Bitcoin Forum
March 30, 2023, 06:38:41 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 24.0.1 [Torrent]
 
  Home Help Search Login Register More  
  Show Posts
Pages: « 1 2 [3] 4 5 6 »
41  Economy / Lending / [FILLED] 3K BTC bond, 1%/week, 100% reserve guarantee, no pirate exposure on: May 18, 2012, 08:14:32 PM
  • Need 3K BTC ( of course, doesn't all have to come from a single lender )
  • Pays 1%/week (every Monday)
  • I reserve the right to pay down the loan at any time
  • Zero exposure to pirate
  • 100% reserve guarantee, so default is impossible
  • You may withdraw at any time provided you give me time to find substitute lender
  • Ask FreeMoney, Kluge, Maged, Coinabul... I am very trustworthy. I have also published articles on Bitcoin and have my real identity published.

Any other questions please post below or PM. Thanks!
42  Economy / Speculation / To Roth or not to Roth? on: May 16, 2012, 11:47:41 PM
Note that I don't mean Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA -- I've already decided Roth is better.

I mean Roth IRA vs Bitcoin.

What say you?

Right now I'm in both to diversify. The more time that passes, however, the more confidence I gain and the more % of my assets I move into Bitcoin. But I haven't cracked my IRA at all to buy BTC, but sometimes I wonder why I have it if the government may decide to confiscate it some day anyway ( hey, Argentina has done it, as well as many other countries that got into financial problems... )
43  Bitcoin / Project Development / mtgox/bitcoinica historical price data? on: May 10, 2012, 09:47:11 PM
Anyone know where I can find this?

Thanks,
BA
44  Economy / Services / Parking BTC with Bitcoinica on: April 25, 2012, 09:07:30 PM
Has anyone done this just to earn the APY?

I am considering it as it seems the safest way to earn interest on BTC, however, my main worry is that they may prevent withdrawals without getting all kinds of crazy info about you. If the Feds ever attack Bitcoin, then expect the exchanges to become frozen IMO.

Any opinions on this?

Although I trust Bitcoinica, I don't trust the Feds, so at present I keep no funds with Bitcoinica. Which sucks b/c earning interest in a deflationary currency is pretty sweet.
45  Economy / Services / Mtgox problem on: April 12, 2012, 05:32:09 PM
"The email address linked to your account has been changed recently. Please retry later."

How long do I have to wait?? I need to send these coins asap
46  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / how to use message signing on: April 11, 2012, 08:43:34 PM
I have a message I'm sending to someone that I need to sign using my bitcoin address private key.

How does the reciever verify that I signed the message using my private key? I see the ability the sign the message using the client, but how do I verify?

Thanks!
47  Economy / Lending / [CANCELLED] Selling 170 BTC zero-coupon bond, pays 200 BTC in 2 months on: April 04, 2012, 07:40:07 PM
PM me if interested

Thanks,
-BA

Regarding my rep:

I'm a trustworthy member of this forum, ask around, Kluge, FreeMoney, DeathAndTaxes, Maged can all vouch for my character, and many others, or just look at the trustworthy traders thread.
48  Economy / Currency exchange / [CLOSED] Want to buy 110 BTC w/ paypal, will pay 10% premium on: April 04, 2012, 03:46:57 AM
Hi, I'm a trustworthy member of this forum, ask around, Kluge can vouch for my character, or FreeMoney, and many others, or just look at the trustworthy traders thread.

Looking to buy 110 BTC via PayPal. I am willing to pay a 10% premium above the spot price at the time of the transaction.

For example, currently they're trading at 4.94 at gox, so I would buy them at 5.434. 5.434 USD/BTC * 110 BTC = $597.74

PM me if interested
49  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / When will Tx DB use the merkle tree pruning? on: April 02, 2012, 07:09:02 PM
Is there any reason that this has not yet been implemented? Are there any limitations imposed by this approach to compress the blockchain? I never fully understood the tradeoffs here, thanks.
50  Economy / Services / Does BitcoinBonus work? on: March 30, 2012, 09:11:06 PM
So last week I went to BitcoinBonus, made an account, clicked on the link to amazon.com, and purchased roughly $50 worth of stuff.

