Bitcoin as the only decentralized currency will stay. Here is a snapshot from Coinmarketcap from May 2013. This is to show how much has changed when it comes to altcoins only by looking at the top 10. Bitcoin was always #1. But look at the other coins in the top 10. We have Litecoin. at#2. Fair enough, they are still around. After that we have: - Namecoin - down +80% since its ATH. - PPCoin or Peercoin - down +85% since its ATH. - Novacoin - dead or no liquidity. - Devcoin - dead. - Terracoin - down +96% since its ATH. - Feathercoin - down +98% since its ATH. - Freicoin - down +97% since its ATH. - CHNCoin - dead.
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Devalued as in non-listed coins?
That's new to me, and I haven't heard about such a scam technique before. The first alarm would be why would someone be interested in purchasing bags of worthless coins if those assets can't be sold or have no liquidity? There are better ways to gamble.
If it's only about those worthless coins, even if you lost them, it wouldn't be the end of the world. But maybe that escrow site will ask for your private keys/seed and the whole point is to steal more valuable assets. Or if forces you to install some malware or add-ons whose aim is to extract your private info.
The whole point of an escrow is that both members trust that same person. Anyone requiring an escrow, should contact one of those available on Bitcointalk, and not someone from an unknown site no one has heard of.
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I wonder if other newbies would still dream of ranking up if there ain't bounty campaigns here. ![Roll Eyes](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/rolleyes.gif) There is nothing wrong with wanting to rank up and reach a higher rank on the forum. The reasons could be bounty campaigns or signature campaigns, just like you mentioned. You wear a signature yourself, and so do I. Why are you in a signature campaign? We both like seeing those incoming transactions in our wallets at the end of each week. I assume, OP would like that as well. Other reasons include gaining respect and recognition. Seeing that the effort you put in to create and share content is appreciated by other members. That motivates you to keep going and trying even harder.
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<Snip> He is not the first or last person that will die with crypto on an exchange protected by an unknown password/2FA. I always thought that having a KYC verified account would make the process of recovering such funds easier. What about a death certificate proving that he died issued by an official government institution and a document proving that his wife and/or children are the legal inheritors of his assets? What happens with the money? The exchange just takes possession of it eventually?
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Ako je prodao ![Grin](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/grin.gif) Sjećam se nekih starijih tema gdje su korisnici pokušali da pronađu BTC adrese koje pripadaju ili bi mogle da pripadaju satoshiju. I zapravao sve što je pronađeno ne može poslužiti kao dokaz jer on nikad nije javno stavio nijednu svoju adresu na forum npr. Bar koliko je meni poznato. Prva bitcoin transakcija je ona koju je satoshi poslao Hal Finney-u, ali sigurno tu adresu nije greškom povezao sa nekim svojim drugim adresama da bi se dalo naslutiti koliko čovjek ima. Bio je među prvim koji su rudarili bitcoin, pogotovo tokom prve godine njegovog postojanja. Neki su tvrdili da bi mogao posjedovati i do 1 milion BTC-a. Al opet, sve samo nagađanje, zvanično nikad nećemo saznati. Ako ga ko zna, nek ga pita.
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Admins rarely respond to ban appeal threads created by members who weren't a net positive to the forum and those who don't get the support by established forum members who are ready to put in a good word and explain why a certain member should be given a second chance. From what I can see, no one has posted in your thread saying that you should be forgiven. Even if someone does, there have been cases where users have waited 2 years for their accounts to be unbanned. Have a look at RegulusHr's ban appeal thread and how long he had to wait. And he had the support of the local Croatian community and many other members who have never dealt or spoken to him, and can therefore be considered totally neutral in the whole case.
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Lol, why do people keep saying I created this website. ![Grin](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/grin.gif) Shit, really? I could have sworn I saw you mention that it was yours. Plus the 'ninja' part of the site's name points at you. Did you advertise/mention it a few times in your posts that could have led me to believe that it was yours or joked about it being your site? I will surely remember it now.
