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#genius $GENIUS A Ledger is a hardware wallet that keeps your crypto private keys offline, making them much safer than storing keys on a phone or computer. You use it with Ledger Live (or compatible wallets) to check balances and send/receive crypto. When you send crypto, the transaction is created on your device/computer, but the Ledger signs it internally and you must confirm on the Ledger screen, so your keys never leave the device. During setup, it gives a 24‑word seed phrase—this is your master backup. Keep it secret and offline; anyone with it can steal your funds.
#genius $GENIUS
A Ledger is a hardware wallet that keeps your crypto private keys offline, making them much safer than storing keys on a phone or computer. You use it with Ledger Live (or compatible wallets) to check balances and send/receive crypto. When you send crypto, the transaction is created on your device/computer, but the Ledger signs it internally and you must confirm on the Ledger screen, so your keys never leave the device. During setup, it gives a 24‑word seed phrase—this is your master backup. Keep it secret and offline; anyone with it can steal your funds.
#openledger $OPEN Uma Ledger é uma wallet de hardware que mantém suas chaves privadas de cripto offline, tornando-as muito mais seguras do que armazená-las em um celular ou computador. Você a utiliza com o Ledger Live (ou wallets compatíveis) para checar saldos e enviar/receber cripto. Quando você envia cripto, a transação é criada no seu dispositivo/computador, mas a Ledger a assina internamente e você deve confirmar na tela da Ledger, assim suas chaves nunca saem do dispositivo. Durante a configuração, ela fornece uma frase semente de 24 palavras—esse é o seu backup principal. Mantenha em segredo e offline; qualquer um com essa frase pode roubar seus fundos.
#openledger $OPEN
Uma Ledger é uma wallet de hardware que mantém suas chaves privadas de cripto offline, tornando-as muito mais seguras do que armazená-las em um celular ou computador. Você a utiliza com o Ledger Live (ou wallets compatíveis) para checar saldos e enviar/receber cripto. Quando você envia cripto, a transação é criada no seu dispositivo/computador, mas a Ledger a assina internamente e você deve confirmar na tela da Ledger, assim suas chaves nunca saem do dispositivo. Durante a configuração, ela fornece uma frase semente de 24 palavras—esse é o seu backup principal. Mantenha em segredo e offline; qualquer um com essa frase pode roubar seus fundos.
Ver tradução
open ledger#OpenLedger @Openledger $OPEN Do you mean Ledger as in the Ledger hardware wallet (Ledger Nano S Plus / Nano X / Ledger Live), or “ledger” as in an accounting ledger? If you mean the Ledger hardware wallet, here’s a ~500‑word explanation: A Ledger is a type of hardware wallet used to store and protect cryptocurrency private keys offline. Instead of keeping your keys on a phone or computer (which can be hacked by malware), a Ledger device keeps the private keys inside a secure chip and signs transactions internally. This means your private keys never leave the device, even when you connect it to a computer or phone. The most common way people use a Ledger is through the Ledger Live app, which lets you view balances, install coin apps, and send/receive crypto while the device confirms each action. When you first set up a Ledger, it generates a “seed phrase” (usually 24 words). This seed phrase is the master backup of your wallet. If the device is lost, damaged, or reset, you can restore your funds on a new Ledger (or another compatible wallet) using that phrase. Because the seed phrase controls everything, it must be kept private and stored safely offline—never typed into websites, never saved in cloud notes, and never shared with anyone. Anyone who gets the seed phrase can take the funds. To send crypto using a Ledger, you typically create the transaction in Ledger Live (or a compatible wallet like MetaMask for some networks), then the Ledger device displays the transaction details (amount, address, fees). You physically confirm it by pressing buttons on the device. This “manual confirmation” is a key security feature: even if your computer is compromised, the attacker can’t sign a transaction without you approving it on the device. Ledger supports many coins and networks, but not every token is managed directly in Ledger Live. Some assets require connecting the Ledger to third‑party wallets while still using the Ledger for signing. The device doesn’t “store coins” in the physical sense—your crypto remains on the blockchain. The Ledger stores the keys that prove ownership and allow spending. A Ledger is best for long‑term holding and higher security, but it adds responsibility: you must protect the seed phrase, verify addresses on the device screen, and avoid phishing. Used correctly, it’s one of the safest ways to self-custody crypto. If you meant “open ledger” in another sense (like accounting or a specific app), tell me which one and I’ll rewrite it in 500 words for that.