I keep checking the account, but no record of the purchase appears anywhere.

Has anyone else had luck using this site? Or maybe I haven't waited long enough?

Thanks!
51  Economy / Lending / [CLOSED] 10 BTC 5-day "short" contract (pays 8% commission) on: March 24, 2012, 09:58:16 PM
I'm in the process of buying $50 worth of BTC. I am transferring the money now via dwolla, and it will be done on Thursday.

If you are willing to send me 10 BTC today, I will send you $50 worth of BTC ( minus the 0.65% gox fee ) on Thursday.

This is akin to buying a contract to short 10 BTC for 5 days and getting an 8% commission for doing so ( given current exchange rates ).

If you are game, PM me and I'll give you my receiving address.

Thanks!
-BA
52  Other / Off-topic / Cool Bitcoin T-shirt on: March 23, 2012, 09:56:40 PM
http://www.cafepress.com/cp/customize/product2.aspx?number=631170564

I'll take a pic once it's delivered to see what the quality is like

The picture sucks since it's too low-res, but you get the idea
53  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / 195.200.253.240 is a real jerk on: March 22, 2012, 09:31:51 PM
Look at recent transactions... ( https://blockchain.info/ )

A$$hat is dropping transactions to get the block reward faster

Making more work for legit mining pools

Maybe TX fee is too low?
54  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / New Feature idea - tracking BTC address balance using the client? on: March 02, 2012, 11:12:10 PM
You know, I thought I was being pretty safe by keep certain addresses secret, keeping my wallet offline and encrypted, etc etc.

But I just realized something - I often check the addresses using blockchain.info or blockexplorer.com

Since the address is encoded into the URL, my ISP could merely save the places I have visited recently, and bam, someone would know "bitcoin addresses of interest" to me.

I suppose the solution is to use TOR to check it, or just use the client ( but I don't want to load my precious offline savings wallet! ). So ideally, the thing would be to have the ability to WATCH or TRACK certain addresses using the Bitcoin client, without having to have the private key for that address.

Good idea or bad idea? thanks.
55  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / BlockExplorer.com and BlockChain.info out of sync? on: March 01, 2012, 09:28:52 PM
I don't want to reveal one of my addresses, but it seems that these two websites are reporting different transactions at present. Specifically, there are txs on blockchain.info that have not appeared on blockexplorer.com.

Any ideas? Thanks
56  Economy / Services / Any else having trouble sending dwolla to mtgox? on: February 17, 2012, 10:24:30 PM
Sent $50 over to gox, but it hasn't been received (about 3-4 hours ago). Normally only takes a half hour.

Just curious if anyone else if having the same problem.
57  Other / Off-topic / Where is that funny bitcoin comic/image? on: February 16, 2012, 10:51:54 PM
It had some guy sitting at a computer taking forever to generate some tiny fraction of a BTC, and then at the end he thinks "soon I will be worth billions..."

It's really funny, but I just cannot find it anymore Sad
58  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / MTGOX new privacy policy??? on: February 15, 2012, 11:44:12 PM
Does this actually change anything? Will they require this for all users, or does this just mean that they may require it?

----

Our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy will go into effect February 22, 2012.

Gathering and Use of Personal Information
 
We may collect your Personal Information if you use the Site, open an Account to use the Platform or perform any Transactions on the Platform. The types of Personal Information which we collect may include:
 •your name;
•your photographic identification;
•your address;
•your phone number;
•your e-mail address;
•your banking details including account numbers;
•your date of birth; and
•your trades.

59  Economy / Economics / when you run out of other people's money... on: February 14, 2012, 10:32:56 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/13/world/europe/greeks-pessimistic-in-anti-austerity-protests.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

Greek Parliament Passes Austerity Plan After Riots Rage
 
By NIKI KITSANTONIS and RACHEL DONADIO
 

ATHENS — After violent protests left dozens of buildings aflame in Athens, the Greek Parliament voted early on Monday to approve a package of harsh austerity measures demanded by the country’s foreign lenders in exchange for new loans to keep Greece from defaulting on its debt.

