Crypto Scalping (Flash Trading) My Real Strategy for Profiting from Bitcoin Fluctuations

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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#1Jun 1, 2020, 04:01 PM
Crypto Scalping Without Candles My Real Strategy for Profiting from Bitcoin Fluctuations Let me be clear: this isn't one of those posts where you invest $100 and magically get rich. No Discord hype, no shilling low-quality coins. Just a genuine technique I’ve been using to consistently profit from Bitcoin price changes without even buying or holding any Bitcoin. Stay tuned because there’s something free at the end. Wait, you can actually make money without buying crypto? Yeah, most folks think crypto means buying a coin, hoping for a price increase, and then selling. That’s investing. The problem is, most people trying that end up losing money because they panic and sell at a loss. What I do is scalping quick trades lasting 5 to 15 minutes each. Here’s how it works: Investor: buys BTC at $90k and holds for months, praying it reaches $150k. Sleeps poorly. Scalper (me): catches a $500 move in just 12 minutes, takes profits and exits the trade. I do this 5 to 8 times a day. What’s great about it: You can profit whether Bitcoin rises or falls (short selling is a thing) Your capital is at risk for just minutes, not months Start with as little as $10 on a testnet to get the hang of it The market never sleeps, so you can trade in your own time zone Why do 90% of traders end up losing money (and it’s not because of them) Here’s the cycle I went through until I figured it out: Open Binance, deposit funds Watch YouTube to learn about RSI, MACD, and candlestick patterns Start trading based on that info Lose money Buy a $200 course from some so-called expert Still lose money Then I thought, "crypto is a scam." The issue isn’t you. The issue is that RSI, MACD, and candlestick patterns are lagging indicators they reflect what has already happened. By the time you see a signal on your chart, the opportunity has already passed. It’s like driving while only looking in the rear-view mirror.
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coin_sigmaLegendary
Posts: 1275 · Reputation: 5553
#2Jun 1, 2020, 09:37 PM
It seems like a dead account that suddenly came back to life just to post this trading that we don't know how safe it is. And honestly, if you are going to scalp Bitcoin, your profit will be eaten by trading fees. I agree on some parts of this, but I wouldn't agree to the file you shared. No open source? You better upload this on GitHub; at least anyone on GitHub could review how safe it is. The suspicious part is your last post was in 2023, and recently you just recovered your account and posted this?
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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#3Jun 2, 2020, 03:20 AM
Well, I understand your skepticism. I'm not going to justify myself, I'll just remind you that it's not necessary to write topics and messages on the forum every day, there are different circumstances and that's normal. I'm not trying to persuade anyone of anything, it's just a topic I'm currently working on and wanted to share a useful find. Personally, you can just scroll past and ignore it. Take it easy, friend, you don't always have to look for a catch. Hugs .
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bridge_atlasFull Member
Posts: 259 · Reputation: 692
#4Jun 2, 2020, 08:11 AM
You are onto something. OP simply slapped the zipped file on GitLab. No open-source code. I can see a lot of red flags; this is likely malware, and I will look into it. I advise anyone here not to download and install the file just because VirusTotal says there are no detections. The account is also likely hacked (Recent Email address and password changes)
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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#5Jun 2, 2020, 11:25 AM
Great! I have absolutely no objection to checks, especially considering that I am not the developer of this software and trusted VirusTotal. As for my account, I'm surprised by this conclusion. I haven't been on the forum for several years, so shouldn't I have changed my password? It's logical and required in all normal systems... but I'm not an expert, I may be wrong, I can go back to how it was...
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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#6Jun 2, 2020, 04:43 PM
People here already suspect me of all kinds of sins... well, as they say, if you don't do good, you won't get evil... if my article is so bad and suspicious, I ask the moderators to delete it.
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0xR4v3nSenior Member
Posts: 192 · Reputation: 1301
#7Jun 2, 2020, 06:05 PM
^ Its not about trusting you, its about providing a way to verify. If you're really as nice as sharing, then share the code as open source. That way even mistakes you made or some kinda loophole or backdoor or whatever, people can even help identify and improve the way it trades for you. That's win win and the whole point of sharing right?
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bridge_atlasFull Member
Posts: 259 · Reputation: 692
#8Jun 3, 2020, 12:05 AM
Now tell us why the two files and both dated 2026-02-07 don't actually contain the real DLL code. They are a ZIP archive disguised with a ".dll" extension. There is a hidden Windows PE executable called "agent.exe" which is about 3.5 MB when decompressed. Your so-called tool also; 1. Disables Windows Defender via PowerShell + registry 2. Requests for admin privileges via "runas" on launch Why would a trading tool do all this? There is a backdoor. VirusTotal could not detect it, so OP thought by sharing a VirusTotal clean link, it would convince people to download the malware.
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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#9Jun 3, 2020, 05:56 AM
Where do you think I should get the source code? I see the same thing as you in the link...
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0xVectorMember
Posts: 8 · Reputation: 156
#10Jun 3, 2020, 12:14 PM
Oh... that sounds terrible... I've been using this program for a week and haven't noticed anything suspicious. What a nightmare, I'll go change my passwords again. I really hope you're wrong and there's nothing to worry about. In any case, I apologize if it really is malware, but please don't accuse me of malicious intent.
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0xR4v3nSenior Member
Posts: 192 · Reputation: 1301
#11Jun 3, 2020, 12:19 PM
My point was, if you can't get it, then you shouldn't have shared it in this forum, because there was no way for anyone to see what it was they would be clicking on or using. But anyway, hopefully you understand now why no one would use or share it on here. And as Bitcoin_Arena already wrote. We were right not to trust it.
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