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11841  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 26, 2015, 01:05:00 AM
Hey, Leroy, since you're online, why don't you pen the 1,000 post over here?: https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers-com/3925/999
11842  Other / Off-topic / Re: Bought this for $10.00 Whats the best deal you made? on: August 26, 2015, 01:02:02 AM
$10!?  Could you explain a bit more?  Was the bike stolen? Tongue
Absolutely not stolen.   I have the new title in hand and in my name.  Been riding this bike around and it's so much fun. I haven't been on a bike since 1993. I buy things at Estate and Tag/yard sales and always ask Questions....I always ask for things i don't see that i collect and can re-sell.  I have had a great summer at these sales and made tons of deals locally.  Word of mouth spreads because When i buy at one of these sales i buy Lots!  I buy all Jewelry any and all antiques,Collectibles etc.   I have just recently Bought a set of Partials(Dentures) With 18k gold in them. it sounds gross but i will make a profit on them Smiley

I believe if i had the capital i would be a millionaire right now....I don't know how to explain it but in person i can Wheel and Deal. on the forums i may come off as clumsy and not well thought out.



Have you heard of doing this type of thing for a larger company (if that's even a thing in your area). Asking because my Aunt is pretty big in the antique buying/reselling business, and she has a friend who runs a giant warehouse downtown. It's basically a huge goodwill type store, but it's only open 4 days a month and the entire inventory is purchased from yard sales and similar events. Even though they pay rent for an entire month, they make huge money, and there are literally hordes of people that wait outside for hours during the days it is open to get in.
sure have heard of this in my area.  A few local guys with More capital than me have this covered. They have a great shop with lots of traffic.  the only thing that seperates us is alot of hard work on my part to get the deals and without the capital. I do hear by word of mouth my mannerism dealing with people compared to them is 100% better though....I think that's because i see every deal as my Livelihood and respect everyone and treat them as people. the "Bigger" guys in my area DO NOT.

I don't treat people as cattle like they do.


+100
11843  Other / Off-topic / Re: are the slot's really the most profitable casino game? have anybody tried it? on: August 26, 2015, 12:50:30 AM
Did you win smth? If the answer is yes, where can i play it? Grin
'Cause I haven't won anything in casino yet, actually. It's interesting to know is there in the world a person who outwitted a system?
Craps, playing the pass and come (or don't pass don't come) line only [no center bets ever] with maximum odds placed on a 10X odd table is mathematically the bet bet in the casino.  Period.

Unless you can count cards at a fair single or double deck blackjack table.

Slot machines are probably one of the worst bets.

Before I comment on slots, roulette is beatable iff you recognize a dealer having a signature release. It's complicated, but doable/profitable.

Back to slots. I used to play poker in Vegas, Tunica and Biloxi. Then, for close to three years, I left the felt to play the slots for a living, along with thousands of other advantage players till the casinos wised up and had them replaced. It was not uncommon for fights to break out between two advantage players over a primed slot machine. They were mostly phased out when the following book was published: http://www.amazon.com/Robbing-One-Armed-Bandits-Exploiting-Advantageous/dp/091057510X

BTW, when I said "wised up" above, the casinos didn't lose any moneys directly on the machines. They just got tired of the bullshit addressing fights and vacationing patronages concerns. The aggressive advantage players would literally stalk the slot players, going as far as talking them off a machine after it's been primed.

How profitable were these machines back in the day? Consider that half the slot machines of any casino in all of America occupied these type of machines on its floors. I knew a guy who would wake up broke, borrow twenty bucks, pay it back with a vig within thirty minutes, and make about five hundred bucks in about three hours because he was lazy. Before he went to bed, he'd dust off whatever he had left after all immediate daily expenses at the blackjack tables.

Another couple in Biloxi spent about three months dedicated to being an advantage player, using their earned over hundred grand to purchase a boat repair business in Gulf Port that they've always dreamed about owning. I'm pretty sure they lost it all to Katrina.

If you enjoy walking, one could still earn on average an easy hundred bucks a day via slots without having to invest a single coin. Simply walk the casino floors and hunt machines vacated by its former players who left credits on the machines. Back in the day, the casinos escorted all the scraggly looking bums back onto the street. Now, well, new laws were passed, and it's not uncommon to see the dirtiest bum literally rubbing shoulders with vacationers in the most ritzy casino in Las Vegas, Reno, ect.

