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81  Other / Meta / Re: The Objective Standards Guild - Testimonium Libertatem Iustitia on: February 20, 2020, 06:23:54 AM
AHHH I seee! I AM the one on a witch hunt now! That is a blatant lie. You are another two bit power tripping antagonistic forum cop. One quick scan over just the first page of your left ratings explains why you are on the suggested exclusion list. You are firmly within the clown car.

Yeah, shame on me for tagging people who are trying to scam others by running fake ICOs. Such power trip.
82  Other / Meta / Re: The Objective Standards Guild - Testimonium Libertatem Iustitia on: February 19, 2020, 09:14:02 AM
lol, this will probably land me on one or two more shitlists. Lips sealed

Anyway, any community forms standards over time.

are those standards now set in stone? trust abuse and witch hunts are rampant, but do they have to be? maybe not. maybe TECSHARE is onto something.

I'm not exactly clear what you want to accomplish with those recommended inclusions/exclusions other than forming another set of standards which are anything but clear.  In fact, I can't see into your brain so I don't know what they are.  Maybe if you wrote them down?

he did. see "core tenets". the standards are very clear to me. ie no red tags based on opinions and unproven accusations + defend people from trust abuse in the face of unproven accusations.

i support the core tenets. i've seen countless people run off the forum by rampant trust abuse and petty reputation drama. it's getting old.

i can't give up my avatar or signature but i can put a short link in my personal message. something like "Objective Standards Guild: https://bit.ly/2P79Dxh"

If those are his standards then I'd love to hear why I need to be on his distrust list. I have never left negative feedback based someone's opinions or unproven accusations. If TECSHARE thinks I have I would love to see him point out which negative feedback/flag support is wrong and I'd happily correct it. The list in the OP is just his personal witch hunt, nothing more.
83  Other / Meta / Re: The Objective Standards Guild - Testimonium Libertatem Iustitia on: February 19, 2020, 08:43:29 AM
Alright, so this looks to me like TECSHARE doesn't like a particular clique.

There is no particular clique, he just listed everyone that has excluded him from their trust list (most likely have valid reasons). I have no relationship with well over 90% of the people in his list.
84  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: how to change BTC sendre's adress? on: February 19, 2020, 08:39:45 AM
Hi everyone!

I've paid from my BTC wallet few times to the same reciever. The question is:
Does he able to see that all transactions from me come from the same wallet?

Not from the same wallet. But all transactions from the same address.  He just have to paste your address in any block explorer to see all of your transactions.

Quote

And what can i do to make him see all my payments as from different wallets everytime? Is it possible at all?

If you make him a transaction from any other address,  he will be able to just look for that address in any block explorer and see all past transactions from that address.

If you give him your public address,  he can watch it.

A wallet is a set of many public addresses and the respective private keys of those addresses.

Actually he can. Try looking up a transaction on www.walletexplorer.com, click the sending address and you can see what other addresses are part of the same wallet.
85  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Trace transactions on: February 18, 2020, 08:18:56 PM
Hello,

I am researching ways how to trace transactions and hot and cold wallets of exchanges, gambling sites, cantors, mixer.s What sources of data could I use? What algorithms and scripts would be useful to do this? Maybe, do you have some interesting articles about this issue? Any help would be great Smiley

Perhaps contact the creator of www.walletexplorer.com? He is a Chainalysis employee so I'm sure he can point you in the right direction.
86  Economy / Goods / Re: String art "BITCOIN" by ✂️HandMade✂️©5Ksana on: February 17, 2020, 07:21:11 PM
I really like it but I'm not sure it's worth that price. If you compare it to other string art (on Etsy for example) it's pretty expensive.
87  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: The Lightning Network FAQ on: February 17, 2020, 07:18:53 PM
I tried Zeus but for some reason it's not connecting to my node. I also tried connecting with Orbot active but that didn't make a difference.

No idea, I would think that it would be some connectivity issue to your node then since nothing is connecting to it.
I have no clue what to check :-(

If nobody can help you here, you might want to post on github to see if anyone can help there.

-Dave


I got Zap to work but only only local ip lndconnect uri (not Tor) so I can use Zap while on my WiFi. Tor is causing most issues I suppose so I'll wait until more compatible wallets become available.
88  Other / Meta / Re: How to do private giveaways on: February 17, 2020, 04:19:39 AM
Sounds like a nice system for the Collectibles section. Would it also be possible to make the giveaway accessible to anyone, limiting the giveaway to the first [insert random amount] people, preferable with a rank above Full Member (or a different prefered rank)?
89  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: Paxful admins are stealing peoples bitcoins. How do I sue? on: February 17, 2020, 04:03:30 AM
Can you update the OP with the following format?

