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1421  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Mt.Gox founder Mark Karpeles Sentenced to Over Two Years. Is This a Joke? on: March 16, 2019, 10:21:55 PM
Just a thought, the bitcoins were stolen by someone who had admin privileges.

Jed McCaleb, who sold mt Gox to Karpeles 6 months before it collapsed, may still have had access to the admin username and password.

McCaleb sold it to Karpeles in early 2011. That's 3 years before it collapsed. Karpeles would have been crazy not to migrate to new wallets when he transferred ownership. IIRC according to the WizSec report, the Mt Gox private keys were compromised in September 2011.

I'm not ruling out the possibility that McCaleb could have been involved in some way, just pointing out those facts...
1422  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-13] Crypto Startup: JP Morgan Chase Closed Account with No Explanation on: March 14, 2019, 10:40:23 PM
https://www.ccn.com/crypto-startup-jp-morgan-chase-closed-our-account-with-no-explanation

I've always been intrigued by bankiing's attitude towards crypto. It's rarely mentioned how tenuous the banking is of some of the biggest players. If Silvergate Bank decides to give up the ghost that might screw Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini and nearly 500 others.

As crypto gets bigger is the banking squeeze going to let up or increase? According to this article they were shut down the day after JPmorgancoin was launched.

Silvergate isn't the only player in this space, just the biggest. Metropolitan Bank has been banking with Coinbase and other cryptocurrency startups for years and they're actively pursuing partners in the space. I'm pretty sure there are others. There's too much opportunity for fledgling and niche banking institutions to ignore, and this is a time when cryptocurrency has much more mainstream legitimacy than years ago.

Speaking as a US resident, I think the banking squeeze for unregulated exchanges making international wires (like Bitfinex) will only get worse. For domestic users using MSB-licensed exchanges, you can hardly perceive any banking squeeze anymore. Bank transfers to/from Gemini or Coinbase are just like payroll transfers and bill payments -- fast with zero hassles.
1423  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-14] Bitcoin Miner Says Solar Energy Cuts Mining Costs By 75% on: March 14, 2019, 08:46:27 PM
Just like the cold weather advantage, it's really dependent on regional climate.

In the US, as prices for solar panel production keep falling, solar power will become increasingly relevant in the desert or California for the same reason renewable wind energy is such a staple there. There's just so much sun. The southwest isn't known for cheap energy prices but for businesses of scale it might make sense to set up a predominantly solar operation, especially when you account for incentives and tax breaks for using renewable energy. Those incentives will probably keep growing, given the political climate.
1424  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-14] Bitfury Integration to Bring Bitcoin Lightning Payments to More... on: March 14, 2019, 08:27:12 PM
I've never heard of HadePay. Looking at their site, they should probably hire a new web designer. But their model seems pretty cool and it would be nice to see them gain some market share. It seems like they set up merchants for POS terminals with all the major processors (credit cards, Paypal, Square, Apple Pay) and then also with Bitcoin and LN capability. They process cryptocurrency payments at a flat 1% -- I think that's the same as Bitpay.
1425  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-3-10] QuadrigaCX Missing Crypto Investigation Full of Twists and Turns on: March 13, 2019, 10:56:41 PM
If it's a bankruptcy he wouldn't necessarily have had to falsify his death. Maybe he wouldn't even have been in debt or not so much.
If this is an exit scam, he could have done it much later, or he didn't have the patience to wait for an ATH.

I'm leaning towards Brian Armstrong's analysis: They were hiding insolvency ever since the $15M ETH smart contract incident. They were able to continue like this during the 2017 bull market but were increasingly unable to fulfill withdrawals in 2018. This is their collapse, like Mt Gox a few years back.

I think Cotten's death may have been real, and it provided an easy out for the rest of the management who couldn't maintain the insolvent exchange for much longer anyway. Or he faked his death so he could disappear, to avoid answering for the insolvency.
1426  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-3-6]Starbucks Works with Bakkt to Enable Bitcoin Payments on: March 13, 2019, 10:46:26 PM
This will work in partnership with Bakkt who will be the crypto holder. SB will not hold any crypto it will go directly through Bakkt. It's a similar system to payment processors that allow you to pay instantly and then prompt your bank to cover the transfer. They are vouching for the transaction for you and will cover the fiat transaction with SB at a later date so you don't have to wait at all. It's also going to be available only for US citizens at first.