I was shocked to learn the above during my last visit a couple years ago during a Bitcoin conference.

Again, for those seeking exercise (like smoothie) and want to eke out a living in Las Vegas having no other skill sets under their belts, "silver miner" (as it was once called, due to the machines paying out physical coins, unlike all of them today) is the way to go. Simply hit the cash out button, and you're golden.

Ideally, one should be dressed as a tourist somewhat while on the hunt, actually feeding the slot machine a ticket from some other find if not purchased outright with your own moneys via any random slot machine. This way you're less likely to draw heat from the eye-in-the-sky. Even though you won't be making 100% profit via the 100% cash out method, your overall expected return is over 20% profit if you played everything you found accordingly. And, if you use your player's card that the casinos offer, you'll amass perks via the mail. With the latter, it's best to have an out-of-state ID, for the perks are better than if one's a resident of Nevada (in this case).

One more thing. There were guys playing one-dollar slot machines using two dollar tokens making a profit. How? They would put the two-dollar coin in the machine whereupon the credits would ring up ONLY one credit. They spin and play accordingly. After several hundred dollars of play, probably at a lost even if they were using one-dollar tokens, they would empty the hopper via feeding the machines with hundred dollar bills. NONE OF THE TWO-DOLLAR TOKENS REGISTERED DURING THE EMPTYING PROCESS.  Grin

And finally, one more thing. There are machines that could be played profitably, but a large bankroll - ~$50K - would be required to enter those still readily available plays. PM me if you desire to learn more. I promise the info'll be free.
11844  Other / Off-topic / Re: SMOOTHIE HEALTH & FITNESS WORKOUT JOURNAL on: August 25, 2015, 11:34:20 PM
Being on the internet (Bitcointalk etc) does only give my fingers any real cardio.

By my own profession (software developer) usually I am in a sitting position behind a computer screen for countless hours every day for the last 15 years.

This thread is to document and possibly (hopefully) encourage others who post on this forum to live a little (at the very least) more healthier.



I still recall smoothie's first words to me when we first met at the MGM Grand: "Mind if I sit down while I eat these 10 Big Macs and large order of fries?"  Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin

Funny, I remember my first words being "Nice pink tutu!"  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

Shit, you're right! I got you mixed up with Corn Beef Hash.  Grin
11845  Other / Off-topic / Re: Bought this for $10.00 Whats the best deal you made? on: August 25, 2015, 11:31:16 PM


I almost purchased the above for only $14.62, but backed out of the deal when I learned that the trailer wasn't included.  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
11846  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 08:39:09 PM
Dudes, since StakeMiners' exponential growth should now have its retard membership base well over 1,000, shouldn't https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/999 have at least 1,000 posts to coincide with that truism?

Please, I beg you, don't be a donkey and wait for Leroy Fodor to pull away from his online gaming sessions to post in that venerable thread to reach the milestone. Somebody there take it upon yourselves to accomplish said feat.

Then again, we all could just wait till Leroy Fodor responds to the question as to how he was a Bitcoin noob on May 26, 2014, but at the same time was a Bitcoin veteran since he traded bitcoins back in 2009 while still cleaning toilets with his wife in Carolina, then later sold off his Forex portfolio to move to the Philippines to building his largest bitcoin mining farm there powered by west-facing solar panels surrounded on three sides by coconut trees defying laureate solar energy experts as to how such should be arrayed.

Then again, again, what transpired one, three, five, seven or eleven years ago is not a bellwether as to the trustworthiness of somebody operating a Ponzi scheme today via amassing other peoples' moneys so to pay out weekly dividends vis-à-vis Pirateat40.
11847  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 04:47:23 PM
https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/1?username_filters=CjMapope%2Ccyberpinoy



I formally request of Leroy Fodor to cease and desist linking to this thread enabling him and his StakeMiners to make bank off my noble efforts unless he desires to pay me a one-time extortion penalty fee of 35 BTC for the privilege.
11848  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 04:31:54 PM
POS staking

Another great invention by cyberpinoy, like ATM machine, IP protocol, or LCD display.


"Consider this our efforts in securing the planet via Proof of Stake."


"There... are... over... 800... retard... members... of... StakeMiners... securing... our... efforts!"