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I don't know what he's been doing for the last year, but since he hasn't earned a single merit he obviously hasn't been making posts that have caught the attention of anyone with sMerits to give out. Lucius offered a good insight in what he has been doing and his post history shows it all. It doesn't look like he wants to stop. Since I don't use social media, I personally couldn't care less if any Facebook or Twitter feeds get flooded with spam. What I do care about is the "post on bitcointalk" component of many bounties, where I believe you need to be at least a Jr. Member with some advertising space in your signature. That's what I meant when I said social media link spammer. He posts links to his twitter and facebook posts in the bounty threads on Bitcointalk. 100s of users do that daily and all it does is create 100s of pages of spam in the bounty threads. If you were to remove the social media reports and fake bump conversations, most of those bounty threads would have a few pages at most. The way it is now, they go up to several hundred pages. When it comes to social media campaigns, I don't think they have rank requirements like other type of campaigns because the activities take place outside of the forum anyways. They would only care about friends/follower count. That makes them available to newbies as well.
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Social media link spammers are the worst kind of bounty hunters. Don't take it personally, that's my opinion and I am sure many members look at it the same way.
To earn merits, you need a history of good posts that someone else will like and deem merit-worthy. Do you think twitter and facebook links are posts anyone will like and award merits for? If you want to become a member of this community, you can. For that, you have to start reading and learning about bitcoin, and discuss it with other members here.
If you go to the Beginners & Help board, you can find threads were people might be willing to help newbies for completing simple tasks. Try to find them yourself...message signing...ahem. It's unlikely that the thread-starter would want to help you (looking at your post history), but you can learn something for free and you can use those skills to acquire new knowledge, or maybe help someone else who could award you with a merit or two.
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And sure, the argument again is if everyone just accepted bitcoin themselves without centralized payment processors this wouldn't be an issue, but we both know that is never going to happen. That's part of the freedom that bitcoin gives you. If a merchant wants to use a centralized exchange for reasons that make sense to him, it's his right to do so. I can tell him about better options, but he doesn't have to listen to me as long as that exchange satisfies the needs he has. If I use the services of such a merchant who then sends those coins to a centralized exchange where they get confiscated for being associated with mixers/underground markets/gambling/whatever, I can't tell the merchant that I am a privacy-oriented individual and he needs to be one as well by not using such exchanges. He'll want his money because the coins I sent him, aren't worth anything to him. Therefore, if this practice of removing value from certain coins that centralized entities don't like continues, it will be the privacy-focused users who suffer the consequences.
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I had no idea that Electrum does what hosseinimr93 mentioned by default. ranochigo's explanation about the buckets system makes sense, but being overconcerned with privacy can certainly cause you to lose a lot of money. Although it's the user's job to learn how to properly send and receive bitcoin, I still think users should be informed that they are about to spend an unnecessary amount of UTXOs for a transaction that can be spent by using only one input that is big enough. Some sort of pop-up or system notification would be nice.
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You can also use Find My Coins.ninja to see the entire list of fork coins available on your address. You just enter your address in the search field. The site was created by Bitcointalk user TryNinja, feel free to try it out. You have already moved your bitcoin from the address, but as a remainder, it's always a good idea to move your valuable bitcoin from an address whose private key you are about to import in a wallet for one of those forks.
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I don't know about the faucet donation (did not search for it) from BitcoinFX but the person exchanged pizza for Bitcoin with Lazlo. Are you aware of this story? ![Grin](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/grin.gif) Yeah, it happened. I took another look and he sent 500 bitcoins to the faucet back in 2010. Here is the part of one of my threads where I talk about that: 5.The last case of exemplary community behaviour comes from BitcoinFX in 2010. This is connected to Gavin’s faucet that I talked about in example #3. When BitcoinFX saw Gavin’s request for someone to refill the faucet, BitcoinFX made a donation of 500 bitcoins. Here is that post and the hash of the transaction. Yeah, I remember those messages he exchanged with Lazlo as well ![Smiley](https://bitcointalk.org/Smileys/default/smiley.gif) No one will report your pm without a reason. Sending an invite message for the interview has not resulted in any bad activities. But not everyone's thinking is the same, so that someone may find your PM unsolicited and report it. You can never know what intentions someone has for reporting something. Maybe if multiple people reported him for sending them PMs they never wanted to receive and consider it spam, something would have happened. We don't know. That's why I am hoping one of the admins will pop by and offer his view on the whole unsolicited PM theory. I am even thinking of a scenario where one could frame someone for sending him and multiple other people unsolicited PMs and then reporting that person. Of course, I am not going to give anyone any ideas of what I am talking about. Depending on how strict admins are with that rule, it could get the person in trouble.