The details are really vague. It may not even work like a direct payment processor like Bitpay.

It sounds like you might have to sell on Bakkt, then use the proceeds to buy stored value (like a gift card) that can be used at Starbucks.

That solves the issue of waiting for confirmations but it also means zero innovation beyond what's already happening now. People already buy gift cards with bitcoins all the time.

Are you sure about that? The way I understood the system after reading a couple pieces about it is that you don't sell on bakkt. You hold funds at bakkt and whenever you buy something at Starbucks your bakkt account gets charged. Bakkt won't pay Starbucks right away. They will rather vouch for your transaction and make sure their bills are covered weekly or monthly.

I'm not sure about anything. I can't find any specific details about how it would work except that funds would be held at Bakkt, meaning no direct Bitcoin transactions at the time of purchase.

Of course Bakkt and Starbucks will have a settlement process like any other merchant/processor relationship. What I'm wondering about is how the POS process will work for customers -- how are they physically going to pay at the counter? Is Bakkt issuing a charge card or something? Or will it be integrated into the Starbucks gift card/app ecosystem?
1427  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: massive feb visitor collapse in Bitcointalk and Coinmarketcap founding websites on: March 13, 2019, 09:30:47 PM
The drop in bitcointalk visitors is because the bounties are becoming increasingly useless with many not paying out, and the ones that do aren't worth anything. Hunters are giving up the game

That's a secondary effect of less general traffic and less interest in cryptocurrency investment during these times. I've actually noticed a recent uptick in BTC-paying campaigns launching, but interest in ICOs has been plunging for months and months. I'm sure that has a big effect on advertisers. I remember the altcoin market feeling this way ~ early 2015. It was a real doldrums.
1428  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: massive feb visitor collapse in Bitcointalk and Coinmarketcap founding websites on: March 12, 2019, 10:08:03 PM
in february there was a massive collapse in visitors on coinmarket cap (-15% now only 55 million viewers per month)

and Bitcointalk (-26.44%)

https://www.similarweb.com/website/bitcointalk.org#overview

now only 6.28 M people visit bitcointalk per month, another massive loss last month, last month alone almost half the amount of people left as there are currently still in.

this is usually a good indication for the success chances of bitcoin

regards

I only see data going back six months. You would probably find similar results in 2014 or 2015, when interest in Bitcoin was similarly waning. It may not say much about future trends.

I'm also not sure if these are the best metrics for general interest in cryptocurrencies. Social media has become increasingly important over time. I'm guessing the forum doesn't have quite the same influence it once had.
1429  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-3-6]Starbucks Works with Bakkt to Enable Bitcoin Payments on: March 12, 2019, 07:53:39 PM
I wonder if it will transact on the lightning network otherwise it would be too slow to use, especially in the busy areas where the queues for a coffee are ridiculous

This will work in partnership with Bakkt who will be the crypto holder. SB will not hold any crypto it will go directly through Bakkt. It's a similar system to payment processors that allow you to pay instantly and then prompt your bank to cover the transfer. They are vouching for the transaction for you and will cover the fiat transaction with SB at a later date so you don't have to wait at all. It's also going to be available only for US citizens at first.

The details are really vague. It may not even work like a direct payment processor like Bitpay.

It sounds like you might have to sell on Bakkt, then use the proceeds to buy stored value (like a gift card) that can be used at Starbucks.

That solves the issue of waiting for confirmations but it also means zero innovation beyond what's already happening now. People already buy gift cards with bitcoins all the time.
1430  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Beware of nocoiners on: March 11, 2019, 07:47:24 PM


Be also beware of "oracles" who made us believe that they understood Bitcoin. Because Bitcoin is not a magic financial solution for mainstream consumers. It's a protocol which mainstream consumer financial solutions can be built on top.

Bitcoin might be of more value to people and businesses who look for a secure store of value, a settlement layer, a payment rail, or an unstoppable censorship-resistant cryptocurrency.

