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            <title><![CDATA[Crypto is not a currency. Stop pretending it is.]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@wittygnu/crypto-is-not-a-currency-stop-pretending-it-is</link>
            <guid>58uCtJA0AB3Zv9gfrfLN</guid>
            <pubDate>Tue, 10 May 2022 16:21:54 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[Which is heavier, 100kgs of bricks or 100kgs of feathers? We’ve all heard this quick thought exercise. And we all know that they’re equal weight. But think about it a little further. What do we use to determine the weight in that question? It’s not the bricks or the feathers. It’s the 100kg. When someone talks about the value of their cryptocurrency of choice, how are they expressing it? In every scenario, they’re contrasting it against the value of a stable currency. If you apply that same e...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Which is heavier, 100kgs of bricks or 100kgs of feathers? We’ve all heard this quick thought exercise. And we all know that they’re equal weight. But think about it a little further. What do we use to determine the weight in that question? It’s not the bricks or the feathers. It’s the 100kg.</p><p>When someone talks about the value of their cryptocurrency of choice, how are they expressing it? In every scenario, they’re contrasting it against the value of a stable currency. If you apply that same exercise as above, and say “which is the cheaper way to buy a car-with dollars or with euros?” you’re getting the same answer-you’re paying for the value of the car roughly the same way. So, if you say, “which is the cheaper way to purchase a car-via dollars, euros, or bitcoin?” the question is still going to be fixed at the value of the car.</p><p>In comparing the two sets of questions, we realize that bricks and feathers are both measurements of weight and that different amounts of each have to be accumulated to match up to the fixed value(100kg) we already know. Similarly, currencies are different measurements that can be used to reach the same value of the known quantity-in this case, the value of the car. Monetary values are not fixed the way a pound or a kilogram is, but are instead a little more open to interpretation. But they are reasonably the same. For example, a Porsche might cost about double the price of a Volvo, but that double in price would be reflected no matter which currency you’re trying to purchase it with.</p><p>But here’s the rub with crypto. If you earn your pay in euro, but you’re saving up to buy a car that’s price is listed in USD, you can be pretty sure how much money you’ll have to save up to make that purchase 2 months from now by comparing it’s USD price against what it’s comparable euro price is. If you want to make that same purchase, but you’re being paid in crypto, you’ll have to check each day to see if you have enough money to make the purchase.</p><p>As a better example, ask a bank to lend you money in bitcoin. Go ahead. What do you think the interest rate would be on a 10 year loan? How about a 1 year loan?</p><p>The biggest piece of bitcoin’s(and many other cryptos) advantage that adherents defend is that it’s a finite supply, and they will inevitably derisively comment on “fiat currency”. While the notion that there is a finite supply of the coin may be true, that wholly ignores why fiat currency exists. Hint: It’s not because economists are just producing money for themselves-there’s a long and detailed history of why central banks control the supply of currency.</p><p>This all derives from libertarian belief, which is tragically poorly informed about how economics work. (Libertarians <em>REALLY</em> don’t understand economics). This is primarily driven by misunderstanding two very important economic functions-and you’ll hear them say both when they breathlessly tell you about why crypto is so wonderful-fiat currency and inflation. They’ll explain that inflation is a huge problem and it’s caused by the central banks unilaterally increasing the money supply by fiat. Here’s what wrong with that.</p><p>Everyone sees inflation as a problem, because the <em>basic</em> premise is that it means you have less purchasing power with your cash. That’s a bad thing. Everyone wants their money to stay similar in value. The first time I ever filled the tank of my first car, it cost $.79 per gallon-and that was merely 25 years ago. Renting an apartment in a downtown metro was 1/5 the cost it is now. You could afford a home, a car, and a family on a single no-high-school-diploma-required income. Nickels used to have bees on them. We get it, gramps. Things used to cost less.</p><p>There’s a lot of complicated reasons for the pricing changes on all of the above listed things, but the basics behind it need to be understood in another context. What really is money, anyway?