I believe these all are owned by the OP due to the pictures and camera matching up. That said anyone should use escrow with brand new accounts.
You've done very well for yourself with these purchases over the years. People on the forum tend to build up reputation, so it's odd that we see a brand new account with years worth of memorabilia.
The premium in BTC terms has taken a huge hit on all of the loaded coins. Those 1 btc peeled brass Casascius coins can go anywhere from $100-500 depending on condition. Ebay has several for reference pricing.
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Can we ask how you came into possession of such a collection? The reason I ask is because these coins are very rare. Only a handful of people in the world own a collection like this, and they all know what it is worth.
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Confirming #6. Beautiful series.
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Nexus | The Alternative News Magazine November - December 2017 Vol. 24, No. 6 Blockchain cryptocurrencies: a tool to enslave?
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Lot 1 - 0.001
Lot 3 - 0.001
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Thank you the info, but just to clarify:
Cannot anyone see TXIDs, since it is all the same address they have to send to?
E.g. this 0.05BTC with this TXID has not been send by me, but how would they ever know that if I just mail this TXID? 870440beea57194939b61b73b0ecd3791e7f11259375152ed8034ed635afdd36
I understand of course we don't aim at cheating...
polymerbit would notice two people using the same txid, he would then know something was up and request that both people sign a message from the sending address. only the real sender would be able to sign. Exactly this. We will keep a close eye on the BTC coming in and the associated addresses. Each order will have an associated TXID. We are building a spreadsheet for it. That is why we need your order number. We can then match all. And see who is outstanding This is why you should use a payment processor that gives each customer their own BTC address to pay... makes it super easy to keep track of any and all orders. Yes it would be problematic if honest customer pays from exchange where they do not control private key. Dishonest customer notices this (because exchanges tend to batch transactions and are easily visible) and says that was my transaction. You would not likely get the exchange to investigate this, so it would potentially never get resolved.
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Don't enter your private key into any online QR code software. Get the official wallet from electrum.org and enter private keys on a clean laptop/PC. Or use a trusted bitcoin mobile for android/ios that allows you to enter a plain text private key (they exist, try mycelium or greenaddress).
I got the electrum.org wallet app for Mac. Where does one put the code from the back of the coin sticker? Im thwarted again. Prof.DeLusion Using electrum, create a new wallet using private key. Or, if you already have a wallet, you can import or sweep a new private key. Note: When spending this coin, always send the full balance to a new address that you control. Don't let any change come back to the coin (look up youtube video on how change works on paper wallets if you are confused).
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Don't enter your private key into any online QR code software. Get the official wallet from electrum.org and enter private keys on a clean laptop/PC. Or use a trusted bitcoin mobile for android/ios that allows you to enter a plain text private key (they exist, try mycelium or greenaddress).
I would stay away from the Mycelium ios app. It is very buggy atm and having issue with withdrawing funds as well as viewing transactions (crashes every time you click transactions). Good to know. Any other good mobile wallets that support plain text privkeys?
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Don't enter your private key into any online QR code software. Get the official wallet from electrum.org and enter private keys on a clean laptop/PC. Or use a trusted bitcoin mobile for android/ios that allows you to enter a plain text private key (they exist, try mycelium or greenaddress).
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First off, welcome Mystery to the forum I am familiar with your TV show and did not know you were into BTC. That's pretty cool. My recommendation, since you are looking for such a low premium $200, is to go ahead and peel this coin and redeem it for a full bitcoin (along with bitcoin cash, bitcoin SV, etc), and then sell the peeled coin for $200. The reason I say that is because you are going to have to find a buyer willing to trust the loaded value of the coin. They will most likely want to escrow the transaction, which adds time and cost to the deal. It seems like you could save a lot of time and potential headache by avoiding this and getting roughly the same amount in the end. You should be asking more if you plan to sell it loaded due to the costs involved. That's just my advice. Good luck. They are nice coins seemingly trustworthy, but are less known than the Casascius coins. The lack of COA is going to really hurt the ability to identify its funds on the blockchain, which is a requirement for most buyers.
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Dang, I missed out. Congrats bavi on a heck of a deal.
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