I think a core issue here is that Bitcoin's deflationary supply discourages spending. It creates strong incentives for people to save rather than spend, especially when contrasted against the inflationary fiat money burning holes in our bank accounts.

This is why some early altcoins like Freicoin introduced demurrage-like fees to discourage hoarding and ensure that currency remained in circulation.

If/when Bitcoin usage is ubiquitous in society, it will be widely demanded among merchants. Consumer payments don't need to be the catalyst for mass adoption, though. That's where I think people have it wrong when they put all the focus on consumer and merchant adoption. Bitcoin is a new form of money, not just an attempt to compete with Mastercard.
1431  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: If everyone in the world owned bitcoin each would have 0.003btc on: March 11, 2019, 07:31:18 PM
As of now if every person in the world they would have $11 worth of bitcoin right now.
https://news.livecoinwatch.com/bitcoin-each-human-alive-getem-cold

This wouldnt include the number of bitcoin which were lost due to theft or misplaced private keys.

So would this mean there will be a shortage of the available bitcoin accessible to those who would want to own some of this cryptocurrency?

If more people want to buy bitcoins than are for sale, the price will rise. That's all "shortage" really means. The price may rise significantly over the years because of Bitcoin's built-in scarcity.

There's plenty of bitcoins to go around, though -- they are divisible down to the satoshi. And with bearer instruments, LN, etc. people will have ways to use small amounts of coins without incurring on-chain fees.
1432  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-08] 73% of UK Consumers Say They Don’t Know What Cryptocurrency Is on: March 11, 2019, 07:16:13 PM
Currently the market is so saturated with altcoins, that people don't care about decentralization, and they probably never have in the first place, but only about what ICO project is the next one to invest in.

From a community focused on decentralization we have gone to a community focused on gains. It doesn't matter how trashy a certain project is, all people care about are how hard something can pump. Sad reality.

Perhaps, but it's also a reality we should have expected. The design of Bitcoin and most other cryptocurrencies incorporates scarcity. You can't have a scarce commodity undergoing exponential growth in usage without the price being driven to the moon. In that context, with so much money pouring into the markets, it's only reasonable to expect a lot of greed. That's just human nature right there.

It's not necessarily a bad thing. Greed is a strong motivator for adoption.

I was drawn in by greed myself in 2013, and I was chasing altcoins back then because "Bitcoin was too expensive." I think a lot of people who came to get rich end up getting fleeced after the bubble pops and eventually leave. The ones that stick around do so because of an appreciation for the technology and design.
1433  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-3-8]Jack Dorsey: Twitter CEO Buys $10,000 in Bitcoin Weekly on: March 08, 2019, 11:30:37 PM
Must be nice! Tongue

I guess he's putting his money where his mouth is. If he really thinks Bitcoin will be the internet's "native currency" then there's really only one direction this thing can go.
1434  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Judge Fines Winklevoss Twin’s Lawyer $15K on: March 08, 2019, 11:23:03 PM
I assumed the case was getting thrown out as frivolous because they had to pay Shrem's legal fees, but I guess not. This is related to their lawyer obstructing the last hearing. These were punitive actions against the Winklevoss twins and their lawyer -- apparently they don't say anything about the facts of the case. The trial is still set for June.

Ouch, it's really sad that the Twins are likely to lose a court case against Shrem because of a bad lawyer. They've been advocates on Bitcoin for a long time.

Shrem has been evangelizing Bitcoin for many years as well.
1435  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: #Deletecoinbase - Agree or Disagree? on: March 06, 2019, 10:20:35 PM
Considering the big controversy around Coinbase, how do you feel about the movement? I haven’t really found anyone protecting them with good arguments, so i’d love to know if anyone here has an opposing opinion and think ‘deleting coinbase’ is too far?

It didn't work last time and it won't work this time, either. It's just a little Twitter drama among the usual suspects and their limited followings. This blunder will be forgotten relatively quickly. Most of Coinbase's market will never think about this stuff.

