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1041  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][DOGE] Dogecoin - very currency many coin - v1.8 Required Update on: August 26, 2014, 11:40:17 PM
1 Doge 1 Dollar
1042  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][DRK] DarkCoin | First Anonymous Coin | First X11 | First DGW | DarkSend+ Is Live! on: August 26, 2014, 11:37:45 PM
What's going on? DOGE has bigger market cap then Dark.
1043  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Blowing the lid off the CryptoNote/Bytecoin scam (with the exception of Monero) on: August 26, 2014, 09:17:06 PM
Obvious also: Albert Einstein.
1044  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: August 26, 2014, 06:06:03 PM
asors Beitrag ist ausserordentlich gut also wie respektabel und verdient demzufolge meine Anerkennung.
1045  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Blowing the lid off the CryptoNote/Bytecoin scam (with the exception of Monero) on: August 26, 2014, 05:57:46 PM
I think it's also noteworthy (as in interesting/strange) that the author and signer of the CN whitepaper Nicolas van Saberhagen isn't part of the official CN team. As it consits of: Johannes Meier (Chief
cryptographer), Maurice Planck (Cryptographer), Max Jameson (Math expert), Brandon
Hawking (Economist), Catherine Erwin (Communications manager), Albert Werner (Core developer) and Marec Plíškov (Developer).
I can't come up with a solid reason, how that makes sense. (If Saberhagen is a group pseudonym, why not sign "Team CryptoNote" as author?)

Also https://cryptonote.org/whitepaper.pdf is gone and no giving HTTP Error 404.
1046  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Blowing the lid off the CryptoNote/Bytecoin scam (with the exception of Monero) on: August 25, 2014, 05:08:14 PM
It's amazing they were able to create the technology and manage to fail so hard at their scam attempt.

I'd suspect one or more people behind CN fall within the autistic spectrum. The clear disconnect from how others would receive their attempts yet still being able to produce novel tech shows a clear imbalance in their mental faculties.
+1000
1047  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: rpietila Altcoin Observer on: August 25, 2014, 06:30:09 AM
Yeah othe is right, Bitshares are no Crypto-Currency. (Because they are different, wider focus, other rules, ...)
Projects like Bitshares, Maidsafe, etc. are doing in Crypto-Finance business (as in crypto-currency inspired).
We should keep (using) this distinction and dont dilute the cryptocurrency term and meaning, by calling every FIN Tech startup/project that involves cryptography a cryptocurrency.


BTW, Bitshares websites look really good/promising. I wish them success.
1048  Local / Altcoins (Deutsch) / Re: Nxt - Allgemeiner Thread on: August 25, 2014, 01:38:27 AM
Geb dir: http://www.reddit.com/r/DarkNetMarkets/comments/2eacyg/tmp_the_marketplace_leaves_beta_stage/

Absolut siiiiiiiiiick, state-of-the-art (Crypto-Currency) & Dark Market technology.

Egal wie man zum Thema Deep Web Marktplätze allgemein steht, vom Technischen her ist "The Marketplace" absolut geil.
1049  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero - A secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency (mandatory upgrade) on: August 25, 2014, 01:17:06 AM
I would like to thank all Monero developers and core team members for their great work. I really have big respect for you guys.

For me, the Monero project seams to be one of the first serious & significant incremental innovation (German: "Verbesserungsinnovation") with great potential, after the break-through basis innovation (of) Crypto-Currency and all it's madness and 1000 projects/meander/trial and error efforts and growing pains scene-wide (scams, BS projects, coins lost, lessons learned...).


Never Stop That Feeling Wink
1050  Local / Altcoins (Deutsch) / Re: Proof of Burn - bessere Alternative zu Proof of Stake? on: August 24, 2014, 10:09:00 PM
Intro to Delegated Proof of Stake
http://bitshares.org/intro-to-delegated-proof-of-stake/
http://wiki.bitshares.org/index.php/DPOS
http://wiki.bitshares.org/index.php/TITAN
1051  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero - A secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency (mandatory upgrade) on: August 24, 2014, 09:57:31 PM
Hey everyone, have a problem. My wallet is eating up almost all of my memory. bitmonerod is using 3.5GB of my 6Gb of ram (4Gb Stick and 2GB stick). I'll buy another 4GB  stick tomorrow, but really, 3.5GB? wow...
Any tips or suggestions on how to reduce this memory hog?
My system is currently not that stable (i have others things using memory too).

