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Other => Off-topic => Topic started by: nanaimogold on December 12, 2012, 12:59:32 PM



Title: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: nanaimogold on December 12, 2012, 12:59:32 PM
Person of Interest

s02e09 min 24:

Finch suggests that a stolen laptop bearing secret data might be sold on Silk Road.

infamous lol


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: Herodes on December 12, 2012, 04:19:13 PM
which series?


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: Rotsor on December 12, 2012, 04:43:31 PM
which series?
Person of Interest
Had to google "Finch TV Series" before I realised that was the series name. :)


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: dancupid on December 12, 2012, 06:08:45 PM
which series?

It was the latest episode s02e09. Unfortunately the seller wanted $50,000 dollars not bitcoins.
Also he didn't seem to realize his ip address could be traced -  to a specific seat in the corner of a bar.


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: panda1 on December 12, 2012, 06:10:20 PM
which series?

It was the latest episode s02e09. Unfortunately the buyer wanted $50,000 dollars not bitcoins.
Also he didn't seem to realize his ip address could be traced -  to a specific seat in the corner of a bar.

That's because the machine sees all!


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: AndrewBUD on December 12, 2012, 06:40:42 PM
Just like the last episode of drugs inc. The dealer received his "product" through the mail.


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: dancupid on December 14, 2012, 05:55:12 PM
Just like the last episode of drugs inc. The dealer received his "product" through the mail.

Why does no one criticize the mail for this?
Someone needs to point out that international mail services (including the Royal Mail - God bless you Ma'am) are heavily involved in the procurement of illicit substances.
Why does Bitcoin get dragged through the dirt and yet no one ever accuses Fedex?


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: b!z on December 15, 2012, 08:05:16 AM
Just like the last episode of drugs inc. The dealer received his "product" through the mail.

Why does no one criticize the mail for this?
Someone needs to point out that international mail services (including the Royal Mail - God bless you Ma'am) are heavily involved in the procurement of illicit substances.
Why does Bitcoin get dragged through the dirt and yet no one ever accuses Fedex?

Because Fedex doesn't know but Bitcoin does


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: Arto on December 16, 2012, 08:55:52 PM
The exact line at 23m56s in Person of Interest S02E09 is as follows:

If d3mn8 discovers what's on the laptop, he may try to flip it. In which case he'd probably go to the dark net... try to sell it on Silk Road or one of those black market forums. I'll try to track him down and see if I can negotiate a meeting.


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: farlack on December 16, 2012, 09:05:54 PM
Was bitcoin mentioned?
Free advertising for the win


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: Arto on December 16, 2012, 09:19:17 PM
Was bitcoin mentioned?
Free advertising for the win

No, there was no direct mention of bitcoin in the episode. However, with such a specific mention of Silk Road, no doubt a good number of curious viewers tried googling for that in the last week ("fact or fiction?") and thus also learned of the existence of bitcoin for the first time ;)

According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Person_of_Interest_episodes#Season_2_.282012.29), the episode had 14.18 million viewers in America, and that of course doesn't count the untold many, there and elsewhere, who torrented the episode after the fact (e.g. from The Pirate Bay).


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: sd on December 16, 2012, 09:34:50 PM
the episode had 14.18 million viewers in America, and that of course doesn't count the untold many, there and elsewhere, who torrented the episode after the fact (e.g. from The Pirate Bay).

Maybe too off-topic for off-topic but:

14.18 million human beings sitting on their backsides staring at a plastic box. Humanity could have done something wonderful with that time instead of squandering it. What an utter waste of human potential.


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: hamdi on December 16, 2012, 10:24:23 PM
maybe you guys want this: https://www.bitmit.net/en/item/11516-silk-road-handmade-designer-t-shirt


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: J-Norm on December 16, 2012, 10:51:20 PM
Just like the last episode of drugs inc. The dealer received his "product" through the mail.

Why does no one criticize the mail for this?
Someone needs to point out that international mail services (including the Royal Mail - God bless you Ma'am) are heavily involved in the procurement of illicit substances.
Why does Bitcoin get dragged through the dirt and yet no one ever accuses Fedex?

Government complicit in drug dealing = Okay!
Anyone else complicit in drug dealing = Criminal!


Title: Re: Silk Road mentioned in current TV fiction
Post by: Rudd-O on December 17, 2012, 12:11:28 AM
Just like the last episode of drugs inc. The dealer received his "product" through the mail.

Why does no one criticize the mail for this?
Someone needs to point out that international mail services (including the Royal Mail - God bless you Ma'am) are heavily involved in the procurement of illicit substances.
Why does Bitcoin get dragged through the dirt and yet no one ever accuses Fedex?

Because, for every evil in the world, if the perpetrator is part of the gang doing business as "government", he gets a magical pass made of unicorns and double standards.

Negro running drugs?  25 years in a cage.  Person doing business as "CIA" doing drugs?  Hero.

It's also exactly as insane as priests getting a free pass on diddling little children for centuries.

When magical thinking is involved, most people can't think straight.

That's the way this crazy world works.