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1  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: How easy it is to KILL bitcoin. on: August 16, 2014, 11:30:03 AM
I could just look at the block chain for address's, write any address found there into my fresh wallet, and take all, using that dns redirect.
Sentences like this are the reason people think you are high. It doesn't make any sense and surrounding it with Internet tough guy talk doesn't help.
2  Economy / Economics / Re: The 10 unanswered questions of a professor of Aristotle University on: June 18, 2014, 08:20:17 AM
-Germany with 5 trillion deficit has debt at 155% of GDP.
-France again 5 trillion in debt has .....
188% of GDP.

Conveniently forgot to mention that 155% is external debt -- at least I assume so because Germany certainly does not have 155% public debt, the figure that normally gets compared. A large external debt can be worrying but it's not a meaningful figure alone, without knowing how much the country lends and to whom.

Greece on the other hand has 160% public debt, more than double the number for Germany and France. That's why everyone thinks they're fucked.

If you are saying we should care more about _external_ debts instead of total of all lending, just say so: I might be inclined to agree. But somehow claiming that Germany is doing just as badly as Greece based on that... seems a bit far fetched. The point isn't that Germany is safe from some future bursting of a bubble, the point is that Greece cannot pay its lenders _tomorrow_.
3  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Block Spacing And Security on: June 12, 2014, 02:50:16 PM
Let's say you are buying $250 at grocery store. Really they are going to accept 0 or 1 confirmation? Chances are they will want 6 or more. It is a definite issue in my mind.

I'm guessing you've not seen the cash flow of a small item store? There's a significant percentage of money you end up "losing", regardless of payment system. Actual counterfeit bills, con artists confusing clerks to give wrong change, credit card companies pulling back payments even weeks after the fact, even debit payments can be denied if the store didn't check the signature... It's useful to realize that bitcoin isn't competing with perfect systems: all of them have these hidden costs, and so far the costs related to bitcoin seem small in comparison. I have no idea if bitcoin will be used in day-to-day shopping at some point but this issue does not seem relevant to me.

As to your example: doing a double spend attack on a $250 purchase (that is handled by a competent payment processor) is just not financially sane. So yes, I absolutely believe a store that handles such small amounts will accept 0 confirmations. The tiny risk might be taken by the payment processor or the store, that remains to be seen.
4  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Block Spacing And Security on: June 10, 2014, 12:39:42 PM
My fear is that that adoption will be held back and hence the rate of network propagation will not be an issue for a very long time.

What kind of adoption is held back with 10min block time versus 2.5 minute block time?

  • everyday in-shop purchases shops can accept non-confirmed transactions -- the risk when handled properly is minimal compared to things like counterfeit cash or credit back claims
  • web shops can always wait for confirmations if they want -- 10 minutes will not affect a two-day delivery
  • Waiting for a confirmation on a major purchase you only make every few years (say, a car or a house) is not a big deal

I can't think of a use case where waiting 2.5 minutes is acceptable but ten minutes isn't. What did you have in mind?

5  Economy / Economics / Re: btc-arbs.com - anybody tried this? Daily interest on BTC deposits on: March 17, 2014, 02:07:40 PM
Number one method of recognising scams: calculate the yearly profit percentage from the daily figures they use to confuse. If it sounds too good to be true, then it's too good to be true.

In this case, they advertise 0.1% to 10% daily profits (this should already be a massive warning sign: if you can make an insane 10% daily profit, then you are taking extreme risks and must have days of bad losses as well. These guys claim to only have profitable days). But let's estimate based on their reported profits for the month: they claim to have made about 1.8% profit per day on average. Maybe that sounds like it's possible, but calculate a yearly profit from that first: 100* (1.018^365 - 1) = 67287%

67287% -> SCAM
By the same reasoning BTC is a doomed bubble because it went up 7000% last year. 

Seriously there are problems with your reasoning.   
1) If they are real and successful the yields will drop.  Probably even .1% will become very high at some point.
2) Arbitrage is a real trading method used by very big money in many different markets to get safe high yields.  Clearly high is something less than 67287%.   Still arbitrage can work if you have the resources to pull it off. 