open ledger

#OpenLedger
@OpenLedger
$OPEN
Do you mean Ledger as in the Ledger hardware wallet (Ledger Nano S Plus / Nano X / Ledger Live), or “ledger” as in an accounting ledger?
If you mean the Ledger hardware wallet, here’s a ~500‑word explanation:
A Ledger is a type of hardware wallet used to store and protect cryptocurrency private keys offline. Instead of keeping your keys on a phone or computer (which can be hacked by malware), a Ledger device keeps the private keys inside a secure chip and signs transactions internally. This means your private keys never leave the device, even when you connect it to a computer or phone. The most common way people use a Ledger is through the Ledger Live app, which lets you view balances, install coin apps, and send/receive crypto while the device confirms each action.
When you first set up a Ledger, it generates a “seed phrase” (usually 24 words). This seed phrase is the master backup of your wallet. If the device is lost, damaged, or reset, you can restore your funds on a new Ledger (or another compatible wallet) using that phrase. Because the seed phrase controls everything, it must be kept private and stored safely offline—never typed into websites, never saved in cloud notes, and never shared with anyone. Anyone who gets the seed phrase can take the funds.
To send crypto using a Ledger, you typically create the transaction in Ledger Live (or a compatible wallet like MetaMask for some networks), then the Ledger device displays the transaction details (amount, address, fees). You physically confirm it by pressing buttons on the device. This “manual confirmation” is a key security feature: even if your computer is compromised, the attacker can’t sign a transaction without you approving it on the device.
Ledger supports many coins and networks, but not every token is managed directly in Ledger Live. Some assets require connecting the Ledger to third‑party wallets while still using the Ledger for signing. The device doesn’t “store coins” in the physical sense—your crypto remains on the blockchain. The Ledger stores the keys that prove ownership and allow spending.
A Ledger is best for long‑term holding and higher security, but it adds responsibility: you must protect the seed phrase, verify addresses on the device screen, and avoid phishing. Used correctly, it’s one of the safest ways to self-custody crypto.
If you meant “open ledger” in another sense (like accounting or a specific app), tell me which one and I’ll rewrite it in 500 words for that.
Ver tradução
#genius $GENIUS “Genius” can mean a few different things, so I need you to pick which one you mean: 1) Genius (lyrics/annotations website/app) 2) GENIUS token/coin (crypto) 3) Binance “Genius/AI” feature inside the app (if you saw a button called Genius) Reply with 1, 2, or 3. While you reply, here are quick steps for each: 1) Genius (lyrics) Install/open Genius app or website Search the song/artist Open the track → read lyrics Tap highlighted lines to see annotations/explanations Create an account if you want to add edits/annotations 2) GENIUS token/coin (crypto) on Binance In Binance, search the token symbol in Markets Check the trading pair (e.g., GENIUS/USDT) and price If you want to buy: Trade → Spot → Market/Limit Always confirm contract/network if it’s a new token 3) A “Genius” feature in Binance app Tell me where you saw it: Home, Earn, Futures, P2P, or Wallet I’ll guide you through the exact taps on Android Which one is it (1/2/3), and what exactly are you trying to do with it?
#genius $GENIUS
“Genius” can mean a few different things, so I need you to pick which one you mean:

1) Genius (lyrics/annotations website/app)
2) GENIUS token/coin (crypto)
3) Binance “Genius/AI” feature inside the app (if you saw a button called Genius)

Reply with 1, 2, or 3.