</p><p>When you distill it down, currency is really just a measurement. Just like the 100kgs of feathers and bricks we mentioned before. And if we’re talking about $100 in bricks vs $100 in feathers, you’d say they should be about equal, right? I could go to the brickseller with $100 worth of feathers and trade them for $100 in bricks.</p><p>Here’s the difference-physical measures (like weight and size) are constant, but measures of value are relative. By this, I mean value changes based on various criteria. If you were opening a store that sells just bricks and feathers, you could probably sell those bricks at much higher price when people need them to build homes, but those feathers are probably going to need to sell at a lower price point-until the pillow building economy heats up.</p><p>And that’s an example for comparing two things. The value of a single thing can change quickly too. If you’re in the middle of a dusty festival in the hot sun, and no outside beverages are allowed, you will be much more inclined to spend $5 for a bottle of water than you would if you’re at the grocery store. The value changes based on your perception. In theory, you could buy that bottle of water and resell it when supply dips and the heat rises a couple hour later for $7. But if you wait too long and it starts to rain, the value of that water bottle could plummet to worthlessness.</p><p>So, value in this context is subjective and based on perception. That still doesn’t address inflation-or does it?</p><p>Well, let’s shrink our global economy to a single fishing village. In this village, all trade is performed through barter. But, after a little while, some villagers assume they are working too hard and others are not putting in their share. To remedy this, they propose a new concept-currency. Because a boatmaker can’t divide their work up into smaller chunks, and because a farmer puts in a lot of work most of the year, but has less work later, we have to start storing the value of their work and production into gold coins.</p><p>This works great. The boatmaker sells a boat, including all their labor for 10 coins, a farmer sells a season’s worth of food for a family for say 8 coins. A carpenter does work for another 12 coins. A haberdasher does work for 5 coins. People can pass around value much easier without complicated ledgers and tracking who owes who different things. The currency becomes the ledger of trade. If someone present you a gold coin, it means they’re trading you a gold coin’s worth of labor. Maybe they got it from digging a ditch for the farmer, or chopping wood for the boatmaker. Or maybe they just re-sold a hat at a higher price. But a few funny things happened on the way to modern banking.</p><p>Flash forward a generation. The village grew. More people immigrated and were born. Technology improved. In short, productivity (aka the real value of things produced) increased. With the purchase of a new tractor, the farmer makes more crops faster and with less labor. The boatmaker can now churn out twice as many boats. And now a new villager is going out fishing to generate new income on a whole new industry. But, we’ve got the same amount of coins.</p><p>Well, we can start splitting the coins up, but at the same time-it’s taking less and less time to produce more and more goods, the old price of 10 coins for a boat doesn’t seem right, especially since everyone who wanted a boat already has one and doesn’t need another. Similarly, more food is being created by the farmer with less work, but it’s not keeping up with how much is demanded, since despite more potential customers there’s now a fishing economy cutting into that customer base. That means the values are changing. Suddenly, things are more complex than what we previously had and values shift. But that’s all harmonious because there’s still a constant exchange of goods and services, so the economics more or less sort themselves out when people figure out what the economy will bear. The fundamental underpinning of Austrian economics is that the market will sort itself out, somehow.</p><p>But, the boatmaker now has decided to close up shop. The demand is low, and he’s not making as much as he used to. He sees his accumulated coins and decides that he doesn’t need to work, but of course he’ll still buy food when he needs it. Same for the haberdasher and the carpenter. Most of their services are declining. Now we’ve got a farmer and fisher both working and maybe trading off goods, while the rest of the economy is frozen out and being socked away for a rainy day.</p><p>Still with me? The village now has minimal trade, so there’s a surplus of crops and fish, and those prices shrink. The farmer no longer can sell crops at high prices because his customers may buy fish instead. He makes less. Suddenly, the value of his crop output shrinks vs the value of coins. Similarly, if he wants to buy a new hat, there’s nobody producing them, so he can’t just walk up to the haberdasher and get it for as cheap as it used to be. What he used to be able to buy with selling x amount of crop now costs him as much as it takes to produce 2x amount of crop.