However just because your reasoning is flawed doesn't mean it isn't a scam.   Clearly caution is warranted.   There are many scams in the BTC world.   

Didn't see this reply before... better reply late than never  I guess.

My logic isn't faulty: No-one promised you a 7000% profit from bitcoins -- or if they did, they were scammers. The point isn't that massive profits are impossible or that arbitrage does not work, the point is that massive potential profits mean equally big risks. These guys claim no risk, zero. They seriously claim that every day is not only profitable, but very profitable.

As an addition to the original rule about recognising scams: Even if you start to believe these guys have found the holy grail (a risk-free high-profit investment), you should ask yourself the second question: Why on earth would they give the profits away to some small time internet investors? They could just invest their own money -- even taking a mortgage is no problem since it's totally risk-free Smiley

btc-arbs is a scam, there's no other explanation that passes Occams razor.

I'll try it out, as I'm not a Newby (fairly recent, just hit 24 hours on forums xD) and see what happens.

Do you happen to need any bridges? I have several really good ones on sale.
6  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin Distribution of Wealth Detailing the BTC Holdings of Wallet Addresses on: March 17, 2014, 01:20:01 PM
We don't know how many addresses people have. But we do know that, excluding multi-sig addresses, an address belongs to one person or one organization.

No, we don't, not in the sense that we could say "there must  be one person that (thinks that he) owns all the coins in this one address". The Mt Gox incident showed very clearly that a lot of people (far more than I imagined) are totally ready to give control of their coins to some other entity that typically will consolidate the coins to a small number of addresses.
7  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Who would like to have ios BTC wallet? on: March 16, 2014, 02:25:03 PM
Yes, on the server. The security team made it well protected.

So you say. Unfortunately that's not enough. You could be scammers. You could be incompetent. Your website isn't doing anything to convince me of either point:
  • You don't publish your real names -- that tells me none of you is ready to put their reputation on the line
  • You don't publish your company info -- do you even have a company?
  • Your TOS and privacy policy do not exist -- why should I trust your security policies if basic things like this fail?
  • The only explanation of your security policies is "We use 5 layer security system" -- Is this a joke?
  • You never mention that you will store the private key and have full control of all the coins in the wallet

I'm sorry if I sound grumpy but that's not acceptable...

Quote
If it is a matter of trust, then it is a matter of time.
Pools, Markets store your coins on their servers, you believe them only if they are quite old and have good reputation. Right?
I go to great lengths to avoid giving control (private keys) to anyone. I would definitely never give my coins to an operation that had the above bullet point list.
8  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: How did the bitcoin-qt package sneak into Debian Sid? on: March 12, 2014, 08:16:36 AM
"sneak in"? Bitcoin tools have been in Debian for years before that article was written...

The article makes some good points, but Debian obviously has the right to make their own decisions -- that's what open source is about.

Personally I think many programs would benefit from out-of-distro distribution methods, but those either don't exist or aren't well integrated. That accompanied with the fact that bitcoin developers don't even provide debian packages means that the article (wrt debian) translates to "please don't use bitcoin on debian"...  That's not constructive.
9  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: BitSimple. A simpler way to buy and sell bitcoins. on: March 10, 2014, 07:41:54 PM
Access for international residents will be added in the next few days.

Would you mind expanding on that a little? Are you going to take EU (SEPA) customers?

Also, I don't see an option for two factor authentication... I would have imagined an end-to-end security policy would have included that -- or am I just not seeing the option?
10  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: New site offering .1% - 10% interest daily on all deposits... Is this legit? on: March 04, 2014, 07:53:17 PM
I've been using it, and promoting it. The opportunity for arbitrage is real, the numbers and deltas are factual. I'm keeping a blog update at http://notnull.org/bitcoin-arbitrage-news/bitcoin-arbitrage-updates/ and in the event I get screwed, which would really only be if they steal and bail, I will certainly be posting. But there is little reason too, there is far more upside to stick around and continue the arbitrage strategy, the difference between the markets is significant, and consistent.