While you reply, here are quick steps for each:

1) Genius (lyrics)
Install/open Genius app or website
Search the song/artist
Open the track → read lyrics
Tap highlighted lines to see annotations/explanations
Create an account if you want to add edits/annotations

2) GENIUS token/coin (crypto) on Binance
In Binance, search the token symbol in Markets
Check the trading pair (e.g., GENIUS/USDT) and price
If you want to buy: Trade → Spot → Market/Limit
Always confirm contract/network if it’s a new token

3) A “Genius” feature in Binance app
Tell me where you saw it: Home, Earn, Futures, P2P, or Wallet
I’ll guide you through the exact taps on Android

Which one is it (1/2/3), and what exactly are you trying to do with it?
Ver tradução
How we use open ledger“Open ledger” usually means a public, transparent record of transactions—most commonly a blockchain like Bitcoin or Ethereum—where anyone can verify activity without needing permission. To use an open ledger, you typically use a blockchain explorer, which is a website/app that lets you search the ledger and read transaction details. The first step is to know which network you’re dealing with (for example: Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Tron, Polygon). This matters because each network has its own explorer and its own type of transaction ID. If you’re using Binance, the easiest way to use the open ledger is to start from your transaction history. Open Binance → Wallets → Transaction History (or Deposit/Withdraw history) and select the transaction you want to verify. You’ll see a TxID / Transaction Hash. Copy that TxID. Now open the correct explorer: for Bitcoin you can use a Bitcoin explorer (like mempool-based explorers), for Ethereum use Etherscan, for BNB Smart Chain use BscScan, and for Tron (TRC20 USDT) use Tronscan. Paste the TxID into the explorer’s search bar. Once you search, you can read the most important fields. Status tells you whether it succeeded, failed, or is still pending. Confirmations show how many blocks have been added after your transaction; more confirmations generally means more finality. You’ll also see the From address (sender) and To address (receiver). Compare these with the addresses you intended to use. Next, check the amount and the network fee. Fees vary by network—Ethereum fees can be higher during congestion, while some networks are cheaper. You’ll also find the timestamp and block number, which help you confirm when it happened and where it was recorded. You can also use an open ledger to verify a deposit: copy your receiving address from Binance (Deposit page) and search that address in the explorer. You’ll see a list of incoming transactions and whether your deposit arrived. If it’s missing on Binance but visible on the ledger, it’s usually a processing/confirmation issue (or wrong network). If it’s not visible on the ledger, the sender likely hasn’t broadcast the transaction or used the wrong details. If you tell me the coin + network you’re using (example: “USDT TRC20” or “USDT BEP20”), I can give you the exact steps and what to check for common mistakes. #OpenLedger @Openledger $OPEN