Code:
[b][color=black]What happened:: [/color][/b]

[b][color=black]Scammers Profile Link: [/color][/b]

[b][color=black]Reference Link: [/color][/b]
[b][color=black]Amount Scammed: [/color][/b]
[b][color=black]Payment Method: [/color][/b]
[b][color=black]Proof of Payment: [/color][/b]
[b][color=black]PM/Chat Logs: [/color][/b]
[b][color=black]Additional Notes: [/color][/b]

Makes it much easier for people to review your accusation.
90  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Craig Wright Potential Lawsuit to Bitcoin on: February 16, 2020, 06:49:11 PM
1. Craig Wright didn't invent Bitcoin.
2. Craig Wright doesn't understand Bitcoin.
3. Craig Wright has had nothing to do with Bitcoin.

He is a pathalogical liar who dug an incredibly deep grave, he's realizing that he can't climb out anymore so he's just trying to over-bluff people.
91  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: The Lightning Network FAQ on: February 15, 2020, 06:40:14 PM
I tried Zeus but for some reason it's not connecting to my node. I also tried connecting with Orbot active but that didn't make a difference.
92  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: SCAM: Bitcoin SV (BSV) - fake team member and plagiarized white paper on: February 14, 2020, 08:04:44 AM
And the reason for the entire case is ...?

Craig getting called out by Ira for using his dead brother in a tax fraud attempt.
93  Economy / Reputation / Re: [Cult of Lauda] An historic peace: Rome’s treaty with Carthage on: February 14, 2020, 07:55:07 AM

He's Cryptohunter, a mental patient who can't resist to continue spreading his delusional mind figments. For some unknown reason he is angry with anyone who is remotely successful in life, likely because he is angrily typing his posts from some shitty appartment somewhere in Chhattisgarh.
94  Economy / Collectibles / Re: [AUCTION] Acrylic Casascius LTC round in signed, Charlie Lee airtite (RARE) on: February 13, 2020, 09:57:25 PM
Not that I have any reason to doubt Charlie but did Mike ever mention creating these?
95  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: SCAM: Bitcoin SV (BSV) - fake team member and plagiarized white paper on: February 13, 2020, 07:20:09 PM
CSW willfully created the fraudulent documents.. That's what I can see.

So, he lied. Intentionally. That's not a person I can trust. Neither should you or anyone else.

U wish he did

(What sense would make all that...)

U cannot proof anything

Neither verify. Don't trust ur filled bags of btcs

Matthew Edman, one of the expert witnesses in the Kleiman vs Wright case, disagrees.

Quote
Edman has a background of assisting law enforcement like the FBI in various criminal and national security investigations, including the Silk Road case.

Quote
First, Edman describes the forged Tulip Trust email that purports to have been sent from Dave Kleiman to Craig Wright in 2011. The original evidence was a scan of a printout, but Wright also provided the original PDF to the plaintiffs as part of discovery. There was also another version of the PDF provided, one where the visible timestamp says 2014. (Note that the linked PDFs are from the court ledger, and have had the relevant metadata stripped out.)

The metadata extracted from the 2014 email PDF contains plenty of information:
The XMP metadata was written by a library compiled on August 23, 2012.
The PDF was created using Acrobat PDF Maker 11 for Microsoft Outlook.
This software helpfully embeds a lot of the email metadata into the PDF.
The email was received on October 17, 2014, at 12:04:57 PM in the UTC+10 time zone (eastern Australia).
The MailFrom field indicates the email was sent by craig@panopticrypt.com (not Dave Kleiman).
The MailTo field shows the same craig@panopticrypt.com as the recipient of the email (i.e. Wright sent the email to himself).
The email headers, embedded in the MailTransportHeader field, contain numerous other indications that Craig Wright was the real sender:
There's a valid DKIM signature for panopticrypt.com, timestamped October 17, 2014.
The first machine in the Received chain to have processed the email as it was being sent was named "PCCSW01" (Craig Steven Wright's PC?) and listed craig@panopricrypt.com as an authenticated sender.
The IP of this machine, 14.1.18.30, is registered in geo-ip databases as being associated with eastern Australia.
The email headers contain contradictory information for when the email was sent:
The Date header (controlled by the sender) claims the email was sent on June 24, 2011.
The X-Mailer header says the sending email client was Microsoft Outlook 15.0. This is Outlook 2013, released in early 2013.
The email attachment was a Tulip Trust PDF that appears to visually match the pages seen in the original scanned printout.
Edman points out that the date inconsistency can be explained if the sender simply changed their computer clock before sending the email, whereas the other headers are added by the servers routing the email, so they will typically record the true date.

