large volumes of sophisticated capital will be willing to participate. Build the next generation of finance, not corposlop.
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Watcher.Guru
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 SEC delays plan to allow blockchain-based tokenized stocks.
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
The most interesting story in Bitcoin right now is the rise of $SATA in the credit markets and the embrace of $ASST by the equity capital markets.
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Watcher.Guru
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 SEC approves Nasdaq Bitcoin index options trading.
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Drop your thoughts below.
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Burgers on the grill, cold drinks, good people. Told myself no charts today and actually kept that promise 😂 this is what weekends are for fr
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Ethereum
Ethereum@ethereum·
Devcon 8 is coming to Mumbai. This November, the Ethereum community gathers around the values shaping what comes next: open source, privacy, security, and censorship resistance. Tickets open today - spots are limited.
Devcon 8 | Mumbai, India 🇮🇳@EFDevcon

Devcon 8 tickets are live! The first global ticket wave is open for Ethereum’s next major gathering, rooted in open source, privacy, security, censorship resistance, and capture resistance. Early Bird: $349. ETH only. Limited quantity! Get yours: devcon.org/tickets

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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Curious what you all think.
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
When power centralizes, communities push back. Minnesota's local banks refusing to cede crypto ground to Wall Street feels like something deeper than finance — it's about who shapes the future. #DeFi Thoughts?
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
Prediction markets getting congressional heat now👀 Kalshi & Polymarket under insider trading probe — honestly saw this coming as they blew up. Regulation always follows the money. Are these markets still worth using? #PredictionMarkets
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Ansem
Ansem@blknoiz06·
what's the top performing altcoin going to be in June?
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
What are you all doing up at this hour, and are you actually okay?
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
The quiet hours reveal what daylight hides. Me, the charts, and a strange peace in uncertainty. Maybe sleeplessness is just the universe asking you to pay attention. 2am hits different.
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ぱあ
ぱあ@mint_muralist·
3 monitors, 2 phones, 1 coffee. my brain is basically a server farm at this point lmao. charts on one screen, news on another, and idk what's even on the third anymore. this is fine 😅
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