How we use open ledger

“Open ledger” usually means a public, transparent record of transactions—most commonly a blockchain like Bitcoin or Ethereum—where anyone can verify activity without needing permission. To use an open ledger, you typically use a blockchain explorer, which is a website/app that lets you search the ledger and read transaction details. The first step is to know which network you’re dealing with (for example: Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Tron, Polygon). This matters because each network has its own explorer and its own type of transaction ID.
If you’re using Binance, the easiest way to use the open ledger is to start from your transaction history. Open Binance → Wallets → Transaction History (or Deposit/Withdraw history) and select the transaction you want to verify. You’ll see a TxID / Transaction Hash. Copy that TxID. Now open the correct explorer: for Bitcoin you can use a Bitcoin explorer (like mempool-based explorers), for Ethereum use Etherscan, for BNB Smart Chain use BscScan, and for Tron (TRC20 USDT) use Tronscan. Paste the TxID into the explorer’s search bar.
Once you search, you can read the most important fields. Status tells you whether it succeeded, failed, or is still pending. Confirmations show how many blocks have been added after your transaction; more confirmations generally means more finality. You’ll also see the From address (sender) and To address (receiver). Compare these with the addresses you intended to use. Next, check the amount and the network fee. Fees vary by network—Ethereum fees can be higher during congestion, while some networks are cheaper. You’ll also find the timestamp and block number, which help you confirm when it happened and where it was recorded.
You can also use an open ledger to verify a deposit: copy your receiving address from Binance (Deposit page) and search that address in the explorer. You’ll see a list of incoming transactions and whether your deposit arrived. If it’s missing on Binance but visible on the ledger, it’s usually a processing/confirmation issue (or wrong network). If it’s not visible on the ledger, the sender likely hasn’t broadcast the transaction or used the wrong details.
If you tell me the coin + network you’re using (example: “USDT TRC20” or “USDT BEP20”), I can give you the exact steps and what to check for common mistakes.
#OpenLedger
@OpenLedger
$OPEN
#openledger $OPEN "Open Ledger" pode ter alguns significados diferentes no mundo cripto, então preciso de 1 detalhe pra te guiar corretamente: 1) Você está se referindo ao OpenLedger (um projeto/app específico), ou 2) Você está falando de um "ledger aberto" em geral (explorador de blockchain público como Bitcoin/Ethereum)? Responda com 1 ou 2. Enquanto isso, se você se refere a um ledger aberto em geral, aqui está como você pode usá-lo: 1) Pegue um hash de transação (TxID) de onde você enviou/recebeu cripto (Binance → Carteiras → Histórico de Transações → escolha a transferência). 2) Abra o explorador certo para a rede: Bitcoin → mempool.space ou blockchain.com Ethereum / BSC / Polygon → Etherscan / BscScan / Polygonscan 3) Cole o TxID (ou o endereço da sua carteira) na barra de busca. 4) Verifique: Status (Pendente/Sucesso/Falhou) Confirmações Endereço de/para Quantidade + taxa de rede Timestamp + número do bloco Se você me disser qual você quer dizer (1 ou 2) e qual rede/moeda (por exemplo, USDT na TRC20, BTC, ETH, BSC), eu vou te guiar passo a passo.
#openledger $OPEN
"Open Ledger" pode ter alguns significados diferentes no mundo cripto, então preciso de 1 detalhe pra te guiar corretamente:

1) Você está se referindo ao OpenLedger (um projeto/app específico), ou
2) Você está falando de um "ledger aberto" em geral (explorador de blockchain público como Bitcoin/Ethereum)?

Responda com 1 ou 2.

Enquanto isso, se você se refere a um ledger aberto em geral, aqui está como você pode usá-lo:

1) Pegue um hash de transação (TxID) de onde você enviou/recebeu cripto (Binance → Carteiras → Histórico de Transações → escolha a transferência).
2) Abra o explorador certo para a rede:
Bitcoin → mempool.space ou blockchain.com
Ethereum / BSC / Polygon → Etherscan / BscScan / Polygonscan
3) Cole o TxID (ou o endereço da sua carteira) na barra de busca.
4) Verifique:
Status (Pendente/Sucesso/Falhou)
Confirmações
Endereço de/para
Quantidade + taxa de rede
Timestamp + número do bloco

Se você me disser qual você quer dizer (1 ou 2) e qual rede/moeda (por exemplo, USDT na TRC20, BTC, ETH, BSC), eu vou te guiar passo a passo.
#PostonTradFi Mag 7: Microsoft é o pilar—demanda empresarial durável, fluxos de caixa diversificados e monetização de IA embutida em todo o software e nuvem. A Tesla é a mais "sensível ao hype", pois a avaliação muitas vezes depende de grandes resultados futuros (autonomia/robótica) mais do que das margens de auto a curto prazo. Ouro: a correção parece mais uma consolidação do tipo compra na queda do que um pico cíclico definitivo, mas é altamente sensível aos rendimentos reais e à força do USD—escale as entradas em vez de ir all-in. Petróleo bruto: espere oscilações voláteis, impulsionadas pela geopolitica no curto prazo, seguidas de uma potencial normalização/fase de reversão à média à medida que a oferta se ajusta e o crescimento da demanda esfria.
#PostonTradFi
Mag 7: Microsoft é o pilar—demanda empresarial durável, fluxos de caixa diversificados e monetização de IA embutida em todo o software e nuvem. A Tesla é a mais "sensível ao hype", pois a avaliação muitas vezes depende de grandes resultados futuros (autonomia/robótica) mais do que das margens de auto a curto prazo.