Though it came after days of intense debate and the resignation of several ministers in protest, in the end the vote on the austerity measures was not close: 199 in favor and 74 opposed, with 27 abstentions or blank ballots. The Parliament also gave the government the authority to sign a new loan agreement with the foreign lenders and approve a broader arrangement to reduce the amount Greece must repay to its bondholders.

The new austerity measures include, among others, a 22 percent cut in the benchmark minimum wage and 150,000 government layoffs by 2015 — a bitter prospect in a country ravaged by five years of recession and with unemployment at 21 percent and rising.

But the chaos on the streets of Athens, where more than 80,000 people turned out to protest on Sunday, and in other cities across Greece reflected a growing dread — certainly among Greeks, but also among economists and perhaps even European officials — that the sharp belt-tightening and the bailout money it brings will still not be enough to keep the country from going over a precipice.

Angry protesters in the capital threw rocks at the police, who fired back with tear gas. After nightfall, demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails, setting fire to more than 40 buildings, including a historic theater in downtown Athens, the worst damage in the city since May 2010, when three people were killed when protesters firebombed a bank. There were clashes in Salonika in the north, Patra in the west, Volos in central Greece, and on the islands of Crete and Corfu.

Greece and its foreign lenders are locked in a dangerous brinkmanship over the future of the nation and the euro. Until recently, a Greek default and exit from the euro zone was seen as unthinkable. Now, though experts say that the European Union is not prepared for a default and does not want one, the dynamic has shifted from trying to save Greece to trying to contain the damage if it turns out to be unsalvageable.

“They’re trying to lay the ground for it, trying to limit the contagion from it,” said Simon Tilford, the chief economist at the Center for European Reform, a research institute in London. Still, he added, letting Greece go would set a dangerous precedent, and it would be “fanciful” to think otherwise.

Greece’s limping economy yields large trade and budget deficits, and none but the European Central Bank, the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund — known collectively as the troika — are willing to lend the nation the money it needs to stay afloat. The troika is demanding more concessions to placate Germany and other northern European countries, where the bailout of Greece is a hard sell to voters. For its part, Greece is trying to preserve social and political cohesion in the face of growing unrest, political extremism and a devastated economy that is expected to worsen with more austerity. And the feeling is growing here and abroad that the troika’s strategy for Greece is failing.

The leaders of two of the three major political parties in Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’s interim coalition government — the Socialists and the center-right New Democracy party — agreed on the new round of austerity after days of tense debate, maneuvering and threats. The leader of the third, the right-wing Popular Orthodox Rally, refused to endorse the measures and later withdrew from the coalition.

In the debate on Sunday night before the vote, Mr. Papademos appealed to lawmakers to do their “patriotic duty” and pass the measures, saying they would be saving Greece from bankruptcy in March, when a bond issue comes due that Greece cannot repay without foreign help.

In a sign of how the crisis has frayed the political order in Greece, the three leading political parties all moved swiftly to expel lawmakers who had broken ranks with leaders in the voting.

Mr. Papademos is a former vice president of the European Central Bank who took office in November with a mandate to negotiate the new loan agreement before new elections are held, perhaps as soon as April. He acknowledged on Sunday that the program “calls for sacrifices from a broad range of citizens who have already made sacrifices.” But the alternative, he said, “a disastrous default,” would be worse.

European Union finance ministers, who were expected to approve the agreements with Greece at a meeting in Brussels last Thursday, instead sent a vote of no confidence, asking Greece for another $400 million in spending cuts.

When they meet again on Wednesday, they are expected to sign off on the measures and raise the stakes. A major topic of discussion is expected to be establishing an escrow account that would hold new money lent to Greece, and using it first to pay creditors, before the Greek government can tap it for any other purpose. The idea, backed by Germany and the Netherlands, may make further loans to Greece more palatable to German voters, but many Greeks see it as a fundamental loss of sovereignty and feel that they are being pushed into poverty to appease banks.

