Most will charge you $1000+ for a good trading course.
Here is one I've made for free.
These are the technical analysis techniques I've used to reach financial freedom:
(Course includes PDFs, assignments and extra readings)
To be clear, I’m spending <5% (but actually) of my time on the Twitter acquisition. It ain’t rocket science!
Yesterday was Giga Texas, today is Starbase. Tesla is on my mind 24/7.
So may seem like below, but not true.
- terra market module configured for $150m daily throughput for peg restoration would be enough if liquidity on curve was the intended $4bn instead of $350m
- people in small panic because $btc tanking and small $ust depeg so LFG started selling $btc to restore peg
- 10 min after LFG pulled some liquidity from curve in preparation for 4pool the attackers pounced
- first cleared all liquidity from curve (needed just $350m $ust to do that)
- then started dumping their $ust on Binance
- creating a small depeg
ok here is how the $luna $ust attack was coordinated & executed. 🧵 (quoted from a friend)
- attacker OTC accumulated $1bn of UST
- borrowed $3bn in $btc
- spread around some fud about peg and bank runs
- dumped the fuck out of their $3bn $btc on market to trigger wider panic
@balajis All false. Twitter started as a corporation. It's had corporate incentives from day 1. It's trying to offset those, and it will, through @bluesky.
"web3" has the same corporate incentives, but hides it under "decentralization." It's literally a different cap table structure.
Twitter is funding a small independent team of up to five open source architects, engineers, and designers to develop an open and decentralized standard for social media. The goal is for Twitter to ultimately be a client of this standard. 🧵
You don’t own “web3.”
The VCs and their LPs do. It will never escape their incentives. It’s ultimately a centralized entity with a different label.
Know what you’re getting into…