Ouro: a correção parece mais uma consolidação do tipo compra na queda do que um pico cíclico definitivo, mas é altamente sensível aos rendimentos reais e à força do USD—escale as entradas em vez de ir all-in.

Petróleo bruto: espere oscilações voláteis, impulsionadas pela geopolitica no curto prazo, seguidas de uma potencial normalização/fase de reversão à média à medida que a oferta se ajusta e o crescimento da demanda esfria.
Ver tradução
#genius $GENIUS “Genius” could mean a few different things. Do you mean: 1) Binance “Genius” / an app or feature named Genius 2) Genius (the lyrics/knowledge website) 3) Genius as in smart/intelligent people 4) GenAI (Generative AI) and you typed “genius” by mistake Reply with 1, 2, 3, or 4 and I’ll explain exactly why it’s used. If you meant Generative AI (GenAI), we use it mainly to: 1) Create content fast (text, summaries, ideas, code) 2) Explain complex topics simply (like crypto, trading, wallets) 3) Automate support/tasks (chatbots, analysis, research) 4) Personalize help (recommendations, learning paths) 5) Boost productivity (drafting, planning, translating) Tell me which “Genius” you mean and your goal (learning, trading, studying, content), and I’ll tailor it.
#genius $GENIUS
“Genius” could mean a few different things. Do you mean:

1) Binance “Genius” / an app or feature named Genius
2) Genius (the lyrics/knowledge website)
3) Genius as in smart/intelligent people
4) GenAI (Generative AI) and you typed “genius” by mistake

Reply with 1, 2, 3, or 4 and I’ll explain exactly why it’s used.

If you meant Generative AI (GenAI), we use it mainly to:
1) Create content fast (text, summaries, ideas, code)
2) Explain complex topics simply (like crypto, trading, wallets)
3) Automate support/tasks (chatbots, analysis, research)
4) Personalize help (recommendations, learning paths)
5) Boost productivity (drafting, planning, translating)

Tell me which “Genius” you mean and your goal (learning, trading, studying, content), and I’ll tailor it.
Ver tradução
why we use open ledge#openledger $OPEN @Openledger An open ledger is a record system where the history of transactions is visible and verifiable by many participants, rather than controlled by a single private organization. In crypto, an open ledger is usually a blockchain: a shared database replicated across thousands of computers (nodes). People use open ledgers because they solve a core problem of digital value: how do you prevent someone from copying, editing, or double‑spending money when there’s no single “master” server? How it works (simple view) When someone sends crypto, the transaction is broadcast to the network. Specialized participants (miners/validators) check that it follows the rules (correct signature, sufficient balance, correct format). Once accepted, the transaction is added to a block, and blocks are linked together. Because many independent nodes store the same history, the ledger becomes extremely difficult to secretly alter: changing one copy doesn’t change everyone else’s. Why it’s useful 1) Transparency and auditability On most public blockchains, anyone can view transactions and balances of addresses. This doesn’t automatically reveal a real name, but it does create a permanent trail. That’s valuable for proving payments, auditing funds, or verifying that a project treasury moved as claimed. 2) Trust minimization (less reliance on a central party) Traditional systems require trust in banks, payment networks, or companies to keep accurate records and not censor transactions. Open ledgers reduce that dependence. You trust the rules and the network consensus, not a single organization. 3) Strong integrity (tamper resistance) Because blocks are connected and the network agrees on one history, rewriting the past is expensive and usually unrealistic at large scale. This integrity is the foundation for digital ownership: your coins are “yours” because the ledger says so and everyone can verify it. 4) Faster, global settlement Open ledgers can transfer value across borders 24/7. You don’t need banking hours, and settlement can happen in minutes (sometimes seconds), depending on the chain. 5) Programmability Smart-contract platforms allow “if‑this‑then‑that” financial logic: swapping tokens, lending, collateral management, escrow, and automated payouts. This is why DeFi exists. Important trade-offs / risks Open ledgers aren’t perfect. Fees can rise during congestion. Privacy is limited on transparent chains (even if names aren’t shown). Mistakes are hard to reverse—send to the wrong address and there may be no recovery. And smart contracts can have bugs. Also, not all open ledgers are equally decentralized; some are more dependent on a small number of validators. If you want, pick one and I’ll tailor it: 1) Bitcoin-style payments and store of value 2) Smart contracts/DeFi (BNB Chain/Ethereum) 3) Business use (tracking assets, supply chain, auditing)

