Friendly reminder to withdraw your funds from exchanges. BTC-e might have their account database compromised. However, nothing indicates that their wallets have been compromised. See here and hereI dont think that the wallets have been compromised but I think if there was a leak it was the records of BTC-e users. I am referring to the email-address of the users, these details may have been compromised and the hackers are using those details to send false information to the BTC-e users to click a Phishing link so they can access your account and can take over your wallet. This is not only happening to BTC-e but to other sites as well and the only thing that we must do is to be very careful in clicking links in our emails. I received such an email recently, only it was a phishing attempt on LocalBitcoins. I know BTC-e is to blame, though, because the email address within was a TMDA sender address only valid for email from BTC-e.
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Due to the impending SJW takeover of GitHub, I've moved my code repositories to GitLab. OP updated accordingly.
I probably should remove Cryptsy support, seeing as how they've for all practical purposes gone out of business.
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Due to the impending SJW takeover of GitHub, I've moved my code repositories to GitLab. OP updated accordingly.
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I have some FFC on a cloud minning pool Where can I exchange FFC ? On crypsty, the wallet is under maintenance , I can't ask a deposit address.... Shall I have to install the wallet on my computer ? Where I can download it ?
try https://comkort.com/trade/ffc_btc not wallet required Stumbled across them a little bit ago, only to find they're going out of business in a week and a half. The Cryptsy wallet's been "under maintenance" for months now. Any other suggestions?
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Support for Poloniex and BleuTrade has been added, support for Coins-E has been removed, and the repo structure has changed to make ProfitLib easier to maintain. See this post in the MinerSwitcher thread for more information.
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ProfitLib now supports Poloniex and BleuTrade. Coins-E support has been removed. These changes are available to MinerSwitcher. On more of an infrastructure-type note, the source repositories for both ProfitLib and MinerSwitcher no longer use submodules to pull in their dependencies. Instead, dependencies should be installed systemwide. The easiest way to get MinerSwitcher working on Gentoo Linux is to pull in my Portage overlay ( https://github.com/salfter/portage) and the Bitcoin overlay ( https://gitlab.com/bitcoin/gentoo) and install MinerSwitcher. You'll most likely need to add a few ebuilds to /etc/portage/package.accept_keywords: net-p2p/MinerSwitcher ** dev-python/pycgminer ** dev-python/bitcoinrpc ~* dev-python/ProfitLib ** dev-python/bleuBot ** dev-python/poloniex ** dev-python/PyCCEX ** dev-python/PyCryptopia ** dev-python/PyCryptsy ** dev-python/python-bittrex ** dev-python/python-pushover ~* dev-python/python-nmap ~*
Once that's done, build and install: sudo emerge -av MinerSwitcher On other platforms, dependencies can usually be installed by downloading the source, going into the directory, and issuing something like this: sudo python setup.py install
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I have the extranonce patched cgminer 4.7 for the S3 (from NiceHash) and it works out fine. I'm not sure about the S1s since I sold mine last year.
That, I think, is what was at the second GitHub link I posted...tried the NiceHash link provided by Mintsy, but got an error page from Cloudflare. Once I found it at GitHub and transferred it over, I tried it out. It didn't work any better than the other ones. I'm currently running with the binaries from the first link, which identify as "cgminer 4.9.1c." (Cloudflare, BTW, needs to DIAF, but that's another issue. ) Mintsy does indeed use 2FA... I have it setup on my account using Authy. Go to "My Profile" and you'll see a "Two Factor Authentication" panel where you can set it up.
I saw that. I don't want to install yet another app. Everyone else uses TOTP (or, rarely, HOTP), as those are the standards with RFCs to back them up.
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After taking a bit of a break from mining, I'm looking at maybe getting back in. My Gridseeds will probably cost more to operate than they'll earn back, but there's a chance the Antminer S1s might still eke out a profit if they mine altcoins. I might also throw some money into rentals so I'm not warming up my condo unnecessarily. Anyway, thought I'd take a look at Mintsy, from a standpoint of running my existing miners through it and possibly renting miners in the future. I set up a couple of workers, set them to use an external pool, and switched my Antminers over. No hashrate showed up at the remote pool. I tried switching to Mintsy's Bitcoin pool...still no dice. Looking at the web interface for the miners, they say Mintsy's dead. They had been out of service for a few months, so I pull the latest version of cgminer from https://github.com/kanoi/cgminer-binaries/tree/master/AntS1 and install it...still no dice. I also found binaries at https://github.com/7queue/cgminer-ckolivas/tree/master/bin that mention extranonce.subscribe support, but that also made no difference. One other suggestion: Mintsy really should support TOTP two-factor authentication. SMS is clunky for the purpose. I already have Google Authenticator installed for a bunch of other websites (including Cryptsy) and would rather not have to install yet another 2FA app.