If u are nerdy and into UNIX check:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cgroups
1052  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][DOGE] Dogecoin - very currency many coin - v1.7 Available on: August 16, 2014, 04:21:36 AM
1 DOGE 1 DOLLAR
1053  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Altcoin Council - [Poll] Who do you want on the council? on: August 13, 2014, 01:30:20 AM
Add me to this council. I am a great poster and big, well known altcoin guru here in Germany.
1054  Economy / Speculation / Re: The end is coming. on: August 13, 2014, 01:21:09 AM
anyway anonymous coins are not very necessary.. i have never need such a coin in all my time i have been with cryptos.. and even if i need that i could use a mixer.
But alot of people DO need such a coin.
1055  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: What is future of litecoin? on: August 13, 2014, 01:10:05 AM
As for the "Litecoin doesnt have new innovations and will die cause of it". I think everyone needs to remember something, in order to stand out in the crowd you need to have something different. Litecoin is different in its own right for being such a successful coin that frankly have other coins ogling its number 2 spot.

Litecoin is unique, even without "feature fever".
This has to be a joke ...

1056  Local / Presse / Re: Presseberichte / Bedeutsame Erwähnungen on: August 12, 2014, 05:26:24 AM
---
BGP Hijacking for Cryptocurrency Profit
Author: Pat Litke and Joe Stewart, Dell SecureWorks Counter Threat Unit

Date: 7 August 2014

Overview

The Dell SecureWorks Counter Threat Unit™ (CTU) research team discovered an unknown entity repeatedly hijacking networks belonging to Amazon, Digital Ocean, OVH, and other large hosting companies between February and May 2014. In total, CTU researchers documented 51 compromised networks from 19 different Internet service providers (ISPs). The hijacker redirected cryptocurrency miners' connections to a hijacker-controlled mining pool and collected the miners' profit, earning an estimated $83,000 in slightly more than four months.

Mining fundamentals

In cryptocurrency, "mining" is the act of validating transactions listed in the public ledger (also known as the block chain). When a transaction is initiated, it is placed in a queue where it is prioritized based on the date and time of submission, and the size of the affixed transaction "fee." Working from the top of the queue, miners cryptographically attempt to "find a block," which entails crunching numbers to satisfy a particular formula while simultaneously agreeing as network that the calculated results are valid. Mining is a generic activity; the mining pool dictates which cryptocurrency is mined.

Each time a miner finds a block, new bitcoins are created. The number of new coins that are created varies; as of this publication, 25 new coins are minted for every block found. The miners who contributed to finding the block are awarded a percentage of a "block reward," which amounts to the sum of the 25 newly created bitcoins plus the total of all fees from transactions in the block. The percentage is based on the miner's individual contribution to the discovery. This process allows miners to make money by using their computing resources to verify transactions for other users.

Addresses

Addresses are "accounts" that can receive funds. In cryptocurrency, these addresses are long strings of numbers and letters that correlate to a "private key." The private key is first used to generate the address, and subsequently allows a user to transfer or "spend" currency. A user may receive currency without a private key, but must have the private key to spend the cryptocurrency.

Stratum

Miners begin the mining process by contacting a pool server, which sends information to the miner, tracks individual miners' work, and pays rewards accordingly. The pool server can send commands with the work to have a miner perform various tasks, such as reconnecting elsewhere for load balancing. Miners communicate with the network using the Stratum protocol, which is a JSON-based TCP connection. Once a TCP connection is established, JSON is transferred between the miner and the pool server, allowing communications to be easily monitored.

Hijacking discovery

On March 22, 2014, a user named "caution" posted a message in the bitcointalk.org forum indicating that suspicious activity was occurring on mining systems connected to the wafflepool.com mining pool (see Figure 1).

Figure 1. Bitcointalk.org forum message indicating suspicious activity. (Source: bitcointalk.org)


Several users in this forum and other cryptocurrency forums noticed similar activity — mining systems mysteriously redirected to an unknown IP address that answered with the Stratum protocol. Once connected to this IP address, miners continued to receive work but no longer received block rewards for their mining efforts. Hijackers harnessed miners' hashing power by redirecting legitimate mining traffic destined for well-known pools to a malicious server masquerading as the legitimate pool: Miners continuously connect to a legitimate pool for tasks.

