Buying, Selling and SAFELY STORING Bitcoin?! – Mining Adventure Part 4 - YouTube

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All right, so you've watched mining adventures part 1, 2, & 3
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You've got your dank mining rig and an ASIC or 2 and you are well on your way to becoming crypto rich.
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But how do you keep those sweet bitcoins and alt coins safe and for that matter if you're not
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Necessarily into buying a bunch of hardware. How do you just... speculate on the coins,
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buying and selling them?
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Let's find out
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But first let's tell you guys about E.K water blocks, E.K's SMLC
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phoenix lineup is designed around quick disconnect couplings and brings a modular approach to connecting and
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Expanding your loop. Learn more at the link below.
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So if you've already been mining, you're likely withdrawing your rewards to an exchange, be it GDax,
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Kraken, Binance, or any of the other few hundred exchanges out there.
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Or you might be using a wallet on your PC.
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Now most casuals will probably stick with the former because being able to sell
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Without moving your funds from your local wallet to an exchange can actually save both time and money
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in transfer fees. However
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There are some serious drawbacks to this approach.
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First, and most importantly, you are not in control of your private keys
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What's a private key? Ah, I thought you'd never ask.
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Ok, so I'm gonna use Bitcoin as an example. In layman's terms a Bitcoin address, that
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String of numbers and letters, is kind of like a see-through donation container at the local McDonald's.
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There's a slot in the top so anyone can see how much is in it and anyone who knows the address can put money in
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but if somebody wanted to get money out, like to
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Transfer funds to a friend or to buy something. They would need the private key to open up the box
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Signing the transaction. Now
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there are a couple of exceptions to this for example Monero makes use of ring signatures to hide balances and
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Transaction amounts. But most crypto currencies are fundamentally similar in this way.
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So then when your funds are in a wallet on your PC the private keys are owned and
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Can be encrypted by you
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so if there is a fork a
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duplication of the existing blockchain with whatever new and different features that the duplicator may desire
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You can export your private keys and then import them into the Fork's wallet to get access to the duplicated funds.
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If your funds are on an exchange however support for Forks is
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Completely up to them because they're in control of the private keys, so let's look at Bitcoin
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Gold as an example of why this matters.
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Many exchanges chose to not support this fork outright, so many people missed out on what was
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Essentially free Bitcoin gold because they were not holding their own private keys at the time of the fork, ugh.
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Now either of those approaches though, even with those drawbacks, is probably fine for
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Casual miners who aren't holding more than a couple hundred dollars worth.
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That is as long as they can afford to lose what they have- more on this later. For larger scale miners and investors
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though something called a cold wallet is basically an essential tool. Now to be 'cold'
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a wallet cannot have an active network connection; this makes it nearly impossible to hack.
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Now some people will just use a network gapped computer
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So it's unplugged with no Wi-Fi with normal software wallets, and then a system of either
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webcams and QR codes or thumb drives to complete their transactions.
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But this method can be kind of a hassle. So many people with large crypto holdings are using what's called a hardware wallet
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These come in the form of little devices with physical security prompts like the Ledger Nano S or Trezor
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Once this device is plugged into a PC, you enter a PIN code, open up a companion app,
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and then you go about your business.
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Now, it should be noted that even the methods that we just outlined do carry some risk.
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But if you think about it, so does putting money in a bank
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so
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You know your- your PC's Drive
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could die, you could lose your hardware wallet, or in both cases you could forget your password.
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But as long as you backup your wallet
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and you keep your backup codes somewhere safe,
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a safety deposit box in a bank is a pretty good bet, you should be ok.
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Alright then, so now that your cryptos are safe, let's talk about buying and selling- though
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I really need to preface this with a quick warning:
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We are not endorsing any of the exchanges that I'm about to mention,
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and I personally would not recommend buying cryptocurrency unless you know what you're doing and you are comfortable losing
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literally all of the money you spent, like literally like this. Gone!
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All right.
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There is a very public history of exchanges
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disappearing overnight or being hacked and losing anywhere from a lot to all
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of their users money, so be safe.