why we use open ledge

#openledger $OPEN
@OpenLedger
An open ledger is a record system where the history of transactions is visible and verifiable by many participants, rather than controlled by a single private organization. In crypto, an open ledger is usually a blockchain: a shared database replicated across thousands of computers (nodes). People use open ledgers because they solve a core problem of digital value: how do you prevent someone from copying, editing, or double‑spending money when there’s no single “master” server?
How it works (simple view)
When someone sends crypto, the transaction is broadcast to the network. Specialized participants (miners/validators) check that it follows the rules (correct signature, sufficient balance, correct format). Once accepted, the transaction is added to a block, and blocks are linked together. Because many independent nodes store the same history, the ledger becomes extremely difficult to secretly alter: changing one copy doesn’t change everyone else’s.
Why it’s useful
1) Transparency and auditability
On most public blockchains, anyone can view transactions and balances of addresses. This doesn’t automatically reveal a real name, but it does create a permanent trail. That’s valuable for proving payments, auditing funds, or verifying that a project treasury moved as claimed.
2) Trust minimization (less reliance on a central party)
Traditional systems require trust in banks, payment networks, or companies to keep accurate records and not censor transactions. Open ledgers reduce that dependence. You trust the rules and the network consensus, not a single organization.
3) Strong integrity (tamper resistance)
Because blocks are connected and the network agrees on one history, rewriting the past is expensive and usually unrealistic at large scale. This integrity is the foundation for digital ownership: your coins are “yours” because the ledger says so and everyone can verify it.
4) Faster, global settlement
Open ledgers can transfer value across borders 24/7. You don’t need banking hours, and settlement can happen in minutes (sometimes seconds), depending on the chain.
5) Programmability
Smart-contract platforms allow “if‑this‑then‑that” financial logic: swapping tokens, lending, collateral management, escrow, and automated payouts. This is why DeFi exists.
Important trade-offs / risks
Open ledgers aren’t perfect. Fees can rise during congestion. Privacy is limited on transparent chains (even if names aren’t shown). Mistakes are hard to reverse—send to the wrong address and there may be no recovery. And smart contracts can have bugs. Also, not all open ledgers are equally decentralized; some are more dependent on a small number of validators.
If you want, pick one and I’ll tailor it:
1) Bitcoin-style payments and store of value
2) Smart contracts/DeFi (BNB Chain/Ethereum)
3) Business use (tracking assets, supply chain, auditing)
Ver tradução
#openledger $OPEN We use an open ledger (like a blockchain) because it makes record‑keeping transparent, verifiable, and hard to tamper with—without needing one central authority to “own” the database. Key reasons: 1) Transparency (public auditability) Anyone can inspect the ledger and verify transactions, which reduces hidden manipulation. 2) Trust without a middleman Instead of trusting a bank/company to keep the “correct” records, the network follows shared rules and consensus to agree on the same history. 3) Tamper resistance Once transactions are confirmed, changing past records is extremely difficult because it would require overriding the network’s consensus. 4) Traceability / easier auditing You can track funds and activity over time, which helps with compliance, investigations, and proving payments. 5) Always-on, global settlement Open ledgers can move value 24/7 across borders, often faster than traditional systems. 6) Programmability (smart contracts) Some open ledgers (e.g., Ethereum, BNB Chain) let you automate agreements—payments, swaps, lending—based on code. If you tell me what you mean by “open ledger” (blockchain for crypto, accounting ledger, or something else), I can explain with an example for your use-case. Choose one: 1) Crypto/blockchain (Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB) 2) Business accounting ledger 3) “Open Ledger” app/software you heard about
#openledger $OPEN
We use an open ledger (like a blockchain) because it makes record‑keeping transparent, verifiable, and hard to tamper with—without needing one central authority to “own” the database.