The hijacker begins an attack
When miners attempt to connect to the legitimate pool, a new BGP route directs their traffic to a pool maintained by the hijacker.
This malicious pool sends each rerouted miner a client.reconnect command, instructing them to connect to a second pool maintained by the hijacker. By convincing the miners to connect to this second malicious pool rather than the original malicious pool, the hijacker filters out traffic that has already been hijacked so it is not hijacked again.
The hijacker ceases the attack. Miners that were redirected to the hijackers pool continue to see tasks and perform work, but are not compensated. Miners who were not redirected remain unaffected.
The hijacker repeats the process in short bursts, allowing the activity to continue unimpeded for months.
BGP fundamentals

Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is an external routing protocol that connects networks on the Internet. Networks use BGP peering to become aware of other networks' existence. Unlike network routing protocols that can automatically initiate a connection from one network, both ends of BGP-connected networks (also known as a "peers") must be manually configured to communicate. This requirement ensures malicious networks cannot hijack traffic without human intervention from a legitimate network.

Figures 2, 3, and 4 show how threat actors used bogus BGP broadcasts to redirect traffic to the hijacker's server.

Figure 2. A broadcast of the malicious route in progress. Because AS3 is 'peered' with AS4, the malicious broadcast is accepted. AS3's broadcast is more specific than AS2's broadcast, so BGP prioritizes it above the AS2 broadcast. (Source: Dell SecureWorks)


Figure 3. Route to legitimate pool server before hijacking. (Source: Dell SecureWorks)


Figure 4. Route to malicious pool server after hijacking. (Source: Dell SecureWorks)


Timeline of hijacker's BGP announcements

Although public reports of hijacked miners began on March 22, 2014, CTU research into historical BGP route announcement data indicates that the hijacking attempts began on February 3. In total, CTU researchers documented 51 compromised networks at 19 different Internet service providers, including Amazon, Digital Ocean, OVH, and other large hosting companies. Appendix A contains a complete list of route hijacking incidents by date.

The data shows that the hijacker attempted to broadcast illegitimate routes for an entire week in February. That activity was apparently unnoticed in the cryptocurrency mining communities, which may suggest that the initial hijacks were not successful.

CTU researchers contacted a hijacked miner who lost profits over a period of a few weeks. Figure 5 charts the output of his mining activity over the time period in question. CTU researchers observed the correlation of hijacking events and the payouts normally received from his mining pool (called Hashfaster). The threat actor hijacked the mining pool, so many cryptocurrencies were impacted. The protocols make it impossible to identify exactly which ones, but CTU researchers have mapped activity to certain addresses.

Figure 5. Dogecoins earned by hijacked Hashfaster miner. The miner did not immediately notice the hijacks at the end of March, leading to a long gap in earnings. The hijacks in April were caught faster. (Source: Dell SecureWorks)


By adding a firewall rule to block traffic destined to the hijacker's mining server, the miner was able to reject the hijack on April 11. His payouts then resumed their regularity. Although the 8000 lost Dogecoins amounted to a few dollars, hijacking hundreds or thousands of small miners can be very lucrative.

Estimating the hijacker's earnings

The hijacker earned an estimated $83,000 in slightly more than four months. The graph in Figure 6 represents the estimated earnings for the five cryptocurrency addresses associated with the hijacker. This graph is incomplete due to a lack of data from March 29 to April 11, 2014. While Figure 6 does not prove that other payout addresses exist, it does strongly indicate that other currencies were being mined.

Figure 6. Estimated earnings for hijacker-controlled cryptocurrency addresses. No data was available between March 29 and April 11, 2014. (Source: Dell SecureWorks)


Dogecoin, HoboNickels, and Worldcoin

These three currencies were easy to extrapolate from the datasets because a central authority communicates with the clients. Correlating payouts to hijack events strongly suggests that the addresses in question belonged to the pool operator, who in this case happens to be the hijacker.

Bitcoin

Determining the Bitcoin address was challenging due to the nature of the peer-to-peer protocol used by the decentralized P2Pool Bitcoin mining pool. CTU researchers examined all addresses from the respective pool server and compared them to addresses in the Stratum traffic. Matching hijack events with payouts revealed one address, charted in Figure 6.

