I'm sure if the electricity bill rises enough, the college will notice something is up. You could probably still get away with 1 or 2 miners though.
Take advantage of it if you can.
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Congrats for Gm on that accidental all-in ![Grin](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/grin.gif) The luck shines on you.
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Hard choice to make. I've known people that have done LASIK and are happy with it, but I'd be cautious to do it myself. Not to mention the thought of the actual procedure is kinda frightening. I hadn't heard about possibly having worse night vision before, that is interesting.
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I'd mostly worry about ensuring you are properly documenting for tax purposes. The "transmitting money without a license" thing could also be something to worry about if you are doing high volume exchanges.
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It is always great to see more local places start accepting bitcoin so kudus on that. Definitely be sure to make it visible to people that may be searching online and looking for local places to spend their bitcoin. You may want to check out this video on how to add your location to coinmap.org http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLpe8YDf8P0
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You can use listreceivedbyaddress to list out all the addresses which will include your change addresses. Then you can dump each address to get the private keys. If you want to include all addresses including empty ones, you would need to do "listreceivedbyaddress 0 true".
You will have to do each address one-by-one.
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I believe you may have to import each address one-by-one into Armory. Not sure if you can import an entire wallet file or not. You can however, use functions within the console of QT to dump all the private keys ( Help > Debug window > Console > dumpprivkey your_wallet_address) which can be used to import them into Armory. You may have to unencrypt the wallet via the console first ( walletpassphrase <passphrase> <timeout> ). The timeout is how long the wallet decryption key is stored in memory. Guide for offline transactions: https://www.armoryguide.com/OfflineTransactions.htmlHope this helps!
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Thanks for the warning. I would definitely report this to the webhost so they can take it offline.
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Bitpay is what most companies use for converting bitcoin to fiat on purchase. Probably the best bet here.
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This is a difficult business to run and determining the honest people from the money farms requires a personal touch. Ten months ago, I made a pledge to the Lucky Bit staff to execute this responsibility faithfully and honestly. Today, I renew this pledge, to the Bitcoin Talk public. Every enrollment will always be personally inspected for quality and eligibility and I will never shortcut this responsibility by using a robot or script.
Thanks for all your hard work on managing this campaign! It sure does look like a ton of work.
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Yeah, it is probably just busy trying to sync or something. Maybe it will respond after a few minutes.
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Just saw this now. Happy birthday! I like the new site with all the currencies under one roof ![Cheesy](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cheesy.gif)
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Username: kolloh
Thank you!
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I loved the trivia edition of Happy Hour and hope it continues into the future!
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One of the first things that crossed my mind, when I heard about Bitcoin, was that whoever had access to school computers would have some awesome CPU mining capabilities at night when the school was closed.
I'm sure some of them probably did it as well lol
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He was a great actor and will be missed for sure! ![Sad](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/sad.gif)
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Yeah most people probably start one for the ad revenue. There is a ton of normal news sites as well so not too strange that there is a ton of bitcoin related ones.
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-DARY!!!See you all there!!! ![Cheesy](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/cheesy.gif) Haha. I have been thinking that the whole time while waiting on LHH.
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The issue here is the CC details or identity information was already compromised. They are then using Apple Pay as a method to use the stolen details.
If we compare to bitcoin, it is like someone stealing your private key and adding your address to their own wallet. The real issue is what allowed the details to be stolen in the first place.
They also need better verification methods to prevent fraudsters from enrolling stolen cards and to prevent social engineering.
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