When users open script pages now, new banners appear under their description. These are the changes we made: 1. The banner for each type of script (open-source, protected and invite-only) contains new text. 2. Instructions for traders on how to load the script on their chart are clearer. 3. Links to Help Center pages are provided. 4. TV blue is now used for the banner's frame on open-source scripts. The icon and banner frame of protected scripts is now black/white, and red is used for invite-only scripts. 5. For invite-only scripts • A new "Author's instructions" field allows authors to include instructions for users who want to request access to the script. DO NOT ask users to use the script's "Comments" section for this. Ask them to send you a private message or use the links which you may include in that new field. • You can ALSO use the new "Author's instructions" field to include links to external content that is specific to your script, such as a Google doc containing screenshots, or a TV or YouTube video. You CANNOT use this external content to replace your script's description, which must still contain the essential information our rules require. • The "Author's instructions" field will not appear retroactively on older publications because for those, it is empty. You can, however, populate or change the field when you update your script. • A warning now appears in invite-only banners, which links to new Help Center pages warning users about using invite-only scripts. • The Help Center page and banner text is different on public and private invite-only scripts. We invite traders to more caution before paying for private invite-only scripts.
When users open script pages now, new banners appear under their description. These are the changes we made: 1. The banner for each type of script (open-source, protected and invite-only) contains new text. 2. Instructions for traders on how to load the script on their chart are clearer. 3. Links to Help Center pages are provided. 4. TV blue is now used for the banner's frame on open-source scripts. The icon and banner frame of protected scripts is now black/white, and red is used for invite-only scripts. 5. For invite-only scripts • A new "Author's instructions" field allows authors to include instructions for users who want to request access to the script. DO NOT ask users to use the script's "Comments" section for this. Ask them to send you a private message or use the links which you may include in that new field. • You can ALSO use the new "Author's instructions" field to include links to external content that is specific to your script, such as a Google doc containing screenshots, or a TV or YouTube video. You CANNOT use this external content to replace your script's description, which must still contain the essential information our rules require. • The "Author's instructions" field will not appear retroactively on older publications because for those, it is empty. You can, however, populate or change the field when you update your script. • A warning now appears in invite-only banners, which links to new Help Center pages warning users about using invite-only scripts. • The Help Center page and banner text is different on public and private invite-only scripts. We invite traders to more caution before paying for private invite-only scripts.
We hope you find these changes useful.
BY PineCoders Squawk Box
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Like a stock, you can buy and hold Bitcoin as an investment. You can even now do so in special retirement accounts called Bitcoin IRAs. No matter where you choose to hold your Bitcoin, people’s philosophies on how to invest it vary: Some buy and hold long term, some buy and aim to sell after a price rally, and others bet on its price decreasing. Bitcoin’s price over time has experienced big price swings, going as low as $5,165 and as high as $28,990 in 2020 alone. “I think in some places, people might be using Bitcoin to pay for things, but the truth is that it’s an asset that looks like it’s going to be increasing in value relatively quickly for some time,” Marquez says. “So why would you sell something that’s going to be worth so much more next year than it is today? The majority of people that hold it are long-term investors.”
Should You Buy Bitcoin?
In general, many financial experts support their clients’ desire to buy cryptocurrency, but they don’t recommend it unless clients express interest. “The biggest concern for us is if someone wants to invest in crypto and the investment they choose doesn’t do well, and then all of a sudden they can’t send their kids to college,” says Ian Harvey, a certified financial planner (CFP) in New York City. “Then it wasn’t worth the risk.” The speculative nature of cryptocurrency leads some planners to recommend it for clients’ “side” investments. “Some call it a Vegas account,” says Scott Hammel, a CFP in Dallas. “Let’s keep this away from our real long-term perspective, make sure it doesn’t become too large a portion of your portfolio.” In a very real sense, Bitcoin is like a single stock, and advisors wouldn’t recommend putting a sizable part of your portfolio into any one company. At most, planners suggest putting no more than 1% to 10% into Bitcoin if you’re passionate about it. “If it was one stock, you would never allocate any significant portion of your portfolio to it,” Hammel says.