I'm also slightly amused that people are acting all surprised and insulted. This is par for the course when it comes to Coinbase.
1436  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Ernst & Young Launch Tool for Filing Crypto Taxes on: March 06, 2019, 10:14:38 PM
As I learned early on, it is much wiser to have someone who's profession is dealing with taxes to do yours. They know the ins and outs and we don't.

I always have a good tax attorney look my returns over each year, but I also need to track and estimate throughout the year on my own to make sure I can cover my tax liabilities and also so my quarterly estimates are fully paid. I saw Turbo Tax launched a product for cryptocurrency, and I'm glad to see this from EY too. I've already done the nitty gritty work on last year's taxes but I'll probably opt to use one of them in the future.

Stay away from H&R Block and business like that, though. They're a ripoff and incompetent as well.
1437  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-06] Starbucks Unveils Key Detail about its Secretive Bitcoin Strategy on: March 06, 2019, 09:42:04 PM
It raises a major question though, Bakkt converts people's coins to fiat, then uses that fiat to settle the Starbucks payment. Isn't that a taxable event within the US?

It sounds like people will be selling and storing in a fiat-denominated account at Bakkt. That's just straight forward capital gains taxation. Or if it's a Bitpay-style payment processing situation, it's still taxable under the current code.

There have been at least two bills proposed -- one is currently under consideration -- that would exempt capital gains taxes up to $600 yearly that are incurred through buying goods and services. No changes yet, though.

It's not the ideal situation yet (which would be paying Starbucks directly with bitcoin), but it's a step in the right direction. If nothing else, it's great advertising for bitcoin payments to be available at every Starbucks store in the US.

Accepting Bitcoin directly doesn't sound ideal for consumers anyway unless they'll be accepting 0-confirmation or using Lightning. Can you imagine waiting around for a confirmation so you can buy a cup of coffee?
1438  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Breaking Mixing Services on: March 05, 2019, 10:47:36 PM
In my thesis, I attacked coinmixer.se (at the time of writing it was the biggest centralized mixing service), however - except chipmixer.io1 - every other centralized mixing service I checked could be broken in a similar fashion.

1 Chipmixer was the only centralized mixing service which I did not break fully. However, I did not put much work into checking this mixing service.

I'd be curious what your findings are if you pursue it further. I always thought Chipmixer's approach was superior to the traditional script methods because those can be extensively analyzed and repeated. With Chipmixer, outputs are broken into generic amounts and users extract private keys that aggregate to [deposit amount - donation]. Those keys can be sweeped at any time. This seems much harder to analyze.
1439  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2019-03-05] WEX used to launder money from SamSam Ransomware, up to $6 million on: March 05, 2019, 10:24:11 PM
Then I found this article from the link in the report where indeed they are stating the same thing:

The exit point for 95% of all the Bitcoin ransom payments were wallets hosted by BTC-e, a Bitcoin trading platform headquartered in Russia.

I mean 95% is a lot, no wonder BTC-e's owner, Alexander Vinnik, was arrested. Although his subsequent fate is unclear. It looks like Vinnik was extradited to Russia finally, or is going to be extradited there soon.

This story about WEX doesn't surprise me at all given BTC-e's history. I remember reading the press release when BTC-e was indicted -- ransomware activity was the first mentioned criminal activity. There were no AML checks or account reviews and the withdrawal system was completely automated, so it was a paradise for laundering cryptocurrency. It sounds like WEX operated exactly the same, at least until they shut down withdrawals and quietly scammed their users.
1440  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin could've been created by the US government...Coincidence? on: March 04, 2019, 09:35:27 PM
If there was a backdoor in SHA-256 we would have known by now I think. There's too much stuff out there that uses SHA-256 with big prizes for those that crack it besides Bitcoin, it has never happened, probably never will or at least we will not see it on our lifetimes.

It could definitely happen in our lifetimes. It's basically a given at this point that ECDSA will be broken by quantum computers sometime in the 2020s. The theoretical breakability of SHA-256 is not as clear cut as with elliptic curve cryptography, but any breakthrough in generic quantum collision search algorithms could quickly change this. I think we should probably assume that all cryptographic functions underlying Bitcoin will eventually be broken, and plan for those contingencies.
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