</p><p>That’s a big roundabout, yet simplistic way of saying how currency value can change through minor disruptions to an economy, without even touching on major disruptions(eg, a crop failure, a ship sinking, or money simply being lost).</p><p>Now, the chief of this village is a shrewd banker, so he knows that because there are more people and there’s more productivity and somehow less currency actively moving around, the economy is starting to stagnate. You can start dividing coins up into fractions, but when value is lost in the economy through destruction, deprecation, loss, or simply freezing(eg, saving money and not circulating it), the value of money compared to the things you want to purchase deflates, which is great for people who have money saved up, but not so great for people who have to make money by providing labor at a fraction of what those who had to labor before them did. So, the chief produces (yes, through fiat) more money to be put into circulation, offered in the form of loans for new businesses usually with low interest paid back to a central bank. This means there’s more money moving around, which frees up more trade. Instead of deflation, which would greatly punish new value creators at the expense of old value holders, we have inflation that does the opposite.</p><p>So, when we see an increase in monetary supply without a comeasurate increase in actual value generated, we are going to see a decrease in value of already existing money. This is correct in the anti-fiat fervor. However, the job of a central bank is to keep a finger on the pulse of value generated and increase money supply at the same rate. This is extremely difficult, given the ever changing nature of value, so economists have to be content to be within a good percentage, generally erring on the positive side of inflation(as opposed to the negative side-aka, deflation).</p><p>This overly complex thought exercise is a very basic explanation of what causes inflation. There’s much more to it, because nothing in economics is that simple. Regardless, the takeaway is that libertarian economics simply stops with “printing more money” causes inflation, without exploring why money is printed in the first place and never considers that inflation occurs even without a central bank. There is a prevalent myth in libertarian economics that the gold standard prevented inflation, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.</p><p>Ok, so back from that little explanatory detour, the appeal of crypto is supposed to be it’s limited supply as a means to combat inflation. This is positively stupid, because the sum total of global value produced is always going to increase, dwindling the purchasing power of individual units of currency. The notion that putting a hard limit on the supply of currency is somehow a positive idea, is absolutely insane and comes from a simplistic and completely flawed perspective of what money actually is. While it’s not an in depth economic analysis, simply watching the James Bond movie “Goldfinger” should at least give you an idea of why fixed currency limits are a recipe for economic disaster. To put it simply, if you believe the summed value of all labor performed, goods created and service rendered is involatile, you have no business pretending to be a serious thinker.</p><p>Ok, so this all explains why fiat currency and inflation are mostly FUD. But let’s get back to the core premise-crypto isn’t really a currency. Nobody actually trades against the value of even the most popular one-Bitcoin. Sure, you may have some vendors who will accept it as payment, but how are they determining the price? As mentioned earlier, things have value, but currency is the unit of measure-not the value.</p><p>To start with, let’s remember that all bitcoin transactions are translated into local currency. If for example, you want to buy a gallon of milk at any store that accepts bitcoin, you can either purchase it for $3.50 OR $3.50 worth of bitcoin. It does not go the other way around. There is not a single merchant that says “the price is 0.000060 BTC or it’s equivalent in USD”. The reason for this is simple. The merchant uses the dollar, or the euro, or the yuan, or the peso or any other numerous world currencies that are fixed to each other to do their business. They’re not going to risk buying a gallon of milk at $3.00, then reselling it at anything between $1.50 and $5. That’s an absolutely bonkers way to run a business.</p><p>So, if crypto isn’t a currency, then what is it? Well. In layman’s terms, cryptocurrencies are, wait for it-a scam.</p><p>Of course, this will be the cue anyone who ignored all of the preceding paragraphs to chime in about it being a currency. But then there will be another group that claims it’s an investment AND a currency. And surely, there is a legitimate market of foreign exchange investment that trades against the values of various currencies globally, right?