True but we should probably focus on OP's actual question. My recommendation is simple:
- Convert 50% to BTC (removes both Tether and dollar risk)
- Keep 50% in USDT if you're actively gambling/trading
- Don't hold USDT long-term as savings
- Monitor Tether news but don't panic at every FUD cycle
@flipflop For your situation: 8k in USDT carries two risks - Tether implosion (low probability but catastrophic) and dollar devaluation (higher probability but gradual)
Converting to BTC in theory removes both but adds 20%+ price swings
The dollar collapse angle is separate from Tether backing concerns. USDT is pegged to USD. If USD loses value globally, USDT loses value at same rate. But that's different from Tether itself being unbacked.
I "d name two main risks there 1st Tether doesn't have reserves (implosion) and 2nd $...
Fee structures vary wildly between casinos:
- Stake: no withdrawal fees on any crypto
- BC.Game: min fees, varies by coin
- Some smaller casinos might take 1-2% withdrawal fee regardless
Always check before depositing as things might change after time
True. Australia banned offshore casinos and while enforcement isn't perfect, it did push many operators to block Aussie players. So UK could theoretically do similar. Though given crypto's nature it would be harder to enforce for sure
The regulatory landscape varies significantly by region which afects this calculation:
- UK: heavy restrictions but genuine player protection
- Ireland: lighter touch, new GRAI framework rolling out
- USA: Complete chaos, state by state
- Australia: complete ban on offshore casinos
For UK...
ARE YOU NUTS!! Using fake documents for KYC is actual fraud and could result in criminal charges. Look violating terms is one thing but submitting fraudulent identity documnts is a fucking crime
Another one.. Online gambling legality varies by state in the US:
- States like NJ, PA, MI, CT have fully legal regulated online casinos
- Some states allow only sports betting
- Some states have no legal online gambling but don't criminally prosecute players
- Some states actively criminalize...
Both reputable with little differences:
Ledger:
- Proprietary secure element chip
- Supports more coins
- Bluetooth on Nano X model
- Past data breach (customer emails/addresses, not keys)
Trezor:
- Fully open source
- Easier to verify security
- No Bluetooth
- Slightly less coin support...
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