The idea of an annual return, assuming 2% every single day, is huge, but it won't be 2% every day. Yesterday it was 2.28% and a couple days prior it was .4%.

It's just logical math, if it's a scam then the joke's on me, but I sense the trolls are just jealous and so jaded now after Gox that any investment with any promise is too scary to consider objectively.

It's not just the massive profits they claim to make. It's also the question why do they want to give these massive profits to you? As you said, even a reasonably small investment of their own would allow them to make loads of money for themselves... but for some reason they don't want to do that, and instead give you the guaranteed profits.
11  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Seemingly horrible business decision by whales on: March 01, 2014, 06:14:52 PM
I feel that every attempt should have been made by the whales to come up with a solution to gox where everyone received their cash/bitcoin

I've translated this to english: "I think someone (but not me of course) should reward Mt Gox with $500000000.00 for being incompetent (or frauds)".

Quote
BITCOIN IS NOW DEAD IN THE WATER....  ALL THE MOMENTUM AND EUPHORIA ARE GONE.
If this could kill bitcoin, then it obviously wasn't a very good idea to begin with. Why do you want someone to give away 500 million on a bad idea?
12  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: The US Govt stole your coins - not MtGox on: March 01, 2014, 11:42:56 AM
Seeing as how not anyone on this forum has provided ANY evidence that proves otherwise, I'm sticking with this as a far more likely theory.

That's quite some logic there.
"If someone can't disprove my theory, it must be right"
On that basis, I have dancing unicorns in my garden. Prove me wrong!
13  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Mt.Gox technical autopsy on: February 28, 2014, 09:56:07 PM
Get to know the abusers is not difficult. Just check the transactions that got confirmed with a different txid. For this there is need of the authentic Mtgox logs.
So have you been logging those transactions that never ended up in the block chain? Because I sure haven't.
I haven't, but Mtgox should have. As I said we need their authentic logs (authentic in the sense that they are not faked)...
Ok, then we agree. The only reason I asked is that I thought you said the opposite in the post I quoted: that we would not need MtGox logs for this.
14  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Mt.Gox technical autopsy on: February 28, 2014, 09:43:45 PM
Get to know the abusers is not difficult. Just check the transactions that got confirmed with a different txid. For this there is need of the authentic Mtgox logs.

So have you been logging those transactions that never ended up in the block chain? Because I sure haven't.
15  Economy / Economics / Re: btc-arbs.com - anybody tried this? Daily interest on BTC deposits on: February 28, 2014, 12:29:31 PM
How did you get it is a scheme? As I was looking through the site and it doesn't seem to be a ponzi. I want to know how did you mentioned that as I am trying to learn such things to be more safe from any schemes

Number one method of recognising scams: calculate the yearly profit percentage from the daily figures they use to confuse. If it sounds too good to be true, then it's too good to be true.

In this case, they advertise 0.1% to 10% daily profits (this should already be a massive warning sign: if you can make an insane 10% daily profit, then you are taking extreme risks and must have days of bad losses as well. These guys claim to only have profitable days). But let's estimate based on their reported profits for the month: they claim to have made about 1.8% profit per day on average. Maybe that sounds like it's possible, but calculate a yearly profit from that first: 100* (1.018^365 - 1) = 67287%

67287% -> SCAM
16  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Mt.Gox technical autopsy on: February 28, 2014, 12:08:12 PM
My understanding is that indeed only one transaction gets registered in the blockchain, but there seem to be different takes on this issue.

This is incorrect. Maged is describing what happens to competent exchanges with the malleability bug in the quote -- and it seems MtGox was not one of those.