"It's the holy Fodor sandal! Dare we touch it?"
11849  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 04:24:52 PM
The way I read it - https://stakeminers.com/terms.php - since Leroy Fodor DOES NOT have StakeMiners registered as a legal business in any country, he's operating an illegal entity as a US citizen currently residing in the Philippines. Putting him getting arrested there in the Philippines aside for such crime(s), I'd say he'd be one nervous fuck when he lands back here in the US wondering if he'll be picked up like Charlie Shrem was when he landed in NYC. The SEC doesn't take too kindly to Ponzi schemes like StakeMiners most likely is.

StakeMiners: Put your moneys in and the more you will receive back. The more people who put in thier moneys, the more moneys those who put in first will receive. Together, we all make moneys, and it's backed up by Leroy Fodor's personally mined bitcoins that to date he has not provided the blockchain proof outta fear that if he did so, the wallet address would be hacked.
11850  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 04:08:39 PM
http://articles.bplans.com/writing-a-mission-statement/

Quote
Your company’s mission statement is your opportunity to define the company’s goals, ethics, culture, and norms for decision-making. The best mission statements define a company’s goals in at least three dimensions: what the company does for its customers, what it does for its employees, and what it does for its owners. Some of the best mission statements also extend themselves to include fourth and fifth dimensions: what the company does for its community, and for the world.

https://stakeminers.com/about.php

Quote
StakeMiners.com Mission

With all the new and exciting things happening in the world of Crypto-currency, we took things in a new direction. The price of Bitcoin continues to be so volatile that trusting in the mining capabilities has become less and less an option for small miners. So we looked for other ways to get where miners needed to be to make a profit. So we turned to POS staking.

11851  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 03:51:26 PM
The world's financial system is collapsing, Bitcoin is splitting, disorder reigns, but amidst it all thier is still this one thread that provides tranquil certitude.

Thanks to your post, a superhero thread has emerged: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1161670.0
11852  Other / Off-topic / A Tale of Two Fodors (with POLL) on: August 25, 2015, 03:49:13 PM
Leroy Fodor, cryptocurrency's number one liar: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=990219.0

Ben Fodor, aka Phoenix Jones, a real-life superhero: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HEqmsVAtSI

Choose wisely!
11853  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 02:49:05 PM
Come on guys! This - https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/998 - only needs two more posts to have it hit 1000. BTW, have you ever noticed that many of them there posts gets "likes" with the exception of Leroy Fodor's posts? It's like Leroy may have to email his motley crew of over 800 retard members of StakeMiners instructing them to not only like his posts over on that there other forum, but instruct them via easy-to-read bullet points on how to actually accomplish said feat.

My Creative Writing Skills Will Dominate Leroy Fodor's Face!


Yes i did graduate from Ohio University with a business degree not an English literature degree, and i graduated a long time ago. English was not my best class, always had red marks all over my papers, However creative writing was, which would explain why I make such long posts. I guess i learned it i college and that has stuck with me. I am not the best speller and I am not the best at grammar so i do apologize.


Framing a house was not my best skill set, However writing manuals on how lumber should be put together was, which would explain why Im a good nailer. I guess i learned it i Georgia and other states while building Habitat for Humanity homes alongside Jimmy Carter for free and that has stuck with me. I am not the bestest speller and I am not the bestest at grammar so i do not apologize for being the bestest nailer making you jealous.

Meet Leroy Fodor's HAHAHA sister while she plays with a Karpeles-esque blue ball: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfJnoMqL56Q&feature=youtu.be&t=194
11854  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 06:29:05 AM
Quote
[02:13] <@StakeMiner> Now let me tell you what he will do before he does it, he is going to go thru here and pick all the places I said you dont have to be in mining to bhe involved, he will blow that text up super big in red or yellow or blue color and say some stupid stuff like "see this F*****G Idiot just proved he was never in bitcoin , he said he wasnt mining , thi
[02:13] <@StakeMiner> s Leroy Fodor is really F*****D in the head"


No more excuses, no more lies, no more crap and run around, why pay someone to try and earn Bitcoins when they are just going to take the biggest share of your profit and earnings in fees, we have eliminated all of these out of our program.