</p><p>To be sure, FOREX is a whole legitimate market for trading against the values of foreign currencies, but the key behind FOREX is that it’s not a daytrader’s market. FOREX is really on a macro scale that the lay person doesn’t need to be involved in, since it pegs the value against currency pairs for large institutional investors. FOREX is used as a hedge, because currency pairs tend to follow each other and the low volatility makes them a safe bet as an asset class. Barring real world events like say a c’oup or a war or a natural disaster, currency values change slowly and there’s definitely money to be made but only by small percentages. It’s certainly more unlikely than say, a bunch of redditors hyping a particular coin.</p><p>There’s no reason a new crypto couldn’t be created out of thin air and be a valid currency, but there’s one glaring problem-there’s no money in stability. Lots of places use alternate currencies that are very stable. For example, Ithaca, NY used the HOUR as a local currency for decades, and many college towns have local currencies that concerned parents will load their children up with as a means of ensuring that they only purchase essentials. These currencies often operate at a 1:1 rate to the larger currency-eg, the Bevo Buck at the University of Texas Austin is as valuable as a dollar to any local merchant who accepts them, but when you get out of the UT campus area, they’re virtually worthless.</p><p>Still, the ubiquitous Bevo Buck is popular among local merchants who then redeem it with the university for it’s cash value in USD. It always stays fixed to the USD so there’s no fear for the vendor that it will suddenly rise and fall. But you’re not going to see people get amped up to buy Bevo Bucks, because even if you created a market where they became more valuable than $1, it would virtually never be more than a fraction of a percent. That doesn’t satisfy the true guiding principle for the modern crypto craze-greed.</p><p>The entire appeal behind investing in cryptocurrency and what drives their price is that the person who puts their money in it wants to see it’s value rise. That’s what everyone wants to see in an investment, of course. But the very point of a currency is that it’s value should remain fixed, else it’s not a viable means of transaction. There is no merchant in the world who would want to sell you something only to know that they later got a worse deal. That’s just not how money or commerce works.</p><p>If you take away it’s transactional ability, you have an asset, not a currency. And in the entire history of trade, assets have been defined by their value which can be measured against a real currency or against another asset. The problem with something like crypto is that it pretends to be a currency to obscure the fact that it’s absolutely nothing.</p><p>Volatility is what drives the speculation in crypto, and that’s not something that will be ironed out as it gains acceptance-the entire point of it is that it will never gain acceptance, because all these coins refuse to be pegged to a stable currency. The entirety of this boom and the coming bust is that it’s built on people’s intrinsic greed and belief that they should receive an unfair amount of money for themselves without actually providing any real value in return. Unfortunately for a not at all insignificant amount of people, they aren’t the ones running the con, and are instead the marks that will fund it.</p><p>Knowing that crypto is a long con, the questions you have to ask yourself if you’re involved in trading it is “am I a part of the con?” and “will I know when it’s time to get out?”. If the answer to either of these is no, you should cut and run before the house of cards collapses on you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>wittygnu@newsletter.paragraph.com (WittyGnu)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[NFT drop — 2022 January 15. Art Value Numbers and Art.]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@wittygnu/nft-drop-2022-january-15-art-value-numbers-and-art</link>
            <guid>Pd8I9HwEwQetVoogECyv</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 05 May 2022 04:17:32 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[Art Value is an online platform and innovative marketplace where Art and Numbers are created, distributed, and traded. The project combines digital art with physical experience to explore values of Numbers. The first number tokens of the project have already been minted and are available for purchase in the Art Value NFT marketplace and/or on OpenSea Art Value collection (https://opensea.io/collection/artvalue). NFTs drop on January 15 with 100 unique tokens. The bidding for the NFT tokens st...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Art Value is an online platform and innovative marketplace where Art and Numbers are created, distributed, and traded. The project combines digital art with physical experience to explore values of Numbers.