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1261  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: NPR: Is Online Gambling Legal If Bitcoins, Not Dollars, Are At Stake? on: February 06, 2013, 03:51:31 PM
For now, I still have 0.8 Bitcoin in my account, worth about $13 — assuming that it's not raided by the feds.

FUD alert.

Coins are not stored in accounts. Coins aren't even stored in wallets. There is no way to "raid" another's coins without a private key. How available your private key is entirely up to you.

Can you post that in the comments??  The author and the general public need to be correctly informed.
1262  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / NPR: Is Online Gambling Legal If Bitcoins, Not Dollars, Are At Stake? on: February 06, 2013, 03:41:16 PM
Podcast an article today.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2013/02/06/171182974/is-online-gambling-legal-if-bitcoins-not-dollars-are-at-stake



by Cyrus Farivar
February 06, 2013 3:01 AM
Morning Edition
3 min 32 sec

With no government ties, Bitcoin is used to buy everything from blogging services to Brooklyn-made cupcakes. Theoretically, millions of dollars are being kept in the digital currency, and it's increasingly being used by specialized online gambling websites. But is Bitcoin gambling legal?

Purely in the interests of journalism, I decided to get my hands on some of the currency. When I did so, Bitcoin, which has been around for a few years now, was fetching around $17 on most exchange sites. It has since risen to more than $20.

It turns out that it's really easy for someone to give you Bitcoin, but it's less easy to just buy them from a third party. I ended up asking a friend with some Bitcoin to help — I told him I'd buy him a couple beers later. So, I created a Bitcoin account, and he shot me a few.

The first gambling site I tried was SatoshiDice, an online dice game specifically designed for Bitcoin. Honestly, it's a pretty boring game. You just bet on whether a random dice roll will come up below a certain value.

After I bet 0.02 Bitcoin, SatoshiDice sent an email saying I won. So, I bet the equivalent of 34 cents and I won 38 cents, meaning I came out a little bit ahead.

The federal government says online gambling is a no-no. In the last few years, the Justice Department has made it very clear: You can't just open up an offshore casino online and start taking bets using actual money from the United States.

But last year, a couple of entrepreneurs asked themselves — what if you were only betting with Bitcoin?

"What Bitcoin does is that it totally circumvents that," says Jerry Brito, who studies the currency as part of his work as a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. "There is no Bitcoin company, there's no Bitcoin building that regulators can get their hands on. It's basically cash."
One bitcoin will get you this nerd merit badge.
Planet Money
What Is Bitcoin?
Room 77
Life in Berlin
Berlin Restaurant Experiments With Virtual Currency

This month, Brito has been following news of SatoshiDice's financial reports. The dice-game company says it made the equivalent of over half a million dollars in profits in just six months of operation in 2012, accepting bets in Bitcoin. But that betting could turn into a legal black hole.

After all, no one knows if Bitcoin is money, a financial instrument or something else.

"We don't have a bank account at Seals with Clubs," says Bryan Micon, the spokesperson for SealsWithClubs.eu, a Bitcoin-based poker site. "There's no bank account. There's no bank of any sort that we do. We only do this one weird brand-new Internet protocol transaction that some of the nerds out there are calling money."

Micon says it might be tough for the Feds to regulate what is just a piece of computer code and not real money.

I started to wonder if I broke the law by gambling online using Bitcoin. So I called the Justice Department. It declined to comment for this story.

But here's the thing with gambling with Bitcoin: My winnings are still in Bitcoin. It's up to me to convert those back into dollars. And that extra step is deliberate, says Brito of George Mason University.

"The fact that they are doing that seems to suggest that they themselves are not 100 percent sure that this will be seen as perfectly legal by regulators," he says, "wherever they're based."

For now, I still have 0.8 Bitcoin in my account, worth about $13 — assuming that it's not raided by the feds.
1263  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Best Security Practicies for a Novice: mySQL/Bitcoin Client on: February 06, 2013, 12:40:43 AM
yes this is extreme. Additional layers of security can be added with growth of value.

But we've seen it all in bitcoin.

Compromised hosts

exposed public keys

unpatched zero day exploit

trojans

disappearing data that was not backed up.

insider fraud.

If you are dealing with anything of value exposed though an http interface you are vulnerable.

You can never be too safe.
1264  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Best Security Practicies for a Novice: mySQL/Bitcoin Client on: February 05, 2013, 11:57:43 PM
Close all unnecessary ports.

Only open ssh to admin's ip.

Don't run a mail server, irc bouncer or chat client on the same server.

If you can or if you can plan to scale run  Bitcoind, Web Server and mysql on separate servers.

Replicate mysql to a 4th server. 

Run Hourly encrypted backup on the Rep Server
Run Daily Encrypted back upon on the Main Mysql server
Save encrypted backup off-site daily.
Use an HSM to store and manage all private keys.

Plan for complete failure and run monthly complete restore runs only from back up.

implement fail over  in co-located data centers.

