Is there an IRC channel, or do I have to use the Telegram channel?
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The loss itself is (as yours) not huge, but its more the principle that they should not keep stealing from nice people like us  I agree.
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I'm sorry for your loss — I hope those jerks get busted.
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PS: The important thing here is that e.g. Gmail doesn't mark these emails as spam because both SPF and DKIM are legitimate. Even the reverse DNS is correct (because of the Sendgrid relation). The only thing about the email headers that gives this away is the Digital Ocean address.
(Of course the email is a blatant scam — I mean, if Coinbase could do a 50% profit in just 10 days they wouldn't need my money in the first place. Also, why do they ask me to send my investments to a Blockchain account? — but the email headers are well forged.)
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Thanks for the follow up info kseistrup. Is there a thread already about how you got that so other's can do it for this and other suspicious emails?
Not really, I just looked in the raw email headers (the first two code sections), and did a “whois” lookup of the offending email address. I don't know about Windows, but mostly anyone on Linux should be able to do that easily.
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I got one, too. The bad thing is that sender has managed to get SPF and DKIM right because the email has been sent through Sendgrid: Received: from o1.em.coinbase.com (o1.em.coinbase.com. [50.31.37.137])
Received: from o1.em.coinbase.com (o1.em.coinbase.com. [50.31.37.137]) by mx.google.com with ESMTPS id p13si266962icl.54.2015.04.08.11.49.44 for <undisclosed@example.net> (version=TLSv1.2 cipher=ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 bits=128/128); Wed, 08 Apr 2015 11:49:44 -0700 (PDT) Received-SPF: pass (google.com domain of {UNDISCLOSED}@em.coinbase.com designates 50.31.37.137 as permitted sender) client-ip=50.31.37.137; Authentication-Results: mx.google.com; spf=pass (google.com: domain of {UNDISCLOSED}@em.coinbase.com designates 50.31.37.137 as permitted sender) smtp.mail={UNDISCLOSED}@em.coinbase.com; dkim=pass header.i=@coinbase.com; dmarc=pass (p=REJECT dis=NONE) header.from=coinbase.com DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha1; c=relaxed; d=coinbase.com; h=content-type:mime-version:content-transfer-encoding:from:to:subject; s=smtpapi; bh=mzFmpzK4RGa5/BW6ukZz8pgNqs8=; b=QCxwr642hzexeNV19i R8Ui1ESMG1QJ7dvii3StPST9nuFdztnrXSdsWSt1x8W6x4cYgSmAgJ0QhSDwFyPP Jmer3WqyWbTm5lh3QWJDnlgEtAtJPJIh7tXvhsIwl/s/Y2uaurdhdso5f6/A8HMw zf99DP+mHtG+msY/S2ycwCYZE=
Real sender is probably Received: from MTYwNDc2NQ (unknown [5.101.100.198])
which is a DigitalOcean customer.
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I hope noxt can become decoupled from btc, especially with Current market sentiment.
I don't think you're alone in this desire at the moment  People ought to start trading NoXT on the builtin decentralized NXT Asset Exchange, rather than using the traditional centralized exchanges.
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Hi guys, How do I find my NXT public key?
when you first log into a fresh NXT account it should be highlighted at the top of the wallet. In green On subsequent logins, follow the “More info →” link.
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Does anyone know how to back up the nxt wallet ? I didn't find the back up wallet option like on other wallets.
You needn't back it up, it's all stored in the blockchain. But don't lose your passphrase, your passphrase is your wallet.
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how about just send him tx id? why u make it that complicated? u think 2 guys send at the same block? very unlikely or?
Anybody could look up the transaction in the blockchain and lay claim on it.
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Is there a Noxt-NXT on a exchange? I see the one in the wallet but I have no reference to go by and I'm not going to calculate Noxt to btc, nxt to btc to compare every time.
I guess this is the closest you can get now, but the liquidity sucks: https://trade.secureae.com/#6780060819348751348
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NOBL Burning Process
1. Send me a PM with the amount of NOBL you are burning right now and the address you are sending them from (before sending any). […]
If I've missed anything important point it out to me.
As far as I can see, you can't really tell what “address you are sending them from”, you can only control the account — and one account can have many addresses. If you have been receiving all your NOBL with one address only, you can tell what address you will be sending from. But if you have recived your NOBL with several addresses, there's no way to tell what the outgoing address will be. I used the “getaddressesbyaccount” to determine which addresses were included in that account, and luckily the command returned only two addresses, one of which I had received most of my NOBL into. I then used the "sendfrom" command to transfer the NOBL to the burning address, and the transaction included a plethora of input — of which the majority involved one of the two addresses. Of course, you can “setaccount <noblecoinaddress> <account>” to a freshly named account with a virgin address, transfer all your NOBL to that “noblecoinaddress” and then “sendfrom” that account, but then the whole procedure gets unnecessarily complicated. Cheers.
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'Cycling' was the idea that if the deflationary nature of NOXT eventually meant there were very little to zero remaining in circulation then they could be re-issued as a new investment/crowd fund in the future. Much longer term.
If no new asset were issued and all NOXT sat in the genesis account, then obviously they could not be re-distributed. This can be solved though by just issuing a new 'asset' much further down the road. I think people would be much more comfortable seeing the NOXT burnt in an address they know no-one can touch, so that's the best course of action.
Thanks for the explanantion. And I agree that people would probably be more comfortable seeing NOXT sent to the genesis account than sitting idle in a theoretically touchable account. Now, I have another question that I hope you can answer: In the FAQ (v3) you describe NOBL as »a ‘pure’ decentralized cryptocurrency«, whereas NOXT is described as being more centralized. How is that? IMHO, the NXT platform is just as decentralized, if not more, than the bitcoin family of cryptocurrencies that NOBL belongs to.
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Or they could be burnt permanently by sending them to the genesis account […]
Sure thing. I can do that. Will just mean if the cycle idea is a success then a new 'asset' and ID is issued in the future. I'm fine with that. I'm not sure I understand the whole cycle thing… Of course, if a new asset is issued I can see where new coins come from. But if no new asset is issued?
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Regarding the NOXT not sold burning. It can either be given to and held in escrow by a trusted BTC or NXT third party, or left in the public 'chest'.
Or they could be burnt permanently by sending them to the genesis account: NXT-MRCC-2YLS-8M54-3CMAJ.
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I have been inherited 1.000.000 sqr. meters agricultural land.
I want to create a crypto coin, each crypto coin will own 100 sqr. meters.
The crypto coin will must have second generation cryto coin charachteristics.
You could issue an asset on the NXT Asset Exchange, or a coin using the NXT Monetary System (the latter going live at block 330000, appr. one week from now).
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NOXT will be traded for NOBL to those who wanted to buy it at the exchange rate. That NOBL is burnt. Any NOXT not sold does not enter circulation.
Even NOXT can be burned. Is that the plan?
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Monetary System goes live on the mainnet at block 330000
We're at block 321435 right now, so that's in 8565 blocks (6-9 days) — exciting!
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that's only the daemon. people are wanting the qt-wallet for full irc goodness. with vpn rewards , these do not come with running a daemon
What's missing for the QT/IRC to work on Linux? On Slack @Bitnet mentioned something about AES encryption, and being a Windows programmer, but how can AES encryption be a showstopper when it's included in OpenSSL?
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