Attribution

All malicious BGP announcements were traced to a single router at an ISP in Canada. The hijacker likely fits one of the following descriptions:

- A rogue employee of the ISP
- A rogue ex-employee of the ISP with an unchanged router password
- A malicious hacker

On May 9, 2014, the CTU research team provided the BGP evidence to the upstream ISP closest to the origin of the malicious activity. The malicious BGP announcements stopped three days later and have not resumed as of this publication. However, the ISP did not disclose details about the source of the malicious changes to the router's configuration.

Route hijacking mitigation

An estimated $2.6 million in cryptocurrency mining activity occurs each day. Every network administrator should prepare for the risk of narrowly-focused, malicious BGP hijacking incidents. ISPs should opt-in to the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) service, which leverages the power of encryption to ensure that IP prefixes belonging to an ISP can only originate from specified ASNs.

From a cryptocurrency perspective, the easiest option for pool servers is to require miners to use the Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol. SSL prevents a system from being redirected to a different server, even if the IP address is the same. Miners should also implement server certificate validation. This validation ensures that the certificate the pool server sends when establishing the connection is valid and authorized for use with the connected domain, even if the domain's IP address changes.

Conclusion

BGP peering requires that both networks be manually configured and aware of one another. Requiring human interaction for proper configuration makes BGP peering reasonably secure, as ISPs will not peer with anyone without a legitimate reason. These hijacks and miner redirections would not have been possible without peer-to-broadcast routes. Although BGP hijacking is possible, the overall threat is minimal.

Additional information

Litke, Pat and Stewart, Joe. "Enterprise Best Practices for Cryptocurrency Adoption." Dell SecureWorks. January 27, 2014. http://www.secureworks.com/resources/articles/featured_articles/enterprise-best-practices-for-cryptocurrency-adoption

Litke, Pat; Stewart, Joe; and Small, Ben. "Cryptocurrency-Stealing Malware Landscape." Dell SecureWorks. February 26, 2014. http://www.secureworks.com/cyber-threat-intelligence/threats/cryptocurrency-stealing-malware-landscape/
---

Quelle: http://www.secureworks.com/cyber-threat-intelligence/threats/bgp-hijacking-for-cryptocurrency-profit/
1057  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Litecoin is officially dead on: August 10, 2014, 02:24:53 PM
Imo all "old" altcoins forgot to develop their coins, hoped they will reach the BTC value one day and didn't implement new features. Features we are seeing now with newer coins ... Bitcoin only has the bonus to be the very first crypto ever ...
+1000

Its nothing new and stated 1000000 times before, but its the truth.
1058  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero - A secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency on: August 04, 2014, 08:17:43 AM
You know this is altcoin economy where everything is pump and dump, yes, even XMR, but pump and hype aspect is very limited due to high mining inflation.
Time in altcoin scene is measured in days , because the risk of scam and competition is very high and odds are stacked greatly against you, don't believe that XMR is any different even though prominent members are advocating ownership, but they are invested and that's why emotionally connected to their investment. Test of time is unfortunatelly still the best method for evaluation of any altcoin.
The future will show you, that you are wrong with this assumption in Moneros case.
1059  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [XMR] rpietila Monero Economics thread on: August 03, 2014, 09:15:47 PM
Is there any plan to promote XMR to darknet.
Forcing Darknet adoption, requires implementation of Multi-Sig-Escrow into Monero.

(Major) Dark Markets won't introduce/accept any coin without Multi-Sig-Escrow, as they all use MS-Escrow solutions for customer fund protection, against hacking, scamming, busts by LE, ...

It's not widely discussed on forums (for obv reasons) or advertised as important project goal, but I think its consensus in the XMR community, that XMR will be "Dark Market"-compatible (safe, easy handling/escrow/payment, trusted, ...).
So XMR will participate in the upcoming battle of the existing anon coins, to become the leading, dominant Dark Market coin.


To answer your question, when Monero (with all the needed features & ecosystem around) is ready and tested, in maybe 12 months. There will be an solid attempt to get XMR accepted and implemented at the leading major 3 till 4 Dark Markets (including informing DarkMarket community about XMR, ...), in the hope of becoming the leading DarkNet trading coin.
1060  Local / Trading und Spekulation / Re: Der Aktuelle Kursverlauf on: August 03, 2014, 09:03:04 AM
WTF, viel zu kompliziert, dass liest sich doch nicht mal jemand durch. Geschweigende mitmachen.

Mach die Promos einfacher, wirst deutlich mehr (zufriedene) Teilnehmer, Leads & Co  generieren.
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