1265  Economy / Currency exchange / Re: USD between MTGOX <--> DWOLLA on: February 04, 2013, 05:42:32 AM
27.23 BTC
1266  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: PHP API to convert USD to BTC? on: February 01, 2013, 11:07:27 PM
are you a programmer?

Have you already implemented a shopping cart?

1267  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: [SCAMMER] MegaHustlr on: January 30, 2013, 05:19:24 PM
Here are just a few of his (unauthed) otc nics
a [otc]
alexfrost [otc]
amanda_ [otc]
amazingplace [otc]
amazingspace_ [otc]
birdcat [otc]
birdcat [otc]
bitbit [otc]
bottles [otc]
brandonA [otc]
brandonAa [otc]
chris__ [otc]
freebird [otc]
goldenteacher [otc]
goldenteacher_ [otc]
guest__ [otc]
Guest37423 [otc]
heroo12345 [otc]
jamestobbano [otc]
maddmaxx [otc]
madmaxx [otc]
mtbtc [otc]
MTGO [otc]
rupert420 [otc]
script_ [otc]
sde [otc]
seals [otc]
Silverlight_ [otc]
1268  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: [SCAMMER] MegaHustlr on: January 30, 2013, 02:43:25 PM
It's kurz performing a man in the middle attack
1269  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: Mt Gox Account Hacked - lost it all today... now what!? on: January 30, 2013, 02:37:34 PM
PGP won't be widely used until there are better libraries and it is easier to implement and use.
1270  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Looking for Partner for a New Bitcoin Business - Developer Wanted on: January 30, 2013, 02:32:43 PM
What problems does bitcoin stackexchange have?
1271  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Stores Can Now Charge You Extra Just for Using a Credit Card on: January 30, 2013, 04:13:37 AM
In fact this new agreement will most likely have little impact.

Few, however, believe many consumers will be affected by merchants’ new prerogative. Settlement or no, surcharging remains illegal by statute in 10 states—California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Oklahoma and Texas—representing about 40 percent of U.S. retail sales. Large retailers that operate in the 10 restricted states are not likely to surcharge in their stores in other states, according to reports. Also, for merchants that accept American Express, which does not permit surcharging, the terms of the agreement prohibit them to surcharge on Visa or MasterCard cards.

“The bottom line,” an National Retail Federation spokesperson said in a published report, “is that very few retailers would be able to surcharge under the settlement, and that the vast majority don’t want to surcharge even if they could.”

http://cardnotpresent.com/news/cnp-news-jan13/Surcharging_is_Here%E2%80%94Or_Is_It__-_Jan__28,_2013/
1272  Economy / Scam Accusations / Re: User Jakers: Beware on: January 29, 2013, 10:48:35 PM
I think he's been given enough time to respond.

Verdict please?


1273  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin will be at CES2013 (Official Thread) on: January 29, 2013, 09:06:38 PM
In Russia women are unresposible persons.

ftfy
1274  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin will be at CES2013 (Official Thread) on: January 29, 2013, 06:28:29 PM
lucif

you forgot to label the cute girls.

1275  Economy / Speculation / Re: Significant press today on: January 29, 2013, 12:19:18 AM
Bitcoin is the new gold.
1276  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Dwolla Begins Paypal-Style Account Suspensions on: January 28, 2013, 06:18:21 PM
Jason. Not gonna happen. No business can make a profit at that fee level. Even at scale.

If you're right, then it's just a matter of time before Dwolla either goes out of business or raises its fees.  Until that happens it makes sense for me to keep using them so long as they remain reliable.


So you think current dwolla model is doomed?

Run the numbers

They've taking in 10M inventure capital

They take 0.25 per transaction (over 10.00).

not a great revenue model.

Dwolla is a service. That banks will subsidize it.  Kind of like a modernized ACH system.

Dwolla will not remain a stand alone company.  If it doesn't fail before an acquisition by (Chase, BofA or some Visa/Amex like association) which is obviously the exit strategy.



1277  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-1-28 -- Bloomberg: Bitcoin’s Gains May Fuel Central Bank Concerns... on: January 28, 2013, 06:03:37 PM
Bloomberg's Chart of the Day:



Going UP UP UP!


Does your nickname stand for "Bitcoin Central Bank"? Tongue

Maybe....
1278  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-1-28 -- Bloomberg: Bitcoin’s Gains May Fuel Central Bank Concerns... on: January 28, 2013, 06:01:37 PM
Bloomberg's Chart of the Day:



Going UP UP UP!
1279  Economy / Lending / Re: MPOE Bonds. The largest loaning operation in BTC. on: January 28, 2013, 03:58:06 PM
Mp. Why is you pr woman handling support requests. Hmmm.

It is because there is no PR woman. It is the pornographer himself. Read the MP post on OTC-assets, it is the same person.

That MP/MPOE-PR is SOOOOOO sneeky.

Just the person to whom I'd be glad to send all my hard earned bitcoins for secure investing.

By the way, How do I volunteer for a ROTA??
1280  Economy / Lending / Re: MPOE Bonds. The largest loaning operation in BTC. on: January 28, 2013, 02:35:50 PM
Mp. Why is you pr woman handling support requests. Hmmm.
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