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r/CryptoCurrencySee Post

Rumors of Franklin Templeton's SPOT Bitcoin ETF Approval Boost BTC by 4% as USDT DOM Dips by 3.20%!

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Go to the Polymarket, on the top right corner of the page, there's a DOM element showing cash. Click on that and you will be redirected to your wallet page. On the wallet page, you will see your balance, and below your balance, you will see a claim button. Click on that.

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r/BitcoinSee Comment

I concur with many of the responses in the comments, and besides that, I'd also like to offer my perspective based on years of trading experience. I've noticed that sometimes the order book doesn't seem to be the primary driver of market prices. This led me to explore further and examine the role of high-frequency trading and its underlying mechanisms. Let me quickly share my observations (though I won't claim them to be absolute truths, they do have merit, similar to concepts like the Depth of Market or DOM). Each year, countries are making significant improvements in building faster connections between trading centers and data storage facilities. These connections have become so rapid that substantial investments are being made in materials that can facilitate quicker information transfer. In today's world, information is arguably the most valuable asset. To cut to the chase, high-frequency trading bots, developed by individuals and employed by banks, brokers, and other entities, are capable of processing information at astonishing speeds. They can execute buy or sell orders so swiftly that they sometimes place orders before the order book can even record them. Since banks, brokers, and similar institutions operate with different order books and receive information at a slower pace than these bots generate orders, you often witness a multitude of buy or sell orders accumulating. However, the price can temporarily reverse, which has also led me to understand why prices react so rapidly to major news events. The speed of execution is so swift that your click to enter the market lags behind these high-frequency trading bots. It's important to note that this explanation doesn't apply in all situations, but it sheds light on why tools like DOM, footprint, and others may not always behave as expected.

Mentions:#DOM
r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Yeah I’ve already gone down this rabbit hole. Still got the blocker with Ublock origin, and it wasn’t a pop-up for me. It actually replaced the video player entirely. When it happened I checked the code and the way it appeared to be setup is that it actually removed the player component from the DOM and replaced it with a new component that was the blocking warning.

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

You can't even say DOM's backwards on here automod just deletes the comment immediately Stop censoring us!

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Datadash bullish on DOM next bullrun perhaps?

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

tldr; Order book depth is an important concept for traders in the cryptocurrency space. An order book provides a detailed record of buy and sell orders for a specific cryptocurrency on an exchange. It helps traders understand the supply and demand dynamics of the market. Market depth, also known as Depth of Market (DOM), represents the volume of limit orders in real-time and serves as a measure of liquidity. Understanding order book depth is crucial for predicting price movements and making informed trading decisions. *This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.

Mentions:#DOM#DYOR
r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Tldr: Order book depth, a critical concept for cryptocurrency traders, reveals the volume of buy and sell orders at various price levels in a specific cryptocurrency exchange. Divided into bids (buy orders) and asks (sell orders), the order book displays price, quantity, and total quantity columns. This real-time list informs traders about market dynamics, where more buy orders indicate strong demand, while numerous sell orders may suggest oversupply. Market depth, also known as Depth of Market (DOM), gauges an exchange's ability to handle large orders without price impact, offering liquidity insights. Deep order books signify high liquidity, enabling significant trades without price disruption, while shallow ones lead to potential price swings. Analyzing order book depth empowers traders to strategize effectively and identify support and resistance levels, aiding in informed trading decisions.

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Take my fiat and my crypto, please DOM me mastercard

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

One thing that’s puzzling to me is the amount of people saying ‘Sell your altcoins to Bitcoin while BTC dominance is up!’ Don’t they understand that’s the definition of ‘Buy High, Sell low’? Because BTC DOM is at its highest point in 4 years, so you’re getting the *worst* value for your alts in terms of BTC assuming you held you alts from long ago. And even if you think BTC dominance will continue going up, the upside will be limited compared to say, 2022 or even the start of this year. It’s already at its high, how much higher can it go up to before alts catches up again ?

Mentions:#BTC#DOM
r/CryptoMarketsSee Comment

Trading wise, it's unlikely that someone has gotten 9/10 profitable trades, as the average is 60-80% success rate from a profitable strategy. Although, ETH has been very easy to trade now, so it's possible. Do take into the consideration that it could just be edited using the DOM, like others have said. Don't blindly believe strangers on the internet. Lots of scammers out there.

