Bananas for China. Considering that the Chinese government banned ICOs. They might not feel to happy with a Crypto that depends on the Chinese fruit market to make money. Looks interesting nonetheless.
The developers are going to supply bananas to China, not crypto currency. Can the Chinese government prohibit the supply of bananas grown with the help of ICO? Ya. China ban ICO not ban banana. And they buy banana a lot. Just check some financial data. I think this is a good project
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just keep calm. I almost think everything will down when panic sell when China block ICO. but now everything recover and become normal
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this project is good. had bookmark this project. waiting for more information. by the way the logo is beautiful
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depend on how much money u have. what is your trade style. u want hold or invest in short term. Long term I think u should buy eth and bcc and short term is... dont known. haha. market is hard to think right now
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Because ETC very low now, you can afford it and second, it’s from ethereum so you can expect a bright future of etc
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You are new here so first you have to read and research so that you have knowledge, then find out an ico that you believe and hold a small amout and feeling how the market work.
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Each country has it own currency and in some country that have an economy unstable, they don’t allow bitcoin trades, bitcoin can influence to their currency
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Some of coins are disappear, I think that a lot of man have lost huge but the others still hold their coin and this market still running day by day, I think you shoud read more and find out by yourself. 
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 why still have comment about this topic.. it's should be close. now is BTC vs ETH BTC vs BCC
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rM4KpmWMaqgokuMSQbyCiymJQqCZ9KkQSF
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Mine is up and listening on 2001:ba8:1c8:104:6a05:caff:fe05:7b39 - no ipv6 connections at the moment though. :p
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I don't understand what you are complaining. This is unique and hugely needed service. If you think there are too much fees, why don't you offer a competing service?
Personally I don't just care, I only complain if the fees are hidden. Here they are in plain sight.
What, in particular, does this solve? Now the people who mined lots of coins can privately move their wealth back into fiat? It doesn't do anything much for people who bought into bitcoins. I pay 1.5% to buy coins I pay 1.5% to sell coins I pay 3%+$9 to cash out mtgoxUSD So 6%+ for what, being back where you started? Or making a payment to someone? This'll make waves For general exchange withdrawls probably not so useful in markets where other deposit/withdrawl methods are readily available (eg: dwolla in the us, intersango in the uk etc). For people in other parts of the world it does seem like a competitive way to get money out of the exchanges (given that their only other alternative is a wire transfer). There is also the aspect that it allows people to operate completely anonymously. Purveyors of silk products and road builders that accept bitcoin will be able to withdraw their profits in cash to pay their suppliers without divulging their identities.
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Dear Bitcoiners, We are very excited to announce a new service that will revolutionize how you get your funds for your traded Bitcoins! Announcing: Withdraw2CardWhat is it?Withdraw2card allows you to sell your Bitcoins and receive your funds on a debit or credit card you already own! Works with any credit/debit card in the world, denominated in any currency! How does it work?You sell your Bitcoins at the exchanger of your preference (currently supported: MtGox, BTC-e, CryptoXchange, and Bitcoinica). You withdraw your funds by a redeemable code. You use this code on our website to order a payment to your debit/credit card. How long does it takes to get the funds?We send the funds instantly and your bank credits the amount within 1 to 4 business days (with 85% of customers getting the funds within 2 to 3 business days). Which credit cards are supported?Works with Visa, MasterCard, Amex, Diners, JB and many other major networks. In which currencies can you send fundsWe can natively send funds in both USD and EUR, however, if your card is denominated in a different currency, you can still use our service! For example, if