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With that out of the way, there are a ton of exchanges out there. Let's look at one of the most mainstream ones: coinbase
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It's fairly limited in features, but should work pretty well for casual buyers.
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The process is pretty simple just hook up your bank account,
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Debit card, or PayPal account and you are free to buy and sell cryptocurrency up to your limit.
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And you can raise your limits by doing additional verification
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with the exchange.
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But this simplicity comes at the cost of pretty high fees- nearly 4% for debit and credit
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transactions. And I should also point out that coinbase has a history of
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freezing trading during high traffic times...
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So take that as you will.
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some of the more Pro-oriented exchanges
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will charge a small fixed fee of a few dollars for bank transfers in and out, and then cryptocurrency
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transfer fees are typically dependent on that currency's specific network fees.
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So Bitcoin will likely have a fee of a few dollars while something like Zcash will have almost no fee at all.
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These exchanges, like Binance, GDax, Bittrex, Poloniex, Cryptopia, and BitFinex
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also have crypto-to-crypto trading pairs.
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So you can actually take your Bitcoin and then turn that into Litecoin without having to first go to a fiat currency.
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This helps you save some fees and is pretty snazzy. Now if you're not super concerned with getting the best possible rate,
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a market trade can be a pretty easy way to go.
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You just pick how much you want to buy or sell and then the trade will transact at the current market rate.
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Just remember that, especially for very large amounts, that that rate can actually change
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literally as your transactions are going through, so you might end up paying more or getting less than you initially expected.
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Now 'limit trades' these allow you to set the price point that you want your trade to execute at,
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meaning that you may actually be able to get a slightly better rate.
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Or, if things go the other way you might end up with nothing going through at all
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Some exchanges allow what's called 'margin trading'. In this situation you can auto-magically [sic]
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borrow money from the exchange to leverage your bet based on a multiplier.
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So let's say you wanted to margin trade a thousand dollars with a leverage of two to one.
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You would essentially be trading a thousand dollars plus another thousand dollars borrowed from the exchange
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and then you would be charged interest on it in most cases...
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And the benefit is that you could double your profit or...
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The drawback is that you could still lose all that money and still need to pay the stuff that you borrowed back so
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Unless you're a seasoned gamb- [cough] excuse me, trader,
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we would recommend staying away from margin trading.
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In conclusion,
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trading can be a fun way to play around with some disposable income.
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But again, I think I've said this before but, I would caution against using any money that could seriously
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negatively impact your life if you were to lose it. So be safe and probably don't buy any
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[Inserted audio, drawn out]: Bitcoin
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Sooooo yeeeeaaaaah...
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iFixit then. You know those guys really like to take stuff apart and teach people how to fix things
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They are leading the charge in the electronics repair tools industry with their iconic black and blue Pro tech toolkit
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And it's only 60 bucks
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It's got tons of great features: the tool roll that makes it compact and easy to store.
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Their 64-bit driver kit, their wide variety of plastic opening tools, spudgers, and picks.
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Not to mention suction cups with the new fancy handle to help remove display assemblies.
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They've got all kinds of stuff, the jimmy pry tool, the ESD-safe tweezers, and all
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iFixit tools are backed by iFixit's lifetime warranty.
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So why pay someone, often more than $60
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to fix something for you, when you can make a one-time investment
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in a fully loaded Pro Tech tool kit over at ifixit.com/linus and fix your stuff forever
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So thanks for watching guys. If this video sucked, you know what to do.
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But if it was awesome, get subscribed, hit that like button, or check out the link to where to buy the stuff we featured
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in the video description except, don't buy the stuff we featured, unless you can afford to lose that money...
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Yeah. Also linked in the description is our merch store, which has cool shirts like this one and our community
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forum, which you should totally join.
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I think an iFixit kit's probably a better investment than cryptocurrency.
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All you have to do is like a few device repairs for people and you'll get that investment right back.
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Several times over.
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Uhh where'd that money go?