Next Edman compares the above to the metadata extracted from the "2011" email PDF, and finds that:
The two PDFs have the same DocumentID, strongly indicating that one is an edited version of the other.
The 2011 email has an embedded modification date of October 22, 2014.
The MailFrom field in this metadata now says dave@davekleiman.com instead of craig@panopticrypt.com.
The email headers had been truncated, leaving only a small portion.
The remaining portion of the email headers matches up against the beginning of the headers of the 2014 email PDF, except a timestamp that used to say "Thu, 16 Oct 2014 20:05:55 -0500" now says "Thu, 24 Jun 2011 20:04:55 -0500". However, June 24, 2011 was a Friday.
There is no way for a computer to make this kind of mistake, so this was hand-edited. Incompetently.
For the lulz, the plaintiffs submit a plain calendar into evidence.
The truncated email headers still include a Return-Path of craig@panopticrypt.com.
The Microsoft SMTP Server that processed the email came out in November 2013.
Clearly, the second "2011" email PDF is a further modified version of the "2014" PDF, trying to make it further look like an email that was actually sent by Dave Kleiman in 2011.

Edman says he's further looked at the document structure of the PDFs, and found the marker /TouchUp_TextEdit MP in the PDF code, a tell-tale marker of someone having made edits to the PDF such as adding/removing/editing text. This is something of a recurring trait for Wright, as it appears in many documents from him, including the recent manipulated Bitcoin whitepaper. In the case of the "2011" email, the date was manually edited in the PDF:




The defense makes an objection that metadata that's generated by user input (such as Date fields) should be considered hearsay by a third party. The judge overrules the objection, and the objection is honestly pure nonsense; Edman's testimony is not relying on user-generated metadata fields being accurate, in fact he's doing the complete opposite; pointing out that they have clearly been falsified.

It turns out Wright also provided the email in question in raw form (a .msg file) ahead of the previous June 28 hearing. Edman analyzed the email headers of this file as well. While these headers were more thoroughly manipulated to look like a genuine 2011 email from Dave Kleiman, several things still reveal manipulations:
UNIX timestamps don't match the human-readable dates (October 2012 vs. June 2011).
This email passed through Google servers; the previous email indicated craig@panopticrypt.com was handled by servers running Microsoft software.
According to Edman, the .msg file contained a reference to the email address craig.wright@hotwirepe.com, however that domain did not exist in June 2011.
The headers of this email are actually from an email sent through Google servers in October 2012, and are completely different from the headers embedded in the previous PDF files.
Edman is asked whether this new .msg file is an authentic email from Dave Kleiman to Craig Wright from June 2011, and answers no. (The defense objects because they don't want this to be taken as a finding that Dave Kleiman did not send an email like this to Craig Wright.) It looks like this new variant of the email was created from some unrelated old 2012 email, instead of the email Wright sent to himself that was used as the basis for the original forgery.

Edman has also analyzed another email provided by Wright that contains the same document ID (indicating it was created by editing the other document). This document purports to be an email from Dave to Craig in April 2013 regarding Dave accepting a role as director of Coin-Exch. (This was three weeks before his death.) The metadata in this PDF is obviously based on and is practically identical to the earlier "2011" email, except the PDF has been edited to contain a different email body. Even the MailAttachments field is still present, even though the printed email in the PDF does not have any attachments.

This email body contains a PGP signature, which has an embedded timestamp of October 23, 2014. This is very reminiscent of the other forged email Wright was caught submitting as evidence (and subsequently withdrew). Edman is asked if he's aware that Dave Kleiman died in April 2013, which the defense objects to as irrelevant. The judge overrules, and Edman gets to explain how this signature cannot possibly be authentic. Further, the key used for this signature has been used and mentioned in other Tulip Trust documents.

Edman next talks about the metadata of a Deed of Trust previously sworn by Wright in this trial, ostensibly created in 2012 but containing font files that were created in 2015. The fonts contain a 2015 copyright notice and also contain timestamped digital signatures from May 22, 2015.