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Just thought I'd try mining YAC once again, but can't log in with the username/password I have stored away for either yac.coinmine.pl or zet.coinmine.pl. New-user registration is disabled, so I can't just create a new account. At least it's not redirecting to a malware site, like yac.ltcoin.net is doing nowadays...
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I've made a vanitygen ebuild (for Gentoo) available: https://github.com/salfter/portageIt's under app-crypt. If the opencl USE flag is enabled, oclvanitygen is built as well. The ebuild uses my vanitygen fork, which includes nonnakip's patch for newer Radeons: https://github.com/salfter/vanitygenSo far, I've tested it on an AMD A4-3300. oclvanitygen (using the latest fglrx driver in Portage) runs about 4x faster than vanitygen. These have now been updated so that calc_addrs.cl gets loaded from /usr/lib/oclvanitygen and the object code generated at runtime from it gets saved to /tmp. This makes oclvanitygen nearly as easy to use as vanitygen, as you don't need to keep these files in your home directory (or whatever).
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I have a set of scripts that will generate ebuilds for pretty much any coin with a GitHub repo. It's in my Portage overlay: https://github.com/salfter/portage (look under net-p2p) This overlay already has ebuilds for a bunch of different coins, most of which were generated by these scripts: 42 (as "coin42") acoin anoncoin bitgem digibyte dogecoin earthcoin einsteinium emark fastcoin fireflycoin fluttercoin fudcoin grandcoin joulecoin nautiluscoin netcoin novacoin opensourcecoin ppcoin primecoin sexcoin spots2 tekcoin terracoin titcoin unobtanium viacoin yacoin zetacoin If your favorite coin isn't in there, you can probably get it up and syncing to the blockchain in a few minutes. See https://salfter.github.io/ to get started.
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I've made a vanitygen ebuild (for Gentoo) available: https://github.com/salfter/portageIt's under app-crypt. If the opencl USE flag is enabled, oclvanitygen is built as well. The ebuild uses my vanitygen fork, which includes nonnakip's patch for newer Radeons: https://github.com/salfter/vanitygenSo far, I've tested it on an AMD A4-3300. oclvanitygen (using the latest fglrx driver in Portage) runs about 4x faster than vanitygen.
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I've updated ProfitLib to support more exchanges, including C-CEX. What does this mean for you? You can now mine FUD with MinerSwitcher: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=828469.0As I write this, FUD is more than 3x as profitable to mine as BTC. For 580 GH/s of sha256d mining power, this is what you'll get in BTC per day for your hashpower for a selection of coins...look who's on top: FUD 0.0269441 BTC 0.00806623 ZET 0.00778141 XJO 0.00510162 TIT 0.00439404 TRC 0.00416549 DEM 0.00319478 ACOIN 0.0011508 UNO 0.00079789 TEK 0.00006284 PPC 0.00003995
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ProfitLib now supports Bittrex, Coins-E, and C-CEX in addition to Cryptsy. You can configure it to use any or all of these exchanges. An extra item is returned in the result set that indicates which exchange offers the highest bid.
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ProfitLib has been updated to support Bittrex, Coins-E, and C-CEX in addition to Cryptsy. MinerSwitcher has likewise been updated to use the latest ProfitLib, which expands the range of coins it can handle.
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That explorer isn't listed on the original post. Hopefully Mineral reads that and updates it. If I knew how to do that kind of stuff I would make a block explorer but the only part that I know how to make is the error page. Looks like the old address (bitgem.dyndns.org:2750) is on there, but crossed out. It resolves to the same address as the new server.
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...and now it's done, and the wallet balance agrees with the blockchain.
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I compared the code and the Joulecoin and Bitcoin code is exactly the same.
Try modifying the HTTPAuthorized function in file src/rpcserver.cpp at line 374 to print to the debug.log the passwords it is comparing:
Tried that with the client...looks OK. Tried with curl...why is the RPC username in one string and not the other? Let's have another look at joulecoin.conf... Somehow I had used "rpcuser name=salfter" instead of "rpcuser=salfter" in there. Just fired up MinerSwitcher, and XJO is showing up alongside the other coins.
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