“Greece will become a protectorate,” said Natalia Stefanou, 45, a shoe store employee at a protest outside the Parliament on Sunday. She said she had not been paid since September and may soon lose her job entirely. “It’s not me I’m worried about, though,” she said. “I’ve got two children, aged 14 and 15. What kind of country are we going to leave them?”

Anti-German sentiment is also on the rise in Greece, where memories of the Nazi occupation during World War II are still vivid. “This is worse than the ’40s,” said Stella Papafagou, 82, who wore a surgical mask at the demonstration to fend off the tear gas. “This time the government is following the Germans’ orders. I would prefer to die with dignity than with my head bent down.”

European leaders, fearful that Greece’s crisis will undermine efforts to help other euro nations like Portugal and Spain, have been trying directly or indirectly in recent days to paint Greece as a special case, whose leaders have failed to transform its troubled and corrupt state fast enough. In an interview last week, the Italian prime minister, Mario Monti, said that in the highly unlikely event of a Greek default, “there would be extremely strong political policy and political responses to prevent any such phenomenon to go beyond Greece.”

Similarly, Fabrizio Saccomanni, the director general of the Bank of Italy, told reporters last week, referring to the risk of “contagion,” that “market indications seem to suggest that this problem is seen as minor.”

But others say that is wishful thinking. “If one country in the monetary union can default, so can another — that is one simple inference that bank managers and hedge fund mangers can infer, no matter what Mrs. Merkel or Mr. Sarkozy may say,” said Costas Lapavitsas, an economist at the University of London, referring to Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and President Nicolas Sarkozy of France.

“Portugal and Ireland have unsustainable debt,” he said. “Put two and two together, and it makes four.”

Mr. Lapavitsas, who has been calling for Greece to go ahead and default on its own terms, added that it was “absolutely unacceptable that this huge amount of Greek debt that ties the country hand and foot should be dealt with by some unnamed and obscure technocrats and unelected people.”

If Greece dug itself into a hole by borrowing beyond its means, as many argue, there is also a growing sense that the troika’s austerity regimen of spending cuts and tax increases is burying Greece alive in that hole. “The reason Greece is in this position is because of the strategy the troika imposed upon it,” said Mr. Tilford, of the Center for European Reform.

“The I.M.F. has never approached a country like this,” he said. “With this much austerity, it would always have a huge devaluation, too.”

Financial analysts said they expected investors to welcome news of the vote in Parliament.

“It’s a pause, it’s a relief,” said Milton Ezrati, the senior economist and market strategist at Lord Abbett & Company. “But it’s short-lived and everyone knows that. We’re buying a few more months before the next round of trouble.”

Jerry A. Webman, the senior investment officer and chief economist for Oppenheimer Funds, also struck a cautious note.

“It doesn’t solve the problem,” Mr. Webman said, “but it gives everybody the political cover to look for ways to solve the real Greek problem, which is how to get the country and its economy back on more stable footing.”

With more wage cuts and tax increases expected, Greeks are growing increasingly angry at their own lawmakers as well as the troika of lenders.

“They’ve all sold out in there, they should be punished,” said Makis Barbarossos, 37, an insurance salesman, as he waved a cigarette toward Parliament on Sunday. “We should put them in small, unheated apartments with 300-euro pensions and see, can they live like that? Can they live how they’re asking us to live?”


Niki Kitsantonis reported from Athens, and Rachel Donadio from Rome. Julie Creswell contributed reporting from New York, and Elisabetta Povoledo from Rome.
60  Economy / Economics / What About Money Causes Economic Crises? on: February 13, 2012, 05:13:09 AM
Peter Schiff is always entertaining, and provides a very refreshing free-market perspective on things

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npJ0CUT8d_Y

Pages: « 1 2 [3] 4 5 6 »
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!