</p><p>The first number tokens of the project have already been minted and are available for purchase in the Art Value NFT marketplace and/or on OpenSea Art Value collection (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://opensea.io/collection/artvalue">https://opensea.io/collection/artvalue</a>).</p><p>NFTs drop on January 15 with 100 unique tokens. The bidding for the NFT tokens starts at 100 USD, i.e. 0.025 (or 0.026 Ethereum (ETH), however, later the starting price will increase.</p><p>Those who will own Art Value NFTs from the January 15 drop will get a higher chance to receive free tokens in 2 weeks period when we will give away many tokens of very high value. You can expect giveaways of 250 000 USD and 1 Million! in beginning of February.</p><p>To participate in the January 15 DROP and in later drops and giveaways You need to register in the whitelist on ArtValue.org — submit the form on the red banner. With whitelisting please also register on our Discord (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://discord.gg/738qX8W2Wu">https://discord.gg/738qX8W2Wu</a>), follow Instagram (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://www.instagram.com/artvalueapp">https://www.instagram.com/artvalueapp</a>) and Twitter (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://twitter.com/ArtValueapp">https://twitter.com/ArtValueapp</a>), follow us on Medium (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://art-value.medium.com">https://art-value.medium.com</a>), like Art Value tokens (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://opensea.io/collection/artvalue">https://opensea.io/collection/artvalue</a>), like Art Value Facebook page (<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://www.facebook.com/ArtValueFoundation">https://www.facebook.com/ArtValueFoundation</a>) and its posts. Be active! You will get a chance to win giveaways and rewards very very soon.</p><p>First NFT drop event — 2022 January 15, 3 pm (UTC).</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>wittygnu@newsletter.paragraph.com (WittyGnu)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[Should You Invest in Quant Crypto?]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@wittygnu/should-you-invest-in-quant-crypto</link>
            <guid>sCdZnDHRKoC7s9U6slXD</guid>
            <pubDate>Sun, 24 Apr 2022 17:27:48 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[The Quant project was founded in 2018, by Gilbert Verdian, Colin Paterson and Paolo Tasca. It was originally founded as a blockchain interoperability network and operating system. The project is mainly focused on the interoperability of blockchain platforms so that teams are not required to deploy more infrastructure. Quant’s Overledger Network is their main product, which helps companies connect their blockchain projects to multiple blockchains. Based on Quant’s project to try and bridge the...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Quant project was founded in 2018, by Gilbert Verdian, Colin Paterson and Paolo Tasca. It was originally founded as a blockchain interoperability network and operating system.</p><p>The project is mainly focused on the interoperability of blockchain platforms so that teams are not required to deploy more infrastructure. Quant’s Overledger Network is their main product, which helps companies connect their blockchain projects to multiple blockchains.</p><p>Based on Quant’s project to try and bridge the gap between distributed ledgers in the modern market, the Quant token was also introduced in 2018. It is currently trading at $171.11 per unit, according to CoinMarketCap. The market cap is over $2 billion, and counting at the time of writing.</p><p>As the first OS to be built for blockchain technology, Quant has a very strong project in the industry. The Overledger Network is not only the main product of Quant Networks, but is also the backbone of the project. According to the company, it is the primary building block of the digital economy in the coming years.</p><p>Quant has a number of unique features that set it apart from the other competitors in the market. Here are its benefits:</p><p>It raised $11 million in an ICO fundraising round in March 2018. Another seed round saw funding from Alpha Sigma Capital for an undisclosed amount. As a result, it is one of the few tokens from 2018 that is still going strong four years later.</p><p>Due to the objective of the project, Quant works with any distributed ledger. You don’t need to make any changes to the base chain in order to integrate it. This makes the blockchain very easy to use.</p><p>Quant is one of the few projects in the world to have a true community treasury. This allows stakeholders to directly be a part of the growth of the Quant ecosystem.</p><p>The most important thing to note about Quant is that developers and enterprises are required to purchase licenses to use the platform. These purchase licenses are acquired using fiat currency, and in exchange, QNT tokens are given out.