Looks interesting. I signed up. They gave me a bonus too.  Grin

Your account is also listed as an early bird investor as well. We have many benefits for our Early Bird Investors. The best benefits for EBIs are low to no fees for life on your account. We also have a lot of promotions lined up and available only to early bird investors.


"Do you know What I Did One, Three, Five, Seven or Eleven Years Ago Has No Bearing On The Lies I Tell Today, or does that one make you cry?"
11855  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 06:07:11 AM
ALL the markets around the world are collapsing, including cryptocurrencies. But, do you care to phantom a guess as to where retards are, and will continue to profit after handing over thier moneys to a non-licensed entity based in the Philippines under the direction of some über-honorable soul regardless of what said soul has or hadn't said over the course of one, three, five, seven or eleven years?
11856  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 05:39:27 AM
Alleged Bitcoin Ponzi Scheme Organizers Arrested in Taiwan



P, as in Pinoy, it's rumored that the Philippines prison system has an excellent dance program in place. Rumor also has it that the Philippine government may be looking for some Bitcoin-related entity operating outside its laws so to thwart expats from taking advantage of its citizenry and those abroad while on thier soils so that what transpired in Taiwan doesn't give the Philippines a black eye.

Since Leroy Fodor's a smart dude and all, having a business degree form Ohio University as proof, he would have no problem producing legal documentation pertaining to StakeMiners to ANY authorities that'd come a knockin' at his door, nor would he have to resort to a single lie when they start asking much more serious questions than we have on several forums. Hell, Leroy Fodor is such a retard, he wouldn't have a clue as to who made the ONE phone call that got such a ball of wax a rollin' putting his freedom in jeopardy due to him being the reigning cryptocurrency asshole.

Since Leroy Fodor wants to so badly add extortion to the supposed list of crimes I've committed in this space, I guess I'll just allow him to do such with... Leroy Fodor, please remit to me one satoshi, and I promise that it won't be I that'll be making said phone call today.

The only drawback to the above is that now Leroy Fodor will head on over to https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925 to post my current extortion attempt on his scammy ass oppose to him addressing the ongoing serious concerns he's opted to ignored since thier inceptions.

Leroy Fodor has only himself to blame for being the number one laughing stock of the Bitcoin community and, by extension, so to StakeMiners' over 800 retard members.
11857  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: BFL fucked us over again (redux) on: August 25, 2015, 03:25:01 AM
TL;DR

BFL just got fucked again...

I still don't see the bill for Bruno PD (private detective)....is he not being compensated for all of his investigations into the happenings at BFL?

Hell, thanks to my recent efforts, the media is just now recognizing John Fitzpatrick as a serial scammer.
11858  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: BFL fucked us over again (redux) on: August 25, 2015, 03:21:00 AM
TL;DR

BFL just got fucked again...

I still don't see the bill for Bruno PD (private detective)....is he not being compensated for all of his investigations into the happenings at BFL?

I thought he got a free trip to Kansas & dinner for his services Huh  Cheesy

As far as I remember Bruno didn't go and thus got "sentenced in absentia" earning him a restraining order to stay away from the most honourable mr. Zerlan c.s.

The above is 100% correct. Since I wasn't there to defend myself, Josh Zerlan was able to convince a judge that an image I posted on the internet of his master bathroom taken two years prior to him and family (I seriously wasn't aware that kids were involved) moving into the BTC-House was cause enough of a concern to have the restraining order implemented, in spite of Josh commenting on said pic months prior during the epic birthday convos causing the fuckin' liar to change his profile on BFL's management page pertaining to his military record.
11859  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 02:22:10 AM
Does Leroy Fodor aspire to be the next John Fitzpatrick?: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1157231.0


Quote
PORTLAND, ORE.

The self-styled supercomputer visionary who secretly pledged $100 million to Portland State University has been spinning grandiose tales of success to public officials, industry insiders and prospective investors for two decades.

But an analysis of public documents left in John Michael Fitzpatrick's wake, from Boardman to Washington, D.C., turns up no evidence of the wealth he promised to bequeath.

What it does show is a high-tech mirage, preceded by a string of unsuccessful forays into politics, free-speech advocacy, offshore finance, consulting, insurance and a check-cashing business.

That all should have been quickly evident to Portland State and a number of other public and private institutions hooked, at least temporarily, by Fitzpatrick's tales over the years. Yet he appears to have played them all almost perfectly, recognizing needs and promising to fulfill them.

