SciFiFisher wrote:It seems that a lot of countries are realizing you can use cryptocurrency to get around sanctions. Of course, if you can't afford bitcoin you can always make your own. Interesting twist on that. Kodak is launching their own cryptocurrency as a way for photographers to license and get paid for their work.
As for the television propaganda... do they still have telenovela's? At least those can be mildly entertaining.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:20 years ago, that channel used to produce its own Telenovelas, some of them were supposed to be good and everything (couldn't tell you cause I don't watch them.) I guess now they have "Social Content"
SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:20 years ago, that channel used to produce its own Telenovelas, some of them were supposed to be good and everything (couldn't tell you cause I don't watch them.) I guess now they have "Social Content"
Why am I suddenly afraid that I don't want to learn about "social content" or Venezuela PC broadcasting.
SciFiFisher wrote:I keep hoping for an (almost) peaceful transition to a government that really tries to pull the country out of this whirlwind ride to the bottom.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:What might compel Maduro and his clique to negotiate an exit is the fact that we WILL collapse in April (why April? major bond payments due then). I think that right now, the government is clinging to the hope that their crummy crypt-coin scheme will allow them to raise some cash. I think they're full it of. On February 20th a PRIVATE Initial Coin Offering for that damned piece of crap is scheduled. Hopefully, it will be a disaster and Maduro will actually try to negotiate his exit afterwards.
grapes wrote:Something to look forward to, now that the super bowl is over. O wait, Olympics. Nevermind.
It’s an opinion he shares with the likes of Morgan Stanley, Nomura Securities International Inc. and Stifel Nicolaus & Co., who’ve argued that the bonds could produce a windfall when President Nicolas Maduro is finally pushed out and a new administration comes to a restructuring agreement with creditors. The change could come as soon as the presidential election the government set for April, but even if the opposition can’t gather enough momentum for a victory, Kisler thinks it’s only a matter of time before Maduro departs.
grapes wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:What might compel Maduro and his clique to negotiate an exit is the fact that we WILL collapse in April (why April? major bond payments due then). I think that right now, the government is clinging to the hope that their crummy crypt-coin scheme will allow them to raise some cash. I think they're full it of. On February 20th a PRIVATE Initial Coin Offering for that damned piece of crap is scheduled. Hopefully, it will be a disaster and Maduro will actually try to negotiate his exit afterwards.
Something to look forward to, now that the super bowl is over. O wait, Olympics. Nevermind.
grapes wrote:grapes wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:What might compel Maduro and his clique to negotiate an exit is the fact that we WILL collapse in April (why April? major bond payments due then). I think that right now, the government is clinging to the hope that their crummy crypt-coin scheme will allow them to raise some cash. I think they're full it of. On February 20th a PRIVATE Initial Coin Offering for that damned piece of crap is scheduled. Hopefully, it will be a disaster and Maduro will actually try to negotiate his exit afterwards.
Something to look forward to, now that the super bowl is over. O wait, Olympics. Nevermind.
I take it back, pass the popcorn.
So, each Petro is based on a barrel of (future) oil. How short can they sell this?
SciFiFisher wrote:grapes wrote:grapes wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:What might compel Maduro and his clique to negotiate an exit is the fact that we WILL collapse in April (why April? major bond payments due then). I think that right now, the government is clinging to the hope that their crummy crypt-coin scheme will allow them to raise some cash. I think they're full it of. On February 20th a PRIVATE Initial Coin Offering for that damned piece of crap is scheduled. Hopefully, it will be a disaster and Maduro will actually try to negotiate his exit afterwards.
Something to look forward to, now that the super bowl is over. O wait, Olympics. Nevermind.
I take it back, pass the popcorn.
So, each Petro is based on a barrel of (future) oil. How short can they sell this?
Very.
According to a report by the Caracas-based news agency Telesur, people will at first only be able to buy the petro using “hard currencies” and other cryptocurrencies, although it will later be possible to sell petros for local currency.
Some outside observers are also sceptical about the scheme. “Venezuela has been known for misappropriation of assets in the past and the central bank has just created hyperinflation so I imagine there’ll be trust and transparency issues,” Longview Economics director Harry Colvin told CNBC.
But proponents say that buyers may find the currency appealing because it is backed by a commodity and an administration with incentives to see it succeed.
“It honestly sounds like they don’t really understand how any of it works,” Alex Van de Sande, a Brazil-based developer for the Ethereum Foundation, said in a phone interview.
“Unfortunately, that doesn’t mean it won’t raise money. We’ve seen terrible ideas that don’t make any sense raise a lot of it,” he said. “If I wanted to avoid international sanctions and make money appear out of thin air in my country hiding the origin, I guess this petro would be a useful way.”
grapes wrote:Reuters article reports that Maduro reports to have raised $735 million
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cryp ... SKCN1G506F
That's $7.35 per petro, so far
SciFiFisher wrote:Come to think of it he sounded like a marketing guy.
So, this blockchain or that blockchain—who cares? Putting aside Ethereum’s larger community than NEM and the simple fact that by employing different technologies they both come with a different set of technical guarantees, switching blockchains in the space of two weeks from a white paper release is amateur hour. It is genuinely unclear what happened here; the Spanish white paper accessible on the official Petro site still says Ethereum, while the English white paper says NEM. Also, I still haven’t received an email 24 hours after signing up to purchase Petro (as a test, of course), and others have tweeted about experiencing this, too.
Still, it’s early days for the Petro and a state-issued cryptocurrency is truly unlike anything the world has seen before, for better or for worse. But this… this is not a great start.
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