your card is denominated in GBP, simply select the USD option on our site. We will send you the USD funds, and your card issuer will automatically convert your funds to GBP. It is that easy! We can send funds to cards issued in any country in the world!How much does it cost?There is a fee of $9 for each USD payment, and €7 for each EUR payment charged by the processor. In addition, there is a percentage fee charge by our company that varies according on how you pay us. For a current list of fees, please visit: https://www.aurumxchange.com/ratesCan I use this as a cheap alternative to wire transfers?YES!! If you send funds to a debit card linked to your bank account (for example, your debit card issued by Chase and linked to your checking account), your funds will be automatically credited to your account! When you think of all the fees involved in international bank wires (such as sending fee, receive fee, intermediary bank fees, etc), this might be an excellent alternative, specially for smaller amounts. What are the minimum and maximum amounts I can send to my card?The minimum amount is $15 for USD payments, and €12 for EUR payments. The maximum is $1,000 and €1,000. PLEASE NOTE: You should NEVER attempt to send more than your card credit limit, if there is one. For example, if your card's purchase limit is $500, do not attempt to send more than that to your card, or some delays might occur. Can I cash out other electronic currencies by this method as well?YES! Anything that we accept, you can cash out to your card! Some electronic currencies we work with are: Liberty Reserve, PerfectMoney, Pecunix, CosmicPay, HD-Money, and C-Gold. Where can I learn more?Please check our knowledge base for more information: https://www.aurumxchange.com/help/knowledgebase.php?category=7If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to post on this thread or open a support ticket on our website. Thank you! The AurumXchange Company Can someone explain what has changed to allow this to be possible? It sounds like you're somehow able to push payments to a credit card number instead of debiting it. Have Visa/Mastercard changed the rules? Dose this work with otherwise non-reloadable visa/mastercard gift cards?
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If I click through: http://blockchain.info/tree/2893660 I can see the LinNode theft. I can also see IP's. Has anyone tried to contact the people at these nodes? It's a shame I can't copy and paste the IPs. Is there anything I can do to to avoid accepting coins that have had contact with thefts in the same way MtGox does? (disgarding that this may be a philosophically flawed idea for the moment) Is there a summary as to what happened regards the MyBitcoin and Gox thefts as well? Possibly an easier to navigate map or general commentry that is understandable to the layperson. edit, afterthought: There ought to be something that automates the whole process of watching the coins move and looking up IP addresses. This would also make the privacy situation much clearer for all The IP addresses are useless. Anyone can relay their transactions through any other node. Simply blocking blockchain.info from connecting to your node will 'cause some other random node to appear to be the source of your transaction (depending on who blockchain.info hears it from first since they won't hear it from you anymore). You can use the -addnode command line parameter to direct which other node shows up in blockchain.info. While the blockchain info may be more accurate than not for casual bitcoiners (although it is still wrong alot of the time) it will be completley inaccurate for anyone taking the most trivial steps to hide their IP.
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On the list!
+1. UKash would be great.. you can buy UKash vouchers at most corner stores in the UK - so it'd be like the cash deposit via a bank, except it's a cash deposit via your local corner store instead (open late, weekends, etc). There's also absolutely no requirement to show ID. You hand over the cash and the corner store guy hands you a receipt with a code on it. I guess the fees are probably a bit higher than the bank cash deposit thing but I think it would be a pretty robust solution, I'm surprised that none of the exchanges seem to take it yet. You might also want to look at contracting directly with http://www.epayworldwide.co.uk/ and/or http://www.paypoint.co.uk/. These are the companies that operate the payment terminals in the corner stores that facilitate voucher sales (such as UKash, but there are actually lots of them - you could setup a bitinstant voucher on the paypoint/epay terminals and cut out the ukash middleman - but it would probably still be good to have ukash since they're already setup and in other countries as well).