Key reasons:

1) Transparency (public auditability)
Anyone can inspect the ledger and verify transactions, which reduces hidden manipulation.

2) Trust without a middleman
Instead of trusting a bank/company to keep the “correct” records, the network follows shared rules and consensus to agree on the same history.

3) Tamper resistance
Once transactions are confirmed, changing past records is extremely difficult because it would require overriding the network’s consensus.

4) Traceability / easier auditing
You can track funds and activity over time, which helps with compliance, investigations, and proving payments.

5) Always-on, global settlement
Open ledgers can move value 24/7 across borders, often faster than traditional systems.

6) Programmability (smart contracts)
Some open ledgers (e.g., Ethereum, BNB Chain) let you automate agreements—payments, swaps, lending—based on code.

If you tell me what you mean by “open ledger” (blockchain for crypto, accounting ledger, or something else), I can explain with an example for your use-case.

Choose one:
1) Crypto/blockchain (Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB)
2) Business accounting ledger
3) “Open Ledger” app/software you heard about
o que é OpenLedgerOpenLedger geralmente se refere a um livro-razão aberto (público)—um registro compartilhado de transações que qualquer um pode visualizar e verificar. No mundo cripto, o tipo mais comum de livro-razão aberto é uma blockchain pública como Bitcoin ou Ethereum. Em vez de uma única empresa armazenar privadamente todos os registros de transações em seu próprio banco de dados, um livro-razão aberto é mantido por uma rede distribuída de computadores (nós). Esses nós seguem regras acordadas (um protocolo) para validar transações e manter a cópia de todos do livro-razão consistente.

o que é OpenLedger

OpenLedger geralmente se refere a um livro-razão aberto (público)—um registro compartilhado de transações que qualquer um pode visualizar e verificar. No mundo cripto, o tipo mais comum de livro-razão aberto é uma blockchain pública como Bitcoin ou Ethereum. Em vez de uma única empresa armazenar privadamente todos os registros de transações em seu próprio banco de dados, um livro-razão aberto é mantido por uma rede distribuída de computadores (nós). Esses nós seguem regras acordadas (um protocolo) para validar transações e manter a cópia de todos do livro-razão consistente.
#genius $GENIUS GeniusTerminal (Genius Terminal) é um terminal de trading on-chain (um painel estilo “pro trader”) que visa fazer o trading DeFi parecer mais como usar uma exchange centralizada—agregando liquidez de várias DEXs e múltiplas chains e te dando uma única interface para execução e ferramentas de portfólio. (academy.binance.com)   Pontos-chave (em alto nível):   Foco em não-custodial / auto-custódia: você negocia on-chain ao invés de depositar em uma exchange. (academy.binance.com)   Agregação entre venues: conecta a várias exchanges descentralizadas e múltiplas blockchains de um único lugar. (academy.binance.com)   Token: GENIUS: há um token nativo associado ao ecossistema (frequentemente usado para utilidade/incentivos dependendo do design da plataforma). (academy.binance.com)   Se você quiser, posso verificar se o GENIUS está negociável no Binance Spot/Futures agora e quais pares estão disponíveis.   Você se refere à plataforma (Genius Terminal) ou ao token (GENIUS)?   Se você quer informações da Binance: devo procurar por Spot, Futures ou ambos?  
#genius $GENIUS
GeniusTerminal (Genius Terminal) é um terminal de trading on-chain (um painel estilo “pro trader”) que visa fazer o trading DeFi parecer mais como usar uma exchange centralizada—agregando liquidez de várias DEXs e múltiplas chains e te dando uma única interface para execução e ferramentas de portfólio. (academy.binance.com)

Pontos-chave (em alto nível):

Foco em não-custodial / auto-custódia: você negocia on-chain ao invés de depositar em uma exchange. (academy.binance.com)

Agregação entre venues: conecta a várias exchanges descentralizadas e múltiplas blockchains de um único lugar. (academy.binance.com)

Token: GENIUS: há um token nativo associado ao ecossistema (frequentemente usado para utilidade/incentivos dependendo do design da plataforma). (academy.binance.com)

Se você quiser, posso verificar se o GENIUS está negociável no Binance Spot/Futures agora e quais pares estão disponíveis.