Fitzpatrick, 51, offered Portland State a philanthropic dream when he approached the school's fundraising arm earlier this month: $100 million in unrestricted funds that would nearly double the university's paltry endowment while underwriting a host of immediate program needs. At his insistence, university officials scheduled an August 18 press conference to announce the anonymous gift. Then they invited the governor and Portland's mayor to help celebrate the windfall.

The money never came.

In fact, the man behind Portland State's nine-figure golden egg had filed for bankruptcy just a few years earlier, listing $0 in assets.

"Frankly, I think he's leading a lot of people down the path that he has no ability to fulfill," said Myrna Fitzpatrick, his stepmother, who says she's had very little contact with him in the last three decades.

John Fitzpatrick still insists he's sitting on an enormous fortune and could make good on his pledge if Portland State would take his calls. He says non-disclosure agreements prevent him from providing a single business reference or document that would vouch for his billions.

"Portland is going to have a great opportunity for the university and the local economy," he said. "I can't even transfer them the money."

Portland State is not the first organization to buy into Fitzpatrick's vision. After a long absence from Oregon, he publicly resurfaced in Portland in 2013 with a plan to build a supercomputer with the processing power of the human brain.

He approached the Port of Morrow in early 2014 with a proposal to locate the $50 billion machine at the port's industrial park outside Boardman. Port officials were intrigued by the prospect, and soon signed a letter of intent, said Gary Neal, the port's general manager.

Before Neal knew it, he said, Fitzpatrick's company had issued a press release touting plans for the world's first exascale computer. The computer would be capable of one billion billion calculations per second and require 1,000 megawatts of electricity to run — slightly less than the entire capacity of the Bonneville Dam.

Engineers at Intel also were intrigued, as Fitzpatrick was planning to generate the behemoth's massive computational power using exclusively Intel processors.

Neal said he soon felt uncertain. "I did some follow up on the company, and it looked like it was questionable at best. It was weird, a very strange deal, and I didn't see any strength behind it."

That deal fell apart, but Fitzpatrick moved quickly to transfer the project to Oklahoma. On April 1, 2014, he filed a notice with the Securities and Exchange Commission that his company, Exascale Power Co. was planning to sell $50 billion in short-term bonds to fund the buildout.

The proposed borrowing was three times more than Facebook raised in its 2012 initial public offering. And the one-page notice indicated that Exascale, with no revenues, had already sold $500 million in securities. There is no public record that such a sale ever took place.

Three weeks later, Fitzpatrick unveiled even bigger plans, filing a preliminary notice with regulators that Exascale intended to take over Intel, Oregon's largest private employer, currently valued at more than $130 billion.

Fitzpatrick's plan was to exchange "some shares of Exascale Power Co... for all of Intel Corporation." He explained in an accompanying letter to Intel Chairman Andy Bryant that there was "more of an opportunity to grow my business in large scale data center development with ownership and controlling interest in Intel Corp."

An Intel spokeswoman said the company had no comment.

Fitzpatrick did approach economic development officials at an industrial park east of Tulsa, Oklahoma, with his plans to build a supercomputer that would generate $13 billion a year in operating profits.

"Yeah, that never happened," said a receptionist at the MidAmerica Industrial Park in Pryor Creek.

Rich Brueckner, president of the Portland-based industry publication InsideHPC, said Fitzpatrick is widely viewed with skepticism.

"He's basically saying he can create an exascale-level machine with cloud computing for a fraction of what it would cost," Brueckner said. "Anyone in tech would tell you this is not possible."

Indeed, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers predicts the first practical exascale computer won't be built until 2023.

Fitzpatrick's career is filled with odd ventures: a failed Republican bid for U.S. Senate in 1998; a free-speech campaign in which he ran graphic pornographic videos on Portland's public access channel.

His widowed stepmother said she and her husband weren't sure Fitzpatrick has ever held a traditional job.

Yet in 2002, a tech journal published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology described him as a Cayman Islands hedge fund manager looking to build the world's largest supercomputer, one that could predict future market movements.

Thomas Sterling, a well-known computer scientist who teaches at Indiana University, was briefly a board member of that company, JJX Capital. He said Fitzpatrick was a visionary who could make connections that others could not see.