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When I want a secure, offline paper wallet, currently I boot to a USB flash drive running with a bootable Ubuntu Live-CD distro and load from that same drive a copy of the page from BitAddress.org - http://BitAddress.orgThough this seems a trivial effort, it is disruptive to me if I have to first shut down, reboot, print, reboot and then log back in to get back to the point I was at when I wanted to create the paper wallet. If I had a spare computer lying around I'ld use that but at the moment I don't. In the near future, however, I might have a Raspberry Pi around. I've not touched one of these yet nor learned much about them either but I'm supposing this unit could be useful as a paper wallet generator. BitAddress has everything that is needed 100% in Javascript so the technical complexity to build this should be low. Though there would need to be an alternative to wiggling the mouse for gathering entropy with this. But for something inexpensive that would let you create a paper wallet and print it out, this seems to be capable. It might have even more use if it could print paper wallets on demand like tickets. I could see using a $50 printer like the Brother QL 700, for instance, where the first ticket / printout is the private key and QR code, followed by a second printout that has the public key and its QR code. (Though I now wonder if thermal paper printouts will fade and become too obscure to scan, as time passes?) So together, for under $100 of hardware, an individual would have an offline bitcoin paper wallet generator. Or at least an excuse to order a Raspberry Pi.  You can buy an android phone for less than $100 ( http://www.dealextreme.com/p/a6000-android-2-3-smartphone-w-3-2-touch-screen-dual-sim-tv-wi-fi-and-gps-black-silver-109574) that could print via usb or bluetooth.
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GLBSE is doomed to fail in its current form. The solution to the desire of a decentralized stock market is simple: either make a blockchain or blockchains for financial securities or associate securities with a unit in the blockchain.
Why Nefario thought it was ideal to have all the stocks in his control is beyond me.
So, how could we inject a securities feature in Bitcoin?
This questions comes up every few months. You can't. There is no point in storing the securities in a block chain because ultimately they are controlled by the issuer (company) in question. The only reason it works for bitcoins is because bitcoins basically aren't tied to anything in the real world, they only exist in the block chain. Shares in a company are tied to the company. The company may as well maintain their own centralized share holder register because if they're going to defraud you then they're going to defraud you anyway so you might as well trust them to maintain the register too. The goal is to make the securities untouchable by the authorities and still publicly tradeable. The 'companies' underlaying the 'securities' are not untouchable, so the securities won't be either. If the company founders all get arrested and the company's assets sold off at government auction it doesn't make a damn bit of difference that some entry in a blockchain somewhere says you own some part of it. If the company maintains it's own shareholder register then it seems reasonable that it will be about as secure as the company itself - which is basically what you want.
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GLBSE is doomed to fail in its current form. The solution to the desire of a decentralized stock market is simple: either make a blockchain or blockchains for financial securities or associate securities with a unit in the blockchain.
Why Nefario thought it was ideal to have all the stocks in his control is beyond me.
So, how could we inject a securities feature in Bitcoin?
This questions comes up every few months. You can't. There is no point in storing the securities in a block chain because ultimately they are controlled by the issuer (company) in question. The only reason it works for bitcoins is because bitcoins basically aren't tied to anything in the real world, they only exist in the block chain. Shares in a company are tied to the company. The company may as well maintain their own centralized share holder register because if they're going to defraud you then they're going to defraud you anyway so you might as well trust them to maintain the register too.
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If 50 BTC or 25 BTC reward are not enough of an incentive, then they shouldn't be mining. Botnets are bad for Bitcoin's image anyway.
Again profit might not be the goal here.
It's quite legitimate to not include transactions in your block if the fees aren't high enough (which currently I guess they aren't!) to make it worth your while. This is the dynamic that encourages users to pay fees and it's a normal part of the bitcoin system.
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That's CRAZY!!!
That IP is mine, I have a bitcoind running there but not only are the generation addresses not mine but also I have never found a block there that I can remember.
So... what's going on?
The IP address detection thing doesn't really work.. it relies on blockcain.info connecting to every connectable node (and possibly doing some funny business to get as many inbound connections as possible? - are they in dnsseed? anyone know?) Anyone can relay transactions through anyone else - just do -nolisten -connect=<xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx> when you start bitcoin to make it only connect to one other node and then the transaction will appear to come from that node rather than you when people look on blockchain.info (assuming the node you -connect too is itself connected to blockchain.info and assuming the node you -connect too isn't actually blockchain.info itself). You could also modify your bitcoin client so that it sends transactions only to certain nodes that have connected to you - that way you could selectively relay through hosts that aren't even listening on port 8333.
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