"Honey Badger don't care. It just takes what it wants."
This is one of Bitcoin's operating modes. He doesn't care about noise, he goes there, generates the blocks and turns his money into anti-fragile.
I promised that if $BTC hits $72,000,
I will give away $20,000 in BTC to 15 people.
So as promised I will be giving away
$20,000 to 15 person today.
Rules: Like, Retweet, and Comment "BTC" 🔔
Gonna lock comments in 24 hours!
🚨 JUST IN: Adam Back just DESTROYED Bitcoin quantum FUD live on Bloomberg saying quantum computers are "EXTREMELY BASIC" and we still have "A DECADE" to prepare!!!
Is the quantum threat just another excuse to scare you out of your Bitcoin?!!! ⚡
While China was busy shipping missile chemicals to Iran and collecting yuan tolls at Hormuz, someone was inside its most sensitive supercomputer stealing everything.
CNN reports that a hacker group calling itself FlamingChina breached the China National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin and exfiltrated up to 10 petabytes of classified defence data. The samples posted on dark web forums include bomb and missile designs, animated explosion simulations, structural integrity tests, renderings of the J-20 stealth fighter, sixth-generation aircraft concepts, nuclear submarine schematics, hypersonic weapons systems, and target analyses for American assets including HIMARS launchers and carrier strike groups.
Ten petabytes. For context, the entire printed collection of the US Library of Congress is approximately 10 terabytes. This breach is one thousand times that volume. It is being sold for cryptocurrency on Breach Forums. Cybersecurity experts who reviewed the previews told CNN the data appears genuine, matching known output patterns from the NSCC Tianjin facility, which serves over 6,000 clients including defence agencies and aviation firms across China.
The timing is extraordinary. Trump posted a 50 percent tariff threat on any country supplying military weapons to Iran hours before CNN published this story. Five Chinese vessels shipped sodium perchlorate to Iran from Gaolan Port in the past six weeks, enough propellant precursor for hundreds of ballistic missiles. China’s ghost fleet continues operating through the IRGC’s yuan toll booth at Hormuz. And now the supercomputer that designed the weapons China is helping Iran reconstitute has been gutted by hackers selling its contents for the same cryptocurrency that Iran charges for strait passage.
The irony is architectural. China built a parallel financial system using yuan and crypto to bypass the dollar at Hormuz. A hacker group is now using crypto to bypass Chinese state security and sell Beijing’s most classified military designs to anyone with a wallet address. The same technology that enables sanction evasion enables espionage monetisation. The blockchain does not distinguish between a toll payment and a weapons leak. It processes both.
For Xi, this is a catastrophe arriving at the worst possible moment. Bessent’s mid-May Beijing summit was already going to be difficult. Trump holds the waiver on 140 million barrels of Chinese-bound Iranian crude. The 50 percent tariff threat targets China’s arms pipeline. The IDF just destroyed 100 Hezbollah targets using F-35I aircraft with Israeli software upgrades the Pentagon approved today. And now the classified designs for China’s most advanced military systems, the systems that justify the rare earth monopoly and the South China Sea posture and the Taiwan coercion campaign, are available for purchase on a dark web forum for less than the price of a single Hormuz transit.
If the data is genuine, every adversary and ally of China can now reverse-engineer the capabilities Beijing spent decades and hundreds of billions developing. The J-20’s stealth profile. The hypersonic glide vehicle’s trajectory calculations. The nuclear submarine’s acoustic signature. The sixth-generation fighter’s sensor architecture. All of it, priced in crypto, available now.
China wanted to build a post-dollar world. A hacker group just demonstrated what that world looks like when the technology works in both directions.
https://t.co/0fIdGsM5qH
Imagine a father who secures $100,000 in spot Bitcoin.
He holds the asset until the valuation hits a massive $5,000,000.
Liquidating the position directly triggers devastating taxes on $4,900,000 of pure profit.
So he executes the perfect institutional maneuver instead.
He locks the Bitcoin in a legal trust, takes out a collateralized loan against the stack, and lives off the borrowed liquidity.
Because he never executed a sale, his tax liability remains at absolute zero.
Upon his death, the heirs receive the Bitcoin with a brand new cost basis set exactly at $5,000,000.
The government cannot legally touch a single cent of the accumulated gain.
This is exactly how generational wealth is permanently secured.
🚨 BREAKING: Gov. Ron DeSantis has just signed a law BANNING Sharia Law from being enforced anywhere in the state of Florida
Sharia Law and Islamism are INCOMPATIBLE with America.
This should be a FEDERAL law.
This 1 hour MIT lecture by Jim Simons (Quant King) will teach you more about quantitative trading than most people learn in their entire career at Wall Street.
Bookmark this & watch, no matter what. It’s the most productive start you can give your week. Then read article below.
When Andres Freund, Linux kernel contributor & Microsoft engineer was debugging slow SSH logins on his Debian machine in March 2024, he noticed something weird:
liblzma (part of XZ Utils) was using way too much CPU power, so he kept digging, and what he uncovered was a multi-year supply-chain attack!
An attacker using the name “Jia Tan” had spent two years slowly infiltrating the tiny XZ Utils project, a compression library used by virtually every major Linux distribution.
The backdoor wasn’t in the source code. It was hidden deep inside the build scripts. It would have given the attacker remote root access on millions of servers the moment a specially crafted SSH key was used.
Freund caught it days before it would have shipped in Debian, Fedora, Ubuntu and more.
One man, one anomaly, one routine debug session saved the internet from a potential catastrophe.
Respect!