Wow. There is a ton of videos to watch on free.btc.pt right now.
Yes. Here's a free tip from me: US prime-time hours are always the ones with the most videos, even videos for worldwide traffic, as most of the advertisers that use Virool are US based. BTW, for me, US prime-time is between 6PM to 2AM whatever timezone they use in texas.
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This is great fun. We are like the government of Bitcoin, passing down regulations when we do not like the way someone uses our system.
Regulations? You trippin', chap? You should stop with that Silk Road acid, it's damaging your last neuron.
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I was trolling the anti-porn people here. Unfortunately You also are one of them. The picture is perfectly legal in EU right now as ED is hosting it for long time. The things will change for worst if we don't fight back.
The picture may be legal, but I'm certainly not the only one who have children at home who are always roaming around and may see it. And there are other countless reasons to only use a link and tag it as NSFW, one being that it's against forum rules to post NSFW content. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=20333.0 <--- Rule 5 of 5, in case you haven't seen it before.
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I cannot wait to start banning more companies from using Bitcoin.
Should we -really- be accepting transactions from Silk Road? They are giving us a bad rep.
And what about a patch to stop BitPay from using Bitcoin. They are just exploiting the early weakness of Bitcoin being too difficult for merchants to implement as a payment service.
This is great.
Except Silk Road or Bitpay don't use always the same n addresses to receive their transactions and leave recognizable "footprints" everywhere...
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At Free.BTC.pt we only process withdrawals when users ask for them and we send them on one single tx when the total amount of all pending withdrawals is at least 0.1BTC, so feel free to use it
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On December 23, 2011, VisaNet processed 11,000 / second - source http://blog.visa.com/2011/01/12/visa-transactions-hit-peak-on-dec-23/ - That's 950,400,000 transactions per day. At 24,000 SD transactions per day is .002525% of that traffic. Said another way, Bitcoin is nowhere near ready for the global stage if 1,000 dust transactions per hour grinds the system to a halt. If SD is a problem, fix bitcoin. All trolling aside, this is the fucking truth. We should be thankful to SatoshiDice for practically highlighting the scalability flaws of bitcoin (like hitting the soft block size limit). If the community starts shiting bricks when SatoshiDice sends a few transactions, what happens if someone starts sharing internet for microtransactions? Or when a real casino starts using bitcoin? Or whatever? A real real casino? One with deposit and withdrawal pages and it's own accounting ledger?
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Dude, cut the image tag on that one. Use only a link to the image and tag it NSFW please.
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Será melhor remover daqui o tópico?
Não. Pode ficar, claro. Talvez seja boa ideia incluir o link para o tópico original. De qualquer maneira as pistas estão mesmo nesse link para o blog e o tópico pelos vistos não avançou muito mais desde a ultima vez q o li. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=149622.0
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Há um tópico sobre isso num dos foruns ingleses.
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SD is not "the tip of the iceberg". Let's imagine a bitcoin-operated coffee shop and compare it to Satoshidice. Assume you have 1000 customers at your coffee shop every day, everybody makes one purchase. 1000 transactions spread over a day is not much. One coffee shop is still part of the tip of the iceberg. Bitcoin eventually needs to be able to handle multiple coffee chains, each with tens of thousands of stores, all serving 1000 customers per day. keyword: eventually
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What SD is doing and what this patch is doing and what the OP is doing is akin to the following analogy.... Bully is punching another student in the face, that student is trying to cover their face with their hands to dampen the blow, all while a third student is asking everyone to get mad at and hold the seconds students hands down because he is hurting the bullies choice to punch people in the face.... Let'em come. We'll see who gets punched and who needs to cover their face. Dogs who bark a lot rarely bit, haven't you heard? And this ones here aren't even dogs, just puppies.
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Ah, he kept 1500 BTC from me, it doesn't mean I lost them. Chump change. I'm still here and not in poverty. Could you say the same if it happened to you?
Yes I could. I currently hold a good bit more coins than that, and my risk management policy is to only keep money in coins that I can comfortably afford to lose. I've lost more than $63,000 in high risk ventures before. I wouldn't call it "chump change" because I have more respect for money than that, but losses like that are manageable in relation to my current financial situation. I suspect your "chump change" rhetoric is nothing more than bravado anyway. The difference is, of course, that I lost nothing with Pirate. I would never put money into a ponzi scheme. I suspect that I'm at least as greedy as you, but nowhere near as stupid. Like I said 1- You don't know why I put the money there 2- You don't know how much I put in there 3- You don't know how much I withdrawn 4- You don't even know if I lost a single satoshi with it 5- You don't know me, how I live, where I live, what I do for a living or how much I earn And yet, here you are jumping into conclusions with no data whatsoever to base them on and I'm the stupid? I'm see more stupidity in your statements than on my failed "investment".
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Amazon associating with BitPay...
Don't spread lies... I can understand people being excited about this, but making stuff up just because bitcoin, well...
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probably a full passphrase
You for real? Probably? If that's the best guess you have about your password things don't look promising.
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What is the relationship between bitcoinstore.com and coinabul?
They share the same Marketing Director, Mr. Jon Holmquist, it seems. http://www.freedomsphoenix.com/Guest-Page.htm?No=00662Jon Holmquist Jon Holmquist, head of Marketing at Coinabul, has been involved with Bitcoin for almost two years. With a focus on Bitcoin businesses, Jon aims to make the highly technical Bitcoin easily understood by anyone. Jon is involved with Coinabul (a Gold for Bitcoin merchant), with the site WeUseCoins (the best website for people new to Bitcoin), as well as recently launched website, BitcoinStore.com, which is selling electronics for prices lower than both Amazon and NewEgg. Jon recently founded the site BitcoinFriday after seeing a lack of merchant sales in Bitcoin as well as a lack of organization between Bitcoin vendors. Webpages to link to: http://bitcoinfriday.com http://coinabul.com http://bitcoinstore.com Video to link to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Um63OQz3bjo
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Building innovative services based on bitcoin. Simple as that.
I can't even imagine what kind of stuff you consider complicated
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also i found the IP to get into coinvisitor instead of using coinvisitor.com address. site still looks functional. definately looks like a hack (redirect sick joke).
IP 184.22.240.76
So, you're visiting a site that may have been hacked and posting the IP so others can go there? Not sure if visiting that IP is a smart idea
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Mesmo eu que lido com tecnologia diariamente e já ouvia falar de Bitcoins há uns 2 anos só há relativamente pouco tempo é que passei a fazer uso.
Cuidado. Torna-se viciante! Agora que tomaste o comprimido vermelho não há volta a dar.
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