Você se refere à plataforma (Genius Terminal) ou ao token (GENIUS)?

Se você quer informações da Binance: devo procurar por Spot, Futures ou ambos?
Ver tradução
what is open leger#OpenLedger $OPEN @Openledger Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell me where you saw Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell me where you saw Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell me where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw

what is open leger

#OpenLedger
$OPEN
@OpenLedger
Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell me where you saw
Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell me where you saw
Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell meOpen leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell me where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw where you saw
Ver tradução
#openledger $OPEN Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”   An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.   Common examples:   Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer   Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not   Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).   Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?   If you tell me where you saw
#openledger $OPEN
Open leger” is almost certainly a misspelling of “open ledger.”

An open ledger is a record of transactions that anyone can view and verify (i.e., it’s transparent). In crypto, this usually means a public blockchain where transactions are recorded openly.

Common examples:

Bitcoin and Ethereum: anyone can look up transactions and wallet addresses on a block explorer

Public vs private: public chains are “open ledgers,” while private/internal company databases are not

Important detail: even on an open ledger, wallet addresses are visible, but your real-world identity is not automatically shown (unless it’s linked elsewhere).

Did you mean open ledger (blockchain), or OpenLedger (a specific project/app)?

If you tell me where you saw
Ver tradução
#openledger $OPEN I'm going to be there in the morning and I can solve it was a good day for you guys to come over and watch the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the
#openledger $OPEN
I'm going to be there in the morning and I can solve it was a good day for you guys to come over and watch the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the price of the
Ver tradução
#openledger $OPEN how to get rid of country 😔 me know if you need anything let me know if you want to come over and watch the price of country hai sir I will be there in about a half payment for highlights handouts join this sound
#openledger $OPEN
how to get rid of country 😔 me know if you need anything let me know if you want to come over and watch the price of country hai sir I will be there in about a half payment for highlights handouts join this sound
última atualização eu já te avisei que é um bull trap e essa foi minha atualização correta agora você pode ver. agora o que aconteceu a próxima coisa é que dessa vez vai ser bearish então alerts $BTC $ETH $BNB
última atualização eu já te avisei que é um bull trap
e essa foi minha atualização correta agora você pode ver. agora o que aconteceu a próxima coisa é que dessa vez vai ser bearish então alerts
$BTC
$ETH
$BNB
análise de ativos cripto Após realizar o padrão de cabeça e ombros, os compradores empurram o preço para cima Acho que é uma armadilha de touro, devemos ter muito cuidado #ADPPayrollsSurge $BTC $ETH $BNB
análise de ativos cripto
Após realizar o padrão de cabeça e ombros, os compradores empurram o preço para cima
Acho que é uma armadilha de touro, devemos ter muito cuidado
#ADPPayrollsSurge
$BTC
$ETH
$BNB
Artigo
Análise do BtcO Bitcoin está em torno de 79700, e já rompeu a zona de resistência de 78-79, agora se tornando um suporte. Quase preenchemos o gap do BTC. Se olharmos o heatmap de liquidações, mostra que a liquidação maior está em torno de 76-77k. Se retestarmos 79 e tivermos sucesso, podemos ver 84k; caso contrário, estamos indo para baixo e 38k está a caminho, inshallah. Esses são armadilhas de alta, fiquem atentos e gerenciem suas operações.

Análise do Btc

O Bitcoin está em torno de 79700, e já rompeu a zona de resistência de 78-79, agora se tornando um suporte. Quase preenchemos o gap do BTC. Se olharmos o heatmap de liquidações, mostra que a liquidação maior está em torno de 76-77k. Se retestarmos 79 e tivermos sucesso, podemos ver 84k; caso contrário, estamos indo para baixo e 38k está a caminho, inshallah. Esses são armadilhas de alta, fiquem atentos e gerenciem suas operações.
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