The claimed explanation for MtGox was:
* MtGox sends a transaction
* attacker modifies the txid
* modified transaction goes in the blockchain, and bitcoin ownership changes
* attacker complains MtGox "I didn't receive my coins"
* MtGox searches for original txid in blockchain, doesn't find it  (<-- this is the bug)
* MtGox thinks they haven't paid, apologizes and sends a second, totally separate transaction of the same value

So there will be two transactions in the blockchain (Maged even says so in his post "Under no circumstance should you just issue a completely new transaction like MtGox did. That is how they lost some bitcoins"). Identifying the pairs could be very difficult as the sending and receiving addresses might be different.
17  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: If MtGox can ident the Bitcoins, why not fix it? on: February 27, 2014, 06:38:56 PM
Not sure what the demo dat rule is.  Perhaps that there is a uniqueness to the stolen property?  I see that dollars have serial numbers and now so do casino chips.  So if the demo dat rule doesn't apply to seralized numbered dollars it doesn't apply to casino chips even tho now they have rfid tags internally (saw it on CSI used as evidence) so maybe the demo dat rule does apply to serialized numbered dollars.  It likely applies to serialized numbered dollars having been marked with an explosive dye pack from a bank robbery.

Whether coins have numbers or rfid is not relevant in any way: this is exactly what I was trying to show by modifying the mugger-example... With most things property ownership is the most important value so your expectation holds: you get the exact stolen item back even if it means that later trades that were made with best intentions have to be canceled. The crucial exception is money and several things like it: When money is stolen, your property rights are _not_ the most important thing, security of transactions is the most important thing. This means if the mugger used your money to buy things at the store, you cannot get that money from the store: you need to get the mugger to give you the same amount of money instead.

It's possible that bitcoin will be considered a commodity in some court (I wouldn't bet on it), but I really doubt that applies in your situation. MtGox had the bitcoins, not you.
18  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: If MtGox can ident the Bitcoins, why not fix it? on: February 27, 2014, 11:44:47 AM
Your assumption that the courts will rule that bitcoin should be treated like cash rather then a commodity is in my opinion foolishly optimistic. I have no horse in this race (not a MtGox customer). But at the very least this creates huge legal uncertainties for bitcoin.
You make it sound like bitcoin needs to be considered something like  legal tender by only mentioning cash. In reality there are quite a few exceptions to this rule (depending on country of course), D&T mentioned a few.

I'm not that interested in how the law is currently interpreted in some specific jurisdiction right now (no horse in the race either), but I would like to see someone actually argue why bitcoin should not have the same exception as these existing exceptions "to facilitate trade and commerce by favouring security of transactions over the protection of property rights in certain common, but risky, trading situations". Personally I have problems making a good case against that.
19  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: If MtGox can ident the Bitcoins, why not fix it? on: February 27, 2014, 11:23:43 AM
Still the application of demo dat rule is not a forgone conclusion when it comes to bitcoins.  It doesn't apply to legal tender and it also doesn't apply to bearer instruments (i.e. casino chip), or negotiable instruments (i.e. a check).  It is at least plausible a judge would rule that bitcoins are more like those exceptions than real property.  Until we see a court case we won't know for sure.  I am not a judge so what I think matters little but a bitcoin has more in common with a casino chip (a bearer instrument) then it does with a car (which is a unique specific piece of real property).

Note: to be clear I am not saying I have the answer just pointing out the law is pretty slow to react to technological changes.  This and countless other questions will eventually be decided but the timescale is measured in decades.

+1

That whole post was what I wanted to express but wasn't able to, thank you. It will be interesting to see the actual legal decisions when they start coming up -- I bet we'll get both interpretations initially but my guess is the same: bitcoins may not be formal currency but handling them as unique pieces of property makes little sense.
20  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin symbol positioning on: February 27, 2014, 10:28:25 AM
You should probably just make this is a poll though
Added

You understand that this is language (or culture) -dependent more than it is currency-dependent right? In english "10$" is always wrong (or at least not the preferred form) but in many other languages that would be fine and putting the symbol before the value would look just weird. The same thing will happen to BTC.

This poll is basically asking "where does your native language put the currency symbol".

Quote from: Bitalo_Maciej
Poll results will be skewed though, because probably most people here come from the US, where you place the dollar sign before the amount Wink.

The same is true for euros and pounds so that covers most of the other people here Smiley
Er, no. My own guess is that in the native language of most EU citizens, the € comes after the value.
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