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Casino withdraw limit changes are still into process, the team is waiting for the final approval. Once we receive it, it will be going live. That's good to know. Looking forward to seeing a lower withdrawal requirement. Another suggestion regarding the withdrawals page. Back when the site was operating with the old design, players could see what the minimum withdrawal limit was by entering an amount in the withdrawal field. But now that message is missing. It would be nice to get it back. So, if I enter 0.002 BTC, I think it would be good to see a notification that the minimum withdrawal amount is 0.004 BTC (or whatever new limit you introduce). Right now, the system only tells us that the amount you are trying to withdraw is below the min. limit. But, it doesn't say what the limit is. Cheers!
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It's good that the casino doesn't require an email address to sign up. Just a username and password. @OP why aren't you answering questions by the community? Will you require an email when withdrawing from the casino or maybe some sort of identity verification? If you want any chance to be successful here, you need to address the questions raised by members regarding verifying the fairness of your casino games. How do we check if the games are provably fair? FAQ section needs to answer more queries. The 15x wagering requirement is way too much in my opinion. I suggest lowering it asap op. I have seen some casinos with a 45-60x wagering requirement for the deposit bonuses. Compared to those, a 15x rollover is nothing. I am curious, which casinos do you know that have a lower wagering requirement than 15x?
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1. First of all, compared to PoW, it does not require a large amount of computing power, so the nodes are more distributed, so it seems difficult to attack. The computational power dedicated to the network is what keeps it safe. If you take that away, you take away the infrastructure that has protected it all these years. Bitcoin, because of its POW consensus algorithm, is the most expensive network to attack and maintain that attack for longer periods of time. Other coins like ethereum classic, grin, Verge, some less-known forks of bitcoin have suffered from serious 51% attacks.
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I had to send over 1000 interview invitations in 6 months Yes, but the question is, what would have happened if I, someone else, 5, 10, or more people reported you for sending unsolicited PMs? Would you have received a temp ban or maybe a permanent one? Or would the admins not have looked at it that way at all or simply warned you to stop? <Snip> BitcoinFX, isn't that the guy who donated 100s of bitcoins to Gavin's faucet back in the day? I think I remember that from a thread I wrote some time ago. Thanks for bringing that up as an example of what can happen in such situations. PM is for something that you don't need to be public and you better be sure that the recipient is not an asshole who would report it and/or publish it without permission. That's what I thought. It comes down to whether or not it will get reported. The consequences will depend on the friendliness or assholeness of the PM receiver and the mod making the call.
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I don't think Rodri will start... Turns out that neither of them started because Guardiola had other plans. About on hour ago, I read a good post by one of the sport sites that I follow and it said something like this: Guardiola played with either Rodri or Fernandinho from the beginning in 59 out of 60 matches this season. The only match where that wasn't the case was in the Champions League finals and he paid a heavy price for it.
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According to Rule #29 in the Unofficial list of (official) Bitcointalk.org rules, guidelines, FAQ, sending unsolicited PMs, including but not limited to advertising and flood, is not allowed. I am interested in the forum's interpretation of the term unsolicited. It's something you haven't asked for, but are the rules really that strict? How do you make business connections and collaborations with other members on the forum privately if you can't send an unsolicited PM? If I don't want to state my intentions publicly, why can't it be done via PM? A few examples: - If I want to advertise a service, is it against the rules to PM that member on the forum and asking if he/she is interested in working with me? - Is it ONLY against the rules if I send 5, 10, 100... PMs with the same content to multiple recipients. That would then be considered flooding. - If someone sends me a PM saying: " Cool site. If you want, I can advertise/write about it on my blog for a fee", is he breaking the unsolicited PMs rule? - If I see a gambler who posts excellent tips on the forum, and I PM him saying: " Do you want to cooperate and join forces in finding value bets"? Can he report me for sending unsolicited PMs, and am I breaking the rules? I could think of more examples, but I am just trying to determine where the admins draw the line. If I were a dipstick and reported such PMs of people willing to offer or use a service or got reported myself, what actions do the mods take?
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@zaico Hardware wallets are simple to use, but still provide a decent level of security. That's what makes them so popular in the community. Web and software wallets are even easier, but they aren't nearly as secure as hardware devices. The perfect setup is an airgapped device or a properly generated paper wallet. But both these options require better technical knowledge than using a USB-like device.
An airgapped computer is only used as an offline medium to sign your transactions. It's a computer you aren't using for other things. Some don't have that luxury unfortunately. Some people don't own or want to own any PC/laptop, but they can still use a hardware wallet with their mobile phone.
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