</p><p>These are locked in layer 2 channels for 12 months. Users are also required to pay a yearly fee for the gateway costs. In exchange, they are entitled to receive a small portion of the fee from their transfer setup.</p><p>QNT has been following a flag pattern over the last few months, with the price shooting up and coming down just as fast. It is down half the value it was in September. The value of the token has been falling consistently over the last month.</p><p>However, WalletInvestor predicts that QNT will increase to over $400 in 2023, hitting the $500 mark halfway through the year. By the end of 2027, the coin is expected to be valued at close to $1500 per unit.</p><p>There are contrasting reports about the value of the token in the upcoming years. TradingBeasts predicts that the coin will average around the $200 mark until 2024, indicating a slowly increasing rate.</p><p>People that didn’t sell their Quant over the last two months are now suffering from lower selling prices due to the decline in value of the token. But, in spite of the current situation, the predictions indicate growth over the coming year and the long term.</p><p>The amount of growth predicted by each of the sources is contrasting, which makes it difficult to come to a concrete conclusion. Being backed by a solid project, there is every possibility that QNT will be able to bounce back from the current dip. But how long that will take is unclear.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>wittygnu@newsletter.paragraph.com (WittyGnu)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[Drip — a step by step guide to earn 1% per day]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@wittygnu/drip-a-step-by-step-guide-to-earn-1-per-day</link>
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            <pubDate>Tue, 19 Apr 2022 08:30:09 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[After a short introduction it is time for a proper guide on how to get started with crypto and specifically how to earn 1% a day with the Drip network. Let´s go! This guide will assume you have no prior experience with crypto and goes through all the steps necessary to get you going. If you are a little more experienced feel free to skip ahead. Requirements:- A wallet to hold you crypto coins- Binance Coin (BNB) on the binance smart chain- A computer with a browser or mobile with a mobile com...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After a short introduction it is time for a proper guide on how to get started with crypto and specifically how to earn 1% a day with the Drip network. Let´s go!</p><p>This guide will assume you have no prior experience with crypto and goes through all the steps necessary to get you going. If you are a little more experienced feel free to skip ahead.</p><p>Requirements:- A wallet to hold you crypto coins- Binance Coin (BNB) on the binance smart chain- A computer with a browser or mobile with a mobile compatible wallet</p><p>Don’t worry, we’ll go through all these step by step.</p><p>Get a wallet to hold you crypto- On your pc or mac one of most well known and easiest to use is MetaMask — compatible with Chrome, Firefox, Brave and Edge. Only use the official site metamask.io to download and install in your preferred browser. Here is a good Youtube tutorial on how to install MetaMask. After installing the MetaMask extension to your browser you’ll need to add the binance smart chain network to it. Binance has a pretty good tutorial on this, so no need to make this longer than needed here. Binance tutorial. Be sure to add the mainnet to your wallet. It should look something like this when done:</p><p>On your phone you you can install MetaMask from the respective Appstore and add the binance smart chain the same way.</p><p>Aquire Binance Coin (BNB)There are several centralized exchanges that offer the possibility to buy BNB either through credit-/debitcard or wire transfer. Binance.us/.com, Crypto.com, Kucoin.com or FTX.com to name a few.Here are a few really helpful tutorials that will guide you through the process on your desired exchange.Binance Beginner`s Guide</p><p>Register on Kucoin GuideHow to buy on Kucoin</p><p>Crypto.com complete guide</p><p>FTX.com complete guide</p><p>When you have bought your desired amount of BNB you can go to your MetaMask and copy your wallet address. On your exchange go to the withdrawal section, select BNB, enter your copied wallet address and withdraw.</p><p>Copy you wallet address from MetaMask</p><p>Be sure to select BEP20 or Binance Smart Chain. BEP2 is NOT the correct network.</p><p>So now you have installed a crypto wallet, bought some BNB and funded you wallet with BNB. The hard part is already done — now lets get dripping!</p><p>Buy &amp; deposit DripThe easiest place to buy Drip is on the drip.community website itself. When you visit the website for the first time your wallets needs to be connected.</p><p>If you are on a mobile device and use the MetaMask app, be sure to use the integrated browser inside MetaMask to go to the Drip website.