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TheGrinder
thegrinder@nostrplebs.com
npub1de6l...q0sd
Sovereign, creator of bitcoins, future owner of Mars and grinder of many things... 0863F34D0311FC550226F06A376B54D5650980FB
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
Bye Pam! I hope your next employer isn't part of the global pedo cabal.
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
Chilling on Zapstream playing Gray Zone. Let's see if we can connect with @S!ayer - the untaggable. View live event → #streaming #chatting #gaming
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
@The Beave got the answer. The handgrip on the game's default M4 configuration is too short for the used gas system and barrel. It's detached from the gas lock and hence it would freely slide rendering the handguard useless. It also exposes the gas system. While this works in-game it wouldn't IRL. Fortunately you can deeply customise your weapons in this game. Custom M4 AR and CQ Carabine. (need to switch their scopes around). image View quoted note →
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
If you can tell me why the M4A1 standard configuration in Gray Zone wouldn't work in real life, I'll zap you 420 sats. Hint: delta ring, gas block.
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
Major EU Bank Quietly Enables Bitcoin Withdrawals to Self-Custody Wallets for Select Clients April 1, 2026 — Frankfurt A leading European lender has begun allowing a limited group of clients to withdraw bitcoin directly to self-custody wallets, according to people familiar with the rollout. The feature, which has not been formally announced, is said to be available to a small cohort of high-net-worth and professional clients following months of internal testing. Sources indicated the bank—described as a top-tier institution operating across the eurozone—introduced the capability through its digital asset platform in late March. Eligible clients reportedly received a low-key notification inviting them to enable external wallet withdrawals after completing additional verification steps. The move marks a notable shift from the custodial-only model adopted by most traditional financial institutions entering the digital asset space, where clients can gain price exposure but cannot transfer holdings off-platform. According to internal documentation reviewed by two sources, withdrawals are subject to daily limits, address whitelisting, and a 24-hour cooling-off period for newly added wallets. Transactions are screened using blockchain analytics tools, with enhanced checks applied to addresses flagged as “high risk.” A person involved in the rollout said the feature was framed internally as a “controlled interoperability test,” aimed at assessing client demand for direct ownership while maintaining compliance with EU anti-money laundering standards and the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. “Clients have been asking for this for years,” the person said. “The question was never if, but how to offer it without losing visibility over funds leaving the platform.” Industry observers say the development (if confirmed) could signal a broader shift among European banks as competition intensifies from crypto-native firms that already support self-custody transfers. “It’s a pressure valve,” said one digital asset analyst. “Banks want to retain clients who understand bitcoin isn’t just an asset - it’s a bearer instrument. If they don’t offer exits, clients will simply move elsewhere.” The bank is also believed to be exploring tiered permissions, with stricter controls for retail clients should the feature expand beyond the pilot group. Discussions reportedly include caps based on account size, transaction frequency monitoring, and potential integration with hardware wallet providers. Neither the bank nor its regulators have publicly commented on the programme. However, recent statements from eurozone officials have emphasised the need to balance innovation with oversight as digital asset adoption grows. For now, the rollout remains limited and largely under the radar. But for those granted access, it represents something long considered incompatible with traditional banking: the ability to withdraw digital assets without an intermediary and hold them directly.
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
After playing with Daddy's money (and support) for over two years, Eric's shitcoin company has only 7,000 BTC? 🤣 🤣
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TheGrinder 1 month ago
Ignore the noise and keep stacking. ALL of these headlines are utter garbage. image