DO NOT DOWNLOAD!
THIS CONTAINS A VIRUS!
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Literally just happened a few hours ago and somehow I was able to get in bitstamp account once before it would not let me in.
They have something with LTC-Home too, dont know if this is a miner or not but I am going to ask someone who I think would know.
LTC-home has nothing to do with litecoin, it's a broadband company in Latvia. http://lattelecom.lv/Huh. So he wasn't running bitcoin-qt when he stole your coins, likely paid them into another wallet, sadly even maybe a mixing service.
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Thanks, but are you saying they play at same location?
I'm saying that they've been playing using the same IP. The IP that cleaned out your account. Not sure why but it's strange that there are are so many players for that game using that IP. I thought it might be an exit node or a proxy but it occasionally seems to run Bitcoin-QT too: https://blockchain.info/ip-address/91.105.76.111As you can see, it was running the day your coins were stolen. It's promising. I think whoever took your coins didn't clean up his tracks properly.
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Where did you find that IP address? Was it from Bitstamp or did you get it from blockchain.info?
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Why would anyone admit that?
He had some info on Satoshi's identity based on info that he got from an old hack on BitcoinTalk, he was just using the account to get out of noobie jail. Looks like the mods deleted all the posts
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Fible1 mentioned in a couple of posts yesterday that he was using a hacked account.
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I'm very careful. I know I.T. I use Linux not Windows. I rather suspect it was a hack on the Android client which I was trailing.
It was my fault. I didn't use a Paper or Hardware wallet.
Good, so you understand then that you were incorrect when you said it's an insecure wallet, because its not, its as secure as you decide to make it as you control the private keys. BTW Linux has spyware too, in fact the FBI have purposely put hidden back doors into open source software.I rather suspect it was a hack on the Android client which I was trailing.
I don't think there are any known vulnerabilities for the android client, but it is possible that malware on your android phone got your 19BTC.
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Blockchain.info's online wallets appear to be the most secure.
Really? Had 19 bitcoins stolen from my blockchain.info last week. That's your fault. Blockchain.info allows you to keep control of your own private keys, the only way your blockchain account can be hacked is if someone gets your password, hence it being your fault.
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You seem to be lending to some high risk people, you shouldn't lend money to new accounts here, the majority of loan requests from new accounts are scammers.
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The ideal solution would be to write it in a different unit such as milliBTC.
So 1.00143781 BTC becomes 1001.143781 mBTC, much easier to read.
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The exchange's server contains a list of Bitcoin addresses without the private keys, those are stored in cold storage, on paper wallets etc
When somebody wants to make a deposit, the server simply assigns one of these Bitcoin addresses to that persons username.
The person makes a payment to the deposit address, bitcoind running on the server will see the transaction, a script executes which then looks up who is assigned that bitcoin address, and then adds that amount to their account balance in the database.
The person then makes a withdrawal. The system simply records this in the database, at the end of the day the site owner then scans the paper wallets and then makes the withdrawal transactions.
Optionally the site owner may decide to store a small amount of bitcoin on the live server, this is what is called a hot wallet. Its purpose is so that withdrawals can be processed immediately & automatically by the server once the withdrawal request comes in, as long as the hot wallet has funds. If the live server is compromised the hot wallet will most likely be compromised as well hence its a wise move to keep as few BTC as possible in the hot wallet. The owner will occasionally "top-up" the hot wallet with funds from cold storage.
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Sorry mate but you havent got a case and lawyers dont sue people for a 50/50 split either, especially Google.
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Number one on that list is trust. How can I trust putting 10 BTC(a decent sum of money) into CoinLenders if the website looks like it was built in 15 minutes? The choice is not rational or thought out, its automatic. You shouldnt decide whether you trust someone enough to trade with them/lend to them based on the design of their website.
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You can spend transactions when they have 0 confirmations. Your wallet has been compromised, you shouldn't use those addresses ever again as this is what will happen every time.
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Go to a secure PC and change all of your passwords, then reformat your PC, you've probably been infected with spyware.
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I think post count is useless. Just check how many Hero members we had running epic scams in here.
It implies some amount of effort has been put in, it prevents people from using all of their sockpuppets to negative rate people (think of Atlas) and also prevents people from creating accounts just to negative rate people.
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