Mentions:#ETH#DOM
r/CryptoMarketsSee Comment

If I was going to fake data on a website I wouldn't take a snapshot and bring it into Photoshop. That's WAY too much work trying to match fonts, font sizes, getting things aligned, etc. Instead, I'd just edit the DOM in the browser and just take a screenshot. To answer your question, I have no idea what you're questioning is fake in this image, so idk.

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r/BitcoinSee Comment

When SBF was a so called “trader” I saw his screens in a few videos/pics and I was very suspicious because he didn’t have a basic DOM (depth of market) and that’s literally like driving a car without headlights on at night… you look on EVERY OTHER TRADERS SCREEN you will almost always see this… it was all for show to full the “normies” to think that SBF was a “smart” guy… all about perception.

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

It is low because iregular BTC.DOM includes stablecoins When you exclude stablecoins you can see that it is slowly grinding upwards

Mentions:#BTC#DOM
r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

actually the UI employs way more than the guy mentioned..launch any UI dApp they've got.. see the animating logo ? They use Google's Monitors API released weeks ago maybe months.. to monitor the state of DOM elements as they are rendered as they make their way into a DIV container.. only once the elements are all in place you get to see the actual contents of a window.....

Mentions:#API#DOM
r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Bitcoin is just experimenting as a sub. It'll be a DOM again soon!

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

That's why I avoid DOM trading, Bookmap and such, and base my trading plans on footprints and orderflow. Mark your levels, use fibs, find confluence, Rev trend chart on top of HTF and LTF and WAIT for confirmation via 5min orderflow chart - THEN enter a trade, with SL/TP set before entering. Never EVER preset a trade, you are begging for a loss. I am a degen and I use high leverage with very low margins for post-practice. Practice with paper trading, get comfortable, read and learn as much as you can from trusted sources in the meantime. Use a trading journal, track that progress. Comment why and what went right/wrong. Always, ALWAYS take profit as soon as you can. I set at least 3-4 tp levels. Discard any emotion and consider those funds gone forever, prior to trading. Then it gets a bit easier. Don't trade the news.

r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Yeah you would literally be asking for issues to occur if you were to use JavaScript on the backend of financial software. That shit wasn't designed for manipulating numbers at the precision required for finance. In fact, it wasn't designed to do anything more than manipulating the DOM.

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r/BitcoinSee Comment

Passive orders are limit buy/sell orders that represent the depth of market (DOM); the bid and offer stack that you see in the DOM. Conversely, active orders are, as you said, market orders that take the best offer if buying or hit the best bid if selling.

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r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

I've seen games running in VBScript/Excel, does not mean it should be a default. Websites working the DOM, orchestrating visual effects or "reactiveness" or spinning up a HTTP daemon that mostly works based on requests and text strings, are not an argument for using javascript for provably correct behavior in financial systems, complex math and floating points/decimal numbers with accuracy.

Mentions:#DOM
r/BitcoinSee Comment

I don't think any redditors who responded to my post in this thread are expats and understand the complications of transactions in general. The short answer to your question is that I told the truth. The long answer is that "where you live" is ambiguous and doesn't have an exact answer if you are an expat. I reside in the Dom. Rep. but my nationality and place of origin is the U.S. If I say I live in the Dom. Rep. the expectation is that I have a CEDULA, the national identification, but I do not because I am not a Domican citizen. I have a U.S. passport. If I say I live in the U.S. I must be able to show a U.S. phone number for 2FA. But I don't have a U.S. phone number. So how do I answer?? If you are a U.S. citizen and you have a U.S. identification and you live in Sacramento, CA, then the answer to that question is straight forward. For me, it is not straight forward and very difficult to know what the "truth" is. The fact is that I went throught a long vetting process with Gemini and they accepted me. I bought crypto, I made ACH deposits, I used 2FA with my Dom. Rep. phone number. Now that that phone numbert has changed, they refuse to change to my new phone number so that I can access my account, because they only accept U.S. plhone numbers. BUT GEMINI INITALLY ACCEPTED MY DOM. REP. PHONE NUMBER, INDICATING TO ME THAT THAT WOUL BE ACCEPTABLE and I had not issues with it.

Mentions:#DOM#REP
r/CryptoCurrencySee Comment

Maybe Dev Tools edit the DOM.

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