The defense objects to relevance as plaintiffs question Edman about yet another email, but the judge allows it as it pertains to Wright's intent and credibility. This email, purportedly from September 2012, also contains digital signatures, these ones timestamped February 28, 2014 and March 5, 2014 (UTC), and using a version of GnuPG (2.0.20) that was released in May 2013.

Yet another email quoting a purported email from Kleiman to Wright in 2012 containing a list Bitcoin addresses supposedly held by the Tulip Trust. The signature in this message was timestamped March 2, 2014. "Dave" describes how at least some of these bitcoins are held as paper wallets while others are on a TrueCrypt drive (directly contradicting Wright's later story about a deterministic wallet where the addresses/keys aren't stored but generated from random seeds).

The PGP key used to sign these last couple of emails was 0415E6CBE23FCC2D "Dave Kleiman (Bitcoin so we neer have to wotty about infaltion and easing) <dave@davekleiman.com>" [sic]. (Craig Wright is known to be a poor speller, and many of the forgeries also contain poor spelling.)

You can read the rest of the analysis here: https://blog.wizsec.jp/2019/08/kleiman-v-craig-wright-part-4.html

There is plenty of other evidence that Craig has submitted forged documents and contradicting statements in court. He'll soon find out how U.S. judges feel about perjury Smiley.
96  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: The Lightning Network FAQ on: February 13, 2020, 07:01:40 PM
I am currently running an LND node (TOR). What is currently the most stable Android wallet that allows me to connect my own LND node? I tried Zap wallet but apparently there are issues with the Android version when running it on TOR.
97  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What if a significant inflation happen worldwide? on: February 13, 2020, 06:53:21 PM
We're about to witness what will happen to Bitcoin in such scenarios. Corona is going to have a (huge) impact on the global economy. Chinese factories are closing down, causing a disruption of the global supply chain. A lot of EU/US based factories and businesses are relying on parts from China. People are canceling their trips to Asia, causing those countries to miss out on a lot of revenue from tourism. Big conventions are being cancelled because of fear of contamination etc.

It's only a matter of time before traditional markets will start to react.
98  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Startup Crypto ATM Project (Europe) - BATM Network Profit Share (MVP) on: February 13, 2020, 05:31:12 PM
Why would anyone invest in worthless tokens rather than keeping their bitcoins? It would make more sense to start an IPO and returning divident in BTC.
99  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Anypay’s CEO Says Bitcoin is Worthless For Payment; Disables BTC Payment on: February 13, 2020, 05:28:38 PM
Listen to this - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FcMZarXA4fc

I just LOL'ed at this fool, how can he tell that BTC is worthless as payment just because they have been double-spend?

https://www.reddit.com/r/btc/comments/f1mbzy/main_pos_in_thailand_disables_btc_payments_as/?utm_medium=android_app&utm_source=share

We all know that is it not BTC's fault, I also have some inclination about this CEO, it looks like he is a shill of Roger Ver's Bitcoin Cash.


https://twitter.com/AnypayInc/status/1226882466033610753

These kinds of attacks will only prove how strong Bitcoin really is. These types of companies will continue to lose customers and revenue until they are forced to:

A) Start accepting Bitcoin again.
B) Shut down the company.

Look at Bitpay. They tried forcing people to use BIP-70, resulting in people stop using their payment gateway. They recently announced that they're dropping BIP-70.
100  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: SCAM: Bitcoin SV (BSV) - fake team member and plagiarized white paper on: February 13, 2020, 04:51:35 PM
Again, you are relying on Craig's version of events, and I am relying on the judge's words that Craig acted in bad faith throughout the entirety of the proceedings. Surely Craig would have known the documents he was submitting to the court were forged and warned the court ahead of time. So why didn't he?

You are relying on the judge's words who goes to the same synagogue as the plaintiff? Have a cup of common sense.

As for why Craig acted as he did. I can only speculate that the clock was ticking for his advantage. Bending some rules here and there doesn't matter if you know you will win the case.

Remind me, where exactly did I promise proof? All I've ever stated is that I have empirical evidence, more than enough. So stop making stuff up on my behalf.

I have more than enough empirical evidence that he's a fraud and not Satoshi.

That's actually fine by me. I didn't come here to change your mind. I just came here to prepare salt for your wounds.

Your signature is very misleading. Bitcoin SV is a fork of Bitcoin Cash, which is exactly why the latest Bitcoin SV downgrade causes nodes to connect to Bitcoin Cash nodes. Being delusional is fine but please don't try to lure people into buying an altcoin, just like Calvin and Craig are doing.
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