But, Sterling added, there's a large gap between originating an idea and fulfilling it. A 2004 Bloomberg News story noted that JJX had failed.

Fitzpatrick registered three businesses in Ohio, where he lived in the mid-2000s. They included a consulting firm in Columbus and another outfit called Bob's Check Cashing Service. In 2009, he became a licensed insurance agent selling casualty, life and property coverage in Dublin, a city of 41,000 near Columbus.

Two years later, he surfaced in Washington, D.C., where he tried to reorganize his business and personal debts under Chapter 11, taking the unusual step of representing himself. He initially listed zero assets and $95,000 in debt - all owed to the landlord of a $7,000-monthly space near George Washington University. Eventually, he disclosed a total of $160,000 in debts.

Early filings in the bankruptcy case list his only income as a $450 monthly disability check. Months of back and forth ended after Fitzpatrick failed to file required reports or pay fees in the proceeding, and the judge dismissed the case.

Fitzpatrick said he has suffered serious health problems, including a heart attack and a stroke as the bankruptcy case played out. He said doctors warned him he might die, though two years of bed rest helped him recuperate.

Although the bankruptcy was stressful, Fitzpatrick said it was a strategic move. He hoped to use a little known provision in the bankruptcy code to fast track the initial public offering of a software company he planned to buy. The purchase price was $5 million, he said, but based on its income and sales projections, the company would net as much as $340 million in a sale.

Fitzpatrick acknowledged the deal never happened because the bankruptcy court didn't understand his proposal.

"If you ever have time and want to make a couple hundred million, that's how to do it," he said.
11860  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: CONFIRMED! Leroy Fodor & Wofvman's stakeminers.com site is a scam! on: August 25, 2015, 01:56:11 AM
Terms of use largely copied from cloudminr.io

Good point, although I think they both plagiarized cex.io with this one.

Quick aside: Such donkey [avatar].  Grin



I LOL'ed in RL. I finally see the connection  Grin

---
https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/990

Quote
larandker1h

At this point, I am Happy with StakeMiners and the owner. I have been paid every week in a timely fashion.
The communication is excellent. Everyone of my emails has been answered promptly. I wanted to write a positive
comment to support the company. Larry



Let me guess: You, Leroy Fodor and Wofvman, after a night of heavy drinking and gambling away other peoples' moneys, headed on over to Reno and tied the knot. The above is my proof and, unlike Leroy Fodor, the Internet never lies.

Nope no match and not a VPN either. GHteam checked the account.



@Gleb, you is nasty. Such extortion racketeering via a public forum...tsssss  Grin
https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/994

Leroy Fodor is such a retard for forgetting that I have on several occasions offered to stop posting for free prior to the satirical 35 BTC request from his scammy ass.

All Leroy Fodor has to do now is to declare that he was a Bitcoin noob on May 26, 2014, ergo cementing that all previous claims pertaining to Bitcoin espoused by him were and are 100% lies. See how easy I've made it for him? I would 100% no longer comment on his scammy ass, leaving it to others to do my previous biding on the subject at hand to warn current and potential investors of StakeMiners the facts at hand, whereupon I'll move on to greener pastures to give some other scammer THE GLEB. Until such day, Leroy Fodor WILL remain to be my favorite SPORT on this forum, i.e., this thread that, BTW, has double the view count of his self-moderated thread where Leroy Fodor deletes ANY AND ALL hard questions pertaining to StakeMiners.

Katrina: Leroy, why don't you just admit that you were a Bitcoin noob on May 26, 2014?
Leroy: Because it's not true! Don't you remember the day in Carolina when you and I were cleaning toilets and that fellow toilet cleaner dude walked in on us and introduced us to Bitcoin? Don't you remember us selling our Forex portfolio so we could move to the Philippines and start our own sorry-ass 12' X 12' Sari Sari complete with west-facing solar panels surrounded on three sides by coconut trees to run our largest Bitcoin mining farm in all the Philippines, a disco, a piggery, and, the most profitable of all, our Internet Cafe?
Katrina: Honestly, no I don't remember any of that.
Leroy: I'm sorry! I forgot. You're a retard! Luckily, I'm home-schooling your two children thier lessons while you work a 40-hour-week so that they to don't become retards.
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