</p><p>On the top right click “Connect Wallet” and select MetaMask from the popup. Go to the Drip fountain — you’ll be able to see the current price in the BNB/Drip exchange on the left (70,38 USDT/Drip in this case), it will also show your current BNB and Drip balances.</p><p>On the left you’ll see the option to buy drip, enter the amount of BNB you would like to spend — remember to keep some BNB in your wallet since it is needed as fuel for your transactions (compounding &amp; claiming) later on. After you have entered the desired amount of BNB to spend hit buy, a popup from MetaMask will appear asking you to approve the transaction.</p><p>Well done, you have bought your first Drip! Now we need to put it into the faucet to start earning.</p><p>When you visit the faucet for the first time it will look like this:</p><p>You see on the top left, you currently have no deposits, no maximum payout and no available drip to claim.First you’ll need to assign a buddy to your wallet, can’t join Drip without a buddy and joining a team. This will have several advantages including possible airdrops. Please consider entering me as you buddy here.</p><p>In the “Get a Buddy” section you can enter an address (here is mine: 0x8A824a624554D7c7C9BA6b42897Ca61FC641Bf2e) — after that you’ll have to hit “update” and assign the buddy to your wallet. Confirm in MetaMask. When the transaction has been confirmed by the blockchain the Buddy section will fill with information.</p><p>When that is done go to the top right and enter the amount of Drip you would like to deposit, it’ll show your available amount that you can enter or simply hit max. Push “deposit” and confirm the transaction again in the MetaMask popup.</p><p>Wow — you are done for the day! You have deposited your first Drip into the faucet contract and will from now on earn 1% of your deposited Drip.</p><p>Whenever you come to the faucet now you can either claim or compound your accumulated Drip. This is the value shown under “Available”. Whenever you hydrate(compound) the available Drip is added to you deposit and you’ll see your deposit AND max payout rise. Also your available next day will be higher since you now earn 1% on your additional deposit as well — the magic of compounding interest!</p><p>Of course if you want to reclaim your deposit the fastest way possible you can claim your available amount and sell the Drip for BNB on the swap page.</p><p>This is it for the absolute starter guide. I hope you enjoy seeing you deposit grow and hydrate hydrate hydrate as I plan to do.</p><p>If you have any questions feel free to hit me up on Telegram and I will gladly help out any way I can.<a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://t.me/Dave_on_Defi">https://t.me/Dave_on_Defi</a></p><p>My buddy address if you want to join the Drip network0x8A824a624554D7c7C9BA6b42897Ca61FC641Bf2e</p><p>Drip.communityDrip whitepaper</p><p>— — — — — — — —</p><p>This article is not intended to constitute investment advice. Neither the author nor the publication takes any responsibility or liability for any investments, profits or losses you may incur as a result of this information. Readers are encouraged to perform their own due diligence and research, or consult a licensed financial advisor before making any and all investment decisions. This content is intended for informational and educational purposes only. Though the author strives for accuracy, the data contained within the article cannot be relied upon. The article may contain affiliate links.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>wittygnu@newsletter.paragraph.com (WittyGnu)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[Top 4 Cryptos That Can Grow Faster Than Bitcoin in 2022]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@wittygnu/top-4-cryptos-that-can-grow-faster-than-bitcoin-in-2022</link>
            <guid>hk73m8lYVQZvms7v1xPv</guid>
            <pubDate>Mon, 11 Apr 2022 01:44:01 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[Those 4 cryptos all have potential to grow faster than Bitcoin in 2022, although Bitcoin will still be having the biggest portion of crypto for a bit of time Although the following lists are thoroughly researched, they are not to be considered financial advice. Thus, a potential investor must carry out further research about the tokens or perhaps read their whitepapers…]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Those 4 cryptos all have potential to grow faster than Bitcoin in 2022, although Bitcoin will still be having the biggest portion of crypto for a bit of time</p><p>Although the following lists are thoroughly researched, they are not to be considered financial advice. Thus, a potential investor must carry out further research about the tokens or perhaps read their whitepapers…</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>wittygnu@newsletter.paragraph.com (WittyGnu)</author>
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